HAPPY BRITISH KILLMAS
Britons
struggle to financially support millions of benefit bandits pouring in from
Africa and the Middle East. Meanwhile, cold weather-related deaths in the UK
have hit a 15-year high, shocking official figures show.
Last
winter saw the highest number of hypothermia casualties since the turn of the
millennium. Those
worst affected are the White elderly who face a eat or heat dilemma.
British
workers throughout their working lives forfeit 48% in taxes every penny they
earn. For 50 working years, the government is a burden to them. Past their
sell-by date, the wage-slaves are worn out. Having nothing else to give the
retired become a burden on the government. The colder the weather gets the
greater relief in parliament.
78
per cent of parliamentarians are multi-millionaires and will not suffer
cold-related illnesses.
There
were almost 44,000 premature British deaths between December and March last
year, the largest annual rise in such figures for almost five decades. In
2012/13 there were 31,000 extra coffins filled by early culled
pensioners.
Experts
said the failure of the flu vaccine last year, which was only effective in 3 per
cent cases, was one of the key factors behind the deaths. Charities raised
concerns that the death toll could rise this year. This winter, Britain’s 300
plus crematoria will struggle to cope.
The
report from the Office of National Statistics shows the number of premature
deaths in 2014/15 was the highest since 1999/00, with 27 per cent more people
dying of hypothermia in the winter months compared with the non-winter
months. There
were more than twice as many excess winter deaths than the previous year when
there were 17,460
winter deaths. The
151 per cent rise is the biggest annual increase since 1967.
The
number of deaths began to climb in December 2014 and peaked on 1 January 2015
with New Year’s Day seeing the number of excess deaths a third higher than
average.
January
saw major failings across the health service, with at least 14 hospitals
declaring major incidents as they became unable to cope with the number of
patients arriving at Accident and Emergency departments.