Tuesday 11 November 2008

Matching Clients to Customers is a Crime

Two Muslim sisters have won a multi-million pound settlement on the verge of an explosive tribunal which threatened to make public claims of widespread drug abuse and racial bigotry in the City.

... The French twins, who both earned six figure sums, are believed to have secured a record payout after demanding up to £10million in compensation.

... One of the sisters alleged that a client working for a big bank was allocated to a Jewish colleague because the two ‘had in common both language and race’, according to submissions for the case.

Saturday 1 November 2008

Tories to Clip BBC Wings

The Tories are planning to cut the BBC licence fee in response to lapses in judgement ...

Keep at it Boys!

Until the BBC starts representing 'men' and desists from demonising them at every opportunity, we must continue to keep stirring up anti-BBC sentiment - on any grounds that we can.

Tuesday 28 October 2008

Black Police Leaders Are 'Racist'

A Tory MP has provoked fury by accusing Britain's black police leaders of being racist.

David Davies said black police representatives in London had behaved worse than the apartheid regime in South Africa by urging ethnic minorities not to join the Metropolitan Police force.

Correct!

In a speech to the National Black Police Association annual conference, he also slammed the organisation for not allowing white people interested in fighting racism to become full members.

Good!

His comments sparked an angry reaction from delegates. Up to a dozen walked out in protest and others slow-handclapped the MP for Monmouth, who was likened to a BNP extremist.

Ah yes - the easily offended brigade walks out rather than addresses the serious issues that David Davies sought to stick under their easily-offended noses.

Tuesday 21 October 2008

Daylight is Precious. Let's Stop Wasting it.

If we didn't put the clocks back we could cut crime, keep fitter - and reduce carbon emissions

At a time when we are being encouraged to minimise waste, shouldn't we think about how much we waste our daylight?

Sunday 21 September 2008

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Hearing on Limits of Executive Power

Vincent Bugliosi - 6 min




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Wednesday 10 September 2008

Sunday 7 September 2008

Politicians are using the internet to harness your bright ideas

People often say they could run Britain better than the political parties. A web-based revolution may give them the chance.

Wednesday 13 August 2008

Legalise drugs, says former senior Cabinet adviser Julian Critchley

Mr Critchley said the "overwhelming majority of professionals" he had worked with, including those from the Government, NHS, police and charities, shared his view.

Tuesday 12 August 2008

Sunday 3 August 2008

Woman 'E' breaks cover to reveal MI5 man DID set up Mosley sting.

They are perhaps the most intriguing and unconventional couple in Britain – the crisply correct MI5 man and his wife, a whip-wielding dominatrix who purveys sado-masochistic sex to the suburbs.

What a nasty, treacherous pair.

Saturday 26 July 2008

Thursday 24 July 2008

Max Mosley Wins Privacy Suit

Mr Justice Eady ruled that there should be a reasonable expectation of privacy in relation to sexual activities, even if they were unconventional, if they were between consenting adults on private property.

Tell me someone. How can it be that a person's private sexuality is protected by privacy laws whereas INNOCENT men who have been falsely accused of sexual things can have their names and the allegations against them publicised all over the place?

Monday 21 July 2008

Saturday 12 July 2008

Free Speech Under Attack In The UK?

Max Mosley is suing for breach of privacy over reports he participated in a sadomasochistic ‘Nazi orgy’. The case has big implications for tabloid culture and freedom of expression
Germaine Greer foams at ‘insane’ play

Greer has directed her rage at The Female of the Species, a play that uses her life as the inspiration for a comic attack on strident feminism.

Sunday 15 June 2008

Don't listen to the liberals - Right-wingers really are nicer people, latest research shows

There is plenty of data that shows that Right-wingers are happier, more generous to charities, less likely to commit suicide - and even hug their children more than those on the Left. In my experience, they are also more honest, friendly and well-adjusted.

Story here

Much of this springs from the destructive influence of modern liberal ideas.

Starting with British anthropologist Edmund Leach, who said: 'Far from being the basis of a good society, the family, with its narrow privacy and tawdry secrets, is the source of all its discontents', feminists, progressives and others have seen the family as an oppressive force.

It's been my experience that conservatives like to talk about things outside of themselves while progressives like to discuss themselves: how they are feeling and what their desires are. That might make for a good therapy session but it's not much fun over a long dinner.

Studies also indicate that those on the Left are less likely to give to charity or to volunteer their time to charity. When they do support charity, it is often less the sort of organisation that helps people and more one that advocates political action.

Saturday 19 April 2008

Dress Like a Ho - 5 min video protest over the way women harass men
Fathers for Justice Target Judge's Home

Angry dads have paid a visit to the Barnes home of a high court judge and claim they will continue until "fathers have justice".

This is a bit strange because this was the judge who recently spoke up against family breakdown.

Friday 11 April 2008

Icons of the feminists and the left ...

... Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir were perhaps the most influential couple of the 20th century.

... Their private lives were wildly experimental. Simone de Beauvoir had affairs with both men and women, while Sartre, despite his stunted stature and ugly squint, was always surrounded by adoring muses happy to pamper his genius.

... Their private lives were wildly experimental. Simone de Beauvoir had affairs with both men and women, while Sartre, despite his stunted stature and ugly squint, was always surrounded by adoring muses happy to pamper his genius.

... Simone's reaction to Sartre's faithlessness was to sleep with another of her pupils, and when Sartre retaliated by deflowering another virgin, Simone pinched her lover's 21-year-old boyfriend.

... Yet Simone had no maternal feelings for them at all. She showed no empathy even when one of them, a Jewish girl whom she seduced when she was 16, nearly lost her life at the hands of the Nazis who were advancing on Paris.
Psychiatric Mumbo-Jumbo

Aged 29, Karen Overhill was diagnosed with Multiple Personality Disorder. In one of the most intriguing and disturbing cases of its kind, her psychiatrist helped her identify 17 distinct personalities - the result of abuse she'd suffered at the hands of her family. Here, Karen tells her story - and how she found a cure.

Questions for the psychiatrist. Why does he believe in one particular personality rather than all the others? Given that this woman is deluded, why does the psychiatrist choose to believe in one particular story of hers?

Thursday 10 April 2008

Man Breaks Girlfriend's Leg For Compensation

A man has been jailed today after breaking his girlfriend's leg in a £100,000 false claim for compensation after a judge watched a horrific video of the attack.

She agreed to the scam but split up with Thomson within weeks of suffering the injury.

Huh. Typical woman; reneging on the deal.

Needless to say, ...

She was not charged with her part in the scheme.
Police Officers' Movements To Be Tracked

Every single Metropolitan police officer will be 'microchipped' so top brass can monitor their movements on a Big Brother style tracking scheme, it can be revealed today.

Government workers - such as the police - often support left-wing 'big government' policies believing that having big, powerful governments will be good for them. After all, they work for government, don't they?

History, however, shows us otherwise.

It shows us that the bigger and the more powerful the government, the more closely are the government workers themselves monitored and controlled. Indeed, they are more monitored and controlled than is the rest of the population.

Wednesday 9 April 2008

Don't say you're English

Goodbye to my England, So long my old friend
Your days are numbered, being brought to an end
To be Scottish, Irish or Welsh that's fine
But don't say you're English, that's way out of line.

The French and the Germans may call themselves such
May Norwegians, the Swedes and the Dutch
You can say you are Russian or maybe a Dane
But don't say you're English ever again.

At Broadcasting House the word is taboo
In Brussels its Scrapped, in Parliament too
Even schools are affected, staff do as they're told
They must not teach children about England of old.

Writers like Shakespeare, Milton and Shaw
The pupils do not learn about them anymore
How about Agincourt, Hastings, Arnhem or Mons
When England lost hosts of her very brave sons.

We are not Europeans, how can we be?
Europe is miles away over the sea
We're the English from England, let's all be proud
Stand up and be counted- Shout it out loud.

Let's tell our Government and Brussels too
We're proud of our heritage and the Red, White and Blue

Author unknown
A City worker suffering from ME [Chronic Fatigue Syndrome] is suing a private equity fund for more than £100,000 after a senior colleague allegedly gave the impression that she was a "malingerer" and helped orchestrate her redundancy.

CFS occurs four times more frequently in women than in men, although people of either gender can develop the disease.