by the system or if you just see this as politics and sloppiness? how do you see it? i think it is a little bit of a mixture of all the above that you just said. me personally, i felt that i went through that storm of my life. this is the way the criminal justice system is supposed to be. i have to say that i wanted to own up and take accountability for what i did. this is the way the justice system is supposed to be designed. it should be everyone should be held accountable across the board. particularly if even the value, the money value, you know, some of the things that you described with the gun in narcotics. they should be held at the same standard as me or someone else that unfortunately had to go through this. like i said, i want to hold myself accountable.
her mum was elderly and every single wall and door in that home was covered in black mould and damp. and her mum had recently had a stroke, blind, on a hospital bed in the front room. and she told me, she broke down and cried and said, i m worried my mum s going to die in these conditions and i can t help her. and i raised it on social media and within a matter of days she was moved out. and in a few months they were found permanent accommodation which they were so happy with, they had a garden and everything. and she was just so grateful. and i said, don t even thank me, this shouldn t be happening. you shouldn t have gone through this for the last ten years, and it made me feel good. no money value can be put on that. that s the satisfaction i get and why i continue to do what i do. that s the sole reason. it must have brought it all back for you, though. yeah, it did. because i always go back to my dad. i wasn t able to help him, so being able to go through those situations and he
the one i can think of in particular was when it was last year, when i went up to birmingham and i went to visit a tenant who happened to work in the nhs. her mum was elderly and every single wall and door in that home was covered in black mould and damp. and her mum had recently had a stroke, blind, on a hospital bed in the front room. and she told me, she broke down and cried and said, i m worried my mum s going to die in these conditions and i can t help her. and i raised it on social media and within a matter of days she was moved out. and in a few months they were found permanent accommodation which they were so happy with, they had a garden and everything. and she was just so grateful. and i said, don t even thank me, this shouldn t be happening. you shouldn t have gone through this for the last ten years, and it made me feel good. no money value can be put on that. that s the satisfaction i get and why i continue to do what i do. that s the sole reason. it must have brought it
example, a way of redeploying people elsewhere or retraining people? because the question is, isn t it, does modernisation always require job cuts? does modernisation always require “ob cuts? ., , does modernisation always require “ob cuts? . , ., job cuts? certainly there are opportunities job cuts? certainly there are opportunities to job cuts? certainly there are opportunities to redeploy i job cuts? certainly there are - opportunities to redeploy people, thatis opportunities to redeploy people, that is quite clear, in my view. also, we have to recognise that a lot of the people in the areas where we perhaps don t need so many workers have been working there for many years and are potentially near to retirement so there is not necessarily a need for people to lose theirjobs. there are more opportunities, and if we can get to the position where we continue to invest in the railway and make it better money value for taxpayers and then we can afford to invest and provide morejo
Washington [US], January 20 (ANI): A new research has shown that contrary to previous influential research, money does influence an individual's happiness. One potential reason leading to this conclusion could be that higher earners feel an increased sense of control over life.