Political views.

(1) The world in state of crisis – (29/10/2023). It is the global situation historically that poor people who live on low wages cannot afford for their retirement life.  Consequently, they reproduce more children to guarantee for their support at old age. But the big corporations are ever innovative technologically to cut costs and increase their profit margins. This can only be possible by cutting wages for workers and due to the finite level of resources available on the planet, they also increase the prices of goods, never decrease logistically. Therefore this is like Catch-22 situation the human population growing out of control in one respect and the wealth inequality getting ever problematic causing the world to become paralysed as we are experiencing currently. The moral of the story is that the more business opportunities we seek for the very burdensome the world would become with intrigue. Psychologically some people are addicted to social intrigue in the self harming way and therefore not having concern for the wellbeing of others.

(2) The climate change issue – (29/10/2023). It is possible in principle to sustain our survival on the planet entirely by harnessing renewable energy resources. But the fossil fuel resources being conveniently available to the big corporations, rather like the “forbidden fruits” has come to prove that our human concerns has lost the race against their greed. Perhaps there is some hard lesson for us to learn, our conventional ideals leaving much to be desired.

(3) The declining state of NHS in UK – (5/11/2023). The NHS should be recruiting those people who are technically trained or experienced to provide health service, rather than more management staff to gobble up the government funds. Also they should divert the large portion of government funds into medical services rather than medical research. We must focus on the urgent present needs of people and not exercising over the uncertain future. People seeking for social prestige irresponsibly is equally bad as craving for financial profits at the expense of the society. We must be wary of such cynical symptoms of behaviour in people and legally regulated, because they can be equally draining on the country’s economy as those who are work shy.

(4) A discussion on climate change – (5/11/2023). The focused efforts to curb the consumption of fossil fuels to avoid climate change is prerequisite. But to persuade the global fuel companies to halt the extraction of fossil fuels to comply with our ecological safety standards it is equally vital to think out of the box. Albert Einstein said that “imagination is more important than knowledge”. This opinion is equally true in politics as it is in science.

(5) The NHS in disaster – (5/11/2023). The health services has been chronically in problems not only in the UK but also worldwide. Despite the government funding and increasing national population to produce adequate staffing in the hospitals it is still declining in its efficacy, while being the two conflicting needs that are foiling the service. (1) Ethically considering – at the very point we depart from providing person-centred care we should in principle anticipate wastage of resources and inefficiency spreading on the larger scale. We need transparency and accountability at the professional level both in the doctors and nurses and avoiding monetisation of the health service so that the corporations can make financial profits from it. (2) Technically considering – how deserving the general public are for person-centred care is an issue that needs to be critically examined. With the conditions in the real world as it is, sexually, racially and culturally, we should abide by certain norms of polite behaviour. Making foul insinuations about the cooking customs of other cultures is very criminal behaviour and it provokes ill-will between people, failing in their duty of care towards fellow human beings. We need integrity in our human behaviour to preserve  our private lives and the occupational foundations to our communities.