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"[A woman] is usually a success as a sick-nurse, for that profession requires ingenuity, quick comprehension, courage in the face of novel and disconcerting situations, and above all, a capacity for penetrating and dominating character."
- HL Mencken, In Defense of Women
"She never sleeps, the TikTok nurse. She is dancing, dancing. She says she will never die."There is a long beep emitting from my patient's alarm. It is the sound that accompanies the end of a life in the ICU - the patient's heart has ceased to beat, and a long flat green line appears on the monitor beside his bed. "ASYSTOLE, ASYSTOLE" the monitor screams. This is usually cue for everyone to run into the room, ready to pound on the patient's chest and pump him full of drugs necessary to restart his heart. In certain cases, however, the patient has been deemed what's called a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR), which means we allow the patient to die naturally (as naturally as one can die lying in a sterile hospital bed hooked up to monitors and punctured with endless tubes).

New Covid-19 lockdown rules in North West England 'crystal clear,' UK health minister says. Mess & 's**t show,' people replyEven a BBC interviewer couldn't avoid but point out that even the Health Minister sounded confused:
UK Health Sec. Matt Hancock is facing a furious backlash after claiming new guidance rushed out by the UK government on Thursday night regarding lockdown rules for some areas of North West England, were "absolutely crystal clear."
During an interview with Sky News on Friday, Hancock defended the government's rushed late night announcement in relation to restrictions being imposed on parts of Greater Manchester, East Lancashire and West Yorkshire in response to spikes in cases of coronavirus.
Hancock rejected claims the new guidance was confusing, insisting they were "crystal clear," and designed to cause as little disruption as possible. He said the rules had been put in place to cut transmission of the deadly disease from household to household.
The ban - which took effect from midnight at three hours' notice - restricts the mixing of two known households or more in all indoor settings, be they homes or social spaces like pubs, cafes, restaurants. However people in the affected areas will still be allowed to mix with strangers in these venues - and even go on holiday with another household.
UK media reported that some local public health directors didn't know about the new guidance until Hancock made an announcement in a short video clip after 9pm BST on Thursday.
The government eventually published the guidance at 22 minutes past midnight. Notably, while people will be handed a £100 fine for breaking the rules, the law to enforce this doesn't yet exist.
Chaos reigned for people in the affected regions of the North West with accusations of mixed messages and nonsensical new rules, which spilled over into Friday morning. Many people on Twitter have taken issue with who households can and cannot interact with and where.
One commenter tweeted: "So you can't go round to each other's house anymore.. but you can all meet up at the pub and go on holiday together."
Another person suggested that the new guidance was all about safeguarding "profits" made by business to the detriment of families socialising.
Others branded the government's handling of the coronavirus crisis as a "s**t show," urging British PM Boris Johnson's administration to focus on the ultimate fix, such as improving their much maligned Covid-19 test and trace system.
Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham - who is responsible for one of the affected regions - told Sky News that he supported the restrictions to stop people dying of coronavirus.
However, in what was perhaps a veiled dig at Hancock, he said UK ministers had "a habit of saying something and then it being a few hours until the detail emerges."





Peskov confirmed the Russian men were "employees of a private security company" who were staying temporarily in Belarus before travelling onwards to Istanbul.
"They missed their plane," he said. "They had tickets to Istanbul."
A senior Belarusian investigator said in televised comments that the men's plans for onward travel were just "an alibi," Tut.by news site reported.
"As the investigation has found out, they did not plan to fly there (to Istanbul)," the head of the investigative team, Alexander Agafonov, was reported as saying in an interview with national television.
The men gave "contradictory" answers, he added.
Eleven of them said they intended to fly to Venezuela, 15 to Turkey, two to Cuba and one to Syria. One "did not know where he was flying to" and the rest refused to testify, Agafonov said.
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