Great Britain
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VOICE: People here can't afford to eat while PM sunbathes in Greece

My mother-in-law passed away earlier this year. It was sudden and unexpected. She was only 68 years old and she was in very good health. She died at her A&E in Birmingham. It is another thing to hear policymakerstalking about excessive fatalities in accidents and emergency departments. your one.

She and my husband took turns cooking dinner for our family and her older Bloomie buddy every Wednesday. Since she died, my house has become a permanent venue for these dinners.My husband cooks for three pensioners, the children, and himself every week. The chat has such an intergenerational richness that Channel 4 creates a miniseries. Meals are also provided during breaks. A real conversation among pensioners this week was about how people like them must come together and band together to get penguin-like warmth as winter approaches. Literally...they put a playful twist on it. Today's pensioner is, after all, a teenager in the 1960s and his 70s. They had suggested throwing a party for pensioners. They talked about good old times and laughed at pictures of long hair and double denim... But no matter how they dressed this up, the reality is how people like them deal

This week's story of Kelly Thompson is part of the same terrifying story. The mother of two children was hospitalized for malnutrition. This is because he skipped all but one meal a day to feed his children on the £40 a week he had left after paying the bills. Higher food inflation and higher energy prices mean a tightening of belts and a reduction in luxury goods. For others, it means reducing the basics of life, such as being able to sit at home without risking disease, or eating so little that they risk starvation.

My mother-in-law was from my constituency. She came from a large family living in a small public housing unit. When she knocked on the door with her on the street of her childhood home during the 2015 election, an elderly woman told us both of what used to be "around here." I complained that it was better. She talked about the rosy golden age when the door could be left open and the children would play. I worked a breakfast making shift at a local hotel before school and was picked up after school and put in a wagon.Drove a few miles so I could sell my potatoes door to door. Nonetheless, she still said she had holes in both her knickers and shoes.If Liz Truss, she was a "lazy" and in London she was a 13-year-old girl. I would have told her I wasn't as productive. If only she had worked harder.

Her mother-in-law had to be a catalog runner and her family was often in debt. She didn't realize that this amazing bygone era was presented to her. , would have read about her mother being malnourished and starving.

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Prime Ministers have been eating dolmades and taramasalata on Greek holidays as the crisis unfolds. I don't hold a grudge against the man on his days off. I hate him for taking it while he has the power to summon Congress and figure out how to keep our nation's mothers from being hospitalized for starvation. will have free time to visit the Parthenon in 2013. Meanwhile, all but those who run or fight our country will come up with possible solutions to the deteriorating situation. Why wasn't Parliament summoned to pass emergency bills that would try to stop pensioners from freezing and their parents from starving, as Labor demanded?

I wish I had learned less than I did about her excess mortality in A&E this spring and summer. My family wishes we didn't become one of the stats, if my mother-in-law were here she would very productively roll up her sleeves and do whatever she could She would have tried, but she's not. If we don't take action now, I'm sure the excess deaths over the winter will be extremely painful for many more families. Cold, hunger and neglect.

Poverty kills.