Showing posts sorted by relevance for query cameron. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query cameron. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

Wednesday [10 to 12]

12.  Other snippets

a.  David Cameron - the prime example of how senior politicians and bureaucrats feel they have an entitlement to use their inside knowledge and chummy contacts, gained when in publicly-funded office, to line their own pockets after leaving.

https://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/19229557.shame-chummy-ex-pm-cameron/

b.   Former Brooklyn Center, MN, police office Kim Potter was arrested & taken into custody at 12:30pET today by agents of the MN Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA). Potter will be booked into jail & charged with 2nd Degree Manslaughter.

Must admit I've missed most of this - I think I did see the footage and first quick glance, it seemed fair enough what she did.  However, a couple of ladies on our side have been saying weeelll, technically legal but probably an error of judgement. This is the first time I've thought it through - let me see if I have this correct - they allowed a young lady like that onto frontline duty?  And put a gun in her hands?

Uh-huh.  What could possibly go wrong?

c. Danielle Marie:

Friday, September 14, 2007

[mr. cameron] if you love the tories - stand down now

UKDP doesn't usually get it wrong:

Sadly, the best Home Secretary Britain will never have, David Davis, is also out of the equation. The problem with Davis is not that he might defect to Labour, but that he might defect to Cuba.

UKDP's tip:

So my tip for the top is Liam Fox - a genuine Conservative with a soft centre. A reconstructed Conservative with a nice smile. A man who knows what he wants and knows how to get it. And with luck, get it he will.

One thing for sure - Cameron is a total non-starter. If he hangs on, beggars belief and actually scrapes in, I'll be the first in the queue for my serving of humble pie.

I fear though I'm going to starve of that particular delicacy.

Saturday, September 01, 2007

[blogfocus saturday] genesis of the bloggers

1. Iain Dale, who incidentally doesn't make it easy to access his old material, is having an identity crisis, as can be seen in the banner above and asks whether anyone can design a new banner for him. That's the latest post but his earlier efforts show that many issues are the same today as way back then:

To understand why this country should question its whole relationship with the EU click on this link. I defy even the most ardent Europhile to defend this.

2. Mr. Eugenides did not begin with much fanfare but with a nevertheless interesting observation of the Tory leadership race at the time:

According to an article in yesterday's Sunday Telegraph, many of the members of the Cornerstone Group of "traditionalist" Tory MPs are considering backing David Cameron. Full story can be found here. If true, this is a big blow to DD. He's trying to paint himself as the heir to Thatcher whilst DC is the heir to Blair - a gross oversimplification, but a convenient one. And, like all good caricatures, it has at its heart a kernel of truth. Cameron seems sure to win the contest - but it's an open question whether or not the party membership would be so keen if they truly understood what he has in mind for the future.

3. In what I thought a neat little piece on Arnie, Vox Day did two amazing things - pumped iron and got no comments. For a 100+ commenter, that seemed a little strange:

In honor of Governor Schwarzenegger's election - I didn't and don't support his political career, but I still like him as an example of what determination can do for an individual - I hit the triceps hard today. After my normal workout, I added a symbolic six reps with the 100-pound dumbell. I figure Arnold would appreciate that sort of homage instead of the usual toast or whatever. So, *grunt* here's to the new governor!

4. Jonathan Swift went out on a limb and predicted what would happen in 2006. How did he do?

Condoleeza Rice will win the 2006 Presidential election.

There won’t be a single terrorist attack in Wyoming.

The Baltimore Colts will win the Superbowl.

Dick Cheney will resign for health reasons and President Bush will choose Joe Lieberman as the new Vice President uniting the country.

American troops will leave Iraq except for the ones necessary to keep order and prevent civil war.

The stock market will soar to 10,000.

5. The Tin Drummer has made a comeback [how's that for a scoop?] but here he writes of the cultural blog to be:

I had intended this to be a cultural blog, full of literature; however at the moment I am drinking rather more than I am reading. And I wanted to make a defence of beer, by which I mean ale, bitter; what is sometimes dismissed by people as "warm beer". This makes me laugh. You don't drink red wine at 2C, so why drink a flavoursome, malty, hoppy, tangy, fruity beer at such a low temperature that you can barely taste anything and your tongue is numbed as it goes down?

6. The ex-globetrotting CityUnslicker got straight down to the issues when he began and at the same time displayed that idiosyncratic spelling he's now come to be known and loved for, along with Tiberius Gracchus:

Today I wanted to briefly air my thoughts on immigration and employment in the UK today. The MSM have been reporting for the last few days on the large numbers of immigrants that the UK has accpeted since 1997. In general they have tried to avoid giving any real insights into the issue and instead have taken simple ideological stances on the statistics produced.

7. Like Iain Dale, another blogger with the extremely annoying habit of not providing archives, Jocko, aka Colin Campbell, aka Adelaide Green Porridge, aka everything else under the sun, gives us the wordy Count Up:

Early one morning in early May 2006, it will be 01:02:03:04:05:06. Only once in your lifetime. And that's all for now folks.

Don't forget that it's 68 days until Hannah's birthday as well.

8. Saving the lady with the capitalized post titles for last, here she is, the incomparable Welshcakes, whose latest post contains some surprises, as does her take on STORMY WEATHER:

Well, not really. This morning it rained hard for about five minutes and there was loud thunder without lightning, which always frightens me to death. [I wondered if, this time, it was old Pluto having a noisy sulk. Perhaps he is going to abduct Persephone again in revenge for losing his status?] If you are out and get caught in a summer storm like that, it is much too hot and sticky to put on one of those raincoats-in-a-bag beloved of the British, and everyone stares at you if you do, as it is evidence of the kind of forward planning that Italians don't go in for. Besides, where's your pazienza? - Just wait a minute and the rain will stop, as suddenly as it came.

If you have pazienza, I'll be back Wednesday evening with another Focus. Ciao, baby.

Saturday, October 06, 2007

[lizard queen] whitehouse here we come

In the Telegraph take on Hillary, there were some juicy morsels:

"Without nepotism, Hillary would be running for the president of Vassar [an elite college founded for women]," sniffed Maureen Dowd.

Mrs Clinton's answers to every question, Frank Rich wrote, were "a rambling and often tedious Gore-like filibuster" and she seems "especially evasive when dealing with questions requiring human reflection". Her laugh had "all the spontaneity of an alarm clock buzzer".

Nice stuff but the following commenter seemed to me closer to the truth:

Hillary Clinton will indisputably be the next President of the United States. She will move to the political center after she wins the Democratic primary. She is extremely intelligent and experienced. She will be a centrist akin to Brown and Cameron. David Cameron would defeat her if he was the Republican nominee in the USA. His oratorical prowess and charisma would resonate with Americans. His impressive green agenda would help to defeat Hillary. [Brien Comerford, United States]

Leaving aside the alleged connection with the giga-fund scandal, Peter Paul, Whitewater and Vince Foster, Jamie Gorelick, Nolanda Hill, Independent Counsel Robert Ray, bouncer Craig Livingstone, National Finance Director David Rosen and the $2m, Juanita Broaddrick, Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Yucaipa, Web Hubbell, John Huang, the Lippo Group and Norman Hsu, leaving aside her health care policy, leaving aside the clearly partisan attacks by Giulliani, leaving aside the worrying and unknown extent to which she accepts the Saul Alinsky thesis, just what is it about this woman?

The travesty of the Starr Report and Wallace's Fox attack show the Republicans need to let the Clintons hang themselves, by themselves, not leave the GOP tactics open to a public perception of overkill.

And yet there is still something fundamentally wrong with the woman.

In the end, it might even be the symptoms and signs - the hyena cackle, the heavily scripted human warmth, the way former supporters and allies are coming out against her and her voting record, rather than the concealed disease itself which sinks her.

I myself wonder about the nuclear arsenal in her hands, in conjunction with the finance she's in thrall to and finally - that phoenix brooch. In the words of another Telegraph commenter:

May G-d help this country if this woman is elected to the Presidency. [Joan - Tennessee USA]

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Sunday [1 to 3]

(0657)

3.  Phantom Digger

Dr E. Vile threatening something? A cyber attack? 

https://t.me/realKarliBonne/145856

2. DAD
 on Sunday


Including:

When upwards of 50 public libraries told Kirk Cameron they were “not interested” in hosting him to read his wholesome new children’s book to kids, the actor-turned-children’s author didn’t take no for an answer. Despite not being granted a taxpayer-funded children’s story-time, as even the most provocative of drag queens are routinely afforded, Cameron’s team shelled out to rent back rooms within those libraries to create their own story hours — and eager listeners turned out in droves. 

https://thefederalist.com/2023/01/12/what-kirk-camerons-countercultural-library-book-tour-means-for-parents-like-you/

(Plus other goodies.)

1.  MftWC one

Cardiologist calls for suspension of C**id injections during BBC interview

https://expose-news.com/2023/01/14/cardiologist-calls-for-suspension-of-covid-injections/

Big Pharma C-19 JAB under FDA harsh glare on Serious Side Effects

https://www.thelibertybeacon.com/big-pharma-c-19-jab-under-fda-harsh-glare-on-serious-side-effects/

Vaccinated were already dying proportionally more than the unvaccinated up to May last year when the ONS stopped reporting

https://expose-news.com/2023/01/14/vaccinated-were-already-dying-more-up-to-may-2021/

CDC, FDA Flag Early Signal of Stroke Risk

https://www.thelibertybeacon.com/big-news-cdc-fda-flag-early-signal-of-stroke-risk/

Immune Tolerance: IgG4 Class Switch Starts with Even Two Doses of mRNA Vaccines

https://www.thelibertybeacon.com/immune-tolerance-igg4-class-switch-starts-with-even-two-doses-of-mrna-vaccines/

Monday, July 30, 2007

[next pm] have we found him?

While the U.S. does what it can to keep the Lizard Queen out of power, Iain Dale rates the qualifications of the next British PM:

[David] Davis is scarcely a woolly liberal, a Soho brand manager or a tree hugger. His voice reaches parts of the party Cameron cannot reach. Well-read and supremely intelligent, Davis is in a different league to John Prescott: Davis would make a fine party leader, which is something that could never have been said of Prescott.

So let's look at his bio:

Conservative Party

Wikipedia

So what do you think? Cameron clearly won't wash so is David Davis the man?

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Nothing to see here, move along ...

Ma Mama dun tol' me: "Li'l Jimmy, if yer gonna come outta left field, then do it properly.  If a job's worth doin, it's worth doin well."  Yo, Mama, gonna do just that on an unsuspecting Sunday evening:

1. There are vapour-trails, con-trails and then chem-trails


Tuesday, February 27, 2007

[blogfocus tuesday] something old, something new

Some new blogs and some old this evening. And no, Guido is not in this one:

1 First off, Guano Forks explains why it's not always the better team which wins:

I remember watching Chelsea defeat Liverpool last year. On the day, Liverpool deserved to win. Yet Chelsea won through a sublime goal and Liverpool failed because they lacked even a competent striker. The parallel between politics and football is so evident. The best players, the better play, and the better tactics do not always bring success. The better campaign does not always lead to a win. I’m reminded of the last election when the Tories would have had the beating of the Labour Party if only they’d had a striker who could get the ball into an open goal.

2 Martine Martin writes of that ASBO in the picture with David Cameron:

Jobless, hooked on soft drugs, electronically tagged for burglary, no interest in the workings of the country... Sad. But he's just one of an army of kids failed at every level by the government, by the education system, by his community, and consequently by himself. I do wonder what David Cameron's family must think of this picture. If it was someone related to me, or a friend, I'd be very disturbed by it. How easily it could have been for real considering how many kids are getting shot in London, Nottingham and other cities in this country. Yet I doubt this boy would care even if he knew just how sick the timing of his little prank was. That's the worst part.

3 L'Ombre explains why biometrics are so illogical:

If a biometric is required to verify ones identity then the likelihood is that people and systems responsible for verifying ID will only check the biometric and not look closely at anything else. In other words if you can fake the biometric you are golden. This means that criminals have a large incentive to figure out ways to crack the biometric and since biometrics have so far proven relatively easy to crack, chances are that the crooks will find ways of doing this. So the biometric will merely be the excuse used by the government (or bank or ...) for why they let some fraudster walk off with your savings.

Nine more bloggers here.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

[bullingdon club] smashing job, chaps

By Sophie McBain

Eternally romanticised by Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall, permanently enigmatic, these tailcoat wearing drunkards have become the stuff of legend. Now, finally, after almost 150 years of silence, The Oxford Student has got one of its members to talk.

Last December, images of snivelling Bullingdon members were splashed all over the tabloids after all 17 members were arrested for wrecking the cellar of the 15th century pub, the White Hart, in Fyfield.

17 bottles of wine were smashed into the walls of the pub after the civility of a gourmet meal descended into a brawl, leaving a trail of debris that was compared by eye-witnesses to a scene from the blitz. The inebriated members started fi ghting, leaving one with a deep cut to the cheek, and the landlord recalls attempting to pull apart the fighting parties, only to have them set on each other once more, exclaiming, “Sorry old chap, just a bit of high spirits.

Four members, including the ringleader, Alexander Fellowes, Princess Diana’s nephew, spent the night in jail. The legal consequences may have been unusual, but the antics were bordering on lame compared to previous incidents. The club was once banned from entering within a 15 mile radius of Oxford after all 550 windows of Christ Church’s Tom quad were smashed in one night.

‘I like the sound of breaking glass’ is one of the society’s mottos and particularly true of one member who, at L’Ortolan in Berkshire, took it upon himself to eat his wine glass rather than his Michelinstarred meal. At another infamous Bullingdon garden party, the club invited a string band to play and proceeded to destroy all of the instruments, including a Stradivarius.

If their aristocratic roots don’t bar them from hooliganism, they certainly don’t temper a certain penchant for good, old fashioned toilet humour. At the Bullingdon’s annual meeting at a point-to-point, one member, a Hungarian Count, pushed another, Daily Telegraph journalist Harry Mount, down a hill in a portaloo. George Osborne was watching the scene, as was The Oxford Student’s source: Fortunately it was quite early in the day and the unsuspecting victim was shaken but not stirred.

Once their three years is up, if their university career survives to its natural end, Bullingdon members go on to some of the most powerful and influential positions in the country. Harry Mount, George Osborne, Alan Clark, Lord Bath, David Dimbleby, Boris Johnson and "it has recently emerged" the Tories’ man of the people, David Cameron, were trained to the pressures of fame by the champagne quaffing, bellicose Bullingdon.

Cameron was member of the club at a time when it was de rigeur to engage in the ‘man of the people’ pursuits of washing down “a cocktail of drugs with an honest, working class box of chips and a five pound bottle of wine”. Looking at the impressive list of famous members and the impeccably tailored member before me, it seems hard to imagine why any of these last bastions of the British aristocratic classes would participate in activity more suited to British football fan culture.

Any member would no doubt be horrified by such a comparison; the Bullingdon is a ‘dining club’ not a ‘drinking society’, regardless of the fact that our source openly admits that they regularly get kicked out of restaurants for rowdiness before the main course arrives. Most Chelsea Headhunters would hold out till after pudding. More at home with a bottle of champagne in their hands than a can of Carlsberg, they are, above all, discerning yobs.

My source is quick to impress on me that they tend to leave one-off antique pieces untouched, preferring to inflict more replaceable damage. I wonder how replaceable a Stradivarius is. Or 550 windows for that matter. A large part of the members’ motivation is the feudal idea that its quite alright to inflict damage on peasants’ property, provided one is able to pay for it.

That’s why Alexander Fellowes, at the White Hart, tipped the waitress £200, on top of all of the members paying for the damage inflicted. Our source described the White Hart landowner as “unfair” for reporting the matter to the police and as having “no sense of humour”. Most people, he adds, are willing to let such matters slide in exchange for the remuneration on offer.

Although the eyewitnesses at the White Hart described the diners’ degeneration as appearing highly ritualised, our source denies that the Bullingdon’s outbursts are intended. He claims that, hard done by members always “intend to have a civilised meal”, but the historical precedent set by former Bullingdon generations means that somehow, after a couple of bottles of Dom Perignon, their expensive primal instincts are released.

That is not to say though that they wake up after a night of debauchery, in their vomit stained tailcoats, with intense feelings of regret - according to our source, the night at the White Hart was “objectively funny”. The Bullingdon seems to be guided by various strangely distorted moral ideas. Along with rule number one - ‘it’s quite fine to wreak havoc, provided you can pay for it’ - it seems to currently have a slightly peculiar drugs policy.

Super-rich druggies need to go to the Assassins or Piers Gaviston to engage in hallucinogenic pursuits, but our source insists that as far as drugs go, the Bullingdon has decided to become squeaky clean. Allegedly, the Bullingdon has never, even during its most drug-loving days, endorsed the use of marijuana, because it meant members were less likely to get the urge to smash things up. The relatively innocent champagne binging “adds to the Bullingdon’s charm”, our source adds.

Cue Bullingdon code number two: ‘passing out face down in your own vomit is quite charming, provided your illness is only alcohol induced’. The Bullingdon usually has between 15 and 70 members, but this year there are only seven. Are financial barriers holding back new membership? The Bullingdon is one of the most expensive of Oxford’s dining clubs.

The tailormade blue tailcoats cost at least £1,200 and a formal dinner, of which there are usually one or two a term, costs a fl at rate of £100, although once damages are added the cost is far greater than this. Richer members may have to pay an even larger membership fee, sometimes approaching £10,000. Nonetheless, our source claims that there are still plenty of people who are rich enough to join, but claims that it is hard fi nding “the right kind of people”.

Anyone who likes clubbing just doesn’t fi t into the Bullingdon mould. It certainly takes a certain kind of person to be willing to face the initiation ceremonies. All members have their rooms completely trashed as a basic initiation, additional requirements may vary. Our source recalls having to, after a whole day of drinking, down half a bottle of whisky in one. He doesn’t recall fi nishing it.

“The Stoics are all about vomiting, the Bullingdon’s about passing out,” he adds with an all-knowing air. Other reports of initiation ceremonies included having to drink five bottles of champagne. Members were each given a black bin-liner to throw up in, but the newcomers’ bin-liners had had the bottom cut out.

Why then do members to pay thousands of pounds to vomit, pass out, be ritually humiliated and be at permanent risk of being sent down or arrested? It is here that one might see fit to grant our blue tailcoat wearing friends some grudging pity; invitation is by membership only and perhaps new undergraduates are drawn into this society through some desperation to try and fit in. Like any society, the Bullingdon must attract members who want to be liked.

Forget the fact that the Bullingdon’s behaviour may isolate the rest of the university, as our source admits, as soon as you enter the Bullingdon, other members become your closest friends. Perhaps this is why so many of the members go on to become famous, after all a member of the Bullingdon must be willing to go through almost anything in order to gain approval. I suggest this to my source, who responds rather philosophically.

“I suppose there are two theories on this, maybe it is because it attracts people who are resourceful and determined, or maybe,” he adds thoughtfully, but with a hint of glee in his voice, “they are just privileged to start off with.” We may wonder, considering its dwindling membership and Oxford’s changing culture, whether the Bullingdon is coming to the end of its 150 year long existence.

With threats from colleges, run-ins with the police and a general lack of acceptance of its decadence, is there any space for such a society in 21st century Oxford? Our source is adamant that the events at the White Hart did not sound the death toll for the society.

He admits that all of the members have been “feeling rather paranoid” since last December and that they have had to rein in some of their wildest urges and keep their activities rather low-key but, he adds in defi ant tones, “The Bullingdon is in a spirit of recuperation and the controversy will soon rise again.”.

12th Jan 2005

Friday, August 14, 2009

[collective responsibility] and dan hannan's honesty


David Cameron, the Conservative leader, said Mr Hannan was wrong in his criticism of the NHS. Daniel Hannan said: “I wouldn’t wish it on anybody. We have a system where the most salient facts of it you get huge waiting lists, you have bad survival rates and you would much rather fall ill in the US.”

If you look at this post from yesterday, not that you need to as you already know fullwell, it's clear that Daniel Hannan was only speaking the truth.

Now this puts your humble blogger into a bind. I'm a paid up member of the Tories and the Tory bloggership, though wary of me as a bit left field, do see me as one of them in the end. However, my more major preoccupation is with the truth and the truth is that the NHS is $%^&*#ed. Every commenter yesterday said so, everyone I know and speak to here said so.

So, let's come back to David Cameron who himself is in a difficult position - he has a party line to uphold. A false party line which requires potential ministers and fellow MPs in general to lie to support the party line. Or was it that the problem stemmed from the comments being made whilst Dan Hannan was in America?

Are people seriously trying to say that America can't access its own material on the NHS? There's this thing, you see, called the internet. Half my readership is American and these guys ... well, let's confess it ... they're capable of talking, reading and listening and from that, horror of horrors, I actually learn about America and maybe, just maybe, they learn something about Britain. Yesterday, we all said the NHS was *&^#$%^ed. Are we being grossly disloyal to our nation bad-mouthing the NHS, on the grounds that an American might be reading our private words?

Look, not to put too fine a point on it - did Daniel Hannan breach the principle of Collective Responsibility to the Party Line? Was he disloyal to Britain? If something in Britain is totally $%*&^#$ed, should every Brit, in conversation with an American, say, "No, no, everything's fine over our way," whilst our American friend is looking at this post and seeing that it's not?

Where is the party line and where is collective responsibility when it's bleedin' obvious what the situation is? To anyone in the world.

I'd agree one needs to be loyal to one's organization when one is taking the shilling - one's firm, one's school and so on. But a country is not something you joined and signed on the dotted line to. It's something you were born or naturalized into. If you were born into it, I'd suggest you have far more right to say what you damn well like about it, wherever you are, with a view to making it right.

I've never bad-mouthed my country abroad and when I was in Russia, I never bad-mouthed Russia. But if I was pointedly asked about some aspect of that country, e.g. is it true that your NHS is not very good, then my answer might be, knowing the questioner had access to the web and can read a newspaper, "It could be better."

I suggest that that was the tone Daniel Hannan took. He strikes me as an honest sort of chap.

So where does that leave a flawed Westminster system where the important thing is not to tell the truth but to toe the party line? Surely that shows that the two party, adversarial system is seriously flawed? Surely it shows it's time to change it.

The question is - for what other system?

Monday, September 14, 2009

[eu referendum] watch this sleight of hand


I'm sorry but I'm going to do the commenting on the MSM news item thing here:

The Conservative leader has only pledged a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty if it has not yet been ratified across Europe but, if elected, he is now under pressure to hold a retrospective poll if necessary.

Labour refuses to hold a referendum under any circumstances.
Ireland, the only country to be blocking the introduction of the treaty, is due to hold a second referendum next month having previously rejected it.

However, with Ireland now facing economic difficulties, voters there are expected to be more willing to back the Treaty. It will then be quickly introduced throughout Europe – before the next general election in this country.

Oh yes, October 2nd is a very big day for Europe and our future lives are in the hands of the Irish. Interesting, isn't it?

Cameron will hold one only if the Irish say no on Oct 2.

But if they say yes on that date, then the EU monster moves in swiftly, from October to next May, all regs are in place and we are taken over, Westminster pales into a rubber stamp house and the regional governments, under Common Purpose, move in to run our affairs at local level.

There's the devolution we supposedly wanted, only under the jackboot of the EU through Common Purpose. Cameron is therefore irrelevant, the victory of the EU is complete and England ceases to be, to the delight of all but the English.

Welcome to 2010 everyone. There are going to be ructions.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

[october election] handwringing for the disillusioned


Gordon at Davos: ‘I know I promised to plunge the next two generations into crippling debt and I’ve only managed one so far. Don’t worry, it’ll be ready by the election.’


The essential problems with our electoral and parliamentary system include:

1. Westminster is a club to which men and women might come in idealism but which they’ll sell their souls to remain a member of. It tends inexorably to corrupt the soul – witness the MP’s expenses row - and it’s heavily under the financial influence of the shadowy Them and why shouldn’t it be?

Look at it from Their point of view. They have an agenda of forming a European bloc to play on the world stage, Britain has already been carved up and the regional assemblies are in place to officially take over, post-Lisbon, courtesy of Common Purpose [* see below].

All they need is the Irish Lisbon vote, which they’re now likely to get.

With the crippling of the Lords, playing on the people’s natural bent against elitism, Blair and Brown have made this a country of Prime Ministerial rule. The Queen is irrelevant, except in loyalist hearts.

The real political power in this country is in the hands of Them; they groomed Blair in 1993 and Brown in 1991 and if you doubt the influence – examine the key movers and shakers in Yorkshire Forward, examine the accounts and where the cash came from.

When a journalist charged Viscount Étienne Davignon, "all the recent presidents of the European Commission attended Bilderberg meetings before they were appointed," Davignon's response [was that] he and his colleagues were "excellent talent spotters."

Ditto in Britain. Everyone knows that Cameron is a clone of Blair, an opportunist out for power and shifting his political position to take advantage of the changing climate.

Where are the men and women of genuine conviction? They don’t get preselected, that’s all – they’re either bought or marginalized.

2. Anyone who knows the sytem knows that the final choice placed before the people is a sealed deal. All the real politicking is done at the preselection stage and that’s where the global power is at its most visible – within the party ranks.

Nobody wants idealists within the Club of Westminster – that’s what the whips are for, charged with ensuring the uniformity of opinion and pulling ‘rebel’ [read people of integrity] members into line.

3. This is one reason a hung parliament might be the best solution. With Westminster poised to become a regional cog within the EU nation, the last PM in the traditional sense, Brown, is doing his masters’ bidding to bring the country to its knees to make the transition smoother by 2012. If you doubt that, read through some of the work by Ian Parker-Joseph and others.

4. What of the little people, like me? What can we do? A dyed-in-the-wool Tory, not unlike David Davis, I see a corrupt leader with no backbone leading what could be an excellent into oblivion. Sympathies are very much with the Libertarian Party these days, perhaps the least corrupt of them all at this early stage and don’t forget the UKIP.

Is it better to vote for one of these?

Under first-past-the-post - hardly.

Under preferential voting, as in Australia – better.

Under proportional representation – best.

Proportional representation weakens the executive and legislature and leaves the country’s governance as a lame duck but it does bring the people’s voice back into the picture, something it risibly isn’t at this juncture.

I like Lord T’s idea of direct voting on major issues via one’s PC, an idea he’ll no doubt post on one day and his plan for the reduction of MPs’ terms is also good – I would add, on a staggered basis.

So here we are – an election in October and whom to vote for? My history says, ‘Vote Tory,’ I’m a paid-up Tory member as of now but to vote for my local member also ushers the corrupt Cameron straight into a Prime Ministerial EU regional dictatorship.

On the other hand, to vote for a minor party is to throw away one’s vote under first-past-the-post.

What to do?

* With its purposes now subsumed into Common Purpose, the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations in London was funded into existence in 1946 with a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation.

One of the Tavistock founders, Dr. John Rawlings Rees
, who also became co-founder of the World Federation for Mental Health, talked of infiltrating all professions and areas of society:

‘Public life, politics and industry should all ... be within our sphere of influence ... If we are to infiltrate the professional and social activities of other people I think we must imitate the Totalitarians and organize some kind of fifth column activity!

We must aim to make it permeate every educational activity in our national life ... We have made a useful attack upon a number of professions. The two easiest of them naturally are the teaching profession and the Church: the two most difficult are law and medicine.’

Common Purpose comes into its own in the post-democracy phase of the EU from 2012.

Thursday, April 11, 2024

Thursday [7 to 10]

(0827)(0843)

10.  The three letter sites

📒


📒


9.  An exciting Torquaymada double over at NOWP

https://nourishingobscurity.wordpress.com/2024/04/09/reader-drops-634/comment-page-1/#comment-8661

8.  A few more

... well, quite a few more really:







7.  MftWC three

a.  Military situation on Ukrainian frontlines on April 10, 2024 (Map Update) | https://southfront.press/military-situation-on-ukrainian-frontlines-on-april-10-2024-map-update/

b.  Cameron meets Trump. Russia claims Burisma links. Annalena, no more Patriots. Elensky, new offensive - Alex Christoforou | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6clrTyqZmA

c.  Zelensky's ‘Patriot’ games go off the rails as he touts it the ‘Next game changer’ | https://southfront.press/zelenskys-patriot-games-go-off-rails-as-he-touts-it-the-next-game-changer/

d.  Ukrainian terrorism and Western involvement, Disintegration of Moldova, Theft of Russian assets - Levan Gudadze | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzV7IIToSD8

e.  Kiev having serious mobilization problems | https://southfront.press/kiev-having-serious-mobilization-problems/

f.  Russia Storms Kransogorovka, Chasov Yar; China Invites Putin; Trump, Mike Johnson Humiliate Cameron - Alexander Mercouris | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2yaG1gPN65g

g.  Kiev regime continues to promote nuclear terror | https://southfront.press/kiev-regime-continues-to-promote-nuclear-terror/

h.  Zelensky pledges another Counteroffensive - Levan Gudadze | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOJSnYe9dfs

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

[aging] the dilemma of the elderly

Reported by Conservative Home some days ago: "David Cameron will today promise to end the 'national disgrace' of the elderly being separated from their families and sent to die in care homes he calls grey ghettoes. The Tory leader will pledge that a Conservative government would shake up the housing laws to make it easier for old people to live with their loved ones." - Daily Mail One hopes it really will amount to more than pre-election words but I can’t see how he’ll change the practice. The problem stems from how the middle-aged view the elderly and how far they deal with the ‘burden’ they see old people as being. I really hope against hope that Cameron can make a difference.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

[conference] cameron speech later today

... And I want to give you another reason why I'm not prepared to make irresponsible tax cut promises. It's a vital reason, because the NHS is vitally important to every family in this country. It certainly is to mine. I believe that the creation of the NHS is one of the greatest achievements of the 20th century. I always believed this. When your family relies on the NHS all the time - day after day, night after night - you know how precious it is. So for me, it's not just a question of saying the NHS is safe in my hands. My family is so often in the hands of the NHS. So I want them to be safe there ... [David Cameron]

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

[wrong women] peter principle illustrated

Veronique Morali


The parallels between Sotomayor and her era of new appointees is striking. I had a post ready to go on Sotomayor earlier and didn't run it because it was boring. However:
The Supreme Court's reversal yesterday of a decision endorsed by Sonia Sotomayor as a federal appeals judge provided fresh ammunition for her conservative critics two weeks before her Senate confirmation hearing, but also allowed defenders to cast her as a judge who respects precedent.

She'll be nominated of course because this is the Era of Wrong Appointments - witness Gordon Brown and David Cameron. Precisely the wrong 'new women', talentless in leadership but with a lot of lip, are also getting appointed under 'positive discrimination' - people like Flint in the UK, Lynch in Canada and Sotomayor in the States.

It's Fiorina and Dunn all over again - a lot of mouth, really good at sacking people and appearing efficient to adoring hangers-on but appointed above their station.

Monica Conyers was in a different role but the story is the same. No matter what anyone says, gender is a factor here. There is a particular type of woman whose efforts to Force those around her to bend to her will and the way she flies off the handle when she doesn't get her own way, like a spoilt child, is going to make powerful enemies, particularly among male colleagues. This is not the way to go in an environment which doesn't fully accept you in the first place anyway and is looking for you to fall.

This was how Sarkozy cut the Segie magnetism in that debate - by provoking her to anger. Veronique Morali, of Force Femmes, is another who should not be let near a boardroom for her obvious bias. If there was her and another woman beside her of equal accomplishments but without the chip on the shoulder about her gender, then you'd appoint the other, on the grounds that she could give 100% to the company.

I'm not going to balance this to avoid being called sexist, by listing a lot of unsuitable men. There are so many. Take your pick of males who should never have been appointed, from Goodwin to Brown himself. They infest the public world, these non-comps but there IS a type of woman too, such as I've described and she should never be let near the reins of power. Merkel is one such person. Remember, a high flyer is just that - a high flyer and into high flying. A high flying woman complicates the issue by bringing gender into it.

The right person to put in is someone with a deep understanding of structure and process, with no real chip on the shoulder and not having to prove him or herself. I can think of two women straight away who are of a type and of a temperament which lends itself to running organizations. One runs a department at a university in Russia and another runs a blog group here. I tell you, honestly, that I would follow where these women led although they're cunning enough to make me think I'm doing the leading. [I also know of another woman running a different association who shouldn't have been allowed anywhere near the reins but that's another matter.]

They are into consensus, politeness and warmth but insist on reasonable targets being met and have the ruthlessness to cut the dead wood away, albeit with tact.

I know men like that too but one thing for sure - these Sotomayors, Conyers and Lynches are most certainly NOT the ones who should be there. What should be done with them? Well, HP did it wrongly, in that you do not throw the baby out with the bathwater. If they refuse to stay on in an advisory capacity, then access their expertise professionally and pay for it that way. They do have great skills. Running organizations is not one of them, that's all.

Thursday, July 05, 2007

[lesson 2] how to lose your readership

"The truth which makes men free is for the most part the truth men prefer not to hear" [Herbert Agar, Time for Greatness, 1942]
Further to my answer to
The Cityunslicker, I don't know where to start with this business of ascribing the "purpose" behind the seemingly suicidal policy of the financial elite and the military-industrial complex.

I agree with him that it would be economically illogical for them to undercut their own financial base but I think to create a western collapse is another matter - there are great profits to be made on a falling market.

Today my friend, who reveres most things western, was almost mocking:

"Oh and how in your country, with its democratic tradition, could a government get away with these things? They'd be voted out of office."

Me: "How? Look at the U.S. - Clinton and Thompson are both ex-CFR. Kerry and Bush were both from the same club."

"But in your society, the people have the power."

"Really? Read any website from my sidebar and see how much power the people have."

"But if they brought in unpopular legisalation, they'd be voted out."

"Hardly anyone knows about it. We call it "salami tactics", from a sitcom called Yes Prime Minister. "Slice by slice". The Blair government criminalized 3000 new aspects of human behaviour and only a few are known about, let alone debated." [Source: Tom Paine]

I can see the problem here.

People are seeking rational answers to the almost hard-driven government mania for acquiring powers over the people - the new Statism. I see no difficulty in understanding it at all because of the hundreds of pages I have in various places, ranging from the financiers through to the psychological and education communities.

How to get it to you and even if I could - would you read it? This is a blog, after all, where people have attention spans for about four witty paragraphs and that's it. The only way I can see to do it is just take fragments from all over the place and throw them together below.

Not to convince, naturally but just to get an idea of the sort of thing we're dealing with, which I'm quite sure the average person is not yet aware of. So here are some random excerpts lifted from various documents, focussing on the Power referred to by Senator Jenner:

# They are intelligent, well educated, and active in their local churches.

# These are NOT nice people and they use and manipulate others viciously. They cut their eye teeth on status, power, and money.

# A top western financier would secretly meet with an Eastern or Russian "adversary" during those years [Cold War], and have a good laugh at how the "sheep" were being deluded.

# The random factor in all of this is how the average citizen reacts. It can't be predicted, although the leadership will often invent different scenarios, and try to decide how they will act if the ordinary citizens react in an unexpected manner.

# Open royalty that is currently seen now, and "hidden royalty"…

# ...a lot of the current U.S. leadership will be in Europe when the change occurs, and many have homes there. They will be "changing nationalities" overnight, as it were.

# The Kennedy family were punished because they tried to disobey them. They were free thinkers, and too hard to "control".

# ...covertly supply guns and funds to BOTH sides to keep the conflict fueled. They are very duplicitous people.

# The government will call in its bonds and loans, and credit card debts will be called in. There will be massive bankruptcies nationwide. Europe will stabilize first and then Germany, France and England will have the strongest economies, and will institute, through the UN, an international currency. Japan will also pull out, although their economy will be weakened.

# The good news is that if a person is debt-free, owes nothing to the government or credit debt, and can live self sufficiently, they may do better than others. I would invest in gold, not stocks, if I had the income.

# They are still there, manipulating people, running banks, and channeling their dirty money to Brussels, Switzerland, and Cairo, Egypt.

# These people are very, very militaristic.

# [symbolism] The Phoenix, especially red on black, or the reverse - Butterflies and rainbow signs - A tiara - Star of David called "the great seal of Solomon" - "The Fifth Element" movie was based on the elements - a head with a computer inside …

# ...paedophiles, they abuse children and teach them, under duress, to become perpetrators themselves from earliest infancy. This alone means they should be stopped. They run the porn industry, along with other groups such as the Mafia drug smuggling, gun running, and human slavery…

# …if a lawyer is super rich, with no real identity, beware…

# …any press about them is the equivalent of a gnat to be swatted. Arrogant people make mistakes, and they are becoming more blatant and open in recent years…

# …creating new life or resuscitating from death is a major preoccupation…

# …use abuse to create obedient top-down hierarchies of control…

# Stopping pornography and child prostitution and drug smuggling and gun running would take a huge chunk out of their profits - the financial base would be severely dented…

# They place importance on bloodlines and trace their ancestry back to ancient times…

# …plurality of linguality is valued…

# They hate trees and forests for some reason…

# …they hate Israel with a passion …

# My younger sister remembers being tied up on a stone altar at the age of 3, with a gag in her mouth, and being raped.

# …[herself] stuck with pins and needles, being burned, hung by my feet - sometimes to crosses, spun, dropped off a table as an infant, near drowning…

# My church was very close locally, so they would take me out of class to be taken to the choir director's home to practice "choir" during schooltime…

# None of their techniques to erase memory was satisfactory. I think that's why there are so many survivors who are remembering.

# I think it is used as an incredible fund-raising ability to bring in large amounts of money underground with child pornography in international markets where it is highly sought after.

# …Point Magoo Naval Base where they had dolphin tanks in research, and there were places at Edwards Air Force Base and all sorts of different locations…

# Walter Bowart has a blurb in his book that says the big secrets are protected by their incredulity. And certainly I believe that those who strategized this were very well aware that when all of us started talking about these things that just like in Nazi Germany - people still today believe that a lot of those horrors didn't happen…

# "Don't these old money power groups have enough money already?" What is motivating them to perpetuate these atrocities? A: What I saw from the inside sitting in a group of these men, they more or less look at this as a game of their intellect - like a group of powerful men sitting in a room thinking up strategies of what benefits they might be able to have…

# Valerie Wolf and her survivor clients who were so courageous and stepped forward and opened the door on the mind control…

# It is my understanding now that A Most Dangerous Game was devised to condition military personnel in survival and combat maneuvers. Yet it was used on me and others known to me as a means of further conditioning the mind to the realization there was "no place to hide"…

# William Birnbauer, Melbourne Age, April 18, 2004: Dr Leeks is already being investigated by the board following claims that he allowed children to be punished with electric shock treatment and pain-inducing injections while in charge of a psychiatric hospital unit in NZ in the 1970s. The complaints include allegations of assault by staff, the use of electroconvulsive therapy and pain-inducing injections on children as well as sexual assault. From 1982 to 1984 he lived in Canada, and returned to Melbourne in 1984 to establish a private practice in Cheltenham

# Ewen Cameron, the founder of the World Psychiatric Association, funded through MKULTRA and Human Ecology Foundation by the Canadian military and the CIA, did LSD and other hallucinogen research and was successfully sued - he had already died and the CIA settled out of court with eight of his patients. One of his papers, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry is on Psychic Driving…

# Why aren't more people concerned about [this]? A: Because they simply can't, won't believe that this is happening.The evidence is there, but in my opinion, the average person does NOT want to know, and even when confronted with it, will look the other way. We as human beings want to believe the BEST of our race, not the worst.

If only a fraction of any of this had any truth to it, three descriptions spring to mind:

1] at the least - irresponsible, in those who supposedly govern us;

2] elements of the fiendish and cold;

3] simply mad.

The question of whether it's as mad as the kill-militias which now roam Iraq in and around the American army, as mad as the Janjaweed of Sudan, of Pol Pot or of the Algerian Islamic Satanist militias - that's a moot point. Does "cold and clinical" make them any better than "gleaming-eyed" and "frenzied"?

You understand I'm not referring to George W. or Cheney or Blair or any of the "open faces" here. I'm referring to the secretive faceless men.

Two can play at that game.