The Chronicles of George & The New York Yankees | Seinfeld
08 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in television, TV shows
The Battle of the Somme – Brusilov On His Own I THE GREAT WAR – Week 102
07 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War I
One year on and what have we got?
07 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
Health New Zealand’s first birthday on Saturday and there was nothing to celebrate.
The news is full of stories pointing to an ongoing and growing crisis in the health system, the latest of which is a plea A&E from doctors who are exhausted:
Emergency departments across the country are under unprecedented strain since the Covid-19 pandemic. A senior doctor at Auckland City Hospital tells investigations editor Alex Spence it is compromising the care she and her colleagues can provide to acutely sick patients.
She has taken the day off, but soon the emergency doctor’s phone vibrates with a message from Auckland City Hospital begging her to come to work.
The texts seem to come day after day now, as hospital administrators scramble to find enough clinicians to staff one of the country’s busiest trauma centres:
SOS SOS SOS.
Desperation x 9000! Dept bursting at the seams.
Cover needed…
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Our scary public hospital crisis
07 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
At The Common Room Ian Powell outlines our scary public hospital crisis :
On 9 February 2023, TVNZ’s 1News revealed some data that should alarm us all: that our hospitals had hit 100% occupancy more than 600 times in 2022. That is, on average, each day, roughly two public hospitals around the country were running at an occupancy higher than they were resourced for.
If anyone doubts that our public hospitals are in crisis, this fact alone removes any doubt. Arguably it is worse than crisis – it’s a scary crisis +!
A 100% occupancy rate is heaven for hotels. But it is hell for hospitals. Behind it is ‘bed blocking’; that is, patients can’t get admitted to the wards from the emergency department because they are already fully occupied. Emergency Departments become overcrowded. Within the hospital system, diagnoses and treatment are delayed, and planned surgery cancelled. Even the…
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Monty Python’s Flying Circus – “Working Class Playwright”
07 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in television, TV shows
New study reveals abrupt shift in tropical Pacific climate during Little Ice Age
06 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
Earth and climate – an ongoing controversy
Evidence that what is today called ‘climate change’ can naturally occur, and has occurred, over a relatively short timescale – described here as ‘remarkable’. Maybe history is trying to tell us future climate conditions are more unpredictable than advocates of IPCC doctrines would have us believe.
– – –
An El Niño event has officially begun, says Science Daily.
The climate phenomenon, which originates in the tropical Pacific and occurs in intervals of a few years will shape weather across the planet for the next year or more and give rise to various climatic extremes.
El Niño-like conditions can also occur on longer time scales of decades or centuries. This has been shown to have occurred in the recent past by an international research team led by Ana Prohaska of the University of Copenhagen and Dirk Sachse of the German Research Centre…
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Thomas Fairclough: Privacy International: Constitutional Substance over Semantics in Reading Ouster Clauses
05 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
UK Constitutional Law Association
I have previously written on this blog and elsewhere about statutory interpretation and the rule of law. In the previous blog post I stated that the idea “that the courts will not allow the executive to escape their jurisdiction is well established as part of the rule of law” and referenced, inter alia, Anisminic Ltd v Foreign Compensation Commission [1969] 2 AC 147 (HL) to support this view.
This is an overarching principle, which has manifested itself most obviously in the courts’ treatment of so-called ouster clauses. The traditional view is that such clauses will be interpreted in such a way that does not preclude judicial supervision of the administrative process. The reasoning for this is simple: every body of the state derives its legal powers from law and, because of this, to be acting lawfully one has to act within one’s powers. A necessary component of this is…
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Karl McCartney MP: The Government’s Net Zero fuel and engines policy needs to change and change fast
05 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
Intriguing trends in latest political poll suggest a close contest in this year’s general election
05 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
Intriguing trends can be tracked in the latest Roy Morgan poll, taken in June, with both major parties losing ground from the May sampling. The Greens, perhaps surprisingly, also dipped.
In contrast, both ACT and the Maori Party, gained ground, both moving up 1.5%.
The poll results, if they were to carry through to October 14, suggest the outcome on the night will be close-run.
Pundits contend that left-of-centre parties will emerge with a majority on the night.
Certainly Labour with 40, the Greens 12, and Te Pati Maori 9 would be ahead of National 39 and ACT 20, but the question is whether Te Pati Maori will accept a minor role in a coalition. Some pointers are already being detected of demands from Te Pati that Labour and the Greens could not stomach.
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The Element of Surprise: Why the Wagner’s Mutiny Fell Apart
05 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: Ukraine
Creative Destruction Is the Best and Worst Part of Capitalism
04 Jul 2023 Leave a comment
This morning in Monaco, I moderated a panel for the Convention of Independent Financial Advisors on the implications of an “uber-ized” economy. In my introductory comments, I asserted that the best part of capitalism was “creative destruction.” Simply stated, we all benefit when entrepreneurs come up with products such as personal computers that make our lives better.
But I also pointed out that creative destruction was the most painful part of capitalism. Think, for example, about the people who used to work in the typewriter industry.
One of the speakers, Professor Philippe Silberzahn of the EMLYON Business School, cited another example. Kodak used to be one of the biggest and most profitable companies in America, but the digital camera (ironically, first invented by Kodak) set the firm into a death spiral. What was creative for the rest of us wound up causing destruction for the people who worked…
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