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ADs and their gratuitous pussy pictures

995 replies

BogRollBOGOF · 28/01/2021 22:10

Welcome in ADs. Snuggle up hygge-style 'cause there ain't much going on out there for a while... except rain.

I haven't got a pussy of my own for gratuitous showing off, so I shall pretend to be Dr Evil with Mr Biggleswade Grin

Link to previous thread: www.mumsnet.com/Talk/_chat/4138531-ADs-and-their-pampered-poodles?pg=40

ADs and their gratuitous pussy pictures
OP posts:
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28
MercyBooth · 06/02/2021 17:47

www.independent.co.uk/voices/captain-tom-moore-clap-boris-johnson-nhs-b1797735.html

Boris Johnson could have honoured Captain Sir Tom Moore by funding hospitals – he decided to clap instead
Johnson insisted on clapping because he understands that Captain Tom's ambition was much higher levels of clapping for the NHS

Several politicians, newspapers and personalities have taken the totally reasonable stance that if you didn’t clap for Captain Sir Tom Moore, you’re a traitor who doesn’t deserve the vaccine, and instead you should be battered for several hours with the captain’s zimmer frame by Piers Morgan, live on ITV.

Because we learned many vital lessons due to Captain Tom, and the most important is that the correct and proper way to fund the National Health Service is not the outdated, cumbersome practice of taxation. It’s much fairer and more efficient to get 99-year-olds to run round the garden.

In years to come, there will be no more bureaucratic National Insurance, and accountants working out how much each of us has to pay. That will be replaced by lines of the elderly charging round Hackney Marshes, while personal trainers bark: “Don’t be a QUITTER Mavis, you CAN give me two more laps, CRAWL if you have to, we’re short of X-ray machines, so MOVE IT.”

It’s no wonder they insisted on vaccinating the over-80s first, they’re relying on them to fund the NHS for the next 10 years.

Eventually, everything will be funded like this. Rishi Sunak will say in his budget: “I am pleased to announce a boost for education. From the start of the next economic year, we will provide no fewer than 500 90-year-olds to hula-hoop all day in Wembley Stadium, to fund school books and fix the busted toilets. Furthermore, I can reveal we will provide the fire service with a 50 per cent increase of 94-year-olds, who will bungee jump for a hosepipe each. And I can announce they will be led by Sir David Attenborough, who will describe the starlings he passes on the way down.”

So it was Boris Johnson who led the clapping, praising the man who raised £30m towards the £30bn Boris Johnson’s party has left the NHS short of.

Some cabinet members have proposed a statue to Captain Tom, to celebrate the man who raised money for the thing they could have funded but decided not to

Everyone should behave like this from now on. In each family, someone should announce: “I’ve decided to never do any tidying up ever again. You have to do it all. But in return, when you die I’ll stand on the step and give you a clap.”

Then we should consider Chris Grayling, because he managed to waste about £30m of public money every day when he was in the cabinet. That means he saves us £30m every day he’s not in the cabinet, so he should have a statue in every village square.

The way that Johnson embraced clapping for Captain Tom is similar to the way he praises Marcus Rashford, when he says: “Isn’t this person wonderful, for pointing out what a useless heartless idiot I am? Thank the Lord this person selflessly dedicates himself to correcting some of the stuff I ruined.”

So now Johnson is insistent on clapping because he understands that Captain Tom’s ambition was much higher levels of clapping for the NHS.

The government could have honoured his name by funding hospitals, rather than sending out billions of pounds worth of contracts to their mates in companies such as Serco. But how would that have led to the claps the service so desperately needs? It’s no good nurses having adequate masks and gowns if no one’s banging a saucepan for them.

That’s why there are so many of these harrowing pieces of footage, in which exhausted nurses plead into the camera: “Please, please someone look at the conditions we’re in, and try to put this right by walloping a wooden spoon on a tin cup.”

So it’s understandable this government feels so emotional about Captain Tom, because they share his values, which is why they sent £12bn worth of contracts to companies such as Serco to create a track and trace system that didn’t work, rather than fund it through the NHS. Because Captain Tom didn’t mind the NHS, but the organisation he really loved was Serco.

The vaccination programme has been delivered through the NHS, and that seems to be working. So we should expect that before long, that will be put right, and it will be outsourced to a company that makes ladders registered in Monaco, owned by a Tory MP’s personal jousting coach

The problem is, as all sensible people agree, we can’t fund the National Health Service through taxation, as people aren’t prepared to hand over that amount of money. So instead we must have lower taxes, and fund the NHS by asking people to hand over that amount of money, because they’re inspired by a 99-year-old. The difference is, instead of the wealthiest handing it over, it’s the poor, which is fair enough as they have so much more to spare.

So we should applaud Captain Tom, and we can only wonder what he’d have done next if he’d had the chance. Because he would have had to top his efforts next year with something more spectacular, in the same way each Fast & Furious film has to be more extravagant.

He would have had to ski down his roof all day, using the frame to do a sharp turn before flying over the guttering, or do a rodeo for the NHS on the back of a bison

And if the government wants to carry on using his name the way they have until now, we can expect them to start with his funeral, asking the pallbearers to carry the coffin round and round the churchyard to raise enough money to buy some protective gowns and a ventilator.

thefallthroughtheair · 06/02/2021 17:54

Jourdain
I hope you're right but I feel that there seem to have been a few false dawns where perhaps a few people seemed to be moving away from the lockdown-obsessed narrative. But every time there's some at- best-disingenuous and at-worst-lying story about children or transmissibility or new variants, and although they are always shown to be exaggerated nonsense, they get onto SM and a whole new wave of madness starts.
I simply cannot believe that I live in a world where so few give a toss about the future of their children.

thefallthroughtheair · 06/02/2021 17:57

Mercy
Love that!

MercyBooth · 06/02/2021 18:04

its good isnt it Grin

AcornAutumn · 06/02/2021 18:12

[quote Iheartmysmart]@AcornAutumn I feel like that as well so you aren’t alone. I’ve actually seriously thought about selling my little flat and disappearing off in a camper van until my money runs out! Then I don’t know what I’d do. Think now isn’t a good time to be making irreversible life decisions though.[/quote]
Gosh, I'd totally do that if I could. What about renting it out instead of selling it? Going round in a camper van won't be too pricey? I don't know a huge amount so perhaps I shouldn't say that.

Someone mentioned about the charity shops being closed. I don't really care about that but I need to control myself so I don't end up regretting getting rid of stuff. Living in a small space forces you to get rid of things and I've missed some of them.

At the same time, I have that sense of really wanting to do something, anything, to start a clean slate.

If the weather forecast is correct, it's going to be a horrible long week.

justasking111 · 06/02/2021 18:14

@MercyBooth and breathe Grin

To be honest having worked for charities, it is the elderly who shake the tree to raise funds. Our hospice, the volunteers, the lottery, it is the older generation who keep it going, they man the stalls, run the shops, run the cafe, empty friends and relatives pockets.

No different in another charity I worked in, the retired are the oil that turns the wheels of any charity, health, military, air ambulance etc.

justasking111 · 06/02/2021 18:16

If the weather forecast is correct some of you lucky buggers will get snow then at least the children can go out and build a snowman. Bugger the online teaching.

TheOrchidKiller · 06/02/2021 18:33

At the same time, I have that sense of really wanting to do something, anything, to start a clean slate.
I get that, Acorn. Quite often at the end of a holiday, after Christmas, or when the kids were going back to school. It was like a fresh start, & like scratching an itch.

BogRollBOGOF · 06/02/2021 18:36

@thefallthroughtheair

Jourdain I hope you're right but I feel that there seem to have been a few false dawns where perhaps a few people seemed to be moving away from the lockdown-obsessed narrative. But every time there's some at- best-disingenuous and at-worst-lying story about children or transmissibility or new variants, and although they are always shown to be exaggerated nonsense, they get onto SM and a whole new wave of madness starts. I simply cannot believe that I live in a world where so few give a toss about the future of their children.
I can't fathom that on a site primarily targeted at mothers/ parents, how minimising the impact on children is.

"Oh they'll just catch up"
Well no, not if W, X, Y and Z always did struggle. A and B flourished and are now bored and getting into mischief, C and D are having friendship issues, E went ferral, F's struggling with parents splitting up, G thinks they killed granny etc, etc.

My friend does child protection in my last school. Volune of cases lightened in lockdown #1. What came in was nasty and was either through those known to be vulnerable or external agencies like the Police. Now it's the mental health collapse that had built up through 2020, much like the abundance of posts of people finding that they're struggling.

Children are malleable. Sometimes they adjust with little consequence. Many will reset on to a more difficult life setting than was necessary, things like perceptions of friendship, and youth is tough, it's quite a closed social world that's difficult to make readjustments in.

I'm also surprised that it took so long for so many to admit that they're struggling.

As dicussed a few hours ago, I've wondered if this is depression, the anger, the numbness and lethargy. But my brain chemistry is fine albeit just starved of a normal balance of stimulation, rest and the hormonal reaction to experience. I do wonder now that this is dragging out beyond a year, how long it will take to feel normal. I managed two running races in Sept/ Oct, but just felt flat about it. I didn't feel excited in anticipation because there was too much risk of cancellation, especially the Oct when the county went into tier 2 about 5 days before. The race didn't have the usual atmosphere, many did it virtually, and never in a HM have I been alone by mile 3. It felt like a long, tiring run rather than the thrill of a race.
Dates don't have any significance any more.
How long before I genuinely feel the excitement of anticipation?

OP posts:
TheOrchidKiller · 06/02/2021 18:41

Really, really don't want more snow. Still have to go out to work in it. My employers say to be careful out there, but there is a strong expectation that we will deliver our service with minimum disruption. Just like with covid.

dingit · 06/02/2021 18:48

The same bunch saying children will catch up, froth at the mouth at term time holidays.

TheOrchidKiller · 06/02/2021 18:53

How long before I genuinely feel the excitement of anticipation?
Good point. Most people I know aren't getting excited about the usual nice stuff that happens, such as birthdays or holidays. It's like what's the point if there's nothing to look forward to? Part of the fun is in the build up.

I have experience of one of my kids not catching up, having missed huge chunks of school due to poor health. It really isn't as simple as making them work during the holidays or evenings (that can feel like a punishment for something that wasn't their fault). Catching up shouldn't just be about academic progress either. They should be allowed to spend time playing together, or hanging out in person together.

Evenstar · 06/02/2021 19:10

@ISaySteadyOn thank you for that article, it was excellent, moving but full of common sense. My DM worked as a nurse from 16 when she started her training and then as a Macmillan nurse for 5 years. She would have agreed with every word, we shouldn’t be treating everything or denying dignity and choice at end of life.

TooManyPlatesInMotion · 06/02/2021 19:28

@Jourdain11

Btw, has anyone noticed a definite shift in the MSM narrative last few days? We've moved from "poor suffering NHS workers" and "this is a TERRIBLE DISEASE" to "when are we going to open up?" Quite a lot of lockdown-sceptic scientists and politicians on BBC too, implying that this must be the last lockdown and that the government mustn't be too slow/cautious to open up.
Yes, absolutely. As I said in a previous post, I do think the terms of debate in the main stream media have started to shift a bit.
AcornAutumn · 06/02/2021 19:35

@TheOrchidKiller

At the same time, I have that sense of really wanting to do something, anything, to start a clean slate. I get that, Acorn. Quite often at the end of a holiday, after Christmas, or when the kids were going back to school. It was like a fresh start, & like scratching an itch.
What do you do when that strikes?

I only get that after something bad happens and that makes me want a new start.

It's not a great idea to make big changes when you are in the grip of the "something bad" though, I find.

TheOrchidKiller · 06/02/2021 19:46

@AcornAutumn
In normal times I'd get out the bin bags & crack on, but now I can't be bothered, even though it would be nice to do.

As I'm a bit disorganised I've tended to keep back stuff in a bin bag for a bit, just to make sure. For more personal stuff like old diaries & letters I've shoved them out of sight & left them until I'm sure I don't want them. That has happened well after bad times have passed though, when life has felt better.

Taswama · 06/02/2021 19:47

Excellent article Isaysteadyon .
Yours too @MercyBooth - I nearly spat my wine out at David Attenborough and the starlings!

mightbealittlebitmad · 06/02/2021 19:54

Is anybody else kind of forgetting how life used to be? It feels like so long ago that I was able to do simple things like go to the gym or for a drink with a friend. I don't want this life to begin to feel normal!

dingit · 06/02/2021 20:01

Well dd seems to be having fun. It seems most have returned to uni for the second semester, and whilst there are not huge flat parties, the students are mixing and having a few sherberts. I can't really blame them. It's reading week and there's very little to do in the evening before the shit gets real and they have to knuckle down to their finals.
They've put up with lockdown shit for nearly a year of their lives and you're only young once. I haven't encouraged her in anyway and she's usually one of the sensible ones.

TheOrchidKiller · 06/02/2021 20:04

@mightbealittlebitmad
I've had dreams where I've been on nights out with other people in pubs. Right bummer on waking up! The dreams are so vivid though, some part of my brain can remember the old life. (It's a bit odd though because I didn't go on nights out much anyway!)

NannyGythaOgg · 06/02/2021 20:47

I'm 66, 2 kids in their 40s neither of whom have children.

I totally agree with you all about children and how so many people in my position are so fucking selfish.

Friends and relatives all think I am some kind of conspiracy theorist, and that lockdown is essential and continues to be so until 'they' are safe.

There was a party in Sheffield Student Village the other night that was raided. Reported in both the local paper and the BBC. The number of people who I used to call friends that have been criticising them as selfish, stupid louts (amongst other terms) that they should be locked up, that they should not be allowed to continue their studies, that they should be named and shamed.

It has really made me feel sick. As well as sticking up for these teens I also pointed out that they would be funding and making the decisions about our future care (all of us 60s and 70s).

I don't care how much money my family (in particular) have. If their is no economy then their savings and pensions will be worthless

TheOrchidKiller · 06/02/2021 21:14

Yes, Nanny. What's that old joke? "Be nice to your children, they pick your nursing home."

I think that society could do with being a bit more understanding of each other, if you see what I mean- young or old, or anyone who is different to the life those living comfortably might have. (Sorry, been watching It's A Sin & feel emotional).

BogRollBOGOF · 06/02/2021 21:20

Especially as so much pension funds are tied up into commercial property. If town/ city centres are killed off and land value crashes, that affects personal pots down the chain.

Not that commercial land hasn't remained over-inflated in the past decade, but it needs to adjust gradually not suddenly crash because the High St suddenly died in 2020 never to recover.

OP posts:
justasking111 · 06/02/2021 22:18

There is so much bile spilling out of people. They hate kids, germy little things, students, drunken louts, dogs, mess on pavements, joggers, exhaling all over the place, walkers, spreading covid, stay home and rot please. Every bloody on FB there are posts like this on local groups. They say who and what they hate, never anyone or anything they like. God help anyone who has the temerity to disagree the spitting hordes descend on them like locusts.

CoffeeWithCheese · 06/02/2021 22:44

Well I've spent about 8 hours today wrath-decluttering - hasn't improved my mood - but the house is a hell of a lot neater (till the kids wake up)

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