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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • Thank you for the correct link, much appreciated.

    Completely agree the 2030 target is electricity, not the entire economy.

    For me the key paragraph is in the middle of this section, emphasis mine:

    I know some like Extinction Rebellion will lecture me on carbon capture investment. They’ll say it isn’t the right choice.

    But it’s working people who come first. Without this tech, heavy industries such as cement, glass-making and chemicals will risk having to down tools.

    The Budget in a few weeks’ time will be about fixing the foundations and continuing to show a decisive break from the past

    The jobs of brickies, sparkies and engineers — the backbone of Britain — will be risked.

    That means fewer new homes, fewer new roads and a slow decline to the dark ages.

    These are not impossible industries to decarbonise, but they are very difficult especially with stuff like cement.

    Back to your original reply, I don’t think it’s a fair reading of the manifesto to say they promised more than 2030 for electricity and ~2050 for the economy.

    Yes I want this to be faster, I’m still pissed off that the £34bn/year for retrofitting, etc, has been watered down multiple times, but - so far - nothing from the manifesto has been scraped.

    Come the budget at the end of the month, I may very well be wrong, and very angry.

    Edit on budget day: I wasn’t.



  • The comment I originally replied to was asking about removal of appetite. The point I was making was that appetite isn’t the only reason people consume calories.

    The jabs do not cause you to exercise, and losing weight without some level of exercise to build fitness is also not healthy.

    The point Streeting is making is that you can’t just eat to excess and expect, 20 years later, that the NHS can fix all your problems with an injection.

    It’s the same way that alcoholics are not given liver or kidney transplants, or smokers new lungs, because even if you did the transplants all the other problems (cancers, etc) would still exist.

    Primary healthcare is really complicated because you’re dealing with people who are generally speaking not at the worse bit, yet, and so patient’s motivation to consider, let alone make, changes can be non-existent.

    This in turn is what makes a preventative healthcare model so much harder to achieve. The best way to treat T2 diabetes is to not get there in the first place, but friends of mine routinely have conversations with patients where their likelihood of having T2D, or stroke, heart attack, etc, is very high within the next 5 years, and are met with blunt refusals to even consider something as trivial as a lower calorie butter/spread, and instead just demand a jab.

    This is not everyone, but it is a significant proportion, and it’s right the Health Secretary to remind people that while the NHS does exist, and will support you if you get there, that it’s better for yourself to not end up there in the first place.