UK: Loneliness Among the Elderly has Reached a State of Emergency

Sven Longshanks
Daily Stormer
June 26, 2014

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Would there be any chance of the elderly feeling lonely if our societies were still 100% White? They would be able to communicate easily with everyone they met, instead of being fearful to even go out, like they are today.

One of the side effects of mass immigration felt particularly by the elderly is intimidation.

Where the savage hordes do not speak English, senior citizens especially find it hard to communicate with them. Instead of being able to take a trip down to the local shop and catch up on the latest news, they are forced to speed through their shopping without the foreign shop assistant even asking how they are. On top of that, there is the fear of being mugged by Pakistanis or raped by Sub-Saharan Apes when they step outside their homes. Even when these older people are visited by well-meaning young people, they soon feel alienated when the cultural-marxist youth start telling them off for being ‘racist.’

The situation has now got so bad that ‘Contact the Elderly’ are calling it ‘a state of emergency.’

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Trevor Lyttleton MBE formed ‘Contact the Elderly’ 45 years ago. He says the elderly have never felt so lonely as they do today in our multicultural utopea.

From the Express:

Leading charity Contact the Elderly says the number of socially-isolated older people in Britain has reached breaking point.

Contact the Elderly has declared a state of emergency as the number of socially-isolated older people reaches breaking point.

Spurred by concern over the speed at which the government is tackling the problem of a million neglected older people, the charity is taking the issue into its own hands.

Supported by a network of volunteers, Contact the Elderly offers a vital lifeline of friendship to those aged 75 and over who live alone.

The charity’s regular Sunday afternoon tea parties enable older people across the country to enjoy much-needed human contact.

New research has revealed that almost one in five of the older people Contact the Elderly supports joined the charity because they rarely saw another person.

Some 78 per cent of the older people surveyed feel less lonely as a result of the monthly tea parties.

And a total of 96% said the tea parties give them something to look forward to.

Contact the Elderly Founder and Chairman, Trevor Lyttleton MBE, said: “Loneliness amongst older people has reached a state of emergency and must not be ignored.

“For almost 50 years we have been focusing on providing a cost-effective solution, yet the demand for our service has never been so high.

“We know our formula of tea and conversation works, but we simply cannot reach out to the people that desperately need our help without increased volunteers and funding.”

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Mary Rance, CEO of Contact the Elderly.