THE LAST DITCH

 

The video is a little ropey but please persist and view the whole thing. As ever, Dr Anthony Daniels (aka Theodore Dalrymple) is both interesting and darkly amusing.

He reports that, under a threat of violence (50% of doctors have been assaulted in the last 12 months) most general practitioners in Britain are routinely filling out fraudulent certificates enabling fit individuals to go "on the sick" where benefits are 60% higher than for unemployment and there is no need to pretend to seek work. More than 2.5 million people have such certificates and he claims that "the great majority of them are fraudulent or at least untruthful." More than a million people have them for "depression and anxiety" alone. He comments wrily that it is an achievement of the British welfare state that it has "created more invalids than the First World War".

Another achievement of the British welfare state is an enormous growth in heroin use. In the 1950s, when heroin addicts were registered with the Home Office, there were known to be about 60 in the whole country. It is now thought that there are about 300,000. He describes an official ideology that heroin addiction is a sickness beyond the addicts' control, which renders them unable to work and drives them to crime. An ideology he says is "completely and obviously wrong."

Every user chose freely to take heroin the first time and most use it intermittently for up to a year before beginning to take it regularly. Most users live in a sub-culture in which the consequences of taking heroin are far better known, as he puts it, than "the dates of the Second World War".

He says it's untrue that medical or other support is necessary to give up heroin. He jokingly calls Mao Zedong "the greatest drug therapist in history" because he told China's heroin addicts that if they didn't give it up he would shoot them. 20 million duly did. Without recommending such a radical approach, he points out that this clearly proves a "conceptual difference between, say, rheumatoid arthritis and drug addiction." Mao's approach, after all, would not have "cured" the former.

For so long as users don't give up heroin he says that's no reason for them not to work. Research shows that in the fifties most American addicts worked normally and indeed most of our own users now lead very active working lives – except that their "work" is burglary.

The growth in heroin use is therefore driven, he seems to suggest, by the needs of the "bureaucracy of care" serving the addicts. Its members need a passive population that takes no personal responsibility in order to secure their jobs. He believes that "at some level" these public employees know full well that they are playing games. In his words;

I would say the addiction services need the addicts more than the addicts need the services.

That's a more shocking critique of welfarism from an insider that I would ever have dared to offer from the outside. To suggest that an army of "carers" has, in effect, steadily built heroin use from 60 to 300,000 to give themselves jobs seems so wicked as to be scarcely believable. But then who would have thought the learned members of our medical profession could be recruited to knowing, if not willing, participation in frauds worth billions of pounds?

For all that its servants justify their jobs by droning on about the supposed immorality and greed of their bogeymen in business, only the state, ladies and gentlemen, can corrupt on such a massive scale.

17 responses to “The British welfare state has created more invalids than the Great War”

  1. Moggsy Avatar
    Moggsy

    This is horrifying. I am hoping this big increase is some sort of empire building feedback thingy and mot conciously deliberate. Awful.

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  2. james higham Avatar

    Nothing like a an organization to induce a condition.

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  3. Martin Avatar
    Martin

    Thatcher made nearly five million unemployed , then the country was flooded with heroine . Coincidence or genocide . As for choice , there were no foundries , heavy industries or many other forms of work or income . I know I was there . The legacy every council estate in Britain has a heroine problem . It is getting better though . A British man will make friends through the labour of his hands . Choice there was none .

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  4. Moggsy Avatar
    Moggsy

    Not genocode I think.
    Isn’t genocide the intentional systematic destruction (or attempt) of an ethnic, racial, religious or maybe national group.
    Unemployment does not really fit and drug addiction isn’t especially limited to such groups. If you really mean to use the word then I think you cheapen the horror of it and do no one any service.

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  5. David Davis Avatar

    Well, dear old fellow, here’s a solution. When I have become your War Secretary, and war begins at home just like charity ought to have done, I will have my ministry’s “executive department” deal with all the crack-addicts in the “services departments”, that depend on the real addicts being maximised.
    Our people in my “secretariat” will have them “resettled” to exciting places. In these places there will be no food, no shelter, no firewood, no plant-materials-suitable-for-textile-conversion, and no anials able to be reliably hunted for meat.
    The amusement will come from satellite-viewing of how quickly the bastards start to butcher and eat each other.
    Please also remember that I am a libertarian and also the blogmaster of the Libertarian alliance. This does not mean that God forces me, or indeed even other libertarians, who might choose to co-operate with my suggested plans, to be merciful to our GramscoFabiaNazi enemies, who have all known what they have been doing for decades, have willingly prosecuted their objectives, deliberately, and mean to win. I did not sign up to be a libertarian, many years ago now, in order to give quarter and mercy to the enemies of good kinds of modern civilisations and societies.
    If you want a better example of how GramscoFabiaNazis use and corrupt and destroy individuals for their own ends, look no further than the one you have just outlined.

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  6. Martin Avatar
    Martin

    You said it . It was systematic , destruction of a certain class of people
    A whole army in fact the grandsons and granddaughters of of men who
    fought for the likes of you . If you think the horrors of heroin addiction are cheap then you obviously live in a very sheltered world . They also expanded
    The prison system to cope . And look where we are . Well I’m glad your alright Jack and that the systems looking out for you . The devil makes work for idol hands . Now you get back to clicking your computer keys because the ones who would got out there and fought are gone or locked up .

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  7. Martin Avatar
    Martin

    Mate you obviously don’t need drugs . Your high off of evil .

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  8. Antisthenes Avatar
    Antisthenes

    Developed nations have done a very curious thing they have ditched free market capitalism and libertarianism in favour of socialist policies and practices. Capitalism brought prosperity and a reasonable form of democracy so we ditched it while many socialist nations have ditched that system in favour of capitalism. The result has been for developed nations to become poorer and less democratic they have set up a form of government that can best be described a technocracy and idiocracy a quasi-communist system. It is pretty reasonable to assume that developing nations will eventually achieve that which developed nations have now abandoned. What is being described in your article is but a symptom caused by the change in political direction that is currently taking place in the UK and many other places. We will of course at some point pay the price as this new system will collapse under the weight of it’s unsustainability and absurdities as all similar ones have in the past.

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  9. Moggsy Avatar
    Moggsy

    The likes of me? Martin, that sort of comment says much more about you and how you think about people than it does of me.
    According to the internet there are 32,000 “problem drug users” in the uk, including heroin users,
    The population is about 60,975,000 so your heroin users are going to be less than o,ooo5% of the polulation. Or a 10th of the population of a city the size of Cardiff. And we are talking spread over the UK not in one place.
    I guess you forgot but It was you said “a certain class of people” not me.
    The “cide” bit in genocide? That means extermination… killing.
    So I still say you cheapen actual real genocide by using the word to “dramatise” your point.
    And no, I don’t think what Heroin or drug addiction can do is cheap, that is you twisting my words, or just not bothering to listen to them properly in the fist place.
    It’s like you are making up both halves of the conversation in your own head. Well you have fun with that…
    but please pick another word to use.

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  10. Tom Avatar

    You are kidding, right? That’s a very special conspiracy theory right there and it must have taken a special education to come up with it. But then that’s what it’s like with the hard of thinking in this country. Why study, research or think seriously about something when it’s so much easier to blame Thatcher and then abuse anyone who raises an eyebrow at that “insight”.

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  11. Tom Avatar

    That’s not very libertarian David. Just allowing people to face the consequences of their own choices is enough. Lets leave the rounding up and resettlement solutions to the statists.

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  12. Tom Avatar

    The problem is not with capitalism but with democracy. A majority vote is a perfectly good way of picking someone to do a political job, but the scope of that job needs to be limited by clear moral principles. There is quite literally NO legal limit on the power of the government under the British Constitution, which has allowed groups of electors to expand and subvert the state for their own selfish, immoral ends.
    If a majority of those British electors who make the effort to vote decide to kill and eat me, that does not make such cannibalism right. That a majority of them consistently voted to confiscate most of the products of my labour to be spent on them did not make such slavery right.

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  13. Moggsy Avatar
    Moggsy

    Is a majority vote really always a perfectly good way of picking someone to do a political job? Shouldn’t the guy in charge of the purse strings have to at least go to evening classes as well?

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  14. Tom Avatar

    If the voters want idiots (and looking at our elected officials it seems they often do) then so be it. My point is that the scope of their powers should be so limited that their idiocy cannot lead to fundamental damage.

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  15. Tomsmith Avatar
    Tomsmith

    I don’t think constitutional limits work Tom. Look at the US, at what that grand sounding written constitution has given rise to in the present day.
    Some good articles on this subject:
    http://faculty.msb.edu/hasnasj/GTWebSite/MythWeb.htm
    http://theemptiness.info/2010/07/the-constitution-is-empty/

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  16. Tomsmith Avatar
    Tomsmith

    “Don’t fall into the trap of trying to use anything the state has written or created against the state. You will lose, and in doing so you will actually be endorsing the state as some kind of legitimate entity and adding to it’s power. You will be saying that it is the job of the state to solve the problem of the state. So how then can you complain when the state chooses not to end itself?”

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  17. Moggsy Avatar
    Moggsy

    I do agree it would be great to limit politicians power to do harm. But the best you can do is make it difficult for them.
    They will find ways they are sneaky they re-interpret what stuff means. Don’t you know that they want to protect us from organised crime and terrorism. Keep our kids safe.

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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