Kaz wrote:The ambulance strikers have categorically stated that any one of them on a picket line would immediately leave the picket to attend a life or death situation.
Right, so the difference between sitting in a vehicle, dressed to respond, get the call on the radio in the vehicle and GO. As opposed to getting off the picket line, into the building, change, get to a vehicle, safety check the vehicle and then leave?
Who is kidding whom?
When I had my heart attack Mrs S drove me the 3 minutes to the hospital as she didn't want to waste any more time in getting me there. Apparently I nearly died. I'm not convinced of that but the GP seems to be. I'm just trying to imagine how these ambulance drivers would live up to that promise in a meaningful way.
I'm not saying they didn't sign up to save lives. I'm sure they did. But they have put that principle aside to try and force the government to give them more money. I was in the forces. Different bargain, you sign up to lay your own life down in the protection of others should the call come. Forces are not allowed to strike, they get jailed for that for 6 months and then summarily thrown out with a bad reference (dishonourable discharge).
Sorry my own view of this doesn't match yours but I have a different filter.