#inspectors
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saywhat-politics · 15 days ago
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HUNT, Texas (AP) — Texas inspectors signed off on Camp Mystic’s emergency planning just two days before catastrophic flooding killed more than two dozen people at the all-girls Christian summer camp, most of them children.
The Department of State Health Services released records Tuesday showing the camp complied with a host of state regulations regarding “procedures to be implemented in case of a disaster.” Among them: instructing campers what to do if they need to evacuate and assigning specific duties to each staff member and counselor.
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justpendule · 4 months ago
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Psycho-Pass: The decrease in empathy as the anime progresses
There's nothing surprising in saying that Japan's society in Psycho-Pass, as it progresses further under Sibyl System's rule, is decreasing in empathy and is heading towards the dehumanisation of people based on psycho-passes and even more.
However, I find it interesting to also see this evolution in the inspectors' task forces too. For instance, the older enforcer we know of, Masaoka, happens to have been an inspector before the Sibyl system was instituted. And he became an enforcers because of his mental/emotional instability, which is something he probably struggled with before Sibyl, but was rebuked for it once Sibyl was in place.
This is something that happened to both Ginoza and Kogami later on too, when faced with grief and despair. For Ginoza, the turn into a latent criminal was caused by the loss of his father, so it's not really surprising. However what really interest me is the death that triggered Kogami's demoting into a latent criminal and thus enforcer.
Kogami's psycho-pass surge was triggered by the death of one of his enforcers, Mitsuru Sasayama. It is shown in the series that they were close, and that the case on which they were working when Sasayama was killed was gruesome, which explains why Kogami's reaction was so strong when he discovered Sasayama's mutilated body.
So, I think losing it is a pretty normal reaction when someone who was your responsability is killed so violently. So, from the first season, it was always clear that empathy could cause you to turn into a latent criminal, which is why it's not surprising to see other inspectors, after Kogami's demotion, start distancing themselves from their enforcers. And I do not think it has anything to do with age, as Kogami and Ginoza were born in the same year.
And Ginoza is a pretty interesting example because, even before the events with Kogami, he was already trying to avoid being close to his enforcers in order to prevent his psycho-pass from going up. But there are circumstances behind Ginoza's behaviour, as his father was demoted due to his psycho-pass surge, and he has suffered the circumstances of such an event.
So, with that being said, when we start the second season and see that Ginoza has become an enforcer, we expect new inspectors to be detached from their enforcers. We can see it with Mika Shimotsuki, her behaviour, and how she is abiding by the laws she dutifully learned. She rejects Akane's conduct and sees enforcers as a disposable task force. However, as the season progresses, she starts to forge ties with Yayoi Kunizuka, and by the third season, we see that her beliefs were shaken, as she's much more lenient in her new position of Chief Inspector. Thus, we could think that, despite wanting to stay away from their enforcers, the wills of inspectors will never be as strong as the time spent besides their colleagues and the ties they forged together, however....
Here comes Risa Aoyanagi. She's an inspector, has the same age as Kogami and Ginoza, and even entered the public safety bureau at the same time as the latter. She is there when Kogami is demoted, and when Ginoza is too. She presumably has the same closeness with her enforcers as her former colleagues did, and yet, she does something no other inspector is shown doing in the show: She kills one of her enforcers, Ryogo Kozuki, in cold blood as he was trying to flee. He was an enforcer with whom she worked for years, and according to Psycho-Pass: The Novel, they even had a relationship at some point (I didn't read it, saw this on the wiki while I was writing this).
And I think this is where the empathy part comes out. Because I remember being shocked when Aoyanagi mentioned to Ginoza that she killed her enforcer while he was trying to flee. I tried imagining Akane or Ginoza doing the same with Kogami, and couldn't really grasp it because they would never do that. And yet here was this inspector, killing her enforcer while he was trying to flee his forced emprisonment.
And this admission made me think about Kogami's surge in psycho-pass. Kogami's psycho-pass surge happened in 2110, after the death of his enforcer. The grief and guilt were so strong that it caused him to turn into a latent criminal. Aoyanagi's execution of Kozuki happened three years later, in 2113. She killed him for something that is, on his part, understandable, and which she maybe could have stopped without the use of her dominator. I mean, I would have tried to flee too if I had been in Kozuki's position. After the killing, Aoyanagi felt grief and guilt, as she expressed it to Ginoza later, but it did not cause her psycho-pass to surge alarmingly.
And this is where this lenghty post is going: As the psycho-pass of inspectors in the Sibyl's system are remaining low, so are,their level of empathy. The Sibyl system is destroying the empathy of their inspectors, going from inspectors losing their minds because of the death of their relatives, to inspectors killing their own subordinates in cold blood.
The system is molding them into cold-blooded agents, no longer questioning the orders and thinking for themselves, ready to kill anyone as long as it is Sibyl ordering it. And in the wake of it, enforcers are nothing else but cannon fodder, finally disposable in the eyes of their inspectors.
Well, this was quite long to talk about something that is pretty obvious, but I've been thinking about the differences in reactions for their subordinates' deaths between Kogami and Aoyanagi and it will never not bug me.
PS: Also, I think the third season shouldn't be taken into account because of factors making the two inspectors different from the others (Arata being Criminally Asymptomatic, and Kei having been raised in another country, and thus not in the Sibyl system.)
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Ellery Queen - Inspector Queen's Own Case - Bantam - 1966
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rain-world-headcanons · 1 year ago
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the various parts inside of iterators are purposed organisms that take the roles or like our own cells, so like the inspectors/hydras/axons are similar to our white blood cells, the dark blue wavy things are like nerves that receive signals from the neuron flies. So when a scug is moving through their systems and occasionally crashing into things and eating neuron flies in the normally sterile environment it’s like when a pathogen gets into the blood stream. For pebbles, in the parts that have been rotted, he has no sense of them, so it’s kinda like losing a limb or an organ in a sense. An iterator’s body is that whole building!!!!!! I just think that’s so cool!!
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eaglesnick · 8 months ago
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“Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it” -  George Santayana,
Wes Streeting has announced a new regime for NHS hospitals, with OFSTED type league tables and the sacking of under performing managers. Hospital trusts can expect to be ranked on a range of indicators such as finances, delivery of services, patient access to care and the competency of leadership. Top performing trusts will be given more money and greater freedom on how that money is spent.
I have no idea how effective these reforms will be but Streeting would be well served to remember the negative impact the introduction of OFSTED league tables had on schools and teaching staff.
For years concerns were voiced regarding the heavy handedness of OFSTED, its crude reporting format and its negative effects on staff moral. The suicide of head teacher Ruth Perry, having had her school downgraded by OFSTED from  “Outstanding" to " Inadequate”, led to an inquiry into the whole OFSTED process. This inquiry described OFSTED as “toxic” and "not fit for purpose". We can only hope Streeting’s new hospital inspectors will not make the same mistakes.
Wes Streeting and his new inspectors would do well to remember   the social context within which individual hospitals operate.
In education it was found that :
“A school in a poor area is five times more likely to be ‘failing’ than affluent areas”  (tes magazine: 16/06/18)
In other words, the more deprived an area, the more likely it is for schools to be judged by OFSTED as “failing” or “inadequate”. It cannot be a coincidence that social class seems to play a major role in the success of a school as measured by the narrow focus of OFSTED.  Will the same bias apply when hospitals are being judged under Wes Streeting’s new NHS inspection regime?
Wes Streeting is a keen advocate of utilizing AI within the NHS.
"AI has the potential to revolutionize healthcare by improving efficiency, reducing waiting times, and enhancing patient outcomes. We must embrace this technology to ensure the NHS can meet the demands of the future."  (29/06/23)
Taking Wes Streeting advice I consulted AI when  asking this  question:
“Is there a link between the social class of an area and the success of hospitals serving that area?”
Unsurprisingly, AI found there was indeed a very strong connection  between the two.
“Yes, there is a link between the social class of an area and the success of hospitals serving that area. Research has shown that hospitals in more deprived areas often face greater challenges, which can impact their performance and outcomes. These challenges include higher rates of chronic illnesses, greater healthcare needs, and limited resources. As a result, hospitals in lower socio-economic areas may struggle to achieve the same outcomes as those in more affluent areas.” (Copilot: 13/11/24)
I hope Wes Streeting’s new NHS inspectorate takes this obvious connection into account when compiling their reports but the news headlines today suggest otherwise.  The media talk of "naming and shaming”, sackings and the withholding of money from “failing hospitals". 
Just as has happened in schools, this will lead to a further demoralisation of NHS staff working in socially deprived areas, recruitment and retention problems and a  worsening of NHS hospital services in those areas.
It would seem that despite the findings if the OFSTED Inquiry, as far as Wes Streeting is concerned lessons have NOT been learned.
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some-melon · 11 months ago
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lame ass gadgetjob
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cavenewstimestoday · 14 days ago
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Texas inspectors approved Camp Mystic disaster plan 2 days before deadly flood...
HUNT, Texas (AP) — Texas inspectors signed off on Camp Mystic’s emergency planning just two days before catastrophic flooding killed more than two dozen people at the all-girls Christian summer camp, most of them children. The Department of State Health Services released records Tuesday showing the camp complied with a host of state regulations regarding “procedures to be implemented in case of a…
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10bmnews · 2 months ago
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Iran says may allow US inspectors from nuclear watchdog if deal reached
Head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization Mohammad Eslami looks on during a meeting with International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Grossi (not seen), in Tehran, Iran, November 23, 2021 — Reuters Tehran, Washington held five rounds of nuclear talks. Eslami says American inspector might be allowed if Iran’s demand taken into account. Iranian president thanked Oman for its…
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