The quiet heroism of the @RNLI - whose lifeboat crews & lifeguards have saved nearly 150k lives since its foundation in 1824 – deserves our total respect, not the hate of late.
Take this week in St Agnes, North Cornwall, one over-excited dog, & this 300 foot cliff... 😱 (1/n)
On Wed evening, the waves were high & the atmosphere wild.
Kids and adults alike were shrieking with delight in the surf.
Rupert the dog, a golden retriever, was pretty intoxicated himself as he chased a ball along the coastal footpath... (2/n)
Owners Katie & James watched in horror as Rupert chased his ball straight over the cliff edge.
“We shouted for him to stop but before we knew it, he went for it and tumbled head over tail down the cliff face," said Katie. (3/n)
😱😱😱
Local @RNLI area manager Steve Instance, here on the beach, told me there have been many casualties over this clifftop - none have survived the drop.
Rupert had almost certainly perished. (4/n)
The St Agnes @RNLI lifeboat was scrambled at 8.33pm and launched just 8 minutes later.
Volunteer lifeboat helm, Tom Forehead, said, “With a fall of that nature, it’s fair to say we were expecting the worst."
But... (5/n)
The hapless hound, who had just plummeted 300 feet into the sea, was alive!
"We were delighted to find Rupert frightened but OK. He was tucked in the back of the small cave on the beach, so two of our crew waded over to him and brought him back to the lifeboat." (6/n)
This story is shared with permission & @RNLI are keen to stress that dog owners should keep dogs on leads on cliff paths (& that, if your dog falls, don't attempt to reach it but call 999 & ask for the Coastguard). (7/n)
But the point for me is this.
Every day, on our coastlines and inland, *thousands* of volunteers are doing their bit to keep our waters safe for people in peril and even, occasionally, the odd kamikaze dog.
People like Jill here, in St Agnes (8/n)
Or like Steve, whose Cornish parents were both volunteer lifeguards, and who became one himself when aged only 16.
You don't do this for fame or riches or glory. You do it because you want to help people in need & in danger. (9/n)
The @RNLI, in short - this remarkable network of volunteers, fundraisers, unpaid lifeguards & lifeboat crews who risk their lives to save others - are the absolute best of us. The kindest, most decent, most admirable best of us.
If anyone felt like supporting true bravery not keyboard warriors, proper kindness not Twitter cynicism, decency not racism, love not hate.... you can donate to the @RNLI here.
92% of their donations comes from ordinary members of the public 💙 (ends)
Last comment - the official @RNLI verdict on Rupert is that he is clearly not a normal dog, he's a cat dog.
Last, last comment.
During WW2, my dear granddad was a doctor on a Royal Naval destroyer defending the North Atlantic convoys. His ship once rescued the crew of a torpedoed German U-boat.
I still remember him telling me, as a child: "They were souls in the sea. So we helped."
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Knowing that Michael Gove plans to “re-engineer the whole NHS” really does make my blood run cold. (1/4) thetimes.co.uk/article/7983b4…
Gove seriously claims here that “data analytics” are the key to addressing waiting lists of 5 million. No mention of 12 years of underfunding - which, of course, is what created those waiting lists. (2/4)
He wants to his theme. And technology is indeed wonderful. But underfunding, understaffing & a deliberate decade-long degradation of our NHS is what’s created those horrendous waiting lists. (3/4)
Today @matthancock will attempt to persuade the Commons that he's behaved impeccably throughout this pandemic - and that Cummings’ accusations of serial lying are, themselves, a lie.
But the fact is, @matthancock *has* lied during the pandemic - and I can prove it. (1/16)
At the end of March 2020, the government rhetoric was all about “protecting” care homes, even as care home workers appeared on social media reporting their terror at being provided with no PPE whatsoever. (2/16)
At the time, I was working as a hospice doctor. Although hospices are classified as ‘hospitals’ in terms of clinical governance, when it comes to PPE they are counted as ‘care homes.” I.e: in supply chain terms, we were the lowest priority, just like care homes. (3/16)
To those who (understandably) see the huge potential health benefits of mining a vast NHS dataset - yes, absolutely, this could do enormous good. But you simply cannot use individual medical data without informed consent. This is a rushed, sneaky, non-transparent data grab.
Of course we’re meant to be reassured by @NHSX that all data will be anonymised. But data breaches have occurred before, notably in 2014. And if it’s all so benign, why the rush, why the secrecy, why the lack of transparency? Harvesting health records on the sly is wrong.
The elephant in the room throughout Cummings' testimony is precisely how Whitty, Vallance & others were advising the PM last March. On 12 Mar they abandoned test & trace *and* said shielding was not yet necessary.
On self-isolation of elderly and infirm, Whitty stated on camera on 12 Mar: "While we will need to move to that stage, we do not think this is the right moment along the pandemic to do so. But that point will come."
Incredibly, on 12 Mar the *only* advice aimed specifically at protecting those over 70 & with pre-existing health conditions was not to go on cruises.