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It is appropriate to look at injured people in the same way, because they have the same considerations about providing for the rest of their lives and for their families after they are gone.
How do people access services, particularly out-of-hours services, when they are a long distance away from where they live? A whole range of risks are thrown up by the proposals from the Fife health and social care partnership.
This might remind us that social progress and progress in rights are not a straight line. We have lived our lives with the view that everything is going to get better and people are enlightened, and that has turned out not to be true.
Throughout society—not just in this country but around the world—there has been a sense that women in particular have felt it necessary to live their lives with the expectation that such behaviour is normal.
As far as the article 50 triggering letter was concerned, it certainly did not live up to the ambition that the Prime Minister set for it of arriving at a shared negotiating prospectus.
By getting rid of those services, we are discouraging people from living in our area; importantly, we are also discouraging those who want to settle there.