Category: News

  • Forbidden T&A: Volkswagen introduces Tiguan Track and Avenue for U.K.

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2010 VW Tiguan Track & Avenue – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Another dressed up offering has landed on that island haven for special editions, the UK. This time, it’s the Volkswagen Tiguan Track & Avenue. Called a “very expressive off-roader,” English types will be able to buy it in either “Oryx White Pearl Effect” or “Island Grey Pearl Effect.” Not that you’d take those pretty 19-inch Savannah alloys off-road, but there’s a specially angled front end with a silver skid plate so you can look like you would.

    Inside is lots of amaranth-colored leather in “Heavy Waxy” grade (it looks better than it sounds), along with sport seats and a high-end stereo. Engine choices number four, in both petrol and diesel, topping out at the 200 horsepower 2.0-liter gasoline variant. It will start at €38,225 (a princely $56k USD, but remember – U.K. prices are still higher than that of their U.S. counterparts) for the 2.0-liter TSI diesel with a manual transmission and 170 hp. Read about it in the press release after the jump, and have a look at our gallery of high-res photos below.

    [Source: Volkswagen]

    Continue reading Forbidden T&A: Volkswagen introduces Tiguan Track and Avenue for U.K.

    Forbidden T&A: Volkswagen introduces Tiguan Track and Avenue for U.K. originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 10 Dec 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • What Do J.P. Morgan And Will Smith Have In Common?

    Brooks Brothers
    What do the Vanderbilts, Rockefellers, J.P. Morgan, and Will Smith all have in common?
    They’ve all worn Brooks Brothers suits.
    Did you know that Brooks Brothers introduced the first ready-to-wear suits in America?  It all began in 1818, when two brothers, David and Henry Sands Brooks, opened their shop on the northeast corner of Catherine and Cherry Streets in New York City.  For the last 192 years, Brooks Brothers has dressed generations of families, including political leaders, Hollywood legends, sports greats and military heroes. Generations of Astors, Goulds, Vanderbilts, and Rockefellers have shopped at Brooks Brothers, as well as five generations of Morgans, including J.P. himself. Brooks Brothers’ clothing is an investment: a timeless classic that has set the standard of American success and traditional family style.

    Click here to check out all the great gifts and classic American clothing, for you, your family, and your friends this holiday season.  Plus, get complimentary shipping on all orders of $200 or more!

    http://www.brooksbrothers.com

    Find out more about Sponsor Posts.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • PS3 motion controller named Gem?

    Let’s face it PS3 motion controller is not a verbally convenient thing to say…or type. Sony still hasn’t made an announcement about what they’re gonna call that thing. At least Microsoft gave us a working name

  • Citi Blasts Moody’s Optimism, Says UK’s AAA Rating Is Doomed

    uk

    Two days ago we highlighted Moody’s full report on sovereign AAA ratings, in which the rater was highlighting its own impotence of knowing full well that both the US and UK are unworthy of AAA ratings, yet unable to do anything about this, as a downgrade of either would set of a chain of events that could potentially undo the last year of house of card building by both key governments, who have set off on creating the biggest ponzi scheme in the history of the world, and whose collapse would result in the same social unrest that was expected to happen in the UK if RBS and HBOS were to fail (which presumably was averted by literally last minute action).

    Today, none other than glass house inhabitant Citigroup, which would not be in existence if the true state of financial and economic affairs was disclosed in even one tenth of its magnitude, bashes Moody’s as being, gasp, too optimistic. Citi analyst Mark Schoefield says “in our view the pre-budget report leaves us significantly closer to a negative ratings action by virtue of having done nothing to slow the current pace of deterioration in the fiscal position.”

    Read the whole post at Zero Hedge >>

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  • Health Secretary debates reform plans in Parliament 4

    Personal Care at Home Bill

    Secretary of State for Health Andy Burnham said:

    “There are still huge challenges in the care and support system. The Green Paper sought people’s views on how we resolve those and create a sustainable system for the long term. In our view, those with the greatest needs cannot wait, and we cannot stand still in meeting the challenge of rising costs. Currently, an estimated 80,000 older people in the highest need receive free personal care, but 40,000 pay part of their costs, and 50,000 pay all their costs.

    “Among younger adults, an estimated 90,000 receive free care, while 20 per cent pay all or part of their own costs, so we want to start now with reform, by helping people to live independently for longer in their own homes for free, which is something they tell us they really want.

    “Our Bill will do just that. It will end the postcode lottery in care for those most vulnerable members of our society. Let us not forget that many have already paid significantly out of their own pockets to fund their own care. We are putting forward reforms that support people in their entirety – support for older and disabled people.

    “The crux of what we are building is the power and control that people get in cash benefits-that is at the heart of the national care service.

    “We want to go further. In the Personal Care at Home Bill, we want to build a system that does all it can not just to pick up the pieces when people need help, but that has prevention at its heart. We want to invest resources in re-ablement-services to get people back on their feet and to give them intensive support after illness, an operation or a fall, so that they can live independently at home.

    “Surely the best way forward for care is to invest in prevention, to give people support to live independently at home and, at all times, to support them to live in their home. That is what they tell us that they want.”

    The National Care Service and the NHS

    “It is my judgment that, whatever happens, more money from the health budget will have to be spent closer to the line with social care. That is just the way things will have to go, and that is why I am talking about finding resources from within my Department to fund re-ablement services – intense support to get people back on their feet after a vulnerable or low moment in their lives. Because we do not provide such support at the moment, people end up at the door of the NHS or asking for support from local authorities. We want to expand the level of support.

    “We should also be less precious about spending health resources on equipment and telecare to help people to live in their own homes. That is all part of my vision. We have to break down the approach of the past that has said, “The health service pays for this and councils pay for that”, and we argue about the bit in the middle.

    “This is an ambitious vision and it will not happen overnight. It raises complex and difficult questions that this House needs to consider carefully before proceeding with any reform.

    “The Prime Minister has committed to making social care our top domestic priority in the next Parliament. That shows that we have the ideas, the courage and the confidence to tackle the big issues that the country faces. I believe that the national care service could be a major social reform that will stand alongside some of the major reforms of the last century. It would be easy to say that it is too difficult.

    “We will see this through. If we fail to act, we will make the choices more difficult. The unfairnesses will grow year on year and this post-war generation – it includes people who own their own properties and who will live longer, which is a good thing – will face ever more unfairness than their parents did. These are big challenges. The Government believe that we have the right ideas to address them.”

    The National Care Service and Carers

    Disability Benefits

    Workforce and Quality

    Read the Green Paper here.

    For a full transcript of the debate click here.

  • Google to Help Stop Deforestation of Tropical Areas

    Google may be a leader in Internet technologies, but its success has allowed the company to redirect some of its resources to fund environmental or philanthropic projects through its non-profit arm Google.org. One of its latest projects was revealed today at the International Climate Change Conference (COP15) which is underway in Copenhagen. The project aims to help countries and organizations with interest in the field visualize and measure the extent of deforestation in problematic areas all over the world.

    Google says that deforestation in tropical areas is one of the major sources of carbon emissions greater than the cars, trains, planes and ships in the world. Studies in the field have show that stopping large scale deforestation is an easy and cheap way of cutting down on emissions worldwide.

    “The United Nations has proposed a framework known as REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries) that would provide financial incentives to rainforest nations to protect their forests, in an effort to make forests worth “more alive than dead.” Implementing a global REDD system will require that each nation have the ability to accurately monitor and report the state of their forests over time, in a manner that is independently verifiable,&rdquo… (read more)

  • Health Secretary debates reform plans in Parliament 3

    Workforce and Quality

    Secretary of State for Health Andy Burnham said:

    “Although there are good examples around the country, and many councils are doing their best, the system is stretched and – if we are honest – it is not systematically providing quality to people across the country. Many people who work in social care earn at, or close to, the national minimum wage, so in some parts of the country it is difficult to recruit care staff to provide the services that are so desperately needed.

    “For all those reasons, and to put quality at the heart of the work force, we need to pick up the work on strategy in social care being done by the Minister of State, my hon. Friend the Member for Corby (Phil Hope), who has responsibility for care services. If we can do what we did successfully for the NHS work force, we shall develop a clear career structure, putting money behind training and development to ensure we have a high-quality, motivated work force. For all those reasons, the debate is important and complicated.

    “We have had a detailed debate on our Green Paper and the consultation has attracted a huge number of replies. Overwhelmingly, people support the principle that the system has to be reformed. Of course there are difficult views about the nature and shape the reform should take, but people are agreed that worst of all would be to leave the system as it is, with more and more people’s needs unmet as we go into a future with an ageing population.

    “Everything in our Green Paper depends on those professional voices in social work. Helping people to unlock the benefits of personalisation and steering them through the system is crucially dependent on a motivated social work profession in adult services. Young people today want to make a difference. One of the biggest differences they can make is to go into social work, be it for children or adults. On both sides of the House, we need to work hard to communicate that message very strongly indeed.

    “Our Green Paper set out a vision of a national care service that is fairer, simpler and more affordable, underpinned by national rights and entitlements and personalised to individual needs. It set out a system with quality at its heart, whereby people get the care and support that they need.

    “People would know exactly what to expect, what they were entitled to and what they needed to do to get it. The national care service is about helping people to live their lives the way that they want to. It is about putting the person’s needs and wishes first, and helping them to keep up relationships with family and friends, to live in their own home for as long as they can and, where possible, to continue to work and contribute to their community.”

    The National Care Service and Carers

    Disability Benefits

    Personal Care at Home Bill

    Read the Green Paper here.

    For a full transcript of the debate click here.

  • Apple Looking to Hire In-House Video Game Talent

    Apple’s posted job listings seem to provoke no end of exciting speculation, and one of its latest open calls for applications is certainly no exception. New job postings call for a software engineer for the iPhone Gaming Group, and a video game artist. Last month’s call for a game/media software engineer was somewhat open to interpretation, but this time around, there’s no ambiguity involved.

    Not that Apple hasn’t made games in the past, as The iPhone Blog points out. Texas Hold’Em is a game, after all, if not a particularly ambitious one. But that casual game was a one-off, and was probably designed more to get the ball rolling for third-party developers than as a meaningful entry point into the gaming industry for Apple itself.

    The new job postings, however, seem to indicate that Apple wants to start taking gaming much more seriously. The skill sets asked for definitely go beyond what’s required to create a simple video poker simulator, at least. From the call for an artist:

    The interactive media group is looking for a skilled artist who wants to work as part of a small highly motivated team to work on interactive multimedia experiences on the iPhone and iPod touch. The position on the team is to help design, visualize, enable and implement interface, 3-D characters/environments, animation, texturing as well as original concept artwork.

    Requirements also include the “ability to model, animate, texture and produce bump/normal maps for 3-D scene graph environments.” The software engineer position is less obviously game-related, but the description does specifically mention the iPhone Gaming Group, and lists “experience with game development” as an asset:

    Please join us in taking the revolutionary iPhone to the next level. The iPhone Games Group is looking for a proactive, highly motivated engineer with 5+ years experience, to share their expertise in application and framework development…You will be responsible for implementing new features in existing applications as well as developing complex applications from top to bottom (user interface design to design and implementation of supporting frameworks.)

    Two job calls does not exactly a gaming studio make, but it shows that Apple is thinking about that area. And how could it not, really? It’s been pushing the iPod touch as a gaming device, and witnessed first-hand the success of games on both it and the iPhone, so it knows that’s a space where money can be made. I still believe the primary purpose of any software effort on Apple’s part is selling hardware, so I’d expect to see new games from the company to make especially good use of the newer hardware and software features of the iPhone and iPod touch, including peer-to-peer networking.


  • Question for low carbers about Bg’s and weight loss

    I’ve been low carbing for about 6 months now and I am nearly at the lowest weight I think would be healthy for me. (I do wish I could get rid of a little more fat around my middle though 🙂 ) My blood sugars are good and I don’t see how losing any more weight at this point will move them any lower. So my question is how do I stop losing weight without increasing my blood sugars? If I add more carbs, which would definitely stop me from losing more weight then I am sure my sugars will go up. I don’t want them to go up because I don’t want to be on any additional meds to control them. Or will my weight loss stop on its own when I am near my ideal weight? Low carb eating is fabulous for dropping weight. But do you keep dropping weight or will it stop?
  • Hydrogen Bus Fleet Expanding in the North America

    NREL Hydrogen BusA couple of weeks ago I talked about how the 40 HyCUTE:FLEET buses mostly in Europe had transported over 8.5 million passengers in their demonstration and testing phase. In the U. S. right now there are 10 hydrogen fuel cell buses operating in six locations.

    If we include the 20 H2 fuel cell buses being built for the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, this brings the North American total to 30 buses.

    But, yesterday the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) issued a report that in 2010 and 2011, this number will rise to a total of 58 hydrogen fuel cell buses in operation in North America, almost doubling the current total.

    According to the NREL there are three steps in bringing fuel cell buses to commercialization including: phase 1 operational field testing; phase 2 full-scale operational demonstration and fleet ready reliability testing; and phase 3 limited production and full operation.

    Right now, the U. S. has been in phase 1, but next year the fuel cell bus program will move into phase 2. The three groups that are driving this effort are the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) National Fuel Cell Bus Program, Zero Emission Bay Area (ZEBA) Group Demonstration and BC Transit Fuel Cell Bus Demonstration.

    Part of the funding for this project also comes from the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009. Continuing to build, demonstrate and test hydrogen buses in phase 2 will create high tech green jobs, from those who build the fuel cells and hybrid systems to those who build the H2 fueling stations. It will also create jobs as we get ready for commercialization of buses as fuel cell longevity needs to be increased, better hydrogen storage methods developed and the building of H2 fueling pumps standardized.

    The U. S. is starting to catch up to what other countries are already doing and green jobs will be one of the side benefits of this endeavor. For the full text, read this report.

  • Rumor Has It: Foxconn Receives Order for Next-Gen iPhone

    The inevitable iPhone update is looming ever closer in the distance, and accordingly, the iPhone rumor mill is heating up. Today, news came that frequent Apple manufacturing partner Foxconn, a Taiwanese hardware company, received an order to build the new iPhone, which still won’t arrive in consumer hands until mid-2010.

    News of the iPhone order comes via Mobile Review’s editor in chief, Eldar Murtazin, who tweeted simply, “Foxconn received order for next generation iphone” early Thursday morning. Murtazin is known to have good connections in the mobile phone industry, so there’s a good chance that there’s something solid behind the report. Engadget went so far as to call him “the ultimate insider when it come to all things mobile,” which is no small praise.

    It also makes sense time-wise, since Apple basically now has about six months to ramp up production enough to deal with the massive demand that usually accompanies the launch of its iPhone products. It’s also worth noting that this time around, many people who got the iPhone 3G on contract through AT&T will be at the end of their 2-year agreement, and thus fully eligible for a new hardware deal, which should help boost sales even further.

    Thus far, details regarding what the next iPhone will have that the current generation doesn’t have been scarce. But that hasn’t stopped the rumor mill from working overtime. Some suggest we could see a CDMA or dual-mode CDMA/GSM model, or one that supports RFID technologies. If it’s true that production on parts of the iPhone is going to begin soon, we likely won’t have to wait long to see these rumors multiply and resolve into a more definite picture of what’s to come.


  • Oil’s Going To $225 By 2012, Says Analyst

    china gasoline gas oil CNPC

    Canada’s LeaderPost has an excellent article about the coming oil price surge and the need for uber-aggressive efficiency projects.

    LeaderPost.com:

    Chinese consumers are buying more than a million cars a month — and in India when the US$2,500 Nano went on sale, more than 200,000 were ordered in the first two weeks. Adding millions of cars a month to roads will inevitably drive up oil prices.

    Jeff Rubin, the former chief economist for CIBC World Markets, predicts that the price of oil will rise to US$225 a barrel by 2012. For readers who dismiss Rubin, think about this:We are in the midst of the biggest recession since the Great Depression and oil has already risen above US$80 a barrel. In 2003, few pundits would have thought US$80 oil was possible. (And Rubin’s past predictions have proven deadly accurate: In 2006, he predicted oil would hit US$150 a barrel in 2008.)

    Continue reading here.

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  • COP-15 Day 4: Reaching a Political Agreement and the Role of the UN

    ‘Political agreement’ was the word of the day in late briefings yesterday and continuing today.  Its definition varies from country to country.

    For the United States, it means an agreement that President Obama can sign when he comes next week with the full expectation that the United States will honor its terms even without Congressional action.  While the preference is for adoption by the Congress by simple majority votes as legislation (as opposed to ratification by the Senate as a treaty with a 2/3 vote), Parties have been assured that President Obama can implement his commitments without Congressional action.

    A serious and growing issue remains the role of the UN in monitoring, verifying, and enforcing emissions reductions commitments.  African countries have taken a high profile and vocal role in opposing early proposals for an supervising entity outside of the UN.  So far, the United States remains firm on its pre-conference position regarding a newly created structure outside of the UN for monitoring and enforcement.  Most regard this issue as one of the most significant impediments to a political agreement at COP-15.

  • Health Secretary debates reform plans in Parliament 2

    Disability Benefits

    Secrertary of State for Health Andy Burnham said:

    “With the introduction of direct payments, we have seen council support beginning to replicate the benefits system, and the two systems have been slowly merging. Reform would continue and deepen that process, placing individuals with the most need in control of their budget so that they can draw down the support and care that they need.

    “Every citizen would stand to benefit under that new system. As well as helping people who need care, the national care service is about changing the lives of the friends and relations who support them. Many carers in this country have told us about the daily battle they face to get the support that they need, and we want to end that battle by providing a reliable, transparent and accessible system that makes it easier for them to manage their responsibilities. We intend to publish a White Paper in the new year, setting out our proposals for the future of care and support, based on the replies that we have received to our consultation.

    “The current care and support system is provided through a combination of local and central Government funding, personal contributions and benefits. It is complicated, it is not clearly targeted at levels of greatest need and it is not sustainable. In each case, the amounts are increasing. Local government expenditure on adult social care has gone up by more than 50 per cent since 1997; and the total fees paid by people who use the services have increased significantly over the same period. Today, there are more than 1.5 million recipients of Attendance Allowance, amounting to expenditure of more than £5 billion a year; and there are more than 790,000 Disability Living Allowance recipients who are over 65 years old, totalling expenditure of some £4 billion a year.

    “By 2026, we can expect that 1.7 million more adults will need care and support than is the case today, and the cost of disability benefits for the elderly could rise by almost 50 per cent in real terms. Demographic and financial pressures on that scale cannot easily be met within the current unreformed system, so we have to find a better way to provide support to older and disabled people, and there may be a case for bringing together some disability benefits within adult social care. That is the argument that we are putting forward.

    “It is true that many people today do not get help from the state towards their care costs. However, that is precisely why this Government are showing leadership and looking at how we can best support care and reform services. As I said in my intervention, it is completely wrong to suggest that all those who currently receive disability benefits but do not receive support from social care services would lose out under a new system.

    “It is completely wrong to say that people will lose out under a new system. This is not about using benefits to support the existing system. We want to create a new care and support system that goes beyond that and is fit for the 21st century. We accept that that means we need to carry people with this reform. We also need to protect people in the interim. We have therefore categorically ruled out using disability living allowance for the under-65s. No other decisions about benefit reform have yet been taken.

    “However, we have been absolutely clear that if disability benefits are reformed as part of delivering the national care service, those currently receiving benefit will not lose out financially. To put it simply, there would be no cash losers from this reform. That will remain the case for life. Existing benefits recipients will keep the cash and keep the control – it could not be clearer.

    “People like disability benefits because they provide a universal entitlement, they provide a cash budget that can be spent on the services that people want, and they support lower-level needs that help people to stay well for longer. Those three principles will all be important features of the new care and support system that we seek to introduce.

    “We are saying that, in future, we propose having a new system of support for people with care needs, but it is not correct to say that that means that support will be withdrawn. Our whole aim in this reform is to give more help and support to the people who need it most. We believe that at the moment the money in the system is not properly targeted at those who need most support.”

    The National Care Service and Carers

    Workforce and Quality

    Personal Care at Home Bill

    For a full transcript of the debate click here.

    Read the Green Paper here.

  • Christmas is coming, the goose is getting fat… and so am I.

    Why do the BIG holidays have to occur so close together?  Between Thanksgiving and Christmas, my softail has become a wideglide.  Consider in the factor that I have Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue, and don’t exercise that much and you have a recipe for a fat chick. 

    Just the thought of exercising is exhausting.  When I climb out of bed, I’m already in pain, stiff all over, and still exhausted after 9 hours of sleep.  How can I exercise when I feel like I’ve been hit by a Mack truck?

    This morning I looked in the mirror and saw some other woman staring back at me.  She looked like me but, a larger version of me.  Where had the time gone?  Where did all those pounds come from?  I sat down and cried.  Now, mind you, I’m not a shallow person.  I’m not overly concerned about my looks.  But, I have put on 15 pounds in the last 3 months.  Between my chronic pain, fatigue, lack of exercise and poor weather conditions my body has run amok.  And “amok” definitely does not imply that I “am ok.”

    With that being said, I decided to do some research on the subject of exercising with Fibromyalgia.   If you have Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue, or any other Chronic Pain disorder then check out these sites and get moving.

    The first two on the list are my favorites.

     http://www.fmaware.org/site/PageServer?pagename=topics_exercise

     http://chronicfatigue.about.com/od/treatingfmscfs/a/exercise.htm

    Fibromyalgia Slideshow: Fibro-friendly Exercises

    http://www.fibromyalgiaexercise.net/

    http://www.fibromyalgiaexercise.net/Fibromyalgia_Exercise-_Part_2.html

    http://www.fibromyalgiaexercise.net/Yoga.html

    Comments are always welcome.  I’d like to know if anyone else has similar problems.  Maybe you have a better way of dealing with your disorder.  If you do, please feel free to share with us how you cope with your chronic condition. I hope this helps you.  I’m headed out right now for a short walk.  I’ll meet you back here. 


  • Nissan announces pricing on 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition, Rogue S Krom Edition [w/VIDEO]

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    Nissan 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition – click above for high-res image gallery

    We’re not apologizing to Nissan, but we were pretty flippantly dismissive of both the 40th Anniversary Z and the Rogue S Krom Edition. Why? Because both struck as as badge jobs. When we think of special edition Nissans, we think of V-Spec, and that typically entails more power and/or pumped up handling. But not with these two cars. Though at least the Krom gets a new front end, which sadly isn’t nearly as eye-catching as the nose of the not-for-us 2010 Qashqai.

    However, the truth of the matter is that our favorite ever special Nissan was the legendary Black Gold 10th Anniversary Datsun 280ZX (and the even rarer Black Red – only 500 made, as opposed to 3,000 Black Golds). And that car was little more than a plaque and a coke habit paint job. Our point? Nissan had better produce a theme song for this new car.

    Anyhow, the prices of both the 40th Z and the Rogue Krom have just been announced. The Nissan 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition will set you back $38,860. Some of you might be asking why not spend the extra $330 and get the better-than-a-regular-370Z NISMO for $39,190? Well, Nissan will only be producing 1,000 40th Anniversary Zs. Other than that, we can’t think of any reason. The Rogue S Krom Edition comes in at $23,940 for the front-wheel drive version, $25,140 if you want all-wheel drive. The 40AZ will be available in Q2 of 2010, the Krom in late Q3. Press release(s) can be found after the jump, along with a little surprise.

    [Source: Nissan]

    Continue reading Nissan announces pricing on 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition, Rogue S Krom Edition [w/VIDEO]

    Nissan announces pricing on 370Z 40th Anniversary Edition, Rogue S Krom Edition [w/VIDEO] originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 10 Dec 2009 10:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Pre-Bitten Gingerbread Men

    Pre-Bitten Gingerbread Men

    Run, run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me – I’m the gingerbread man!

    The gingerbread men that come out of my oven aren’t all that fast, so I can tell you exactly what happens when I catch one: he looses a leg, an arm or, when I start from the top, his head. I’ll bet that the same thing happens to your gingerbread men. I jump started the process with these cookies (they’re sugar cookies, not gingerbread) by taking a few nibbles before decorating. A little bit cute and a little tragic – but that’s just the life of a gingerbread man.

    Now, you can buy some very cute cookie cutters that give you this very design – but why spend the money on multiple cookie cutters when you can use just one and add the bite marks yourself? All you need to do is “bite” off an arm here and a leg there, then frost the cookies as you normally would!

  • Health Secretary debates reform plans in Parliament 1

    The Secretary of State for Health Andy Burnham has spoken extensively about the Government’s plans for care and support service reform in a House of Commons debate.

    Answering opposition questions about disability benefits, Mr Burnham outlined the Government’s thinking on a wide range of topics around the creation of a new National Care Service for adults in England, as detailed in the summer’s Green Paper Shaping the Future of Care Together.

    The National Care Service

    “Some 61 years ago, the House agreed to the establishment of the National Health Service to end the unfairness that the people with the greatest needs faced the highest costs and that the people who had the least were in danger of having their needs left unmet.

    “Today, the same unfairness exists in social care. A person who happens to develop dementia in old age, rather than cancer or heart disease, is yet to find the freedom from fear that Nye Bevan promised as the goal of the NHS.

    “It is because the system has grown in a piecemeal way over the years that it has become confusing and in many ways a lottery. It varies very greatly around the country, according to the eligibility criteria operated by councils and a range of other things.

    “The serious purpose that lies behind the Green Paper is to create a fairer care system for all, in which the people with the greatest needs have those needs met and society as a whole shares the risks and costs of providing that care. In creating such a system, we will provide a better standard and quality of care.

    “One in five people will need care that costs less than £1,000 during their retirement. One in five will need care that costs more than £50,000. In the worst cases, the sum can exceed £200,000. This cruel lottery leaves us with no way of predicting our risk and makes it hard to protect ourselves against it.

    “The current care system is piecemeal and complicated. Many do not know that care is means-tested. People face a battle to access the care that they need. When they succeed, the care can be of a poor quality, but not always. Resources are not channelled to where they are needed the most and, as we all know, carers often do not get the support that they need to make life tolerable and to enable them to provide the care and support that they want to their loved ones, while also balancing other aspects of their life, such as work.

    “This much we know, and we know that the problem will become more pressing as the population gets older. When the NHS was created, there were eight working adults for every retired person. Today there are four, and by 2050 that figure will fall to just two. If the system is left unreformed, there are real questions about its sustainability in the long term.”

    Carers

    “We must give people looking after elderly relatives quality support that they can draw down when they need it, because that gives them the ability to work and to balance work with caring for their relatives. If we cannot provide that support, there will be an economic consequence for the country.

    “We have taken steps to support carers, and my Department has made funds available from our budget to support respite care. A crucial part of any national care service is to provide quality support for carers so that life becomes tolerable and they can carry on with their work and other responsibilities, knowing that there is good-quality support for their loved one when they are not with them. For all those reasons, we brought forward a Green Paper.”

    Disability Benefits

    Workforce and Quality

    Personal Care at Home Bill

    For a full transcript of the debate click here.