Scaff
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That's a very specific number to tout without a source to either support it or demonstrate that every one of them would be improved.1,872,678 lives.
That's a very specific number to tout without a source to either support it or demonstrate that every one of them would be improved.1,872,678 lives.
That's because he's dropped the mask that he has any factual basis for what he's talking about and is openly making up bollocks. He will now claim that he was being funny, and followed by desperately hoping that nobody follows up on the actual number.That's a very specific number to tout without a source to either support it or demonstrate that every one of them would be improved.
Please expand on:Yep, because the UK going private is going to solve the underfunding of the NHS.
Please read this:That's because he's dropped the mask that he has any factual basis for what he's talking about and is openly making up bollocks. He will now claim that he was being funny, and followed by desperately hoping that nobody follows up on the actual number.
Because we already established in the Islam thread that it's not about cousin marriage or protecting children. It's about legislation targeted at certain minority groups and trying to dilute their culture into oblivion through forced "integration".
I know you know this, but I thought it was worth saying out loud.
Mainly because the ongoing introduction of private service and underfunding in the service has caused damage, and the utter failure of insurance based system in the US.Please expand on:
A) Why you posted this in response to a suggestion that will....save lives.
B) Whether this would be a positive or negative for patients and the NHS in the short and long term.
Ohh look an appeal to authority that doesn't actually support the number you presented.Please read this:
And answer:
A) Why you're fighting so hard for cousin ****ing, creating generations upon generations of disabled children and repressed women that will....hurt lives.
B) A rough estimate of the amount of severely disabled individuals you have cared for, and in what capacity.
C) If you think you know what's better for the British Pakistani community than Nazir Afzal (son of Pakistani immigrants) and Matthew Syed (half Pakistani).
No one has commented on the morals of banning it, rather on your inability to form a coherent position and actually support the data you presented!Many thanks lads, long may the loony left continue to provide the solutions our world so desperately needs. This is, most definitely, the way to keep Farage out of No. 10.
Stop pretending you're trying to save the children. We can all see it for the lie that it is.Many thanks lads, long may the loony left continue to provide the solutions our world so desperately needs.
Ain't no faith like bad faith, eh?A) Why you're fighting so hard for cousin ****ing
Fortunately, the good guys are winningAs I have written a few times before on these pages and I quote :
" My father, now a retired doctor/surgeon now an Orthodox Sikh ( after years of procrastinating having lived a quite hedonistic-life, prior ) was reprimanded by his employers for advising a Muslim man from avoiding consanguineous marriages....it went on and on almost escalated to GMC level until they backed down 'cause my dad refused to apologise . It almost lost his career and livelihood .
The science was on his side and was not being Islamophobic or anti-Muslim ".
Consanguineous marriages are just wrong . Morally and Genetically and an evolutionary dead-end if contained in very small consanguineous group of inter-related individuals ...those are just well established scientific& medical facts .
It's not prejudiced .
There is no prejudice in science : it cares nowt for your creed, ethnicity, colour, caste or class . It's equal to all and all are equal to it ... despite & regardless of one's indoctrination or ones Holy Books or inbred culture for which the Science cares not .
Facts are facts . And facts cannot be changed by religious/cultural idiotic ideological idiocy
Please explain how taking out private medical insurance would cause damage. What has the introduction of private service and underfunding got to do with my post?Mainly because the ongoing introduction of private service and underfunding in the service has caused damage, and the utter failure of insurance based system in the US.
It's a silly answer to a silly question. You can't possibly quantify how many lives will be changed to a quotable degree, but it is fair to say a damn lot will be improved.Before we go anywhere, support your original claim.
Well this confirms you have no idea of the problem you are talking about.No, they have solutions that provide information to couples that allow them to see their ancestry and make an informed choice.
And yet you did and then avoided answering it and engaged in yet more bad faith arguments.It's a silly answer to a silly question. You can't possibly quantify how many lives will be changed to a quotable degree, but it is fair to say a damn lot will be improved.
Third time the charm?At least we've moved up to the Times comment section now.
Note that you were asked three questions (one of which was a twofer) in that post and you chose to ignore two to give a "silly answer to a silly question" - which, actually, could have had a reasonable estimate given.It's a silly answer to a silly question. You can't possibly quantify how many lives will be changed to a quotable degree, but it is fair to say a damn lot will be improved.
Congratulations on figuring out that Tom is not Dick is not Harry.Well this confirms you have no idea of the problem you are talking about.
Icelandic people =/= British Pakistanis =/= Mexicans =/= Spanish etc etc
Why does anyone get married, in your mind? Only to have children? Surely you can think of some non-sprog-making reasons why people might find getting married desirable. You can't possibly be so far down the rabbit hole that you think that marriage is purely for making heirs.Hold on a second. What exactly are the benefits of keeping this legal?
YouTube tends to remind us of videos we like. QE2's funeral procession from a few years back is certainly among them. To me she was the only true royal left in this modern time. And her funeral procession was as impressive as her life and personality. I am very curious if your King Charles will get the same honor when his time has come. (I hope not)
No. No it isn't. But I am wondering what the popular vote would be at the moment, to enable a popular vote on this subject (if that makes any sense)It's not down to a popular vote.
This. Their funeral's are planned years if not decades in advance. I imagine that, details aside, a much loved/tolerated seventy year reign monach's funeral will play out very similarly to that of a largely disliked five year reign monach. Its just protocol.Or does it just come down to cold tradition?
Protocol/tradition, which helps to preserve a people's culture. Something I can only applaud. Too bad we Europeans have destroyed so many culturesThis. Their funeral's are planned years if not decades in advance. I imagine that, details aside, a much loved/tolerated seventy year reign monach's funeral will play out very similarly to that of a largely disliked five year reign monach. Its just protocol.
Your monarchs quit rather than die though. Hard to sell that god-given right, making people care or be interested in the grandure, when Old Crownie can just give up when they don't feel like it.Protocol/tradition, which helps to preserve a people's culture. Something I can only applaud. Too bad we Europeans have destroyed so many cultures
Not really.Note that you were asked three questions (one of which was a twofer) in that post and you chose to ignore two to give a "silly answer to a silly question" - which, actually, could have had a reasonable estimate given.
If you take the highest possible figures, the number of first-cousin marriages in the UK annually is (between one and) 4% of ~250,000, or 10,000.
Just under half of live births in the UK are to married mothers, but let's take half: 350,000 annually. If 96% of those mothers are not first-cousins with their spouse, we get 336,000 live births per annum compared to 14,000 for their first-cousin counterparts (regardless of fecundity; it's possible for a woman to give birth twice in one calendar year, but I'd wager quite rare, so almost each and every birth is a different woman).
The rate of congenital birth defects (of all kinds, from kooky to extremely life-limiting) among offspring of first-cousins seems to stick resolutely around 6% - compared to 3% outside of first-cousin marriage. That would give us 10,000 children born with a congenital defect among the normies and 840 among the first-cousins.
Even if we take the assumption that all of these congenital birth defects are extremely life-limiting, the estimate then would be 840 lives per year saved by banning first-cousin marriage.
Seems that you can quantify it, and I did that on my phone. We might reach your figure in 4225, or thereabouts.
British Pakistanis account for 3.4 per cent of births nationwide but 30 per cent of recessive gene disorders, consanguineous relationships are the cause of one in five child deaths in Redbridge and the NHS hires staff specifically to deal with these afflictions.
You....want me to answer the other two? Including why we shouldn't ban drinking while pregnant?But you provided a stupid answer to only one of three questions asked of you. I think we know why...
I might as well come out and ask it....do you disagree with this advice:Mainly because the ongoing introduction of private service and underfunding in the service has caused damage, and the utter failure of insurance based system in the US.
Why, why not?As I advise others, if you are fit and able, you should seriously consider taking out private medical insurance. Hence, you get coverage before it is denied for a pre-existing condition.
Please explain the similarities and differences between Icelandic consanguineous relationships and Pakistani ones since I would love to be enlightened by your far superior knowledge on the subject.Congratulations on figuring out that Tom is not Dick is not Harry.
However, Icelandic people are humans. British Pakistanis are humans. Mexicans are humans. Spaniards are humans. We all work on the same basic fundamentals of genetics. So you'll have to explain exactly why a solution that works for Icelandics is inapplicable to any other group of people.
I don't think you have any idea of the problem you're talking about, because you keep conflating marriage with genetically inherited defects as if they're one and the same thing. You refuse to face the fact that your "concern" could be addressed without touching marriage at all.
But you don't want that. You don't want the "effective" solution that would make children from first cousins illegal whether it was from a married couple or not. You want to ban marriages. An objectively worse solution that only works to disrupt certain cultures further.
Yawn.How interesting. When you persist with this barely masked racist behaviour even in the face of solutions to your claimed problems, it becomes impossible for any rational person to assume that it isn't your goal to target specific groups of people.
Various reasons.Why does anyone get married, in your mind? Only to have children? Surely you can think of some non-sprog-making reasons why people might find getting married desirable. You can't possibly be so far down the rabbit hole that you think that marriage is purely for making heirs.
Various reasons.
Well, you've convinced me. Really strong argument you've made there.Your....solutions....aren't solutions at all.
Robust? Is that what you're calling it?If you remember I gave a link to a robust argument for banning it - is your defence of it included in that article's list?
You reworded that when you could have just quoted it directly or copy pasted. Why? To try and put words in my mouth?And your "solution" isn't being tried in Sweden and Denmark (in fact, they are looking to ban it), so the claim that "that's what a sensible first world country would do" isn't as strong as you think it is.
That's not a claim, that's my opinion. Iceland, a country that is actually directly faced with significant negative health outcomes from this exact problem, is behaving like a normal, sensible first world country. Countries that are banning or thinking about banning cousin marriage are not.You know who actually has a problem with consanguinuity and has put in place a reasonable solution to the problem? Iceland. The population is ~400,000, there's some degree of relation between almost everyone. Do they ban first cousin marriage? No, they have solutions that provide information to couples that allow them to see their ancestry and make an informed choice. You know, like a normal, sensible first world country.
And yet you still can't quantify it...I was deliberate with my choice of words:
This has the potential to change many lives for the better.
Let's take a quick look...We can break it down:
To be clear, I've already answered this as it didn't seem to register. Yes, I disagree with that advice.I might as well come out and ask it....do you disagree with this advice:
Because, as someone who already has (work provided) private medical care, it doesn't offer a solution in the way you're suggesting, it's not affordable for the majority who are most impacted by the current underfunding, as if you think we wouldn't get a 'reset' should those with a chub-on for a private system to replace the NHS you're deluded (and those are large swaths of the Tory and Reform parties).Why, why not?
No, it's not separate. Increased uptake of private cover is a part of the argument, and it does not lead to better outcomes.The introduction of private services in the NHS is a separate, complicated issue...
No you didn't....and I addressed your claim about "insurance based systems" in a subsequent post.
The member in question already has, you dismissed it without supporting why, the onus is on you, not them.Please explain the similarities and differences between Icelandic consanguineous relationships and Pakistani ones since I would love to be enlightened by your far superior knowledge on the subject.
Once again, forced marriage is already illegal.Do you honestly think these women are getting to know their dad's brother's sons and choosing them thinking, yes, that's the guy out of everyone else I want to marry and have kids with?
Which are?Various reasons.
A quick search indicates the only person to mention Sweden and Denmark are you...And your "solution" isn't being tried in Sweden and Denmark (in fact, they are looking to ban it),
...which would once again seem to be bordering on bad faith. A reminder, you will not be given another warning, you have had more than enough.so the claim that "that's what a sensible first world country would do" isn't as strong as you think it is.
Pretty much. Which parts do you disagree with?Robust? Is that what you're calling it?
Again, you haven't articulated why exactly you want it to remain legal. Because there are other situations in which health risks aren't legislated against?But you posted the link. You'd think you'd know what was in it, and would immediately be able to identify whether or not the argument was addressed in there. Feel free to point to the part that you think rebuts what I'm saying - if you know what you posted and you've read what I posted it should take you less than 30 seconds.
I don't think you've done either of those two things, nor do I think that you're capable of putting together a rebuttal even with reference material available.
What are you talking about. I typed it from memory. Is it sufficiently different from what you said so as to have put words in your mouth?You reworded that when you could have just quoted it directly or copy pasted. Why? To try and put words in my mouth?
Pretty sure they are doing it for at least two reasons, one being the health risks.Unless they want to admit that they're doing it primarily to disrupt certain cultures instead of because of the health risks, and then I'd have a different opinion on that. But as long as the stated justification is based on the health risks to children, I will continue to think that it's daft. There are better ways to shear that sheep than putting it through a wood chipper.
Do you honestly think these women are getting to know their dad's brother's sons and choosing them thinking, yes, that's the guy out of everyone else I want to marry and have kids with?
Where exactly? Is there discussion about برادری (baradari)?The member in question already has, you dismissed it without supporting why, the onus is on you, not them.
Your posts have never been censored here, they have been removed from view for breaking the AUP, however, you are right about one thing, your time here is done.I also remember the times my posts were censored here when outlining my day-to-day experiences of life working in the NHS so I'm not holding much hope of me being allowed to post here much longer.