Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2010-09-09-Speech-4-176"
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"en.20100909.11.4-176"2
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".
We have already been seeing for many years that it is no longer feasible to finance short- or long-term care. Nevertheless, all measures in this regard have been put on the back burner and those affected and their relatives have been left out in the cold. Just as in the case of bringing up children, the services of caring relatives and voluntary workers in the community are far too undervalued and social networks are destroyed in the name of capitalism. Instead, people have been persuaded that unbridled mass immigration is necessary in order to guarantee that the social systems are maintained and therefore also the care of the elderly.
The opposite is true, in fact. This has only speeded up the impending financial collapse. The debate about the financial viability and financial burden of care is coming far too late. If we now want to give priority to developing palliative care and medical care at home, it will not really be possible to change our minds and do a U-turn on this. The desire to tackle the abuse of elderly people in care is, in any case, to be welcomed. The list of demands is years overdue. I have, nevertheless, voted in favour of it."@en1
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