User:Zombiebaron/wip/The British Board of Health and Safety's Revised Edition of the Ten Commandments

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On June 15th 1979, following the prime ministerial election of Margaret Thatcher, The British Board of Health and Safety (NHS for short) released publicly for the first time a document that would later become known commonly as The British Board of Health and Safety's Revised Edition of the Ten Commandments and sometimes referred to as The Fifteen Commandments. The Revised Edition of the Ten Commandments was intended as a way to introduce basic health and safety education into religious tradition, as a way to prepare the population for the impending closure of all schools and hospitals. The fifteen commandments outlined by the British Board of Health and Safety sparked a slew of violent protests nationwide, and was eventually voted out of Parliament. Today The Fifteen Commandments are revered as one of the earliest examples of edutainment with many of the leading creators of edutainment citing The Fifteen Commandments among their influences.

Early Life[edit | edit source]

Margaret Thatcher initially came up with the idea for The British Board of Health and Safety's Revised Edition of the Ten Commandments during a congratulatory phone call from Ronald Reagan a few days after her election[1].

Summer Of 79 Protests[edit | edit source]

Cultural Impact[edit | edit source]

References in Pop Culture[edit | edit source]

Footnotes[edit | edit source]

  1. It is worth noting that at this time Reagan was not President, having narrowly lost the 1976 to Jimmy Carter