User avatar
By Yug
#112016
Headline versus story - Torygraph edition.

Cut benefits to boost defence spending, voters tell Starmer

Voters have urged Sir Keir Starmer to cut the benefits bill to fund a rise in defence spending.

More than a quarter of Britons said they would like to see Labour cut the welfare budget in the event that it needed to raid public services to pay for a boost to the military, a poll by Ipsos found...

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/20 ... l-starmer/
Hang on. What's this?

...Asked where the Government should find the money for defence, voters were most likely to say they would oppose cuts across the board.

However, those who did select a public service to cut were most likely to choose welfare, including Universal Credit and pensions...
Here it comes

...The findings will give Sir Keir an indication of which cuts are likely to be most palatable to the public...

Actually, dear Torygraph, 73% of voters have indicated that the cuts you're bigging-up are toxic. The correct headline should be something like "Only 27% of Ipsos poll responders are cunt enough to put the boot in to vulnerable people", but we'll never see a true headline from your shiterag, will we.
Malcolm Armsteen liked this
User avatar
By Yug
#112562
Hold the front page

Prince Harry and Meghan to stay at royal residence
The King offers security guarantees as the couple return with their children ahead of the Invictus Games


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/0 ... rn-sussex/
In a shocking revelation the Torygraph announces members of the royal family will be staying at a royal residence. :shock:

Well, colour me surprised.
User avatar
By Yug
#113709

Britain’s healthcare used to be excellent. Then the NHS arrived

Centuries of charitable and local authority hospitals formed the basis of a world-leading system before it became a wasteful monopoly

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/0 ... -nhs-came/
So excellent that people who couldn't afford the bills died of things the NHS has eradicated. This is why my dad grew up under a stepmother instead of his mum.

I fucking hate rose-tinted bullshit like this.
Boiler, Dalem Lake liked this
By Rosvanian
#113711
Another Telegraph article from another right wing weirdo for which the only response is "what the actual fuck".

In 1933 my grandmother's first born son died from pnumonia at the age of 7 in a hospital 20 miles from where he lived because there was nowhere nearer that could take him in. He was in there for 4 weeks but visiting wasn't allowed on the basis that it would 'upset the child' . This sick, terrified boy never saw his parents again from the day he was admitted. My grandmother often told me she and my grandad would stand at the hospital gate pleading to see their son. The golden days of healthcare indeed.
Last edited by Rosvanian on Wed Jul 08, 2026 7:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
By Killer Whale
#113712
As I've stated on here before, neither of my grandfathers were considered fit enough to be conscripted into the forces during WWII, one had withered limbs due to childhood polio, and the other had damaged lungs due to TB.
Is this what the Telegraph seriously wants to return to? Maybe they've figured that AI in the workplace and drone technology on the battlefield means they no longer need fit and healthy cannon fodder for industry and war.
User avatar
By Boiler
#113714
Rosvanian wrote: Wed Jul 08, 2026 7:18 am Another Telegraph article from another right wing weirdo for which the only response is "what the actual fuck".

In 1933 my grandmother's first born son died from pnumonia at the age of 7 in a hospital 20 miles from where he lived because there was nowhere nearer that could take him in. He was in there for 4 weeks but visiting wasn't allowed on the basis that it would 'upset the child' . This sick, terrified boy never saw his parents again from the day he was admitted. My grandmother often told me she and my grandad would stand at the hospital gate pleading to see their son. The golden days of healthcare indeed.
That's heartbreaking to read..
User avatar
By Boiler
#113722
Regrettably there are those who think it'd be "better" because they're not paying for healthcare for fatties, cripples and other lesser forms of life in their view.
User avatar
By Samanfur
#113774
About ten years ago, I used to work in a branch library where one of the regular service users was 101.

She was a staunch defender of the NHS, She used to tell the story of when her sister needed a leg amputated, but her family didn't have much money.

The doctor herded all of the family except the patient into another room of their two up, two down, and told the parents to turn the gramophone up very, very, very, very loud.

Halcyon days indeed.
By davidjay
#113791
Boiler wrote: Wed Jul 08, 2026 9:38 am Regrettably there are those who think it'd be "better" because they're not paying for healthcare for fatties, cripples and other lesser forms of life in their view.
Let's be honest - when they say "better" they mean "whiter."
Boiler liked this
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#113794
My grandmother (Ellen) was a 'laying-in lady' - an unofficial midwife in the working class streets. New mums gave her half-a-crown if they could afford it, much cheaper than the local maternity hospital.

I often think of her when readuing the exploits of Granny Weatherwax.

(Nan used to smoke perpetually, the cigarette never left her mouth and she exhaled through it, sending out sparks... apparently pretty much during births as well).
By davidjay
#113795
My nan was a layer-out. One day she'd just put pennies on the eyes of a corpse when he woke up.
Last edited by davidjay on Wed Jul 08, 2026 7:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
By Boiler
#113801
I can only recall one instance of that locally: the children of my great-aunt's neighbour lost their father back in the early 70s. They'd have been about seven and nine IIRC.

A bit later, my sister was fifteen when our father died.
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