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ReviewSpot.co.uk
26.6K posts

ReviewSpot.co.uk
@ReviewSpotUK
Individually reviewing all types of products and services.
Hereford, England Katılım Şubat 2018
595 Takip Edilen446 Takipçiler
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Pat McFadden thinks people getting time off when sick or disabled is a problem.
I think Pat McFadden and his ilk are the problem.
Guess how much we paid for him to have a residence closer to work? £40k
Now guess how far from his original home it was?
Right next fucking door…
But he thinks fit notes are the problem…
Sure, Pat. You grifting asshole 🙄

Pat McFadden@patmcfaddenmp
We have worked closely with GPs to see how we can reform the fit note system. The idea is to get real help to people to help with underlying medical conditions. And we want to test all this properly to get it right. bbc.co.uk/news/articles/…
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She Hid 2,500 Jewish Children From the Nazis. When the War Ended, She Went Looking for Their Families. Most of Them Were Gone.
Every morning she got dressed, hid medicine in her coat lining, sewed money into her hem, tucked vaccine doses where no one would find them, and walked through the gates of the Warsaw Ghetto.
The penalty for what she was doing was death.
For her, for anyone who helped her, for anyone who knew. The Nazis had made it simple: one Jewish child hidden, one Polish family executed. That was the deal. That was the world Irena Sendler walked into every single morning, sometimes twice, for years.
The ghetto held 400,000 people. The Nazis fed them 200 calories a day. Children died first. So Irena carried in medicine. Vaccines. Money. Sometimes candy. Sometimes a doll. She knew what a doll meant when everything else had been taken.
Then she started carrying out the children.
Babies sedated and folded into carpenter’s toolboxes. Toddlers hidden in sacks of potatoes. Children old enough to walk, coached to recite Catholic prayers before they stepped out through the church door on the other side of the wall, yellow stars removed, new names already memorized. One baby was five months old. Her name was Elzbieta Ficowska. She was carried out in a carpenter’s box past guards who did not want to think too hard about what a carpenter’s box might contain.
She survived. She grew up. She had no idea, for years, how close she had come to not existing at all.
She saved 2,500 children this way.
And she wrote every single name down. On tissue paper, in code, because she never thought of them as saved. Not fully. Not yet. After the war, she told herself, the parents would come looking. She would be ready.
She buried the names in glass jars beneath an apple tree in a neighbor’s garden.
In October 1943, the Gestapo came for her.
They broke her legs. They beat her for days. They had one question asked a thousand ways: the names. The addresses. Where are the children.
Irena Sendler said nothing.
Not one name. Not one street. Not one child.
She was sentenced to death. The date was set. And then, at the very last moment, Żegota, the underground resistance network she had given everything to, bribed the guards. She was released in a forest, officially listed as executed. She changed her name and kept working.
The war ended in 1945.
She went to the garden. She dug up the jars. She unfolded 2,500 pieces of tissue paper and began searching for the families.
Most of them were gone.
The mothers. The fathers. The grandparents who had pressed their children into her arms at the ghetto door and whispered please. Gone to Treblinka. Gone to ash and silence. The children Irena had saved were alive and completely alone, carrying names given to them by strangers, with no one left who remembered their real ones.
She had kept every name. There was almost no one left to give them to.
Irena Sendler lived until 2008. Ninety-eight years old. For most of that time the world had no idea she existed. It took four teenagers in Kansas, stumbling across a single line in a magazine in 1999, to begin telling her story. They thought it was a misprint. Surely it meant 250. Surely one woman couldn’t have done what the article claimed.
It was not a misprint.
She never called herself a hero. She said she should have done more.
Somewhere right now, someone is laughing with their children, and their children’s children, and they do not know why they are alive. They do not know about the apple tree. The tissue paper. The toolbox. The woman who walked into the ghetto every morning knowing exactly what it would cost her.
And did it anyway.
Sources: USHMM / Yad Vashem / Jewish Women’s Archive / Life in a Jar project.
If this is the kind of story you want more of, you know where to find it.
Great stories, follow Gandalv @Microinteracti1

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NHS survival rates for avoidable deaths 'second-worst' in developed world, 'sobering' report reveals
lbc.co.uk/article/nhs-av…
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Look what we saw at @AngleseyAbbeyNT today, absolutely adorable 😍😍
🦆🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥🐥
Mama Duck & 13 tiny ducklings 💛
#Duckwatch #lovenature #Ducklings
@nationaltrust
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This, this and double this
Clare Turner💙@hct2906
Palantir, the controversial U.S. company working with ICE and the Israeli military, has access to our private data via NHS databases. We need the Government to trigger the break clause on their contract NOW. 🚨Can you sign and share? act.38degrees.org.uk/act/trigger-th…
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Salmon farms release record levels of cancer-causing chemical into lochs
“Salmon-farming firms use formaldehyde as a disinfectant to rid fish of parasites, fungi, and bacteria, but the chemical was classified as a carcinogen in 2016 by the UK Government”
There is no upside to salmon farming - bad for salmon, our health and the environment
thenational.scot/news/25948420.…
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“This is the first time in human history corporations are selling you chocolate that can no longer legally be called chocolate.”
“To classify a product as chocolate, the UK requires at least 20-25% cocoa (only 10% in America). So many popular brands, including a slew of Nestle products, have quietly changed their labels to chocolate flavor coating.
Cacao prices have shot up 250% over the past 3 years, so Big Food has reformulated to more vegetable oils, sugars, and other fillers. Major brands like Hershey, Mondelez, and Barry Callebaut are also cutting back for less cocoa usage.
With input prices rising, there seems to be Either corporations continue to swap real ingredients for fillers to keep prices the same or content is kept similar but the price gets pushed to the consumer.
Watch out for this over the holidays and expect to pay a little more for properly sourced and formulated products.”
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@Morris_claim It wont let me message you. Please email me janicerosser06@aol.com and phone number 07511174833
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@Morris_claim Hi I do follow you back. My email is janicerosser06@aol.com Phone number 07511174833
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Politicians aren’t ‘selling the NHS’ - they’re doing this instead 🚨🚨🚨
open.substack.com/pub/jujuliagra…

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