Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
October 16, 2014
There was a time when the elderly used to be respected as highly valued members of our society, nowadays we just ship them off into homes and expect other people to care for them.
This would not be so bad if it was White people that were entrusted to look after them, as they could be relied upon to treat them with dignity.
However, since the invasion of the third world and the mass migration from the former Communist countries, the majority of carers are now either Non-White, or from another White country.
This has led to all manner of abuses of our old folk, resulting in at least 46 of them being killed off by their carer.
Is this any way to treat those who brought us up?
This is wide scale abuse on an industrial scale and it will continue until we start having some respect for our elders and ensure that only White people are involved in caring for them.
Around 104,000 elderly or vulnerable people suffered abusive treatment in care homes or their own homes last year, according to complaints made by their families and friends.
The most serious cases led to 46 deaths, the majority of them older people.
Official figures reveal there were 32,000 allegations of physical assault, 36,000 cases of neglect and 22,000 cases in which frail, old or mentally incapacitated over-18s were said to have been cheated of money.
More than a third of the alleged abuse incidents happened in care homes and more than a third were said to have been inflicted by care workers.
All of the charges were detailed and weighty enough to prompt inquiries by social services investigators and 100 led to ‘serious case reviews’ because of the high level of harm suffered by the victim.
The record of investigations was collected from all councils in England for the first, annual Safeguarding Adults Return produced by the Government’s Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC).
It covers incidents alleged to have happened in the year to the end of March, mainly in people’s own homes, in care homes and hospitals.
It follows a warning by the care industry watchdog – the Care Quality Commission – that nine out of 10 care homes and hospitals provide poor or inconsistent help for dementia sufferers.
Kingsley Manning, chairman of the HSCIC, said its report published yesterday ‘sheds light on the extent and type of abuse reported to have been perpetrated on some of our most vulnerable citizens’.
Charities and pressure groups said the level of abuse would deepen public concern and called for ‘zero tolerance’ of attacks on the elderly and vulnerable.
The scale of abuse allegations means that nearly eight in every 1,000 people aged between 75 and 84 were said to have suffered from an assault or other maltreatment, and more than one in every 50 people aged over 85.
More than half of the abuse allegations centre on people who were physically frail or disabled, while in another quarter the alleged victims suffered from dementia or mental incapacity of some other form.
The majority those said to be abused were over 75, and two thirds were over 65.
‘The majority of institutional abuse and neglect was alleged to be caused by social care and support workers,’ the report said.
‘Most physical or financial abuse was said to have been carried out by someone known to the victim.’
The report added: ‘Individuals in care homes were most likely to be abused by social care or support workers, accounting for 57 per cent of the allegations in that location.’
Investigators have completed 99,000 inquiries into complaints of incidents of abuse involving 88,000 old or vulnerable people. Other cases are ongoing.