The NHS’s job is to make people better. If chaplains help in this why shouldn’t there be funding?
Well it's the old principle of little and often, when these instances are pointed out, in comes the oh they do a good job, etc etc all mostly correct when referring to, in this case, chaplains, which with most cases mentioned yes I agree with these arguments and yes they do mostly good, but this isn't the point.
The religious organisations are very canny,
the state is paying for chaplains to do part of the various religious organisations P R work for them; the state is paying the schools to do to do P R work for them, through tax exemptions, another state hand out to them; chancellery laws introduced by past government assist their finances another hand out; oh yes don't forget the chaplains of the army and prison service also, another two hand outs.
It's all little and often some of the hand outs are not that small either but even then having said that what sort of sum do you think of just the ones I've pointed our above add up to in the over all picture of funds they get gratis from the state to enable them to push their agenda.
The benefits religious orders get that I've pointed out above are just the ones that came to mind as I sit here doing my one fingered typing, I can assure you there are plenty more places that these religious organisations have their their fingers firmly in the till, where I would like to remove their fingers from our state money for good and ever, no other organisation, mostly the C of E, I know of is much better at getting the state to fund their P R work in so many, in purposely hardly noticeable ways, as these religious groups.
Like I said I'm not against the principle of chaplains, more a job for someone that people feel able to talk to, one of those lovely genuine warm people you get from time to time, that really care about fellow human beings.
Regards ippy