Archive for the 'Death' Category

A State Funeral For Thatcher?

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margaret-thatcherAccording to the Mail, she will be given a State funeral when she dies at some point in the future. If this is true, she will be the first Prime Minister since Churchill to be accorded this honour.

This is of course called “no less than she deserves” from some quarters, and “an insult” from others.

Personally, I can see both sides. She was a Prime Minister who achieved a lot - whether what she achieved was good or bad depends on your viewpoint. And on what you emphasise - saving the economy from collapse after the disastrous Callaghan government, or stopping free milk for schoolchildren and ending the tyranny of the trade unions.

Thatcher was the first Prime Minister of the 20th century to have won three general elections with their own party forming their government, and the first female Prime Minister ever. She was chosen by the people as their Prime Minister on three separate occasions, with large margins. Whilst there is no denying that she was a divisive figure, she won 42.7% support in 1987, her final general election.

So she deserves a State funeral.

However, it is just as arguable that Tony Blair - who also won three general elections with a large majority - should have a State funeral as well. And why not? I detest him and what he has done/caused to be done to this country, but I don’t begrudge him that. Why? Because I’m not riven with class hatred like some.

Let’s just hope that neother of them die for a good long time yet, anyway.

Not Great Press For Cycling

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cyclist-crashed-bike

Cyclists are killing, being killed, and having sex problems according to the media.

Two of them could very easily be prevented in the future through the clever application of a very simple thing called cycle lanes - alongside both pedestrians and motorists waking up and paying attention. And not parking in them, as I have seen so many people do.

Too many pedestrians pay absolutely no attention to cyclists and put themselves in danger by walking out right in front of them. And most motorists pay no attention to cyclists and are more more bothered with being right up behind the car in front and saving themselves about five seconds. All with absolutely no thought about the cyclist.

There’s also the idiocy that is “traffic calming”. Speed bumps - especially those ones in the middle of the road - and chicanes put cyclists in often mortal danger because motorists are too busy avoiding/dealing with them to pay attention to other road users. This is a known fact - but because of the obsession with “traffic calming”, cyclists are injured and killed.

Until cycle lanes are compulsory on all roads, cyclists will kill and be killed.

Oh, and as for the sex thing? Absolutely no problems here. ;)

The Death Penalty - Simply Inhumane

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Michael Portillo is investigating how to kill a human being. He is looking for a humane execution technique.

Surely a humane execution technique is a contradiction in terms? How can killing an otherwise healthy person possibly be called humane in any way?! A “humane” execution is simply not possible, whether it is conducted by a state with judicial approval or by an individual. Either way, it simply cannot be described as “humane”.

No matter how fast the death may be, it is still not “humane” - the waiting etc. in themselves make that impossible.

I can’t see how the death penalty is in any way acceptable in a modern, civilised, society. If just one innocent person is killed, the entire system is undermined. We can never be so technologically advanced as to have complete proof of guilt.

The death penalty is immoral and inhumane in itself. There is and cannot be any “humane” way of killing, either by the state or by an individual. No matter the method used. The idea of a “humane death penalty” is simply a contradiction in terms.

[And the pro-death penalty lobby in America is comprised of a bunch of nutters. It's also massively ironic that those who consider themselves "pro-life" (ie. anti-abortion) tend also to be those who are pro-death penalty. Idiots.]

Making A Choice

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A young Jehovah’s Witness has died after refusing a blood transfusion after giving birth to twins. It is, obviously, a terribly sad occasion for the entire family, especially since it should have been such a joyous one.

But they - and she - made a choice, their choice, with the full knowledge of the dangers. We can say that it is stupid etc. all we like, but the choice can only be made by her, her husband, and her immediate family. It is not up to us to approve or disapprove of their perfectly legitimate life choices. They have chosen to follow a particular faith that does not allow blood trandfusion, and chose to die rather than break it - a decision that I am sure was not taken lightly.

She, and they, amde their choice. We can certainly consider it wrong and stupid - and I do. But it was her choice to make, not mine or anyone elses. She had chosen to sign a piece of paper refusing any blood transfusion, and no-one has the right to break that, except maybe her husband if she was incapable at that point in time.

What if she had been given a blood tranfusion? How would she have felt if her right to choose to refuse treatment was overruled? We don’t know - but her husband and family might. And they chose not to break her wishes.

Her body, her faith, her life, her choice.

Source: BBC

Cycling: Healthy Unless It Kills You

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I can’t even act shocked at this:

Cyclists and motorbikers are at far greater risk of being killed on the roads than previously admitted by the Government, according to figures released to The Times…
[P]edal cyclists are three or four times more likely to be killed than pedestrians.
The higher risk of death on bicycles is especially embarrassing since the Government is committed to increasing cycling because it “promotes good health”.
The discrepancies arise because of the different ways figures can be collated. The Department publishes fatality statistics based on deaths per kilometre travelled. This makes faster modes of transport, which are used for longer journeys, look safer…
There are 153.45 deaths per 100 million by motorcycle, 13.05 by bicycle and 3.68 on foot. (The Times)

Cycling is dangerous because motorists don’t pay any attention to them. The number of cars who have come so very very close to knocking me off my bike is legion, and buses are just as bad - if not worse - since their very size makes them far more dangerous when driven badly. As too many are.

It really doesn’t help that most cycle lanes are next to useless. They are almost all in the wrong place, plonked down where the road is wide enough for a bike anyway, just so that the council can claim to have this much cycle lane. This means that the areas in which cycle lanes are actually needed rarely have them. The worst kind of cycle lanes imaginable are those that go onto the pavement - dangerous both to the pedestrians and, since they are almost always designed about as well as a two-legged tripod, to the cyclist when he tries to regain the road.

Also, cars rarely leave enough space for a cyclist to get down the inside whenever there is a traffic jam - like in every rush hour - forcing cyclists to take risks by cycling on the right hand side or taking to the pavement. And then there are the idiots who park in cycle lanes.

Of course, it’s not all the fault of motorists. Cyclists have to look out for their own safety - and jumping a reed light is an annoying and potentially fatal habit of many. Cyclists need to use their own brains and take responsibility for their own travelling.

I don’t blame motorists, but do I think that, as a whole, they need to be more considerate of cyclists. Remember that they can’t move as fast as you. Pay attention to them - we move around drains and potholes that you can’t even see. And be courteous - you can make up any time you lose behind a cyclists in seconds. We can’t make up the time we lose because you’re too damn inconsiderate to leave enough space for cyclists to pass you in a queue.

Source: The Times

Obligatory Diana Post

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A decade ago, a woman was killed in a car crash in Paris. This caused extreme outpourings of “grief” from people who had never even met the woman, let alone actually had any sort of relationship with her. And this has led to what Cranmer has referred to as to the “Dianaification” of society:

Dianification: the seeking of a shared and public grief at any given opportunity; the idea that a method of mourning is driven more by selfishness and secularism than by sincerity of emotion; corporate emoting; cumulative and protracted obsession with feelings and intuition.

I don’t like the absurd lengths to which it seems necessary to go with the demonstration of grief at any public - or just publicised - death. They are just people, and people die every day in every way. Unless you actually knew the individual, there is really no excuse for such overt demonstrations. It’s fine to feel sorrow at the loss of a life - we all do - but there is a line, which has been passed at seemingly every single opportunity since that event a decade ago today.

When she died in that car crash, I was 12. I remember mainly being annoyed at the way that the death of just one woman had completely taken over the airwaves, obliterating everything else than had been planned to be shown. And neither was it just for one day. I remember it went on for the best part of a week!

Diana the woman was not as saintly as he has been made out to be in the decade since her death. I know that it is the natural response - to erase the natural faults of a person in order to idolise them better, “never speak ill of the dead” as the saying goes. But the sanctification of Diana has come with the demonisation of Charles and Camilla, primarily along the whole “they committed adultery” line. But Diana did too. Maybe not until after Charles had, but she still did it. She is by no means a completely innocent partner in their break-up.

I hope that after the memorial service today that the ghost of Diana will finally be put to rest. Let it be over, for everyone’s sake, not least that of her sons. She is dead, and has been dead for an entire decade.

Camilla Should Go

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Camilla shouldn’t have been pretty much forced not to go to the memorial service for Diana.

Camilla had faced mounting criticism after accepting an invitation to the event on Friday - 10 years after the princess died in a Paris car crash - including a call from Diana’s best friend, Rosa Monckton, that she stay away.
Yesterday the duchess announced she would not be attending, saying she did not want to “divert attention” from the princess.
The change came following an impassioned plea from Miss Monckton, who said that the princess would have been “astonished” that Camilla - who the princess famously described as the “third person” in her marriage - was one of the “Guests of Honour” at the service. (The Telegraph)

Camilla was invited by Princes William and Harry. They asked her to go to the memorial service. What possible business is it of one of Diana’s friends if her sons want their father’s wife to go? Since they don’t blame her the break-up of their parent’s marriage, on what grounds does anyone else have the right to? They are the ones it affected more than anyone else.

Since Camilla was invited and asked to go by William, Harry and Charles, she should go. Ignore those “friends of Diana”, who basically claim that Camilla is evil incarnate, and do it. It wouldn’t “overshadow” the memorial service in reality - unless certain people came out to condemn for doing what her stepsons want her to.

Source: The Telegraph - article 1, article 2

Stop This Obscene Outpouring Of "Grief"

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Yet another example of an outpouring of grief taken into absurdity with the inclusion of celebrities:

Players from Everton Football Club have paid tribute to Rhys Jones during a visit to the scene where the 11-year-old was murdered in Merseyside.
The squad laid flowers, a shirt and boots at the makeshift shrine to the youngster outside the Fir Tree pub in Croxteth, Liverpool.
Rhys, an Everton season ticket holder, was shot outside the pub on Wednesday…
Everton captain Phil Neville urged people to help the police catch the youngster’s killer.
“We are here today to pay our respects and appeal to anyone to come out and give information about the person who did this terrible thing…
Rhys was an 11-year-old lad and massive Evertonian. We just hope this thing never happens again.”(BBC)

Yes, it is tragic when someone - anyone - dies, but they do so every day. People, even 11-year-old boys, die every day and in every way.

The way that a few of these are picked up and exploited - by the media, politicians, and general public - can really be quite sickening. Why does Rhys deserve more than any other 11-year-old whose life is brutally cut short? Why does the search of Madeleine McCann get so much more media attention than many of the other missing children? The same question can be asked about all of the other media stories of this ilk - Damilola Taylor, Stephen Lawrence, et al. The answer is the same for all of them - nothing makes them more deserving. The only difference is that their deaths/disappearances got into the news.

This outpouring of, and wallowing in, grief just revolts me. Yes it is tragic. but where is the traditional British stiff upper lip? What happened to grieving in private and getting on with your life? Especially when you didn’t even know the deceased.

Source: BBC

He Was A Serial Killer. RIP?

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“A serial killer who modelled himself on the horror-film character Freddy Krueger has killed himself in a top-security mental hospital.
Daniel Gonzalez was found in a pool of blood by staff at Broadmoor in Berkshire after he used a broken CD to cut his wrists.The 26-year-old schizophrenic was jailed for life in 2004 for killing four people in three days in London and Sussex.
Gonzalez… was described by psychiatrists as one of the hospital’s most dangerous inmates… He showed no remorse and told police that he was “on a mission to kill as many people as possible”.” (The Times)

I’m not at all sorry that a man who killed four people in three days and showed no remorse, and declaring that he was “on a mission to kill as many people as possible” is dead. But we should neither have the death sentence, because it could easily kill an innocent person, or ‘encourage’ or even allow prisoners kill themselves if we possibly can.

It would be very easy to suggest that serial killer should be ‘allowed’ to take their own lives - they’re in prison on a life sentence without parole, so why shouldn’t they be able to commit suicide if they wish? But having this as even an unofficial policy is a step along the slippery slope towards corporal and capital punishment. Every reasonable attempt should be made to prevent suicide from occurring - but of course it is neither affordable or even possible to make suicide impossible, and especially not if suicidal tendencies have not been seen. Suicide should not be ‘easy’ in prison. But it should be as hard as finances and practicalities allow.

And should Gonzalez rest in peace? Hell, no.

Image made with the help of the Tombstone Generator
Source: The Times