Showing posts with label nhs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nhs. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Chip Dale's Leadership Promise No. 1: On The Professionalism of Dentists

The first day of the Lib Dem leadership election campaign didn’t begin well for the early front runner.

Gabby had her knee on my chest and was using her elbow to keep my head still. I could only try my best to keep my mouth shut as the scream of the Black & Decker cracked the tiles which came raining free from the bathroom walls like a scene in The Matrix. I was only glad when the extension cable came loose. Because of some EU ruling regarding electrical sockets in bathrooms, Gabby had been forced to plug in her 2400W power tool by the front door. The cable was an inch too short. As the drill slowed and Gabby spit a curse, I wriggled free of her grip and told her how I was having second thoughts. I might need my teeth fixing ready for all those close ups on Sky News, but saving a hundred pounds by fixing them at home hadn’t been my best idea.

But that’s the problem with real dentists. They’re like the American Army at times of international crisis. You want help but you don’t necessarily want their help. But who else is there to turn to? A Romanian with an indifference to suffering and a huge collection of diamond tipped drills? The Russians? The Chinese? Dentists know that we can’t go elsewhere. It means they have a market with almost untapped potential and it’s there job to tap into it as deep as your teeth run. They’d polish your ankles if they could prove they were a major cause of tooth decay.

They are the most visible part of the creep of professionalism that it ruining this once proudly amateur country of ours. That’s why I’m making this my first manifesto policy. I want to change the way we do things in this country.

A Liberal Democratic party led by The Chipster would be nothing but amateur and I want to reintroduce amatuerism into everything we do.

There are simply no amateurs these days, none of those madcap inventors who changed the world from their garden shed. What has happened to the crazy Englishmen who try to fly to Iceland by pigeon power? At one time, British amateurism was better than anything professional coming out of American, Europe, or Japan. A man with a yard or twine, a few bottle caps, and a steely determination could rule the world. Yet to be described as amateur these days amounts to an insult. I’m not saying that I want to be treated by amateur dentists but what’s wrong with going to see a man in tweed suit, a few hairs up his nostrils, and a dog sitting sniffing its testicles in the corner of the room?

Where have all the unique looks gone? Where is this nation’s personality and our enjoyment of work? With professionalism comes a need to look the part, a growing hegemony of listlessness in everything we do and wear. Newer whiter surgeries, bluer smocks, and eye protectors you’d think would stop a .44 magnum bullet, let alone an errant flake of tooth enamel. Where once the dentist had a receptionist who worked the odd few hours to do his paperwork, they are now assisted by teams of nubile young women whose whole purpose in life is to distract you from the crimes being committed in your mouth. I’m not complaining but, at the same time, why do I feel so dirty?

The only people who are losing their professional status are the very people who at one time you would consider – nay, insist – were professionals. Teachers are making way for teaching assistants and you’re lucky to find a doctor who knows a few words of English. Lawyers are no longer highly esteemed but are injury claims specialists who pop up in the ads during the Bill. Nurses no longer have our respect given they are paid half the yearly income you can expect to earn if you’re a second-rate plumber. University education has become an extension of Further Education, and has less to do with educating a small number of people to a high degree, and more to do with keeping huge numbers of layabout teenagers off the streets and away from the unemployment figures.

If the rise of the dentist marks the decay of our society, it will be left to us amateur revolutionaries in the Liberal Democrats to cleanse the nation’s gums. Cheap modern housing estates surrounded by leisure communities, fast food restaurants, out-of-town shopping centres, multi-screen cinemas, ten pin bowling, Laser Quest: it all adds up to a faux-recreation of 1950s suburban America which those of us with any sense will have to destroy in the next ten years. Pitched battles will be fought in depressingly manicured cul-de-sacs in new towns where we’ll fashion crude bludgeons from plastic fencing, solar garden lamps, decking, outdoor furniture, and barbecues stands.

Our war cry will be heard from one end of the country to the other:

‘Chip Dale is proud to declare himself an amateur in everything he does and he asks that you do the same!’

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

The King of Thong’s Medication

Ever since I came a cropper beneath nineteen stones of a falling traffic warden that night at the Turntable Taffy's Disco in Llandudno, the Chipster has been taking some pretty strong medication to keep the pain at bay. I’ve known injuries like this to end some dancer’s careers but no matter how much you say you won’t be egged into doing something stupid, the plummeting punter is still one of great hazards of the professional stripping circuit.

Consider the situation: a room full of excitable ladies, heavily influenced in their behaviour by all the neat paraffin they’ve been necking all evening. Throw in The Chipster, oiled to his best sheen and wearing only a black leather thong. Well, you can’t stop the ladies asking you to pick them up and hold them to be lifted above your head, can you? And you know the Big DC: I can’t let a lady down, can I? Heart as big as… Well, enough of that.

The tablets I take are big enough for horses. Seriously. The surgeon who operated and fixed my back told me that they use the same medication to dope race horses and it’s that level of professionalism which makes me feel so bloody of the NHS. I might be doped up to my bloodshot eyes but I know a good thing when I see one. And the NHS is most definitely a good thing despite all of Tony Blair's tinkering.

Just the other day, we were doing some step aerobics when Gabby went over on her ankle and I had to take her to A&E. They had her bandaged up in no time. Very sweet about it to and I knew the nurse from some of the local Lib Dems meetings. But do you want to know what was really great? While I was there I came up with a brand new routine I hope to try out this week. You have to picture the darkened nightclub, packed with punters. I’ll come on stage, single spot picking me out dressed in a white coat and carrying a clip board. I come centre stage and say to the audience ‘Pass me the tongues, matron!’ Then I pause. Look to audience and add: ‘Did somebody mention thong?’ Then I whip out my old fella. Bloody instant classic act. And all down to the NHS.