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Connie Botke's avatar

I am retired critical care nurse, started my nursing career in 1973, retired in 2015. I will be ever grateful to my profession, the changes I saw in those years was phenomenal . The atmosphere of working together however slowly disintegrated, by the time I retired the writing was on the wall. We went from a cohesive, well run unit to one plagued with management cuts, intrusiveness by management and an attitude of “ if you don’t like it , don’t let the door hit you on the way out!” Fortunately, or unfortunately, I retired before Covid hit, actually thought about going back because I KNEW what my fellow nurses were facing. As we all know, it’s been a gradual decline in care, services, and I am so grateful I had my time when I did. My heart goes out to every single medical professional trying to do what they were trained to do. All I know, if you have someone in hospital, make sure someone is with them. Especially if they cannot advocate for themselves😞

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Kerry Truchero's avatar

You have eloquently expressed the nature of our greatest socio-economic problem. It is the economic side of a valueless society. Excuse me, I meant to say, a society which has as its sole value the accumulation of wealth. This value is now degrading the idea of productive labor, with the capitalist cost savings achievable by robotics and artificial intelligence. We are a species now rushing headlong into self-destruction by ignoring every common sense metric of happiness. We can't even learn about what is occurring in our world because reporting itself has become subordinate to wealth creation, whose sponsors have decided that knowledge is less lucrative and therefore less valuable than entertainment.

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