Einer der an der „Rettung Vergifteter“ beteiligter Notärzte aus Salisbury schreibt in einem Leserbrief an The Times: Sir, bezüglich Ihres Berichtes („Kontakt mit Gift führt zur Behandlungsbedürftigkeit von fast 40 Personen“ vom 14. März) erlaube ich mir klarzustellen, dass kein einziger Patient Symptome einer Vergiftung durch ein Nervengift aufgewiesen hat und es nur drei Patienten gab, die überhaupt signifikante Vergiftungssymptome hatten. Mehrere Personen suchten die Notfallambulanz in der Sorge auf, dass sie betroffen sein könnten. Keiner von ihnen hatte Vergiftungssymptome und keiner bedurfte einer Behandlung. Alle durchgeführten Blutproben zeigten keine Auffälligkeiten. Kein zufälliger Passant wurde durch die involvierte Substanz kontaminiert.

Finanzmarkt- und Konzernmacht-Zeitalter der Plutokratie unterstützt von der Mediakratie in den Lobbykraturen der Geld-regiert-Regierungen in Europa, Innsbruck am 20.03.2018
Liebe® Blogleser_in,

Bewusstheit, Liebe und Friede sei mit uns allen und ein gesundes sinnerfülltes Leben wünsch ich ebenfalls.

 Aus dieser Quelle zur weiteren Verbreitung entnommen: 

Einer der an der „Rettung Vergifteter“ beteiligter Notärzte aus Salisbury schreibt in einem Leserbrief an The Times:

Sir, Further to your report (“Poison exposure leaves almost 40 needing treatment”, Mar 14), may I clarify that no patients have experienced symptoms of nerve agent poisoning in Salisbury and there have only ever been three patients with significant poisoning. Several people have attended the emergency department concerned that they may have been exposed. None has had symptoms of poisoning and none has needed treatment. Any blood tests performed have shown no abnormality. No member of the public has been contaminated by the agent involved.
Stephen Davies
Consultant in emergency medicine, Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust

Übersetzung: Sir, bezüglich Ihres Berichtes („Kontakt mit Gift führt zur Behandlungsbedürftigkeit von fast 40 Personen“ vom 14. März) erlaube ich mir klarzustellen, dass kein einziger Patient Symptome einer Vergiftung durch ein Nervengift aufgewiesen hat und es nur drei Patienten gab, die überhaupt signifikante Vergiftungssymptome hatten. Mehrere Personen suchten die Notfallambulanz in der Sorge auf, dass sie betroffen sein könnten. Keiner von ihnen hatte Vergiftungssymptome und keiner bedurfte einer Behandlung. Alle durchgeführten Blutproben zeigten keine Auffälligkeiten. Kein zufälliger Passant wurde durch die involvierte Substanz kontaminiert.

 Aus dieser Quelle zur weiteren Verbreitung entnommen:    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/british-retaliation-against-russia-s-actions-p5hmpj8jh

 

British retaliation against Russia’s actions

Sir, The government’s response to the attempted murder of the Skripals was well judged. Losing spies in London is something that President Putin cares about. If the Russian reaction is low key, as it was in 1971 — when only 18 British diplomats were expelled from Moscow in retaliation for the 105 kicked out of London — then there will be no need to go further. But if they up the ante, we should be prepared to do so as well, either in relation to embassy staff or in other areas. Today’s declaration of support from the United States, France and Germany is welcome. But we should not expect them to take specific measures on our behalf. They each have political and economic interests with Russia that are different from ours. In the post-Brexit world we will have to get used to acting on our own.
Sir Paul Lever

Former chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee and British ambassador to Germany 1997-2003

Sir, Theresa May has announced the expulsion of 23 spies: Britain’s limp response to the nuclear attack of November 2006 on Alexander Litvinenko repeats itself. Apart from a short-term staffing issue for Putin, none of Mrs May’s threats roar. Besides, Britain stands alone in the world after the election of pro-Putin Trump and Mrs May’s dogged stewardship of Brexit.

However, if Britain in 2006 had revoked, say, Roman Abramovich’s visa, Litvinenko’s killers would have been handed over on a salver. London is both the playground and safety chute for Russia’s oligarchs. Block access and you have their attention. Also, unlike May’s complicated proposals, withdrawing a visa transfers the burden of proof on to the persona non grata. Will the UK reach for this weapon? In 2006 no one wanted to do it, in 2018 no one can do it. Until Britain starts denying access to powerful Russians and their families, Russia will continue to do as it pleases.
Dr Yuri Felshtinsky

Author of The Putin Corporation: How to Poison Elections, New York

Sir, Further to your report (“Poison exposure leaves almost 40 needing treatment”, Mar 14), may I clarify that no patients have experienced symptoms of nerve agent poisoning in Salisbury and there have only ever been three patients with significant poisoning. Several people have attended the emergency department concerned that they may have been exposed. None has had symptoms of poisoning and none has needed treatment. Any blood tests performed have shown no abnormality. No member of the public has been contaminated by the agent involved. 
Stephen Davies

Consultant in emergency medicine, Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust

—————————————————————————————————————————————–

 

—————————————————————————————————————————————

Sir, At Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government we have established an initiative, the applied history project, which uses history to inform government policy-making by illuminating similarities to — and differences from — the past. Britain should respond where it is likely to hurt Putin’s oligarch court: targeted sanctions and freezing Russian assets in UK jurisdiction. Theresa May also hinted that Britain may retaliate with “covert measures”— perhaps referring to a cyber-retaliation by GCHQ. If these measures are effective we will not know about them for years, until government records are one day released. I hope this is so.
Dr Calder Walton

Ernest May fellow in history & policy, Harvard University

ROLE OF UNIVERSITIES
Sir, Tensions have been rising in British universities and anger is now boiling over (“Lecturers target busiest exam days for next strikes”, Mar 15). We continue to seek a fair and viable long-term solution but it would be a mistake to assume that the anger directed at university leadership is all about pensions. The president of the Cambridge University Students’ Union argued that strikes and demonstrations are “about the future of higher education, continued marketisation and the move towards students as consumers”. I share her concerns.

Reducing students to mere consumers makes sense only if the value of universities is simply economic. That would be a fundamental error. Universities have helped successive generations to achieve their potential in these places of breathtaking discovery and disruptive insight.

For a generation politicians have talked as if UK universities are broken, in need of “market discipline”. We are beginning yet another higher education review that fails to get to the heart of concerns around universities. The focus should be on what values our society expects to see reflected in our universities, not only value for money.

We need a broader debate about the role of universities in the UK. Our universities have the capacity to work across society to discover ways forward. Universities are not the problem but part of the solution.
Professor Stephen J Toope

Vice-chancellor, University of Cambridge

GLUT OF GRADUATES
Sir, Emma Duncan rightly asks (Comment, Mar 15) why taxpayers should have to continue to fund the defined-benefit pension schemes that university lecturers still enjoy, but about which they themselves can now only dream, when it is not clear there is any public good from producing so many graduates. Nearly half of all school-leavers in the UK now go on to university, yet there is no evidence that we benefit from such a high proportion. Even in Germany, the EU’s most successful economy, the figure is only 27 per cent. In the same edition the Higher Education Policy Institute claims that 300,000 new places will be “needed” at universities by 2030. Needed by whom? Not, it seems, by British industry and commerce, which are crying out for better-educated school-leavers and more focused work training and apprenticeship schemes, not for yet more graduates.
Nigel Henson

Farningham, Kent

IMMIGRATION ROW
Sir, Tim Martin (letter, Mar 14) should perhaps be aware that it is the market itself that allocates resources in optimum fashion. His proposal that immigration should be controlled by the “British parliament” ignores the fact that whenever governments interfere in the market it leads to bureaucracy, delay and inefficiency — communism was a good example.

Mr Martin also needs to expand his views on the EU. In particular he should have regard to the fact that the EU’s accession/enlargement system has brought democracy, freedom, justice and peace to more than half the countries in the EU. He might compare this with the situation in Syria, which had no such framework.
Tom O’Hanlon

Radley, Oxon

REAL WELSH LAMB
Sir, Andrew Bond (letter, Mar 13) raised concerns about meat being “passed off” as premium Welsh lamb. May I reassure him that the integrity of quality lamb from Wales is protected not only by traceability from farm to fork but also by strict protected geographical indication (PGI) standards. To be branded as PGI Welsh lamb the animal must have been both born and reared in Wales. Shoppers can rest assured that Welsh Lamb is the genuine article.
Kevin Roberts

Chairman, Hybu Cig Cymru — Meat Promotion Wales

HEALTH TOURISM
Sir, Sarah Wollaston MP protests against the sharing of patients’ addresses with immigration officials (“NHS must stop giving out patients’ private details”, Thunderer, Mar 15). Whatever the true scale of health tourism, we are constantly told that the NHS is desperately overstretched. Hence it is right that steps are taken to ensure that only those who are entitled to UK state-funded services benefit from them. In Iceland, where I now work, for non-emergencies if you do not have an Icelandic kennitala (a state identity number) you must take along your passport and EHIC card; a bill is presented after consultation and treatment. This seems entirely proper. Medical attention is available to all but only those entitled to Icelandic state services get them free at the point of delivery.
Martin Powell

Westgate on Sea, Kent

DEATH AND POVERTY
Sir, Apropos your report “UK deaths up by 10,000 over seven weeks” (Mar 15), it is right to indicate that finding the reasons for a reduction in life expectancy will not be easy. What is clear is that cumulative poverty and disadvantage throughout life means that some people will live a shorter life than others. The data is irrefutable: richer older people live about ten years longer than those who are poor. Recent figures show that this inequality is widening. Policymakers need to prioritise efforts to tackle this across health, housing, work and pensions.
Claire Turner

Centre for Ageing Better, London EC1

STIFLING CREATIVITY
Sir, The education guru Sir Ken Robinson is right that schools kill children’s creativity (“Is it the end of the world if your child isn’t academic? No”, Times2, Mar 15). I worked as a specialist support teacher for years, with many highly creative dyslexic pupils. Many of them wrote stunningly beautiful descriptions and poems but all the teacher could see was missing capital letters, misspellings and poor punctuation.

Just before retiring five years ago I was stunned by the English teacher in a middle school who told the class that, to meet the national curriculum, all their poems needed to work to a formula requiring so many adverbs, adjectives, metaphors, similes and alliterative elements. Pupils were asked to identify these on completion and rewrite those poems not meeting the criteria. My bewildered comment was: “Do you think Tennyson had that in mind when he was writing Crossing the Bar?” The teacher replied: “I’m not familiar with his work.”
Victoria Crivelli

Worcester

EQUALITY IN CLOTHING
Sir, Further to the letter “Uniform approach” (Mar 14), as a single parent I found that the cost of providing the required school uniform was so high that I could afford relatively little “mufti” for my children. If all the children had been able to wear non-uniform clothes they would have felt far less discriminated against. A much more socially equal solution.
Sue Lane

Malvern, Worcs

BRAIN BYPASS
Sir, Dr Charles Sandeman-Allen is understandably biased in favour of university lecturers (letter, Mar 15). In my day, the definition of a lecture was “the transfer of knowledge from the notes of the speaker to the notes of the student without passing through the minds of either”.
Derick Walker
Hadlow, Kent

ANIMAL INSULTS
Sir, I read with interest how animals can be the definition of an insult (“Saying that pigs are fat is a porky pie, farmer tells dictionary”, Mar 14). In these days of gender equality I am surprised that potent animal insults specifically for women still exist: dog, cat(ty), mouse(y), bovine, cow and crow. I am unable to think of a single animal insult that is gender-specific for men. Are there any?
Sarah Bradfield

Littlebury Green, Essex

——————————————————————————————————–

Aus dem per ÖVP-Amtsmissbräuche offenkundig verfassungswidrig agrar-ausgeraubten Tirol, vom friedlichen Widerstand, Klaus Schreiner

Don´t be part of the problem! Be part of the solution. Sei dabei! Gemeinsam sind wir stark und verändern unsere Welt! Wir sind die 99 %!

“Wer behauptet, man braucht keine Privatsphäre, weil man nichts zu verbergen hat, kann gleich sagen man braucht keine Redefreiheit weil man nichts zu sagen hat.“ Edward Snowden

banner (4)

 

Der amerikanische militärisch-industrielle-parlamentarische-Medien-Komplex des Kriegsimperiums, das Hydra-Ungeheuer der US-Kriegspartei bei klar sehen – Eine Analyse: Hauptantriebskräfte und Ursachen vieler US-Kriege, failed states und Flüchtlingsströme

 
 

Die Systemfrage – zu den Verbrechen der NATO – Illegale NATO-Angriffskriege, illegale NATO-Regime Change´s, NATO-Terroristenbewaffnungen, NATO-Mitwirkung bei Terroranschlägen gegen die eigenen Bevölkerung, NATO-Staatsstreiche und NATO-Folter, Mitwirken bei NATO-Drohnenmassenmorden, … die NATO ist ein mafiöses verbrecherisches Angriffsbündnis! Und über die Kriegsverkäufer, die Transatlantik-Mainstreammedien & Politiker.

 
 
 

Wichtige Infos – über WAS JEDER TUN könnte – wenn er denn wollte – Schluss mit den Ausreden! Jeder kann was tun! Viele Tipps – da ist für jeden – was dabei! – Verschiedene Aktions- & Protestformen. Widerstand. Sehr viele Tipps zum (Um-)Weltverbessern; Bürgerprotesttipps, Weisheiten Gandhis u. v. m.

 
 
—————————————————————————————————————————————
 
 

Folge dem Geld US Bonds

Hier noch eine kurzes Video zur Erklärung der Grafik Gewaltspirale der US-Kriege

GRUNDLAGENWERKE zu 09/11 – die ein Aufwachen garantieren:

David Ray Griffin / Daniele Ganser

Der mysteriöse Einsturz von World Trade Center 7:

Warum der offizielle Abschlußbericht zum 11. September unwissenschaftlich und falsch ist

496 Seiten Peace Press, Berlin/Bangkok, 2017ISBN 3-86242-007-8

Bestellmöglichkeiten:- über http://www.peace-press.org oder

oliver.bommer@peace-press.org Euro 29,80 mit Luftpost –

über Amazon Euro 39,80 (inkl. Amazon-Gebühren) mit Luftpost- über jede Buchhandlung Euro 29,80 per Seeweg oder Euro 34,80 per Luftpost

Bitte teile diesen Beitrag:

Schreibe einen Kommentar

Deine E-Mail-Adresse wird nicht veröffentlicht. Erforderliche Felder sind mit * markiert

1711614416