Government’s Latest Balls-Up: Sex & Drugs Lessons From Age 5

November 5, 2009 by James Taylor

I despair:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/6507537/Sex-and-drug-lessons-from-age-5.html

Why can’t they leave our children alone?  This is yet another tickbox for Ofsted savvy teachers and further sexualisation of young children.

The burdens on four and five year olds are immense now (my four year old recently had to give a five minute speech on Batman, for instance).

At these tender young ages children should be learning only a few things: self-esteem and social skills and that school is a positive and good place to be.

Tories to Curb Binge Drinking

November 2, 2009 by James Taylor

Although I have a great deal of respect for Chris Grayling, my local MP, I have a growing sense of disquiet the more I read of what he’s proposing for post-broken Britain.

Reading in the Telegraph today that he intends to stop supermarkets from choosing their own prices for alcohol makes me very wary indeed.  Also, although he rightly wants to push powers down to local people when it comes to licensing premises the whole approach is NuLab-esque: put in place new and badly thought up rules in a hope to shape people’s behaviour.

Until a government forgets soundbites and short-term media-led government Britain will remain broken.

Supermarkets should decide how best to price the products they sell.  Local people and local government should have power over things that have an affect on the lives of local people.

When it comes to binge drinkers: let them binge drink, let them stab each other and vomit in the street.  Then round them up, try them under existing laws and punish them properly.  They’ll soon get the message.

Thinking up rules for social engineering that look good when reported in the Daily Mail hasn’t worked for over a decade and it won’t start working when the Tories are in power.

Nick Griffin

October 29, 2009 by James Taylor

Just a quick note to congratulate the BBC on letting Nick Griffin on to Question Time.

Whatever people say about freedom of speech being less important than fighting “extremism” (a much overused and now almost meaningless word), I think the BBC were proved right and at the same time Nick Griffin has been outed as a complete incompetent not fit to lead a political party.

Forget Racist Incidents; Where’s my Son’s Coat?

October 29, 2009 by James Taylor

My son started primary school this September.

Since then he has lost a number of items of clothing including a brand new coat, brand new pair of trainers, brand new PE kit bag, brand new jogging bottoms and T-shirt and a tie.  All the items were clearly labelled.

On two occasions he was made to sit out PE because of missing kit and yet the teacher didn’t once let us know that he was missing vital school uniform.

I wouldn’t mind if this were a sink school in a sink estate but it is meant to be the best state primary in Surrey.

From what I read this morning, I wonder whether they’re too busy reporting racist incidents amongst the four year olds in my son’s class for offences such as these.

80 Quid from Oblivion

December 4, 2008 by James Taylor

Sitting next to a couple at a Burger King after a boozy night out in the city this evening, I overheard a rather disturbing conversation that I fear may be being repeated around the country as I write this.

The man concerned was describing his cashflow for the month and attempting to persuade his partner of the merits of lending £200 to a friend for Christmas present purchases.  The woman was gently attempting to persuade him to pay more than the minimum payments on his credit cards and reminding him of various debts he owed relatives.  He proudly recounted all the payments he had to make this month (including a mortgage) and decided he had £80 to tide him over until he received his earlier than usual December pay.

Their conversation then moved on to the financial situations of their relatives including the sister who — working full time whilst on full benefits — was conning the housing benefit out of £1600 a month.

I was horrified and decided despite having put away a skinful and being surrounded by drunk people on the penultimate train home I ought to write about it here.

My horror is threefold.  First, a man living £80 per month from insolvency has a mortgage.  Second, he feels quite at ease discussing his sister’s theft from the state in a public place surrounded by people.  Third, I am going to have to pay for this sorry shit show when it all goes to shit.

I didn’t buy a house whilst house prices were rising out of control because I decided I couldn’t afford one.  It was too risky.  I didn’t buy a 4×4.  I didn’t build up balances on credit cards.  I saved.

I did all the things I should have done.  I acted with prudence.  I acted sensibly.  I did everything that Gordon Brown should have done for our country and what this pair of good-for-nothings should have done for themselves to avoid people like me having to bail them out.

No one bailed me out when the housing market was running away from me.  No one bailed me out when I couldn’t afford a 4×4 because I didn’t have a house to remortgage.

Unfortunately a bailout funded through my taxes is exactly what these people are going to be begging for in the next few months.

They should be rounded up and put in a modern equivalent of the Victorian poor house.

Politician gives honest opinion – my god, sack him now!

November 19, 2008 by nelsongb

George Osborne broke the “convention” that politicians should always tell lies with regards to currency strength. I say give him a medal of the realm. It is so frustrating to see Labour brand someone “irresponsible” after selling off the countries gold reserves in 1999 and then taking the country into an abyss of debt over a period when tax revenues could have been used to build a nice surplus instead of blowing it and then some on illegal wars, asylum seekers, diversity police, Olympics etc etc ( see previous posts )

I am aware that the moment an official hints at the weakness of a currency it automatically lowers its value and believe me a decrease in Sterling strength hurts me financially but you have to be objective and listen to what GO is saying because if we had not been told a pack of lies over the last 10 years we may not be in such a bad position.

I think GO saying this is a lot more sensible that a certain someone in 1997 saying he was going to end boom and bust….

Seek the truth and the truth shall set you free…

Nanny State out of control

November 17, 2008 by nelsongb

This is just insanity. I just could not handle some retarded jobsworth interfering in my life like this.

Via Daily Mail :

A father is demanding an apology from police after he spent a night in a cell for smacking his son.

Mark Frearson, 47, was arrested on suspicion of assault after he slapped his seven-year-old son Harry on the back of the legs.

Mr Frearson, a company director, punished his child for leaving his side and wandering off on his own in the dark.

A witness called the police and three hours after the incident, four police officers and a specialist child support officer arrived at Mr Frearson’s home in Plymouth, Devon, to question him and examine Harry for bruises.

They then drove the boy away in a police car and took his father to the station where they locked him up in a cell overnight.

Mr Frearson later found out that he should have been questioned immediately but was locked up because the ‘witness’ was ‘in no fit state’ to be interviewed.”

Council Tax Boycott

November 6, 2008 by nelsongb

I think only a Nationwide Council Tax boycott can put the councils back in their place….

Via Daily Mail :

“It used to be a simple matter of look right, look left, look right again.

But one new road is supposedly so complicated to cross that the council has spent £15,000 of taxpayers’ money on a seven-minute DVD explaining how to do it.

Six thousand copies of the jargon-filled film are being handed out to adults.

In it, they are informed the road is a ’shared space’ for pedestrians and cars, urged ‘to use all their senses’ and directed to grey and white ‘courtesy crossings’ where they ‘will be more obvious to traffic’.”

Government To Store Every Single Email

November 5, 2008 by nelsongb

If they take our privacy away, they will have to add a few more terrorists to the list I can assure you of that.

“Internet “black boxes” will be used to collect every email and web visit in the UK under the Government’s plans for a giant “big brother” database, The Independent has learnt.

Home Office officials have told senior figures from the internet and telecommunications industries that the “black box” technology could automatically retain and store raw data from the web before transferring it to a giant central database controlled by the Government.

Plans to create a database holding information about every phone call, email and internet visit made in the UK have provoked a huge public outcry. Richard Thomas, the Information Commissioner, described it as “step too far” and the Government’s own terrorism watchdog said that as a “raw idea” it was “awful”.

Please Sign Our Petition

October 28, 2008 by James Taylor

Further to my article of a week or so ago, I am petitioning the Prime Minister to put an independent body in charge of administering the taxpayer’s stake in the recently nationalised banks.

In one of Gordon Brown’s finest moments, he made it the responsibility of the Bank of England to set interest rates. This took politics out of what is essentially an economic concern.

However, after nationalising the banks he now seeks to put pressure on them to return lending levels (and therefore the lax practices that begot them) to 2007 levels.

This political meddling is interest rate setting by the back door and must be stopped.

Please sign our petition.

BBC Hides Evidence Speed Cameras Cause Accidents

October 25, 2008 by James Taylor

Thank you to our reader, BoiledBunny, for turning up this piece of Broken Britain.

Politically incorrect facts regarding road safety cameras are being withheld from public debate by the BBC.

Whether or not safety cameras increase road safety is open to debate.  At least it should be open to debate but instead the BBC are doing what they can to prevent that debate taking place.

According to Motorcycle News’s report, here, the BBC and the owners of the footage in Norfolk are even rejecting Freedom of Information requests for the footage.

We urge you to sign the petition demanding the footage be released.

Knives out for Osborne

October 22, 2008 by James Taylor

So, it turns out that Broken Britain’s political elite on both ends of the political spectrum were being courted by the Rothschilds and the richest man in Russia this summer.

Judging by reports over the past few weeks, talk was loose and George Osborne cosied up not only to a wealthy Russian billionaire but “the prince of darkness” himself: Peter Mandelson.

What are Broken Britain’s to make of this?

First, we need look to where the power is in all of this?  Is it with our shadow chancellor?  Or with our business minister, perhaps?  Unfortunately, it would appear all the power lies with the Rothschilds who arranged the meetings and who are unelected, unappointed and unaccountable.

Next we should consider judgement: Osborne is a Tony Blair-like figure, in awe of the big boys with their big toys, having made a blunder of gargantuan proportions to have even mentioned donations in conversation with a Russian oligarch.  Mandelson is a schemer: in the thick of it, mixing it up and emerging stronger for it.

And now media timing: funny that this should be dripped out whilst the credit crunch has temporarily fallen out of the limelight.  Is it Mandelson playing his old tricks?  Or have unseen forces (led by the Rothschilds, perhaps?) decided that Osborne can’t cut it after his lacklustre performance handling the recent banking crisis?

Fundamentally, there is a scandal here: the rise and fall of our politicians is being orchestrated in private by a political elite who are unelected and have the ear of the media.

Osborne did perform badly during the banking crisis and he should have paid for it in public through informed debate in the media.  The public have been refused their say by a political elite who have decided unilaterally to oust him.

Breaking The Back of Freedom

October 21, 2008 by nelsongb

I have to post a link to this story again as it is nice to see people making a stand for our freedoms.

This issue is nothing to do with Left or Right. I would rather duck and dive a couple of bombs than have the likes of Jacquie Smith/Council Drones monitoring every aspect of my private life.

We have had unchecked immigration in this country ( Tories and Labour both to blame ) so is it any wonder that some of these people have been undesirable to say the least.

Did anyone see “Traffic Cops” on BBC1 a couple of weeks ago, I saw 2 fresh of the boat Iranian ILLEGAL immigrants get stopped by Police for walking along a motorway. I then saw the Police let them go after giving them a print off with directions to the nearest Home Office Welcome Center. Apparently it is no longer policy to arrest. Now Mrs Smith, are you telling me that you need to bloody monitor MY phone calls,emails,dna and trace my movements with an ID card when the borders are 100% open and you let illegals walk around unchecked?

No this simply does not add up does it. They want to monitor us not “Terrorists”. ( I am not suggesting Iranians are terrorists by the way )

Via The Independent :

“Government plans to build a giant database holding information about every phone call, email and internet visit were last night dealt a major blow after the man in charge of prosecuting terrorism in England and Wales warned of the dangers posed by a “Big Brother” security state.

Sir Ken Macdonald, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), told ministers not to “break the back of freedom” by creating irreversible powers that could be misused to spy on individual citizens and so threaten Britain’s hard-won democracy. “

Security State

October 20, 2008 by nelsongb

More people are waking up to the obvious trend that we are turning into a Police State…

Via Telegraph :

“Sir Ken chose to issue his tough warning about the perils of the “Big Brother” state in his final speech as DPP, days before he leaves his post at the end of this month.

He warned that MPs should “take very great care to imagine the world we are creating before we build it. We might end up living with something we can’t bear”.

Sir Ken, who has held the post for the past five years, said: “We need to take very great care not to fall into a way of life in which freedom’s back is broken by the relentless pressure of a security State.”

“Technology gives the State enormous powers of access to knowledge and information about each of us, and the ability to collect and store it at will.”

“At the last estimate, there were 4,285,000 cctv cameras in Britain.

Last week Miss Smith said the Government was examining ways to “collect and store’’ records of phone calls, emails and internet traffic.

Plans for the new snooper databases, which will be held by the Government or by phone companies, will be included in a draft Communications Data Bill, which will go out for consultation in the new year.

The new law was necessary to allow officials to keep track of potential terrorists who use social networks, such as Facebook, to plot attacks free from detection, she said”

I Want Answers

October 20, 2008 by nelsongb

How have they been allowed to blow all our money and burden us with such a debt during one of the biggest booms ever? Well it is because people just do not care..

Via Telegraph :

Borrowing was £8.1bn in September, taking the total to £37.6bn in the first half of the year, some 75pc higher than at the same point last year, and the highest since records began when Britain started rebuilding the country after the Second World War.

It was significantly higher than the £6.6bn monthly figure expected by economists, who described the unexpected jump as alarming.

Borrowing rose as tax receipts from stamp duty, corporation tax, national insurance and excise duties were all weak as the UK stood on the brink of recession. Receipts rose 1.9pc from April to September compared with the same period a year earlier, well below the 5pc level required to hit the Chancellor’s Budget forecast.”