On
some days it feels like everything one holds dear is under assault.
The BBC liberals think a terrorist attack in St Petersburg is a Putin
false flag; there is a preponderance of lies about abrupt climate
change.
And
ssometimes it gets personal.
New Zealand has a new PM – neo-liberal, reactionary Catholic,Bill English who is putting his own stamp on the government.
In
one day he has ruled out an investigation in to war crimes in
Afghanstan committed by New Zealand's SAS and has ruled out
legalising medical cannabis despite 97% being in favour in an
informal newspaper poll.
We are now living in a police state where heartlessness rules the day.
In the old days if a tetraplegic is found with cannabis that he needs to control his pain your community copper would likely overlook it as a victimless crime (perhaps not!)
But now the police have no resources to investigate burglaries or even assaults but they have plenty of resources and time - not to mention motivation, to go after elderly folk or steal pain meds from a helpless tetraplegic.
I am VERY ANGRY today.
Tetraplegic left bed-bound
after breakdown with
caregiver agency
A
worried Auckland mother has been left scrambling to help her
tetraplegic son after his caregiver agency pulled its service with no
notice.
3
April, 2017
In
a move that's been described by those in the industry as "extremely
unusual", ACC-funded agency Life Plus pulled its caregiver out
of Kellie Aitchison's home on Thursday evening.
Aitchison's
25-year-old son, Ben Clifford, has been a tetraplegic since breaking
his neck after a dive into a friend's swimming pool went wrong in
2015.
Since
then Clifford has required 24-hour care - a contract given to Life
Plus.
But
that service came to an abrupt end on Thursday.
First
the Aitchison family home had a visit from police, who came to
confiscate Clifford's large cannabis supply - a drug he uses to
control his pain.
He
had hoped the supply would see him through the rest of the year.
ACC,
Life Plus, Clifford's caregivers and anyone else associated with his
well-being knew about his cannabis use, Clifford said, as it helped
control his spasms and muscle pain.
"It
can mean the difference for me not being able to drive my powerchair,
to being able to drive it."
Aitchison
said a couple of hours after the police left, the caregiver at their
Dairy Flat home got a phone call from her manager to leave
immediately. After several calls the carer eventually left, in tears,
having to leave Clifford with no one at his side
I
can't believe they've done this, they've just gone," Aitchison
told the Heraldtoday.
The
family have been left flummoxed as to what's happened, she said, and
have only been told it was due to "health and safety reasons".
"Ben Clifford and daughter Alizay, 6. Ben has been left without a carer after Life Plus pulled their services without warning on Thursday. Photo/Doug Sherring
But
both Aitchison and Clifford say neither the carers, or anybody else,
have anything to worry about.
Aitchison
said she has had concerns for some time about the level of help
they've been getting.
"We
had two to three regulars which were great and Ben's had them for
pretty much the whole time," she said.
"But
the ones they were sending in [recently] didn't know how to hoist,
didn't know how to turn him over, they don't know how to do anything.
Some of them don't even speak English."
The
family contacted ACC on Friday, she said, which told her to call an
ambulance so Clifford could be taken to hospital and spend the
weekend there.
However,
Aitchison said they'd tried that before and the hospital hadn't been
able to provide the level of care her son needed.
"You've
got to have the right mattress, you need someone staying with him 24
hours. They just leave [him] in the room," she said.
"That's
not care for him. That's not the right care. He can't even push a
buzzer [to request help]."
The
past three days had been stressful for the whole family, especially
Clifford.
"I'm
stressed as. I'm worried," he said.
"I'm
worried for my skin because I don't want it to break. I'm worried
that I won't be able to get to my physio appointments on Tuesdays and
Thursdays.
"I've
had broken skin before and I had to stay in bed for two weeks until
it healed and I just really don't want to go through that again. ..
that's what happens if you're left on your back or your side and not
turned."
Prince Harry met Ben Clifford at the Auckland Spinal Rehabilitation Centre in May last year. Photo/File
Clifford
is also a father to 6-year-old Alizay who had also been stressed by
what happened.
"When
I got the phone call and Life Plus told me, she was standing there,"
he said.
"I
was shocked and she saw my reaction and started to freak out a little
bit. But I just tried to calm her down afterwards and tell her that
it will be all right."
Although
she was young, she had been a great support for him, both physically
and mentally, Clifford said.
Hans
Wouters, chief executive of New Zealand Spinal Trust, said it was
"extremely unusual" for a carer to be pulled from a job
with no prior warning given to the family.
"The
only time you would ever pull someone out would be in an extreme
situation where you thought there would be an extreme danger, like
weapons or anything where the carer is in danger. It is extremely
unusual in New Zealand."
Standard
procedure is for the client to be notified the carer service is
intending to withdraw and a transition plan put in place, Wouters
said.
Life
Plus general manager Michelle Batchelor declined to comment on the
situation.
"No
comment, this is part of an ongoing police investigation," she
said in an email to the Herald.
Police
confirmed they visited a Silverdale address last week. Inquiries in
relation to the visit are ongoing.
ACC
will respond this morning
Despite 97% of people wanting reform to allow medical cannibis English ('NZ') does not want a 'marijuana industry'
English (National) opposes cannabis law change
Bill
English has confirmed that he and National by association oppose
cannabis law reform, speaking to Duncan Garner this morning on
Newshub’s morning programme:
NZ doesn’t want ‘marijuana industry’ – English
“We don’t want an official marijuana industry. We’re not going to be legalising it.”
The
headline says ‘NZ doesn’t want’ but I think the ‘we’ that
English is referring to is the National led Government, which means
the National Party opposes any law change.
English
is less staunch in his position on medical cannabis.
Speaking to The AM Show on Monday, Prime Minister Bill English said there’s already a “compassionate” and legal route for patients to get cannabis products – if they need them.
“The minister’s just changed the rules so that’s a little bit easier, with the Ministry of Health now approving it instead of each one going to the minister.
“As far as we can see, that’s going to work pretty well and we don’t want to take it any further.”
He fears increasing access to medical products based on cannabis will increase recreational use.
“We just think the long-term damage of large-scale use of marijuana is pretty bad.”
The
‘we’ again I think meaning ‘National’ – or at least a
majority of the National caucus. Younger National MPs like Nikki Kaye
and Chris Bishop are likely to have a more pragmatic and progressive
view.
The
minister that English refers to is not a National MP, it is Peter
Dunne, who has pushed medical use as far as he probably can within
the current laws. And…
Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne says he would welcome trials of other products here in New Zealand, but our market is too small.
“We need manufacturers with product to say ‘we would like to trial these formulations in New Zealand’, and the sad truth is that for many of those manufacturers they do not see New Zealand as a sufficiently large market to make it worthwhile,” he told The Nation.
“It’s the same story we have for clinical trials generally, but there’s no prohibition for sourcing cannabis for medical trials in New Zealand.”
That’s
all he is able to do, promote possibilities under current law.
English
and others in National won’t allow any law changes.
It
will require either a change of Government or a change of generation
in the National caucus to get any cannabis law changes.
Unless
Dunne and David Seymour are able to negotiate a coalition deal with
National that sorts out a mess of a cannabis situation
And despite all the evidence English rules out an investigation into war crimes committed in Afghanistan by the SAS
PM trusting military's word 'a joke' - Hager
Investigative journalist
Nicky Hager has accused Prime Minister Bill English of joining "a
seven-year cover-up" by refusing to hold an inquiry into a 2010
raid in Afghanistan.
Mr
Hager and Jon Stephenson's book Hit & Run claims six civilians
were killed in a raid on two Afghan villages involving New Zealand's
SAS in 2010.
Mr
English yesterday ruled out an inquiry after being briefed by the
Chief of Defence, Lieutenant General Tim Keating, and watching video
footage of the operation shot by some of the aircraft involved.
But
Mr Hager said it was "a joke" for Mr English to trust the
military's word.
"These
are the people who are in trouble, so of course they don't want an
inquiry ... No experienced minister should fall for that."
He
said the Prime Minister was being "irresponsible" by simply
accepting the "selective information" he was shown.
Going after the elderly....Susan Austen (known as Suzie to me) is a very caring individual who has other people's interests at heart has had extra charges thrown at her.
If I can I will be there to supprt her.
Susan Austen in court on euthanasia drug charges
24 March, 2017
Supporters
of Susan Austen outside the Wellington District Court at an earlier
court appearance.
The
charges against a woman accused of importing a euthanasia drug
have been further postponed while another unspecified charge is
laid.
Susan
Dale Austen, 66, a Lower Hutt teacher, was charged in October, 2016,
with having twice imported a controlled drug
pentobarbitone.
At
the Wellington District Court on Friday Judge Ian Mill remanded her
on bail to appear in court again on April 7.
Austen's
lawyer, Donald Stevens, QC, consented to the delay.
Police
prosecutor Carmen Stewart said another charge would be laid for
Austen's next appearance.
A
large group of supporters were at court with Austen.
The
Independent Police Conduct Commission launched an investigation into
complaints police used a vehicle checkpoint operation to
identify people who had been to an Exit Wellington meeting in
early October, 2016. Exit Wellington is a pro-voluntary euthanasia
group.
For background see this -
Elderly raided for suicide drugs as police conduct anti-euthanasia operation
Two
elderly Wellington women with suicide drugs have been pounced on by
police, who are conducting a national operation thought to be
targeting a euthanasia group.
Police
have confirmed a Lower Hutt woman was arrested and faces two charges
of importing a class C drug as part of an "ongoing
investigation".
It
is understood a second elderly woman was also involved in the October
7 raid, part of what police are calling Operation Painter, and that
one of the women spent the night in a police cell.....
Police
have repeatedly refused to say what the drug was, the age of the
arrested woman, or when she would appear in court. They have also
refused to comment on claims they had got hold of Exit's membership
list and were working their way through it....
He
said it appeared a police task force had "infiltrated"
Exit, whose members have an average age of 75, as they cracked down
on people wanting the option of dying on their own terms
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.