werdies wrote on Dec 4
th, 2007 at 7:45pm:
It's just a company, the people that work there are nice, normal people - especially the front line staff, who have a very tough time.
Wasn't that the line employees at various notorious German prison camps during the Second World War took? That is they didn't invent the rotten system and were only following orders? OK you aren't killing anyone directly except that your company (and a company can never operate without people being prepared to work for it) might actually prevent the relatives of some sick patients speaking to them for the last time the night before they die in a major op because they are worried about spending £30 on a 60 minute phone call. And of course none of us knows for sure who will die during an op and who won't
Quote:The bloke who works in my newsagents doesn't worry about the death and misery his f*g sales cause, I doubt.
But f*g customers all have a choice about consuming the product whereas people rarely have a choice either about being ill or being in a hospital where your rotten company's exploitative system is the only way to contact them. That is the big difference surely? I agree that top cigarette company marketing people who try to make a lethal killer in to a fashion accessory ought to have a lot of trouble with their consciences though.
Quote:I dont have strong opinions about Patientline either way.
Self evidently. No one with a strong moral position on its activities would ever work there unless they took a job as a BBC undercover reporter.
Quote:Anyway, it's all virtually confirmed now, and if anyone owns shares they need to sell them NOW!! as they are about to become totally worthless and Patientline plc is about to disappear forever and a new bunch of brave souls can have a go at making it work, as the old bunch vanish into the sunset with a very large wedge in their back pockets...
I'd give more info, but I might get caught out if I do that
Ok well thanks for that anyway. You clearly substantially redeem yourself by being prepared to share with this forum so much of what is going on. Do you have any clue what the new phone call price will be for incoming calls. Wouldn't there be huge advantages to moving to 10p per minute 0871 combined with a big marketing campaign to promote that the service was now relatively affordable (if not exactly a bargain).
Anything using 07 and pence per minute advance price announcements is surely doomed to failure?