When Ministers of the Crown are under pressure, it’s
understandable that the mood in their households may become less than totally
happy. But the domain of Michael “Oiky”
Gove gives every impression of having descended into downright misery, if today’s
mean-spirited rant from his wife Sarah “Vain”
Vine is anything to go by. Ms Vine is in no mood to be concerned at others’
wellbeing.
Sarah Vine - the happy one on the right
“Trapped behind a
London bus the other day, I was confronted with a thoroughly depressing sight. On the back was a public information poster,
illustrated with a drawing of an unsteady female, complete with
micro-mini-skirt and platform heels. The message was simple: drivers, be
mindful of tipsy pedestrians falling into the road in front of you”
she observed, scornfully.
Then she segued effortlessly into Daily Mail Speak, with “But what I found so puzzling and offensive
was the fact that it was aimed at the unsuspecting motorist, as opposed to the
actual drinker who might be stupid enough to lurch into the traffic. Doesn't that speak volumes about the kind of world
we inhabit?” Well, no it doesn’t – it’s a public information
announcement. What’s her problem?
Here it comes: “£3.5 billion a year is spent on treating patients for the effects of
alcohol; at weekends, up to 70 per cent of A&E admissions are
alcohol-related ... Areas such as care for the elderly, that are manifestly
more deserving than some silly girl who's drunk her own weight in Bacardi
Breezers and who is slumped unconscious in a pool of her own bodily fluids”.
And, as Jon Stewart might have said, two things here. One,
most folks who go out to the Rub-A-Dub and become Elephants Trunk And Mozart do
not intend to end up in the local A&E – and, with crime figures falling,
according to the Government of which her husband is a member, there is less bad
behaviour of an evening, although it would be nice if there were none of it at
all.
Two, we don’t have someone on the door of A&E
breath-testing arrivals and then declining treatment to those who have been on
the pop. Ms Vine shows a very worst case scenario – in typical Daily Mail style – whereas most of those
in A&E late at night are not threatening the staff or chucking up on the
floor. And the mean-spiritedness has a little further to run.
Ms Vine wants readers to know that she attended A&E
recently: “Because of the general blood,
mess and shouting, the rabble had to be treated first”. Yeah, someone else
is getting something that they don’t deserve! It’s like all those migrants –
they get treated first, too! Why oh why oh why oh why?!? Yes, Sarah Vine is
settling in to being a Daily Mail
commentator very well.
It must be terrible being so miserable. And in the same house as “Oiky”
Gove, too.
The phrase "Trapped behind a London bus" tells you everything you need to know about her sense of entitlement.
ReplyDeleteNot for her the public transport that millions of Londoners use every day. No. A private car, probably chauffeur-driven, to keep her away from the rabble.
Good report on the way home.
ReplyDeleteHospital admissions last year due to drink in West Yorkshire
Age 60-69 10,500
Age 70-79 9,500
Aged 20-29 3,500
The last figure is not a typo. Oldies are worse for drink than the youngsters.