The Talking Clock is an opinion based, independently authored, small 'c' conservative, libertarian blog.

"The laws of England are the birthright of the people thereof; and all the kings and queens, who shall ascend the throne of this realm, ought to administer the government of the same according to the said laws; and all their officers and ministers ought to serve them respectively, according to the same."
Act of Settlement, 1700/01

"And I do declare that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state or potentate hath or ought to have any
jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm."

Bill of Rights, 1689
- an important and still exisiting part of OUR both written and unwritten English constitution

Monday, 31 August 2009

Diana: 1997 until forever


Today is the twelfth anniversary of the unlawful killing (actual official inquest jury finding) of Diana, Princess of Wales.

There are those who would rather we forget about Diana.

"Let her rest in peace!' might be their rather unimpressive reason for trying to guilt trip us into keeping quiet about her.

To use her brother's words in anticipation of such a clamour, we would like to say that: "My own and only explanation is that genuine goodness is threatening to those at the opposite end of the moral spectrum".

And Diana was genuine goodness. She was humanitarianism in action. She was compassion. She was kindness. She was joyous and light and beauty and inspiration, caring and loving, and she was OURS.

The 'English Rose' label might sit uncomfortably with some. Even though she was.

And while those of us who see Diana as a Saint might wait for forever without seeing such a title conferred upon her, she will have saintliness in our thoughts and in our hearts for always.

Genuine goodness is loved for all time.

This blogger certainly misses you, Diana.

Sunday, 30 August 2009

Sunday Paper Review: 30th August 2009

The Talking Clock didn't bother chiming for a week as we didn't spot anything in the news that we wanted to talk about. So, a week has passed. As we go into another Sunday newspaper round-up, will anything have changed in the space of a week?

No. The Sunday Times reports that there's a chain of letters demonstrating that the release of the Libyan bloke who'd been jailed for the Lockerbie horror DID have British national interest motivating it... and that interest, according to the newspaper, was oil.

No. MPs from the House of Snouts are apparently still whining and moaning and groaning and claiming victim status over reforms of their expenses following the scandal exposed by the Telegraph. And it's the Sunday Telegraph listing the trough-lovers' latest protestations of being hard done by.

No. There's still no-one who likes Gormless. But praise goes to the young soldier who confronted Gormless about the fact our boys have to pay tax while out in Afghanistan fighting ZaNuLiebour's war on photographers and trainspotters. The Mail on Sunday has an interesting article revealing how much our brave boys get paid. It's about £20,000 apparently. And when The Talking Clock goes to work each day, we see plenty of people in ties and suits who must earn that amount in a week for just gambling with other people's money. Strange old world.

Yes. We have the paparazzi. Jet-skis. Bikinis. St. Tropez. Romance. But this isn't the wonderful Diana, Princess of Wales. It's former Spice Girl Geri Halliwell. The News of the World pays homage to Geri's derrière.

And that's about all we could find which we wanted to comment on.

Still, at least we're not moaning about the state of the world. Isn't life that little bit nicer with all the politicians on holiday?

Sunday, 23 August 2009

Sunday Paper Review: 23rd August 2009

The Sunday Telegraph has a report which could run and run. It forms links with the release of the Lockerbie bomber, Peter Mandelson and his old friends Oleg Deripaska and Nat Rothschild... and Colonel Gaddafi. It's a revelation that the newspaper explores in depth and is sure to be the beginnings of an almighty political row.

As if that wasn't huge enough, the Sunday Telegraph also reveals how Britain's payments to the EU are set to increase by SIXTY PER CENT next year! The amount we have to cough up is reported to amount to 3p on the standard rate of UK income tax. So on our calculations (not that we're mathematical geniuses or anything), if you earn £300 per week, you are giving £9 a week to fund the European Union.

The Observer also runs with the Lockerbie-Libya story, but chooses to put Gordon Brown squarely at the centre of it's investigation. In other news, the detail and fallout from this year's G20 in London continues to be centre stage in a newspaper that - together with it's sister paper - thankfully maintains a protective interest in matters of civil liberties.

A lot to digest in the Sunday Times who are not getting into the silly season this week. First up is a dossier which had been suppressed by ministers but has now been seen by the newspaper. It reveals a catalogue of shortcomings which are apparently failing our troops. Fear of political correctness is also out of the window as the newspaper reports on gangs who "import children" in order to claim British state benefits. Meanwhile, it is reported that cereal manufacturers Kellogg's and Weetabix are about to find themselves in the cross-hairs of the EU's interfering with every aspect of everything habit. We're looking forward to this one. A couple of very big and very popular brands up against the EU? We'll get the popcorn...

The Mail on Sunday is scathing of Labour, it's beleaguered Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth and British policies in Afghanistan as it reveals that an exclusive poll for the paper shows that 69% of British folk now want our troops to be brought back home.

The Sunday Express reveals how just ten out of our eighty-six ministers are actually at their desks earning their wages right now. The paper brands Whitehall a "ministerial ghost town"..

The Independent on Sunday has a report on how the Tories may repeal the ban on hunting. Shame they're not planning on reversing the smoking ban. Hey ho. This blog doesn't support fox hunting, but we don't mind the Tories discussing repealing it. Not only do we oppose banning everything, but discussion of repeal should mean the utterly dishy Otis Ferry will be finding his way back into news headlines frequently. Swoon! Call us shallow and superficial... we confess.

Saturday, 22 August 2009

Quote of the Week

"[A]n awful lot of people in our party... are deeply unhappy with the way that we've signed up apparently quite blindly to the climate change agenda. [T]here is a deep unease that we're rushing in virtually to a theology: those who asked questions are 'deniers'. The language is theological. We're rushing in to what has become a theology imposed by the equivalent of what has become the mediaeval church and that nobody's allowed to question it".

- The very sensible Ann Widdecombe MP becomes the voice of non-sheeple and expresses deep concern about the "climate change" agenda in conversation with blogger Iain Dale for Total Politics magazine.

Thursday, 20 August 2009

And another supermarket in on the act

So far this week, this blog has noted how Sainsbury's and Iceland supermarkets have in place policies challenging under 25's for identity if they want to buy cigarettes or alcohol.

We've noted that the legal age to purchase such things is eighteen.

We've noted that 25 seems a strange and over-the-top age to challenge until.

We've noted that - at best - such policies are "convenient" to ZaNuLiebour and their bid to impose compulsory biometric identity cards on an unwilling nation.

We've asserted that it could be viewed as part of a "mission creep" bid to make sure as many people as possible become regimented into viewing demands for identity as very normal - and not in any way draconian.

Yesterday, we were in a Co-Op Food supermarket. And guess what? They ALSO have a policy to challenge the under 25's.

Are you spotting a pattern here?

Question is - do we believe that these supermarkets have all independently sat down and arrived at the same policy? Why 25? Why not 24? Or a reasonably sensible 21? Or 18 as the statute books demand?

Independent and co-incidental policy matches - or something more co-ordinated?

And as they keep on lifting the barrier, how long will it be before under 30's are routinely challenged for identity to make store purchases?

We'll keep on checking all the supermarkets and seeing what policies they have.

And we'll keep on increasing our shopping at independent stores in response.

This blog author is way over the age where we are likely to be challenged. But this blog author is a libertarian. And this blog author can see signs of "mission creep" trends in these exact same policies.

So, come join the light side, Damian Green

It emerged last night that Conservative front bench MP Damian Green has successfully lobbied to have his personal data removed from the ruled-as-illegal DNA database.

Damian Green - for those with no memory and for international readers who may not know - was the MP who was arrested and whose Parliamentary offices were raided without a warrant after ZaNuLiebour suffered a spate of embarrassing news headlines concerning immigration.

Both Liberty and Genewatch UK have demanded that all innocent people be removed from the DNA database - not just those who are 'famous'.

However, praise where praise is due to Damian Green MP. He has not forgotten normal, everyday man-on-the-street.

Speaking of his reaction, Green says: "I am delighted that the Metropolitan Police has recognised that keeping the DNA records of someone who should not have been arrested in the first place is wrong. This is a small but significant victory for freedom. But this is only a first step. I want every innocent person who has been arrested and whose records are being wrongly held to be treated the same as me".

This blog author wholeheartedly supports Damian Green - if he follows through on his words with consistent campaigning.

He has undoubtedly learned a lot from his experiences.

To that end, we now publicly call on Damian Green MP to unite with his Conservative colleague David Davis MP and to become a prime force in moving to undo ZaNuLiebour's Stasi-esque, 'Big Brother' state.

He has the experience which should be a catalysing power. We invite him to step completely onto our side - the side of libertarians, the side of goodness and light.

And we invite him - together with David Davis and any other person who feels strongly about our personal freedoms - to launch a relentless campaign to restore to the British people those liberties, freedoms and values granted to us in our constitutional documents.

British values of freedom, privacy, of protection from tyranny.

Come join us on the light side, Damian Green. Step forward and make yourself a libertarian champion.

Tuesday, 18 August 2009

DNA evidence "can be faked"

Saw this and thought it really interesting. We'd make it story of the day in fact. According to the Daily Mail, any biology student can fake DNA evidence and plant it at a crime scene should they wish.

The one saving grace is that students would apparently need thousands of pounds worth of equipment in order to fake DNA evidence.

So we won't worry about them doing so...

Anyway, interesting story. The ridiculous New Labour Government ought to stick that on their illegal DNA database. We say 'illegal'. That's what the European Court ruled. We don't love Europe and don't cede our personal sovereignty to Europe. If ZaNuLiebour want to cede the nation's sovereignty, they could at least abide by Europe's court rulings.

And when they've all stuck this story on their DNA database, they can shove it on the back of their not-yet compulsory biometric identity cards, too.

Nice story, Daily Mail. Keep up the very good work of late!

-

We were channel-hopping last night. As we flicked onto one channel, we heard a narrator say:

"...police state predicated on terror"

We thought it was a documentary on New Labour and civil liberties.

We were wrong. It was a History Channel documentary on the SS.

History repeating..?

Iceland: Another supermarket on our 'we won't shop there then' list

Earlier this week, we wrote about why we would not be shopping at Sainsburys supermarkets because of their policy of challenging anyone who looks under 25 to prove their identity when buying cigarettes or alcohol.

Our view was that the legal age is eighteen.

We've seen under eighteens challenged, then under 21's, now under 25's... and we suspect they'll aim for under 30's next.

We also expressed the view that we found it difficult to not think this is in some way linked to nasty New Labour's despised compulsory biometric identity cards and the sinister database behind it. Our view is that, even if entirely independent, this scheme was at least convenient to ZaNuLiebour's would-be total police state.

So, imagine our surprise to have noted today that... Iceland supermarkets also have the same 'Challenge 25' policy.

Two supermarkets running the exact same bizarre age challenging policy? We are starting to feel a conspiracy theory coming.

At some point in the next few days, we'll have a look at the other main supermarkets and we'll let you know if they're operating the same entirely unnecessary identity demanding schemes too.

This blog author supports the No2ID campaign. We also support those young people who will be effected. They should not have to live in a constant police state. We can help them - by not shopping at those stores with such a ridiculous identity policy which - rightly or wrongly - we suspect has something to do with compulsory biometric identity cards.

As we say, it's a policy that is at least 'convenient' to the architects of the British police state.

Do us all good to shop at small independent retailers anyway...

Now our MAGISTRATES do not trust the police!

Well, if the ever expanding police state makes you nervous, if CCTV everywhere makes you constantly feel like you're being watched, if the threat of random searches on you makes you freeze whenever you see a police officer, if the Guardian's coverage of the G20 was an eye-opener - all of which have made you trust the police even a little less... then do not think yourself in anyway questionable for your response.

Only, it appears that our MAGISTRATES do not trust the police either.

A front page report in the Daily Telegraph reveals that the Magistrates Association has issued dire warnings about the ability of police officers to issue fixed penalty notices to motorists.

We might just mention, in passing, that fixed penalty notices are - from our understanding - not lawfully valid in England and you'll have to read the Declaration of Rights - a Constitutional document which we're handily linking to in our right-hand sidebar - to understand why. They might be on the statute books, but that does not necessarily make them lawful.

We digress.

The Magistrates Association's Chairman, Chris Hunt Cooke, warns: "Once they have been given these powers, the police will misuse them, that is a certainty, and careless driving will be generally treated as a minor offence, unless serious injury is involved. This is a proposal that places the convenience of the police above what is right in principle, may coerce innocent drivers into accepting a fixed penalty, and is certain generally to downgrade careless driving in terms of offence seriousness".

So, there's a strange turn up for the books. Magistrates speaking out to warn that the police cannot be trusted to not abuse powers that ZaNuLiebour unthinkingly want to give to them. Surprise!

And all of it as though Habeas Corpus never existed.

And anybody who thinks the Conservatives will be that much different has so much policy documentation to give them reassurance (aka don't make us laugh!).

So let's all vote for UKIP, the Green Party, the Pirate Party, the BNP, the Monster Raving Loony Party, the SNP, Plaid Cymru, Esther Rantzen and every single worthwhile independent available at the forthcoming General Election and get our country back.

We won't, of course. Like sheep, the vast majority will mostly unthinkingly vote for more of the same LibLabCon. Baaa!

Maggie was warned... about UFOs!!

Another batch of documents has been released chronicling British reports of UFO sightings.

Included in this latest batch is a letter sent from the former Chief of Defence Staff, Lord Hill Norton, to then Defence Secretary Michael Heseltine.

The defence chief was writing in response to the dismissal officially of interest in the infamous events at Rendelsham Forest in Suffolk of December 1980.

His letter - remember this is from the most senior of defence staff to one of the most senior members of Margaret Thatcher's Government - read:

"My personal view, having considered the fragmentary but compelling evidence brought to public knowledge by the media, is that the case cannot be disposed of in these rather perfunctory terms. If the report made by the USAF authorities in January 1981 is accurate, there is evidence that British airspace and territory are vulnerable to unwarranted intrusion to a disturbing degree. If, on the other hand, the report of the deputy base commander must be dismissed ... then we have evidence – no less disturbing, I suggest – that a sizeable number of USAF personnel at an important base in British territory are capable of serious misperception, the consequences of which might be grave in military terms."


Fascinating reading. Much else has been summarised throughout the mainstream media - a good example of which is contained in this report from The Independent. There's also a devoted sub-section on the Daily Telegraph website.

What makes this story even more interesting is the recent furore and the ongoing scandal of the proposed extradition of 'computer hacker' Gary McKinnon. The Aspergers sufferer faces being sent for trial to the US after he allegedly hacked US computer systems looking for evidence of alien life.

Much of the media comment of McKinnon's case has argued for him to NOT be extradited but at the same time dismissed him as a fruitcake eccentric looking for little green men which so obviously do not exist.

However, here we have a Chief of Defence writing to the Minister of Defence in Margaret Thatcher's Government saying something far more interesting and thought provoking than that.

Wonder how much correspondence on UFOs has passed over the desk of Gormless? Not that we expect him to be interested in things that are out of this world. He's clearly already too far off the planet already.

Monday, 17 August 2009

EU will be deported, you naughty Brits!

Another day, another EU story. There we were reading The Sun on the tube this morning to get the lowdown on all the weekend's footie action when - there on page two - we were struck by this story about how New Labour are signing up to yet more things that will give the EU even more rights to demand British people be extradited to Europe.

Simple answer? Have holidays outside of Europe?

Even more simple answer? Vote UKIP and get rid of these EU loving idiots who are running our country.

It's difficult to find anything new to say on EU issues now. Every day, there's something else - none of it to the benefit of British people.

Je ne sais pas pourquoi pero no me gusta.

We expect that - if we could be bothered to look - we'd find Labour politicians saying it was for our own good, the Conservatives saying they would do something maybe but they won't decide on what anytime this side of a General Election and the LibDems saying it was bad for democracy but the Europeans want it so it must be a joyous thing before falling out with itself when the whips tell their MPs what to think on the matter.

Sigh.

Been here before.

EU? Better off out, thanks.

Is the media calling 'time' on Afghanistan?

Wherever you are in the UK, we're sure you have a local newspaper.

When we came out of work in Central London this evening, we were greeted by the freebie newspaper London Lite's headline:

"1,000 killed or injured in Afghan war - Shocking toll of British troops is revealed"

Our view on the war in Afghanistan is irrelevant, so we'll spare you the trouble of finding out in minute detail.

What is most interesting though is the position of the British media.

There seems to be a continual supply of bad news headlines concerning Afghanistan recently.

Our troops have been there waging a 'war on trainspotters' for nine million years - or something - and yet it's just in the last few weeks that the media tide seems to have turned into bad news story after bad news story.

A constant supply of bad news stories will obviously have a negative impact on public opinion.

Not that this New Labour lot care a fig about public opinion. Remember the 80 billion people who marched against the war in Iraq? We exaggerate the number... obviously. Call it dramatic license.

Anyway, we just wondered whether these constant bad news stories about our involvement in Afghanistan were simply the media's response to detail as it happens or whether the proprietors of the British media industry have decided that they've had enough of us being there now..?

Sorry, we did study media and we know about the way the media can often create the stories it wants the public to get energised about.

It's interesting.

Obviously, the media can say what it likes. New Labour's war on trainspotters and photographers must be fought in the caves of Afghanistan in order to prevent people who like trains and photography thinking they can get away with that sort of criminal behaviour on British streets.

Yadda, yadda.

Maybe New Labour should just consider bringing our brave troops home and sending Joanna Lumley to Afghanistan in their place. She could sit down with them in a mountain cave - or whatever it is - and just say: "I say, would you mind awfully not being rotters and being awfully well behaved in the future, Old Bean?"... now wouldn't that save a lot of time and trouble?

Why this blogger won't be shopping at Sainsburys any more...

Outside a Sainsbury's store recently, we noticed a sign informing shoppers that the supermarket chain will soon be moving to a 'Think 25' policy. In practise, it means that if you look 25 or under, you are likely to be asked to prove your identity in order to buy cigarettes or alcohol.

Now, we appreciate that both products have a legal age for purchasing these. Fair enough.

However, why 25? And why now?

It seems somewhat suspicious to us that the store would adopt such a policy at a time when ZaNuLiebour are trying to impose compulsory biometric identity cards and a sinister database that goes with it on an unwilling nation.

Now, we might be rather cynical - admittedly. We might be prone to considering conspiracy theories - admittedly.

But it does seems somewhat convenient to ZaNuLiebour, this new policy of Sainsbury's.

Nobody wants the ID cards. But if no-one can buy anything without one, then they'll have to get one.

Let's not start off with the population as a whole - let's start on the up-to-25 age group and make them think it quite normal to have to prove your identity to any Tom, Dick or Harry who demands it.

Not in our name, you don't.

Now, there's a very good chance that there's nothing sinister behind Sainsbury's decision to move to this policy. Indeed, their corporate website presents it as a policy receiving "positive feedback" and is part of their commitment to the "responsible sale of products".

This blog author is extremely unlikely to be effected by the 'Think 25' policy of the Sainsbury's supermarket chain.

Yet to us, it represents another step on the road to 'bye-byes' for our civil liberties.

At some point, we all have to make a stand against anyone and everyone dictating every tiny aspect of our lives and thinking they are entitled to demand to intrude upon our private lives and our identities whenever they feel like it.

We can understand people who look under eighteen being challenged - fine.

However, challenging people who look under 25 is a step too far. We view it with deep distrust and suspicion.

And for that reason, we'll be boycotting Sainsbury's for as long as they maintain such a policy. It's a shame. It's a nice supermarket that sells nice things.

But we're not going to give encouragement or business to any organisation that thinks it can demand to know the minute detail of all aspects of our lives.

We've had enough of the mission creep. Enough of the police state. Enough of civil liberties being eroded. To us, a 'Think 25' policy is another brick in the wall.

We'll shop elsewhere.

Sunday, 16 August 2009

Sunday Paper Review: 16th August 2009

It's a bit of a quieter day in the newspapers if you ask us, but here's one or two things we found interesting.

Know how this blog has been somewhat cynical about the 'swine flu' apocalypse? Well, we have. But we've refrained from saying *too* much. We'll let this story from the Mail on Sunday do our talking. Everyone should read it. Then make their own minds up. As we did several weeks ago.

The Sunday Telegraph reports that 30,000 people have DIED in England and Wales over the last five years after contracting 'superbugs' in hospital. The story cites figures from the Office for National Statistics. Puts the drama about 'swine flu' into context, huh? And also could become a talking point in the non-story row about the NHS.

Days after the Pirate Party UK announced that they will fight as many seats as they are able to afford at the next General Election, it seems that ZaNuLiebour want to be their chief recruitment officer. The Independent on Sunday reveals that the Queen's Speech will include a bill to criminalise and restrict the internet access of the estimated 7 MILLION people who download dodgy music on the internet. We thought downloading illegally copied music was already illegal... surely if you download something, you make a copy and therefore it's already covered by copyright laws? But there you go, we obviously know nothing - and we're happy to put our hands up to what we don't know.

The rest is rather dull in newspaper land. In our humble opinion. Afghanistan, NHS rows, Conservatives, Labour, old music, new music, fashion, music, fashion, music... sorry, we were just channelling Jennifer Saunders' Edina Monsoon alter ego for a moment.

Friday, 14 August 2009

What do New Labour know about patriotism anyway?

Health Secretary Andy Burnham is in the news headlines... again. He seems to be in the headlines all the freaking time of late. Is some mysterious force propelling him into the spotlight for any particular reason, we wonder?

Maybe he could get our water fluoridated or something?

Anyway, we won't talk too much about the individual. However, we have noted that he has accused Dan Hannan of being 'unpatriotic' after Hannan publicly questioned the NHS while in America.

Anyone who knew anything about Dan Hannan at all would know that his views are not even news. He published them months ago in a book called 'The Plan'.

Though is this accusation of being 'unpatriotic' not somewhat interesting, coming from a New Labour politician?

Unpatriotic... as in handing our sovereignty to a foreign power?

Unpatriotic... as in ignoring the Declaration of Rights? Magna Carta? Habeas Corpus?

Unpatriotic... as in branding UKIP extremists because they stand up for British sovereignty?

Who needs lectures in patriotism from New Labour? It is they who have turned the Houses of Parliament into little more than a Town Hall while giving rule over this nation to megalomaniacs in Brussels whose names and faces no-one even knows.

It is they - New Labour - who would have our national anthem become Beethoven's 'Ode To Joy' and our national flag become a ring of gold stars on a navy blue background.

It is they - New Labour - who would relegate Her Majesty The Queen from her position of Head of State of a proud nation into a 'citizen' of the European Union.

Patriotism? New Labour know nothing about it. In fact, most people who feel an ounce of patriotism in Britain are scared of voicing it in case we get locked up indefinitely for daring to care about the land in which we were born.

Our once proud Britain, that New Labour has ransacked then gifted to the European superstate.

So we take no lectures in 'patriotism' from New Labour!

Dan Hannan has more patriotism in his receding hairline than the whole of New Labour can muster throughout the entirety of their collective crapistocracy*.

* Yes, we did just invent that word. It seems to fit where New Labour are concerned.

Thursday, 13 August 2009

Dan Hannan's opinions are VERY welcome here

There's a story in the Daily Telegraph that Andrew Lansley, the Conservative shadow health secretary has "rebuked" Dan Hannan over the latter's opinions on the NHS.

Now, interest declared - this blog is a huge supporter and admirer of Dan Hannan.

Position stated - this blog actually disagrees with Dan Hannan's opinion on the NHS.

Now that's said... the Tories should take their 'rebukings' and shove them where the sun doesn't shine.

This is what is completely and utterly appalling about British politics. The moment anyone nails their colours to a political party's mast, then their opinions are homogenised.

They cease to be an individual with individual opinions. They become little party apparatchiks. They become lobby fodder. Whatever the party decrees, that must become that political person's opinion - whether it is their actual opinion or not.

Given a choice between the Conservative Party or Dan Hannan, we would choose Dan Hannan anytime. Tell them to naff off, Dan. Then get yourself into Westminster and represent those of us who are able to think for ourselves. Gosh, we so need representation!

Given a choice between some silly lobby fodder pointless politician and a person with compassion and individual thought that they express publicly, we would choose the latter.

It ties in with what we said about George Galloway recently.

We may well disagree with George Galloway until the cows come home. However, he knows his own mind, he expresses it... and even if you disagree with him, he does at least contribute something to debate.

All three of the main political parties do this. They dictate what their members say, think and do.

It is utterly to the detriment of us, the people that these politicians are meant to represent.

This then ties in with representation. How many times have you written to an MP and received back something that simply copies and pastes from a political party briefing.

Try writing to a Labour MP about the lack of democracy evident in Gordon Brown being PM, for example. We can tell you what the reply will be. Only, we received two such replies from different MPs. Almost identikit including grammatical structure.

Now for change. Time for change. We want change - blah, blah, blah.

This blog is bored tireless by sterile political 'debate' which normally involves different faces arguing about a difference that one can barely wedge a cigarette paper into.

We want change. We want Dan Hannan, we want George Galloway, we want Frank Field, we want Boris Johnson.

We want party politicians or individuals with their own minds who are capable of expressing them and, therein, stimulating political discourse.

What we do not want is more flaccid, sterile posturing handed down from Party HQ and masquerading as individual opinion in a 'democracy'.

Have we explained enough? Can you see the point? Hope so. Thing is, we're told we live under a democracy. How can it be, when people in political life are told what to say and slapped down if they dare drift off-message?

That's not democracy. It's an insult to our intelligence and a sham.

Americans getting energised over 'Obamacare'

U.S. citizens are getting energised and animated over President Obama's plans for healthcare reform.

We mentioned this in passing on this blog a couple of days ago and have been aware of the story for a couple of weeks through monitoring what's said on the controversial but often enlightening Alex Jones show.

A couple of the British broadsheets pick up on it more today - namely The Times and The Guardian.

The UK coverage prompts a couple of points.

As Alex Jones has been saying for a fortnight on his show, the media are portraying the protests against 'Obamacare' as "right wing" protests.

Indeed, if you look at the UK newspaper coverage, images showing Obama cast as Hitler illustrate the stories.

Of course, every media student knows that the press and TV will focus on those most extreme images that illustrate the points being conveyed in as simplistic a manner as gets across a message. One should never assume that such images represent wholesale opinions or actions that protesters are engaged in.

However, if there are a small number of people carrying placards in which Obama is cast as Hitler, one does wonder what on earth they would do if they lived here in the UK under New Labour and their totally Stasi-esque police state.

Which brings us neatly on to our main point.

The people of the United States are often mis-characterised here in the UK. However, here they are getting very worked up about the issue of healthcare.

Rather than condemning silly protest posters (which many political parties - including LibLabCon - in the UK manage perfectly well too), this blog applauds those people in the United States who are exercising their right to express an opinion.

Democracy works by Government representing the views of the people. That's the exact point of democracy! If Government fails to represent the views of the people, then it should expect to have those people say that they think they are not being represented according to their wishes.

Whatever you think of American healthcare, silly posters depicting Obama as Hitler - whatever - let us take a moment to applaud the American people for caring enough about their own lives to wish to make their views known to their representatives in political life.

What a contrast to the UK where the Government seems able to do anything it wishes to the people and protests generally number a couple of thousand before being brutally crushed. That said, there were a few million who protested against the war and they got soundly ignored.

And we must acknowledge that anyone voicing a political opinion in the UK is likely to disappear for a walk in the woods at worst or risks being locked up for six million years without charge after being accused of being a trainspotter. Or something. You get the point. We've all read the civil liberties nightmare stories of life in the UK over the last few years under New Labour.

So, bravo to the American people for not becoming brow-beaten, for wishing to have a say in how they are governed, for choosing to engage in democracy.

What a shame that Britain seems to be completely locked down from citizens engagement in political life. Who knows... maybe one day, the American people might teach us a thing or two again.

--

You may remember that - somewhat less controversially - there were recently images circulating of Obama mocked up as 'The Joker' from the 'Batman' franchise. According to what we have heard on the Alex Jones show, Obama supporters are claiming that such images are 'racist'. If true, it's a cowardly way of stifling debate on policy. We're putting the Obama image and a recent British political poster alongside each other below. Maybe it might contextualise claims that the Obama 'Joker' posters are 'racist' - dunno. What do you think?

We've also put a famous British tabloid front page up to contextualise our point further. Apologies to the football legend for reviving it, but it makes the point.

Are any of these really racist, or is the assertion that one might be a mere cop out from debate?







Wednesday, 12 August 2009

1.1 million under 18's on UK DNA database

The Daily Mail today continues it's spirited fightback against 'Big Brother' Britain'.

The newspaper reveals that 412,670 under fifteens are on the DNA database. They say that 300 children are added every day.

The total number of under 18's on the database now numbers a jaw-dropping 1.1 million.

An estimated five million people of all ages are on the database - a large number of whom have never actually done anything wrong.

Dear, dear. In a true democracy, of course, the State would do the bidding of the people. So - whatever we have become - a democracy it is not.

Why can't 'they' just leave people alone? 'They' being the people who run things? How much power, control and money do the elite need?

Our view? They have everything already. A tiny number of people have most of the financial wealth in the world and an even smaller number have most of the power. Very nice for them, if that's what makes them tick. Us normal folk have far smaller demands. It's called humanity.

Now back off, take your power, take your money and let us - the normal everyday masses - just go about our simple little lives without being constantly bothered and having every small pleasure banned. What more can the elite want from us all?

To think that, fifteen years or so ago, people laughed at David Icke. Didn't he turn out to be right on just about everything - with the exception of those lizards?

Tuesday, 11 August 2009

When the Minister met GMTV...

Health Secretary Andy Burnham popped into GMTV for a little chat. He got a little more than he bargained for when he was asked about Tamiflu.

You probably wouldn't get this on the BBC. Well done GMTV.

"Swine flu is a new virus," the minister keeps saying. Really? So what was the swine flu that happened in the 1970's and other decades of the twentieth century? Anyway, keep asking the questions. The answers are out there somewhere.



Could the Pirate Party have a big influence on UK politics?

The Daily Telegraph is noting that the Pirate Party UK is now registered on the Electoral Commission's register of political parties.

The original Pirate Party stunned the political class in Sweden when they won a seat at the recent European elections.

It must be noted that the Pirate Party UK is not the same party as the Swedish party, but they share a common ethos and, apparently, communicate.

Their emergence as a British political party could have a fundamental bearing on future elections in the UK. Their primary message of overhauling copyright laws is sure to appeal to the 18-to-25 year old demographic. The sharing of clips of old tracks by their favourite artists or rare tracks from the recording sessions of a couple of years previous seems quite commonplace.

The Talking Clock still buys physical music products, but it's easy to see how hardcore fans might enjoy hearing a rare recording from their favourite artist.

Here's a little more of what the Pirate Party UK has to say:

We have 3 core policies:

• Reform copyright and patent law. We want to legalise non-commercial file sharing and reduce the excessive length of copyright protection, while ensuring that when creative works are sold, it's the artists who benefit, not monopoly rights holders. We want a patent system that doesn't stifle innovation or make life saving drugs so expensive that patients die.

• End the excessive surveillance, profiling, tracking and monitoring of innocent people by Government and big businesses.

• Ensure that everyone has real freedom of speech and real freedom to enjoy and participate in our shared culture.

In recent years we have seen an unprecedented onslaught on the rights of the individual. We are treated like criminals when we share entertainment digitally, even though this is just the modern equivalent of lending a book or a DVD to a friend. We look on helpless as our culture and heritage, so important for binding our society together, is eroded and privatised.

Now there is a democratic alternative. We, the people, can take back our rights. We, the people, can overturn the fat cats and the corrupt MPs who hold our nation's cultural treasures to ransom, ignore our democratic wishes and undermine our civil liberties.

A political party whose primary concern includes civil liberties is sure to appeal to a broad spectrum of people and - on that basis - this blog wishes the Pirate Party UK every success in it's efforts. It will be difficult for them, but not impossible... as the Swedish Pirate Party has already proved.

Meanwhile, the one note of cynicism that we will express is on their stated ethos of supporting free speech. When The Talking Clock was at University, there was lots said about 'free speech'. Students love to bang on about it.

However, we did note that free speech was encouraged at the University that we attended - provided it was extreme left wing in orientation and anything else was very frowned upon and virtually not allowed, let alone a valid opinion. Many UK Universities have a 'no platform' policy within student unions for the BNP, for example.

So, we're all in favour of 'free speech' provided that everyone - everyone - is free to speak.

We digress. We wish the Pirate Party UK every success and hope that they can play a big part in making the 18-to-25 year old age group in particular more aware of how their civil liberties have been eroded under New Labour, and how we might start going about getting our rights as human beings back from the corporate strangle holders who are currently ruling the roost over our once great nation and our beautiful lives.

Roll up! Roll up for the Great British cash give away!!

Now then sir, now then madam, would you look utterly billions of quids of British coin of the realm? Only, the British taxpayer just loves giving it away!!

Yes, the British citizen works more hours than most other people in 'Europe' and we get less holidays than anyone else in 'Europe' and we're the most spied upon and controlled population in all of 'Europe'...

...but us British folk don't mind any of that!

Run a bank and gone a bit tits up after gambling and paying yourself millions upon millions in bonuses that most of us could only ever dream of?

Not to worry. Here's several billions of British taxpayer's money of the realm! Just use it as you will. Bonuses, huge salaries. Have fun at our expense and don't even worry about sending us a postcard while we slave away on £6 an hour!

And if that wasn't all bad enough, the latest figures reveal that we are giving more money than ever to the European Union! What joy!

UKIP are reporting the figures from the Office of National Statistics. They show that last year, we gave the European Union £16.3 billion. Yes billion. Spelt with a 'b' as in 'British'. £16.3 billion.

But don't worry! They gave back £9.8 billion in grants! Don't worry if you haven't seen a single thing anywhere that you believe came as a result of the European Union. The figures say we got that much back in grants, so we must have. Who needs to see the evidence of it, anyway? Just rejoice!

There is the slightly uncomfortable issue of the net contribution of £6.5 billion which we still paid for membership of the EU club that we don't even want to be in.

Does any British person known how many noughts there are in a British billion anyway? And is it the same as an American billion?

So how much is £6.5 billion for every man, woman and child? And is that amount bigger or smaller than the amount we just gave to the banks for absolutely nothing? And how many hours will we have to work at £6 an hour in order to pay off our share of it?

Oh, don't worry! EastEnders is on the telly later, so we won't bother voting for anyone who might do things any different. Voting Labour again, dear? Of course, Jack! My Dad did, his Dad did, as did his Dad before him, and his Dad before that. It's what we do. That funny gadget above the TV? Oh, it's just the Government keeping an eye on me. I'm off to the supermarket to have a microchip tracking implant in my arm next week. How cool is that?

Strewth.

Daily Mail: 'Big Brother' Britain worse than China

The Daily Mail has an excellent report detailing how 'police state China' has one CCTV camera for every 472,000 of it's citizens.

By comparison, Britain has one CCTV camera for every 14 people.

It also notes that 1 in 78 British adults were spied upon by the state last year with over half a million of us having had our telephone or email records spied upon.

So, fellow Brits, know any cheap airline tickets to go and live in liberal China?

Praise must be handed to the Daily Mail who have, of late, been a consistent guardian of British civil liberties and consistently expose the absolutely appalling levels of control that we live under in New Labour's totalitarian state.

The sooner ZaNuLiebour are gone... not that we expect anybody else to do anything much different once they actually get into power. Call us cynical.

See also the excellent opinion piece by Henry Porter with which we agree.

And here's a nice little article in The Times for the 'nothing to hide, nothing to fear' loonies.

Monday, 10 August 2009

The Tories looking dodgy and back in spotlight over EU

If you thought this blog was cynical and distrusting of the Conservative Party's policy on the EU and the dreaded constitutional Lisbon Treaty... you were right! And it seems that the Tories are now going to start having to answer the questions that this blog, UKIP, and 'eurosceptics' of all flavours and persuasions keep on asking... just what is the Conservative policy on Europe?

The matter is put under sharp focus after it has become clear that the Tory Party's new allies in the EU - Poland's Law and Justice Party - are not only IN FAVOUR of the Lisbon Treaty but also in favour of the Common Agriculture Policy.

Even a Labour MP manages a 'eurosceptic' response to the latest turn up for the books.

Former EU Minister Denis MacShane is quoted in The Independent as saying: "It now turns out that Michal Kaminski who is leader of the Tory MEPs in their new group in Strasbourg is a strong advocate of the EU's most corrupt, wasteful spending programme. What is David Cameron doing in alliance with this man? Critics of the Cap like the Yorkshire Tory MEP Edward Macmillan Scott have been expelled from the Conservatives to appease this Cap junkie from Poland".

Nick Clegg of the LibDems and Glenys Kinnock have also waded in with criticisms and derision of the Conservatives.

Kinnock is quoted in The Independent as saying: "Repeating the vague Hague mantra 'matters will not rest ' won't do".

And you know what? We agree with her! Shocking, huh? But it's what we've been saying for months!

The Conservative Party seem to think their policy of 'say nothing about what we'll do' will hold out until the General Election.

For those of us who oppose the EU superstate, we know what we want to hear from the Conservatives - and they just cannot say those words that will grant them a British electoral landslide. With each twist and turn, it's the one area upon which they look decidedly weak and incredibly untrustworthy. And therein, we must conclude, lies the answer to the great Conservative Party EU policy mystery. They aren't going to do anything. It's all a con. If we're wrong, then they really are completely bonkers for not just coming out with full 'eurosceptic' force and cast iron promises.

UKIP must be laughing all the way to the ballot box.

Sunday, 9 August 2009

Sunday Paper Review: 9th August 2009

The Sunday Telegraph has an article written both by Alan Johnson and David Miliband. They write the article in a bid to try and convince those who will listen that they do everything possible to make sure the country does not collude in torture and human rights abuses. Oh, well, now they've said that in a newspaper article we will ignore the evidence that keeps coming out and the report from the JCHR. Of course we will. Especially when they add the caveat about 'but there are tough choices'. Really? Doesn't seem like a tough choice to us. To kick out a wicked and sinister New Labour Government or vote for another five years of civil liberties abuses at home, to experience a further five years growth in the surveillance state, to let authoritarian and totalitarian New Labour MPs build yet more infrastructure with which to repress the people... or to kick their disgusting backsides out of office never to trouble the good people of Britain ever again. Oh, and as for torture? Not in our name.

And if we do not believe Labour's protestations of innocence on torture, then we're joined in good company... by the Foreign Affairs Committee. The Independent on Sunday says that the FAC are publishing a report demanding that ministers PROVE that they've not been guilty of collusion in torture.

In the Mail on Sunday, Peter Hitchens asserts that the British police have become the uniformed wing of New Labour. Well, he's only saying what a vast number of the rest of us are thinking. Thinking, not saying. We're all uncertain as to whether New Labour actually brought in thought crime. They seem to have legislated for everything else. Meanwhile, the newspaper gives another warning on the 'swine flu' vaccine and warns parents that it won't even have been tested on children when it is given to all eleven million children in British schools.

The Observer has a story that we've been aware of via the internet but we've said nothing on it until it hits a British paper. There's a great big row in the US over Obama's healthcare plans. Sarah Palin has now declared the plans as akin to putting her children in front of an 'evil death panel' - apparently. There are protests - very vocal protests - which are growing all the time by all accounts. Where we do not agree with The Observer is that this is a Republican strategy protest; a partisan political issue. We wouldn't normally link to Alex Jones in a review of the mainstream media, but watch the video clips that are freely available on his site and decide for yourself what is going on in the US. This blog author doesn't live there. This blog author has no opinion on the debate. But we are capable of watching a YouTube clip on a pro-free speech website. And those video clips strongly support the line that people of all political hues are really rather unhappy over the matter.

Meanwhile, back on domestic policy, the Sunday Express claims that there are secret plans to 'privatise' the National Health Service. Elsewhere, they report on Tory plans to let us all look at our Google or Microsoft-hosted health records online. Which is going to be really great when we find our computers riddled with spyware...

The Sunday Times is reporting that British Universities are turning down British students for courses... whilst welcoming international students - because they can make them pay more for the same courses. Quite scandalous, in our opinion, and if it's true then we should write to our politicians and say 'fine, if that's what they want to do, but the Universities concerned should not be getting any British taxpayer's money then'. Strange story. If the BNP had said it, we wouldn't have believed them, but there you go - it's in the Sunday Times. Shocking.

Meanwhile, this blog's 'rebranding' of Mandelson as the far more appropriate Voldemort (which we first used way back in May) is catching on - Fraser Nelson in the News of the World is using the same alternative name today. If they use 'Gormless Buffoon' and 'Mini-Brained' next week, they do so with our blessing...

Saturday, 8 August 2009

And now even Mother Nature gets an ASBO...

'The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore' sang Cher. Okay, it was a cover. But that's not the point. Apparently scientists now actually do want to stop the sun from shining - if a story in the Daily Telegraph is accurate.

Now, the Telegraph is not a newspaper we associate with making up rubbish, conspiracy theories, interviews with aliens or April Fool's jokes in August. Even more bizarre would be the Telegraph roping in The Times to peddle the exact same story as a hoax. So it must be true... mustn't it?

This blog author is also not very hot on science nor very interested in environmental politics.

However, there was a 'what the flip?' moment when we read this story in the Telegraph which details how scientists are plotting to have a huge flotilla of unmanned ships sailing the oceans of the globe, creating clouds to stop the sun shining on our beautiful planet.

Failing that, they want to send some giant mirrors up into space and reflect the sun's rays away from the planet.

Or something.

It's a story that's already generated several hundred comments on the Telegraph's website. We're not surprised.

Who are these scientists? And what would they have done had they had technology at the beginning or the end of the Ice Age? Evacuated the planet?

And here's another question. If cloud producing ships were commissioned, would it rain in Britain 367 days a year?

And another - if the sun has to be punished for shining, does that mean we can stop worrying about our carbon footprint and get cheaper flights on EasyJet and RyanAir again?

This is one of those stories that comes along every so often and catches you completely off-guard.

We've said it before and we'll say it again... what the flip!? We knew New Labour were totalitarian halfwits, but not even they could be ridiculous enough as to contrive to hand Mother Nature an ASBO... could they?

Friday, 7 August 2009

Everything changes, but everything stays the same

Polls in the US are showing massive slumps in the approval rating of President Obama. He is now dipping to below 50% approval. The analysis of his dramatic decline in support from the voters is noted in one article as making his first six months a "greater failure" than those of George W. Bush.

When President Obama swept into power on the crest of unprecedented hope and euphoria, his message was simple - 'we want change'.

Alas, the current run of bad news polls suggests that the American people are not feeling the change that they hoped they could believe in.

Of course, change takes time.

The reason we mention this is that one cannot escape the huge slogan on the website of our very own Conservatives.

"Now for Change" screams the website of the Conservative Party.

Great! Fabulous! Let's all have a slice of that. So, what are they going to do, exactly?

Civil liberties, police state, European Union...

At the moment - apart from the welcome promise of cancelling the biometric ID card scheme - the Conservatives are still rather vacuous on policy.

Their 'now for change' slogan offers nothing more than a nod to the three word election mantra of President Obama.

As Hillary Clinton famously gibed: "Lifting whole passages from someone else's speeches is not change you can believe in, it's change you can Xerox".

To bring that back to the domestic... lifting a three word slogan from someone else's election campaign is not change you can believe, it's change you have photocopied.

And the evidence from the polls is that the American people aren't feeling particularly enthusiastic about the change that they were promised.

The Conservatives - and the British electorate - might want to take note of that.

Female Labour MPs turn on Harperson - report

According to The Sun, female Labour MPs have turned on Harriet Harperson and are uniting with male ministers to form a campaign to make sure Harperson is prevented from a bid for Labour leadership.

Holding the reins of power whilst Gormless is away with the fairies and talking to buttercups (or something), Harperson has recently gone on record with all sorts of very strange proclamations about the strengths of women compared to the weaknesses of men.

We would accuse her of being whatever the correlating equivalent of a misogynist is - if we knew the appropriate word. We don't. The best we could come up with was 'feminist'.

Yet - again according to The Sun's report - one 'senior figure' in the Labour Party has a word or two for Harriet 'The Hatter' Harperson.

Their source is quoted as saying: "If Harriet becomes leader it would be the end of the Labour Party. A number of us believe we have to take steps to stop it happening. Harriet is only concerned with number one. She is a fundamentalist, she's like the Taliban when it comes to driving through her own agenda".

Harperson being compared to the Taliban? By one of her own colleagues? Wow. We hope she's really offended. Maybe then she'll have an inkling how British people feel about being searched under 'terrorist' legislation for eating fish and chips, or for enquiring in stores about the price of gravy, and that seriously 'terrorist' activity of watching EastEnders.

Labour have this very strange habit of finding the worst thing possible in the world to accuse folk of and hope it sticks, huh? We - the public - are all terrorists and Harperson is a 'fundamentalist' like the 'Taliban'.

And the Labour Party are clearly all on another planet.

All 8.5 million UK schoolkids to be vaccinated against 'swine flu'

The Guardian is reporting that ministers are planning to vaccinate all 8.5 million school children in Britain against 'swine flu'.

They do, of course, produce a vaccine for the regular seasonal flu. Those who want it generally phone up their GP and request it. It's never normally taken into schools and given to every single five to sixteen year old.

Is such a vaccination program part of a response to something even more dreadful than they've let on? Or is such a programme destined to create even more apocalyptic hysteria than we've already witnessed?

It will be interesting to see what the parental uptake of such a vaccine program will be in a nation where a large number of parents refused consent for their children to be given the MMR jab at the beginning of the decade after fears of a link to autism.

Seems the 'swine flu' story is going to run and run...

Thursday, 6 August 2009

We're all healthy again now

Just been announced on the news that the number of new 'swine flu' cases has decreased significantly in England and there are no signs of any mutations of the virus. As if by magic.

Interesting.

It's possibly the fastest appearing and fasting disappearing virus on record.

It's also possibly the first virus ever on record to have listened to the sizeable proportion of public opinion which was saying: 'They're not vaccinating me'.

Very curious.

And how many died of this end-of-the-world apocalypse? Less than die from an outbreak of the common cold by a country mile. What a pointless drama.

...but watch out for the next virus that needs a vaccination program.

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Tories - are EU still just pretending?

Has former Hong Kong Governor Chris Patten inadvertently blown a hole in a Conservative Party smokescreen over the European Union? Or are the newspaper's making something out of the Conservative position on Europe that isn't actually there?

The now Lord Patten yesterday expressed the view that he would be "very positive" about the idea of becoming an EU Foreign Minister. Or rather, that's an edited version of what was said.

The full quote which appeared in yesterday's Financial Times read: "I’m not campaigning for the job. But if I was approached, which I think is unlikely, I would certainly be very positive about it."

It seems from the words with which this quote opens that Lord Patten was responding to a question on the issue. Nonetheless, he does still express positive interest in such a future role.

So, we were then rather mystified by a responding quote from William Hague which appears in The Guardian.

Hague is quoted by the latter publication as stating: "Speculation about who should fill a post whose shape we do not yet know is certainly unwise and, given the nature of European politics, likely to be unhelpful to any possible candidate".

Excuse us for being a little over analytical in the age of Twitter, Strictly Come Dancing and Big Brother (the TV show rather than the ZaNuLiebour reorganisation of the State) but...

...William Hague's words hardly sound like a reassurance that there will not be an EU Foreign Minister to go with the constitutional Lisbon Treaty, do they?

If anything, it appears - appears - that it was "unwise" for Patten to say what he did because it has been "unhelpful" to the Conservative Party's hopes of securing 'eurosceptic' votes. Or even further haemorrhaging these to UKIP.

And the Conservatives seem to be leaving suspicious and understandably distrusting 'eurosceptics' to engage in the "speculation" that Hague is worried about.

Only, for clarity's sake, the politically engaged 'eurosceptic' might go to the Conservative Party's website to try to get some context on these media quotes and find out what the party has to say about the matter in more detail...

...only to find a rather worrying silence. Which leads one to "speculation" about what truths such a silence is concealing.

As there is no elaboration on these intriguing media titbits, the 'eurosceptic' will probably have to file this mysterious passing of a handful of words in the same folder as the mysterious and still unexplained "we won't let matters rest there".

Though if Gormless called a snap election tomorrow, those wavering between the Conservatives and UKIP might give their vote to the party that is upfront about it's EU intent - and that party simply isn't the Conservatives.

Indeed, as each month passes by, the Conservative position on Europe still continues to be akin to an unsolved 'X File'.

And if the Conservatives must draw comparison between their policies and The X Files, we need only remind readers that the Smoking Man would surely vote UKIP who have a policy to partially overturn the smoking ban.

So what is the Conservative Party's real intent on the European Union? In the iconic words of the best of sci-fi shows, 'the truth is out there'...

Or is it? When faced with deep, dark mysteries, the hardened and weary 'eurosceptic' might choose to adopt another phrase from The X Files - 'trust no-one'.

Tuesday, 4 August 2009

Torture and human rights: David Davis accuses Labour of 'cover up'

If you even needed yet another good reason to never trust Labour with your vote ever again, this surely has to be it.

A lengthy report by the Joint Committee on Human Rights has called for an independent inquiry into allegations of British collusion in torture. The report is available online HERE (pdf file) and makes for damning reading.

Conservative MP David Davis - who famously resigned from the Shadow Cabinet in order to fight a by-election to draw attention to Labour's brutal assault on British civil liberties and privacy from the State - is openly condemning the Labour Government over the allegations of collusion in torture.

Whilst his Parliamentary colleague William Hague is quoted in The Guardian making more disappointingly wishy-washy noises about the possibility of the Tories holding an inquiry, civil liberties hero David Davis openly accuses the Government of acting in a manner where they have made "clear violations of the UK's international legal obligations".

Davis goes a stage further, saying of the failure to publish key guidelines which has been highlighted by the JCHR report: "All of this smacks of a cover-up. If they've got nothing to hide, why not publish the guidelines?"

David Davis has been putting pressure on the Government over this for quite a while and recently made a very passionate speech in the House of Snouts on the issue. He is to be praised for this, and for his previous actions in trying to make an issue of Labour's erosion of civil rights against the British citizen.

Mr. Davis is joined in our praise by The Guardian newspaper which sets the standard in reporting grave issues of civil liberties and human rights abuses and it's coverage of these exemplifies why the British public must never succumb to or allow Government regulation of the British media. Whilst the British mainstream media often gets criticised - often it's own fault for just churning out regurgitated guff from press releases rather than actually conducting in journalism - it is stories like this, pursued relentlessly by The Guardian, which are testimony to how the British media is our last line of defence against an all too sinister Labour administered State which - all too often - seems way out of control.

--

In fairness to William Hague, he has written an open letter to Gormless demanding answers to a series of matters on the issue of collusion and - as well as publishing the letter on the Conservative website - has also sent his letter to the media. However, we do expect Mr. Hague to follow up on this demand for answers with a public show of authority that one would expect of a leader who hopes will be entrusted with upholding British standards of decency in all things.

UKIP slams 'dangerous' Big Brother database; Tories slam another

UKIP have reiterated their opposition to ZaNuLiebour's 'Big Brother' Britain. They have slammed what they call an "ID nightmare" following revelations that nine council officials have been sacked for allegedly abusing the National Identity Scheme database (in operation already, is it?) to look up the details of friends and celebrities.

UKIP's Justice Spokesman Gerard Batten also condemns the proposed not-yet-compulsory biometric ID card scheme as just a front for the sinister State database.

Batten says: "The Identity Card scheme is just a red herring to allow the NIS to exist and give the government access to every aspect of our personal data. That is bad enough but these revelations also show that we will also be open to every criminal, fraudster or ill-wisher that is determined to get access to our personal information. The identity card scheme will not even do what it is supposed to: it won't protect us from criminals or terrorists, they will easily find ways to circumvent it. The people who will really suffer because of it are once again the ordinary law-abiding citizen. The ID Card and National Identity Scheme should be scrapped. It is a colossal waste of money and downright dangerous".

The story comes a day after a report in the Daily Telegraph which focussed on data security firm Overtis Systems and their analysis of the ContactPoint database. The damning report by Overtis was shocking in it's range and scope of criticisms and notes of alarm.

This led Conservative Shadow Children's Minister Tim Loughton to warn: "It’s becoming horribly clear that ContactPoint will be about as secure as a paper bag. We have to pull the plug on this expensive and dangerous project before it places millions of vulnerable children in harm’s way".

We say: New Labour: Same Old Danger

Boris comes out in support of McKinnon

London Mayor and thoroughly sensible chap Boris Johnson uses his Daily Telegraph column today to speak out for Gary McKinnon.

Boris - to paraphrase in the extreme - seems to share exactly this blog's view.

So Gary McKinnon used his computer to look for proof of aliens. So what? Big deal. Who cares?

As Boris notes, he's done the Americans a favour. If their systems really are so rubbish that he was able to nosey round for proof of men from Mars, then they should thank McKinnon for pointing it out.

He doesn't merit being sent to America to face 'trial' for something he's admitted. And trust ZaNuLiebour to not stand up for a British national.

Writing in the colourful and amusing style which you would expect from Boris, the Mayor manages to slam ZaNuLiebour, the Home Office, Alan Johnson and the US all in one go.

Worth reading.

Anyone noticing some trends here? Conservative politicians constantly speaking out in favour of civil liberties, human rights and damning ZaNuLiebour who keep on riding rough shod over them - and over the British people.

Remember how people said the Tories were the 'nasty party'? They may have been imperfect, but they were seriously never as vile as this Labour lot.

In fairness, we have to point out that one Labour minister has finally found some compassion. Welsh Secretary Peter Hain has called for McKinnon to be tried here. Any other Labour Ministers feel like proving they are not stone cold heartless betrayers of the British?

Now, back to Boris and can we repeat this just in case he comes by this blog?

Dear Mr. Mayor. You're a very good Mayor. This blog author is a Londoner. Nice Mr. Mayor.

...but when you've finished doing Mayor-ing, please get yourself back into Parliament, Westminster, the Cabinet and play a key and needed role in sorting this country out, won't you?

Monday, 3 August 2009

Edwina Currie dismisses Harperson as 'mad'

Edwina Currie - the former Conservative Minister - has responded to Labour's Harriet Harperson and her reported belief that men cannot be trusted in power and so the Labour Party should change it's rules to make sure that a woman always has one of the top jobs (see our paper review of yesterday).

Edwina, who has never had a fear of speaking her mind, says of Harperson in an article for The Times: "The woman is mad, that is now clear. On a different planet".

She has a lot more to say, does our Edwina. None of it complimentary. Good for her!

We'll let you in on a little secret. This blog author has met Edwina Currie. And spent a good couple of hours in her company. She is our sort of politician.

Harriet Harperson, however... not quite as low in our esteems as Jacqui Smith and Gormless, but not too far behind.

Memo to Edwina Currie... any chance of returning to Westminster and sorting the mess out that Labour will be leaving behind? Thank you!

Sunday, 2 August 2009

Dan Hannan provokes thought on 'climate change'

The Conservative MEP that this blog utterly loves - Dan Hannan - has an intriguing blog post over on the Telegraph website today. He points to the dismal failure of the Met Office to predict the washout of a summer, having previously told us that it would be a glorious 'barbecue summer' rather than warning of the non-stop rain.

Dan asks the curious question: "[If they] can’t accurately forecast the weather two months in advance, why should we let them speak with such sacerdotal authority about what the temperature will be a century from now?"

Nice bit of subtle question asking there, Mr. Hannan. Wouldn't be trying to get sheeple to think a little, would you? Anything you've been reading about carbon taxes in the course of your job that you'd like to share with us, Dan?

Anyway, we've said it before and we'll say it again:

Dan Hannan for BRITISH Prime Minister, please.

President Václav Klaus, got room for a few million hard-working Brits?

The Czech Republic's President Václav Klaus is becoming a bit of a hero. He merits praise from UKIP - and this blog author - for his refusal to add his signature to the Lisbon Treaty and, as yet, is showing no sign of caving in.

Don't go changing your mind, Mr. Klaus! Don't sign it... save the people of Europe!

If those heroic credentials weren't enough, his country's senate has just refused to issue a blanket ban on having a ciggie with a beer.

The Czech senate has, instead, gone for a compromise position in which venues must display a notice informing people as to whether a venue allows smoking or not.

Sounds very sensible to us.

So, a bit of freedom of choice and a refusal to be a poodle under the thumb of the ever-expanding might of the Brussels oligarchy. We like the sound of a nation like that.

So, Mr. President, can you find a little room in your economy for a few hundred hard-working Brits to come and live in the Czech Republic? Your country is starting to sound like one of the few last sensible places left to live.

Sunday Paper Review: 2nd August 2009

We start this week with the News of the World which reveals that the banks which have been bailed out with OUR money are set to fork out £4BILLION in bonuses. The paper also reports on the massive profits that the banks are now making. So, if you were wondering what had happened to all the money that the taxpayer had taken off us and were wondering why small businesses were going to the wall, millions are unemployed and we the public are all struggling to make ends meet... wonder no more.

The Independent on Sunday claims that the Joint Committee on Human Rights will publish a report this week demanding an independent inquiry into the allegations of British involvement in torture and rendition that have been swirling around for many months. An independent inquiry sounds a good idea in principle, but worthwhile in practise? Will anyone ever admit to anything? Will any proverbial ever hit a fan? Of course not. Why not just steal the taxpayers money and give it to some bankers, or live the high life on 'expenses' as per usual? Call us cynical.

Henry Porter in The Observer needs no such inquiry. He just comes out and states as fact what most of the rest of us accept as being the case as he writes simply: "No one's fooled – we colluded in torture". His article makes for powerful reading. One of his conclusions is that: "It is preposterous that Britain still presents itself to the world as a paragon of virtue when our people have been sitting with their fingers in their ears as some poor bastard has his fingernails ripped out, waiting for a lull in the screaming so they can ask the next question". Powerful writing, Mr. Porter, which we hope many will read.

That 'New Labour' has - by all accounts - brought our once proud nation to this sorry state of affairs. It's enough to make one weep.

The Sunday Telegraph has a story which suggests that Labour MPs once loyal to Blair are trying to persuade Lord Voldemort, Peter 'Prince of Darkness' Mandelson, to use a not-even-on-the-statute-book-yet change in the law allowing peers to resign from the House of Lords... so that he can stand for election as an MP in a 'safe' north England seat. There have been a few stories of late suggesting Mandelson could become Prime Minister after Gormless. Out of the frying pan..?

The Sunday Times contains an article with the new Home Secretary, Alan Johnson, twattering on about Gary McKinnon - Johnson doing his best 'not my fault Gov'nor' routine. We're not listening, Labour. You're a shower, a scandalous shower, and the worst thing to happen to Britain and it's people, period. Meanwhile, there's a revelation that Harriet Harperson tried to change ZaNuLiebour's rules so that a woman had to always have a position of power as 'you can't trust men in power'. Oh really? We have just two words for Harperson - 'Jacqui' and 'Smith'. Shuddersome.

The Sunday Express has an interesting story on passports. It says that of the £130million spent on face-to-face interviews for passport applicants, only 87 applications have been held back as suspect - a cost of £1.5million per application. So, when you look at your PAYE slip and see how much tax you're paying each week and thinking 'good grief', take heart in knowing that your money is being put to such good use, won't you?

The Mail on Sunday has a story that is both hilarious and pathetic in equal measure. It tells how an illegal immigrant is on the run - after sneaking himself into Britain under a coach hired by the Border Agency and crammed full of immigration officials. They all failed to spot the immigrant - until they got to Folkestone whereupon the plucky immigrant made his dash for freedom... and got away. You could not make this up, could you? And political uproar is sure to follow. The report suggests that the coach driver will not face any penalty - even though British hauliers who fall foul of illegal immigrants are routinely penalised if immigrants are found in their vehicles.

Saturday, 1 August 2009

Royal College of Surgeons condemn European Working Time Directive

The Royal College of Surgeons are all over the news giving grim warnings of the impact of the European Working Time Directive which comes into force today.

The EU law - which Britain looks set to bow down to - will limit the number of working hours each week to 48.

The Royal College of Surgeons say: "[T]he College and the vast majority of surgeons believe that a 48 hour week for surgeons in the NHS is a major threat to safe patient care which will result in very thin medical cover with multiple handovers, and will devastate standards of training. In addition, the College knows from its surveys that it is not deliverable because the doctors to staff paper compliant rotas do not exist".

They note that they have made representations on this matter but say: "It is a matter of regret and frustration that government has not listened".

They are advising their members: "If in your opinion inadequate cover or a rushed handover have harmed a patient, fill in an incident form. It is your duty as a doctor".

John Black, President of the Royal College of Surgeons writes: "It is interesting that the feedback I am getting suggests that other European countries are ignoring the EWTD, even as close to home as Ireland".

The British Medical Association is also raising concerns. Dr. Andy Thornley, chair of the BMA's junior doctors' committee, warns: "Our members are worried about their training; many feel it has reduced in quality as working hours have been reduced".

Of course, this Government will make sure Britain follows the EU rules. Isn't that the way this always works? The European Union make laws that have a negative impact, most European Union loving nations ignore them and Britain - where the majority of people want nothing to do with the EU - steadfastly makes itself subservient to each and every diktat.

Now, it seems, it might genuinely be harmful to our health.



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Yorkshire Post writer Bill Carmichael seems to be singing off the same hymn sheet as this blog. He writes:

Our elected politicians in Westminster are so in thrall to the EU that they would never countenance disobeying a direct order from their unelected masters in Brussels.

When the Eurocrats shout "jump", British ministers reply "how high?".

So tomorrow, the EWTD will come into force – regardless of the risk to public health.

But what is worse is that – as with all EU legislation – the UK will "goldplate" the rules to make them almost impossible to live with.

My friends in France fall about laughing when they learn of the hoops we jump through to obey "EU rules".

They, like all of our European partners, have a much more sensible approach to EU bureaucracy – if they don't like the rules, they simply ignore them. And their governments – equally sensibly – leave them alone to get on with their lives.

UFO lover McKinnon shows the pure poison of New Labour

The case of Gary McKinnon, the UFO enthusiast accused of hacking into US systems in his quest for evidence of aliens is a fascinating one.

He may not have turned up evidence of little green men from Mars.

But he has shown up the disgusting nature of New Labour.

New Labour have no compassion. All they know is authority, population control, people hatred and compassion-free society.

Yet for all their authoritarian control-freakery, they are incapable of standing up for Britain or the British people.

One sided extradition treaties - New Labour roll over and do what they are told.

The New World Order (European Union Branch) which the vast majority in this country are opposed to with a passion - New Labour lie and deceive and hoodwink the nation in their rush to bow down to their Brussels masters.

And let's not even start on what has been reported in the broadsheets regarding torture allegations.

Labour will condemn a man to extradition for looking for aliens, but don't see the irony when all that the Labour Government is good for is spying on the population, controlling everyone's thoughts and sticking microchip implants in our arms. Okay, they haven't got round to the last bit yet, but give them time.

When the Daily Mail turns to campaigning for compassion for an alleged computer hacker - not the type of person you would normally expect the Daily Mail to feel affinity for - it really is time to sit up.

But the Daily Mail are not alone.

The Conservatives are sticking up for McKinnon. As are the LibDems. There are big name pop stars, human rights groups, lawyers, radio hosts, actors, the lot - people from all walks of life from across Britain and beyond urging common sense and compassion for Gary McKinnon. There's even the odd Labour MP in the form of Keith Vaz.

Have a look through the Daily Mail's pages. See how many people are taking Gary McKinnon's side on this.

But no... the Labour machine will not intervene. They've signed up to be subservient to every power on the globe bar the British national sovereignty and will make the life of British people hell for a few months longer until we get the chance to kick them out of power - never to darken our lives ever again, we pray.

In the meantime, Gary McKinnon may or may not still win his fight against extradition.

...but at least he has shown New Labour up again as the nasty - truly nasty - utterly vile and nasty party that they are.

The sooner Labour get kicked from office, the sooner we'll all sleep safer in our beds.