THOUGHT FOR THE DAY!

" It is legal to purchase a fully assembled Uzi machine gun in this country [United States] but it's not legal to purchase a fully assembled low-watt radio transmitter. "-- Greg Ruggerio, editor and media activist

 

GREAT BRITAIN

Jan 05 11:35

Crystal, china maker Waterford Wedgwood collapses

Waterford Wedgwood PLC, the maker of classic china and crystal, filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday after attempts to restructure the struggling business or find a buyer failed.

Jan 05 09:40

Orange drinks with 300 times more pesticide than tap water

Fizzy drinks sold by Coca-Cola in Britain have been found to contain pesticides at up to 300 times the level allowed in tap or bottled water.

A worldwide study found pesticide levels in orange and lemon drinks sold under the Fanta brand, which is popular with children, were at their highest in the UK.

Jan 05 08:01

Pictures from SAT protest in Manchester UK

Jan 04 09:03

Demonstrators hurl shoes at Downing Street in day of global protest against Israeli attacks

Demonstrators demanding an end to Israeli airstrikes on Gaza hurled their shoes at the gates of Downing Street yesterday during a wave of global protests.

Jan 04 08:25

Riot police called out in London as protest ends in skirmishes

Riot police were dispatched to the Israeli embassy in London last night as a day of protests across Europe degenerated into ugly skirmishes.

In London Israeli flags were set ablaze and surging crowds were penned back by police with shields and batons. Some protesters were in tears, claiming they were being stopped from leaving peacefully, and organisers said they would complain about police heavy-handedness. Others, growing more aggressive as news of Israel's ground invasion spread, threw missiles while police tried to drive them back. Late into the evening, several hundred were still staring down officers outside the embassy.

Jan 04 08:19

Police set to step up hacking of home PCs

THE Home Office has quietly adopted a new plan to allow police across Britain routinely to hack into people’s personal computers without a warrant.

The move, which follows a decision by the European Union’s council of ministers in Brussels, has angered civil liberties groups and opposition MPs. They described it as a sinister extension of the surveillance state which drives “a coach and horses” through privacy laws.

The hacking is known as “remote searching”. It allows police or MI5 officers who may be hundreds of miles away to examine covertly the hard drive of someone’s PC at his home, office or hotel room.

Material gathered in this way includes the content of all e-mails, web-browsing habits and instant messaging.

Jan 03 07:42

Thousands across UK protest against Gaza bombings

Israel launched the offensive after more than a week of Palestinian rocket fire that followed a six-month truce.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

As usual, no mention that it was Israel that broke the truce on November 4th with the blockade, and November 5th with the attack that killed 6 Hamas officials.

Jan 03 06:39

Rallies to protest about Gaza strikes

Tens of thousands of protesters will voice their anger at the Gaza bombing blitz today in a series of rallies across the UK

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Don't forget your WRH signs (and to send me pictures)!

Jan 03 06:33

The perfect credit crunch menu: pubs offer meals for £1

"The original £1 food-menu pub," says a sign outside the Four Crosses Inn near Cannock, Staffordshire. The claim may be a contentious one, as more and more pubs offer incredibly cheap meals to stave off closure, but the owner, Tony Rabbitts, insists that he was the first to show it could be done.

Jan 03 06:24

Chancellor Alistair Darling on brink of second bailout for banks

Alistair Darling has been forced to consider a second bailout for banks as the lending drought worsens.

The Chancellor will decide within weeks whether to pump billions more into the economy as evidence mounts that the £37 billion part-nationalisation last year has failed to keep credit flowing. Options include cash injections, offering banks cheaper state guarantees to raise money privately or buying up “toxic assets”, The Times has learnt.

Jan 02 09:51

British telecom firm severs ties with Israeli counterparts

British telecommunications firm FreedomCall has terminated its cooperation with Israel's MobileMax due to the IDF operation in Gaza.

Jan 02 06:34

UK: Private firm to guard database of every phone call, e-mail

A contentious proposal to create a massive database of communications metadata in the United Kingdom has just become even more controversial. According to reports in the British press, a "consultation paper" laying out the plan, slated for release in January, contemplates outsourcing the maintenance of the database to private-sector firms. The proposal has already come under fire from civil liberties groups, the European human rights commissioner, and former public officials.

Dec 31 09:44

London demo groups urge Brown to take action on Gaza

The organisers of demonstrations in Britain against Israel's air strikes on the Gaza Strip urged Prime Minister Gordon Brown on Wednesday to end his "deafening silence" on the bloodshed.

In an open letter published on the back page of The Guardian, the 21 groups told Brown: "this is your hour with history and we urge you to take the first step".

Dec 31 09:16

Iranians raid British diplomatic compound in Gaza protest

Dec 31 08:25

Hundreds of Iranians storm British compound in Tehran over Gaza attacks

Hundreds of Iranian radicals stormed the British compound in Tehran last night, replacing the Union flag with a Palestinian one in protest against Israel’s military offensive in the Gaza Strip.

British officials will be assessing whether the security breach, unprecedented in recent years, was an isolated incident or presages further violent demonstrations.

Dec 30 18:25

Protest in London over Gaza being bombed

Dec 30 07:01

UK heads for the big chill - 13C

Britain faces a freezing start to 2009 with temperatures plunging as low as minus 13C.

The big chill will mean widespread frost throughout the UK.

During the day, the temperature is unlikely to rise much above zero, and in parts of Scotland it could even fall as low as - 13C.

The South East and Midlands are braced for overnight lows of - 6C for the coming week.

Global warming is a pain in the butt - ACHOO!

Dec 29 10:44

British foreign secretary calls for urgent cease-fire in Gaza

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband on Sunday called for "an urgent cease-fire and immediate halt to all violence" in Gaza.

Dec 29 09:41

"Gordon Brown redistributes wealth from taxpayers to City bankers in bonuses"

Webmaster's Commentary: 

I've been to The Tower. That big wood block is still there!

Dec 29 09:29

Violent protests at Israeli Embassy in London

Dec 29 08:48

Brown: we need Dunkirk spirit in 2009

"Today, the issues may be different, more complex, more global," Brown says. "And yet the qualities we need to meet them the British people have demonstrated in abundance before."

He says he is confident that because the British have the "right character" they will one day be able to look back on the economic crisis facing them "as another great challenge that was thrown Britain's way, and that Britain met".

Webmaster's Commentary: 

All well and good until you recall that Dunkirk was actually a major RETREAT!

Dec 29 08:45

London protest over raids on Gaza

Ten people have been arrested for public order offences after clashes at a protest near the Israeli embassy in London against air raids on Gaza.

Dec 28 16:36

Protest in London over Gaza being bombed

Violent confrontations broke out at the Israeli Embassy in London today as up to 1,500 protesters against Israel's Gaza campaign gathered in a vociferous demonstration.

Campaign supporters, Palestinians and British Muslims stood on the pavement of High Street Kensington, west London, and chanted in unison: “Five, six, seven, eight - Israel is a terror state.”

Dec 27 19:07

Gaza: Protests in London on Sunday & Monday

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Which will be ignored by the obedient (to Israel) British government.

Dec 26 19:06

Mystery as dozens of public artworks vanish

Works of art worth hundreds of thousands of pounds are missing from British embassies and other official buildings around the world.

At least 50 paintings from the Government Art Collection are unaccounted for, according to the latest audit. None was insured. Some are known to have been stolen but more than half the total simply disappeared.

Dec 26 13:16

Al Qaeda is More of a U.S. Propaganda Campaign than a Real Organization

Former British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook wrote:

Al-Qaida, literally "the database", was originally the computer file of the thousands of mujahideen who were recruited and trained with help from the CIA to defeat the Russians.

Former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski told the Senate that the war on terror is "a mythical historical narrative".

Dec 26 10:07

Hallelujah, Allahu Akbar and Merry Christmas

I watched as suspect after suspect in the case was released, but Mohammad and an Iraqi man were put on trial. I felt at that point there was no hope, though I was still certain of his innocence. A man who knows his wife is in custody and his baby boy with social services can be persuaded to say all kinds of things even without "enhanced interrogation techniques." But not this time. This week I heard he'd been acquitted and cleared of all charges. So Hallelujah, Allahu Akbar and Merry Christmas.

Dec 24 10:00

ecret nuclear sell-off storm

Britain no longer has any stake in the production of its nuclear warheads after the Government secretly sold off its shares in the Atomic Weapons Establishment in Aldermaston.

Ministers agreed to sell the remaining one-third ownership to a Californian engineering company. The announcement, which means that Americans will now produce and maintain Britain's independent nuclear deterrent, was slipped out on the eve of the parliamentary Christmas holiday. Officials refused to say how much the deal raised.

Dec 24 04:46

A Civil Limit to Political Activism?

Activists guilty of hate campaign Staff Writer | BBC England | Tuesday Dec 23, 2008

Four animal rights activists have been convicted of orchestrating a blackmail campaign against firms that supplied an animal testing research centre.

They used paedophile smears, criminal damage and bomb hoaxes to intimidate companies associated with Huntingdon Life Sciences (HLS) in Cambridgeshire.

Dec 22 20:41

Jobs cut as liquidator seizes Madoff's UK fund

Madoff Securities International's traders are believed to have unwound all their positions on Friday morning and could not carry on doing business because all their capital belonged to Mr Madoff and his family. The New Yorker is now under house arrest after being accused of a $50bn investment fraud.

Dec 22 07:58

Minister's U-turn on interest charges for social fund after 'loan sharks' jibe

The government was yesterday forced to perform a rapid U-turn over plans to charge high-street levels of interest on loans to some of the poorest people in Britain who rely on a social fund when they experience financial difficulties.

Hours after the government was accused of acting like "loan sharks", the welfare minister, Kitty Ussher, took to the airwaves to deny that interest charges of up to 27% would be imposed on vulnerable people using the fund for vital items such as cookers and beds.

Dec 22 07:40

Britons who fled in search of French idyll feel the pain of the pound's fall

It has long been the stuff of dreams, of bestselling books and sometimes even of profit. The British love of France has led tens of thousands to cross the Channel in search of a better quality of life, a ruin to renovate, or simply to snap up a cheap second home.

Dec 20 09:12

Taleban ‘threaten British values like the Nazis’

John Hutton, the Defence Secretary, has compared the Taleban and al-Qaeda to the Nazis, saying that British forces in Afghanistan are defending the country’s values as they did in the Second World War.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Actually, you need to take a closer look at the issue of who is invading who to see that there is in fact a really BIG difference between WWW2 and today!

Dec 19 08:32

Rosy rewriting of the Iraq debacle will fuel worse disaster in Afghanistan

Now they want to bolt the stable door. With British troops at last due to leave Iraq next spring, everyone is for a public inquiry. That is fine. But what about an inquiry into where they are going, straight from the frying pan into the fire, from Iraq to Afghanistan? In Basra the British army had at least a tattered remnant of a war plan. In Helmand the only plan is to be target practice for the Taliban.

Dec 19 08:14

Brown rejects early Iraq inquiry

Gordon Brown has rejected calls for an early inquiry into the Iraq war, saying it would not be considered until UK troops are out of the country.

Conservative leader David Cameron and Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg both want an inquiry now that the exit date for British troops of 31 July has been set.

Dec 18 16:43

Like an 'addict returning to the drug': Archbishop slams Brown's plan to spend his way out of recession

The Archbishop of Canterbury has hit out at Gordon Brown's plans to combat recession by boosting spending and has likened them to an 'addict returning to the drug'.

Dec 18 11:15

Nobody threw shoes at Brown – but his guilt is still undeniable

At least this time there was no ballistic footwear. The last time Gordon Brown made a surprise visit to Iraq to announce troop withdrawals, he was whacked so hard on the head by the giant DM attached to his own left leg – and if nothing else, you had to admire his Nadia Comanecian elasticity of movement – that it took this unfolding economic catastrophe to rouse him from the ensuing psephological coma.

Dec 15 20:27

Chancellor admits Britain is facing more severe downturn

Britain will be more severely affected by the global downturn because of its dependence on the City of London, the chancellor, Alistair Darling, warned yesterday, in remarks which intensified clashes between Labour and the Tories over the economy.

Dec 13 21:26

Six years of carnage for what, exactly?

THERE WILL be no victory parades, I think. Next March, fully six years after they arrived, the last of Britain's troops will begin to leave Basra. By June, reportedly, only a token few hundred of the 4100 remnant of a 46,000-strong force will remain to train Iraqis and assist the new American tenants at the city's airport. The British are packing up their tents, their tanks, and their pretensions.

Dec 12 06:24

Extraordinary scenes end Jean Charles de Menezes inquest

The moment the family of Jean Charles de Menezes attempted to force their way past a group of private security guards into the inquest courtroom marked the lowest point in a multi-million pound hearing into the fatal shooting of an innocent man by the Metropolitan police.

Any semblance of trust between the relatives and the establishment, in the person of the coroner and the court, dissolved into a volley of recriminations and accusations after Sir Michael Wright made a series of decisions that made the family question the openness and impartiality of proceedings.

Dec 12 06:22

Open verdict at Menezes inquest

The jury at the inquest into the mistaken shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes has returned an open verdict.

Two officers shot Mr de Menezes seven times as he sat on a train at Stockwell Underground station, south London. They thought he was a suicide bomber.

The jury returned the verdict after deliberating for a week.

The family had earlier withdrawn from the inquest after the coroner said the jury could not return a verdict of unlawful death at the hands of police.

Dec 11 07:37

UK runs 'Guantanamo camps', says detainees

Asylum-seekers who claim to have been abused by British security guards accused the Government yesterday of running Guantanamo Bay-style detention camps.

Mafungasei Maikokera, a Zimbabwean asylum-seeker attending a meeting at the House of Commons, said guards had beaten her when she resisted attempts to deport her. and had discussed "bonuses" they were paid for removing asylum-seekers.

Dec 10 19:44

Speculators push pound to record low against euro

The most sustained run on the pound since Britain was ejected from the exchange rate mechanism in 1992 sent sterling to its lowest-ever level against the European single currency last night.

Fears that the UK would suffer a long and painful recession to match any of the three big downturns since the second world war helped push sterling to 1.1385 against the euro and prompted fears that further selling could result in the exchange rate falling to parity over the coming months.

Dec 10 19:42

Grim outlook for Woolworths rescue

The outlook for 32,000 Woolworths workers looked grim last night as administrators said they could not find a buyer for the collapsed retail group and were starting a closing down sale.

Dec 10 17:57

'We have saved the world': Brown's gaffe as he defends his billion-pound rescue of the banks

Dec 10 09:15

Britain says most troops will leave Iraq by June

British troops will begin withdrawing from Iraq in March and will mostly be gone by June, the Ministry of Defense said Wednesday.

Dec 10 07:37

Britain worse credit risk than McDonald's

Britain has become a worse credit risk than McDonald's and a host of other large companies, figures produced for The Independent reveal.

The collapse in Britain's credit rating has taken place over the past two and a half months, since the Government underwrote the banking system and decided to spend its way out of recession. Investing in UK government debt is now almost twice as risky as buying McDonald's corporate bonds, according to the market in credit default swaps (CDS), which provides insurance for the buyers of such debt.

Dec 09 09:56

U.K. auto-parts maker Wagon reportedly on brink of collapse

One of the U.K.'s largest car-parts groups, Wagon Automotive, was on the brink of collapse this weekend, according to reports in several newspapers.
Administrators are expected to be appointed within days at Wagon, which employs more than 500 in the U.K.
Only the U.K. operation will be put into administration this week, with the fate of European plants still to be decided, reports said.

Dec 07 09:25

Has your child been CAFed? How the Government plans to record intimate information on every child in Britain

Since April 1, hundreds of thousands of State employees, from police to teachers, youth and nursery workers, social workers and sports coaches, have been entitled to interrogate children aged up to 19, using the ‘Common Assessment Framework’ (CAF), a creepy, eight-page, 60-section questionnaire.

CAF includes eyewateringly intimate questions about children’s sexual behaviour, their family’s structure, culture and religion, their views on ‘discrimination’, their friends, secret fears, feelings and family income, plus ‘any serious difficulties in their parents’ relationship’.

Dec 07 09:15

Bill to allow Commons searches with no warrant

The vow by Commons Speaker Michael Martin to prevent "unauthorised" raids on MPs' offices in the wake of the Damian Green affair was seriously undermined last night as it emerged that the Government is preparing new laws to allow investigators to mount parliamentary searches without a warrant.

Dec 05 19:21

17 judges, one ruling - and 857,000 records must be now wiped clear

The fingerprints and DNA samples of more than 857,000 innocent citizens who have been arrested or charged but never convicted of a criminal offence now face deletion from the national DNA database after a landmark ruling by the European court of human rights in Strasbourg.

Dec 05 07:35

Hundreds affected by cards scam

Two senior police officers are among hundreds of people in Edinburgh and West Lothian who have been victims of a card cloning scam.

Lothian and Borders Police and several banks are investigating the withdrawal of money from the accounts overseas.

It is believed that hand-held chip and pin card machines are being targeted by the criminals.

Police are warning retailers to watch for bogus workers who could be fitting the machines with skimming devices.

Dec 04 20:03

Bank of England mulls "nuclear option" of cash injection

The Bank of England is working on radical plans to inject cash directly into the economy - the nuclear option to be used only when interest rates approach zero.

Dec 03 18:14

Jean Charles de Menezes jury told to remember officer’s tears

The jury hearing the inquest on Jean Charles de Menezes will retire to consider its verdict today, having been instructed not to return a finding that he was unlawfully killed by police.

Sir Michael Wright, QC, the coroner, told the 11 jurors that they will have to work through the evidence from 100 witnesses and decide whether discrepancies between witnesses were “failures of recollection” or caused by misunderstanding and communication lapses at the time.

Dec 03 18:14

Jean Charles de Menezes jury told to remember officer’s tears

The jury hearing the inquest on Jean Charles de Menezes will retire to consider its verdict today, having been instructed not to return a finding that he was unlawfully killed by police.

Sir Michael Wright, QC, the coroner, told the 11 jurors that they will have to work through the evidence from 100 witnesses and decide whether discrepancies between witnesses were “failures of recollection” or caused by misunderstanding and communication lapses at the time.

Dec 03 18:14

Jean Charles de Menezes jury told to remember officer’s tears

The jury hearing the inquest on Jean Charles de Menezes will retire to consider its verdict today, having been instructed not to return a finding that he was unlawfully killed by police.

Sir Michael Wright, QC, the coroner, told the 11 jurors that they will have to work through the evidence from 100 witnesses and decide whether discrepancies between witnesses were “failures of recollection” or caused by misunderstanding and communication lapses at the time.

Dec 03 12:01

Blizzards, black ice and freezing rain forecast as the bookies slash the odds on a white Christmas

Blizzards are expected across most of northern England, the north Midlands and Scotland tonight, lasting into tomorrow morning.

Up to 8ins of snow is expected to fall in some parts of Britain as the cold snap continues, weather forecasters have warned.

Heavy rain is forecast for London, the south east, the south west and south Wales. But the freezing conditions means the rain could form dangerous black ice.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

There is no truth to the rumor that a group of global warming protesters froze to death outside a coal-fired power station.

Dec 03 09:43

UK food and energy prices are rising twice as fast as those in Europe, report finds

Power and food bills in the UK are rising at twice the rate they are in the European Union.

A report from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development yesterday showed that British bills surged at the fastest rate of any EU nation in October.

Energy costs rose by 24.2 per cent compared with the same time last year, the OECD said.

That was twice the gain in Finland, which recorded the second highest rate of power price inflation.

And UK grocery bills gained 10.1 per cent, a rate matched only by Finland.

Dec 03 09:05

UK: Big Brother police to get ‘war-time’ power to demand ID in the street - on pain of sending you to jail

State officials are to be given powers previously reserved for times of war to demand a person’s proof of identity at any time.

Anybody who refuses the Big Brother demand could face arrest and a possible prison sentence.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Memo to thinking Brits, particularly those with kids; if you have a way of making a decent living, get out of the UK now, while you still can.

This country has become a true "police state", in the full definition of the term, and this is not the place where you want your kids to grow up.

Dec 01 06:52

Climate targets to hit household bills

Households could face big rises in their energy bills under plans to reduce the role of fossil fuels and cut planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions by more than a third by 2020, the country's chief climate change adviser said on Monday.

The Committee on Climate Change said the price hike could push more than 1.7 million houses into fuel poverty, when families spend more than a tenth of their income on energy to keep warm.

Dec 01 06:52

Climate targets to hit household bills

Households could face big rises in their energy bills under plans to reduce the role of fossil fuels and cut planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions by more than a third by 2020, the country's chief climate change adviser said on Monday.

The Committee on Climate Change said the price hike could push more than 1.7 million houses into fuel poverty, when families spend more than a tenth of their income on energy to keep warm.

Nov 30 08:30

Brown trying to deny British were among the terrorists

Nov 29 08:44

U.K. Credit Cards to Give Borrowers Extra 60 Days to Pay

The U.K. government has extracted a pledge from credit-card issuers to give struggling borrowers an extra 60 days to pay, in its latest effort to ease the impact of the financial crisis on the economy.

The move, which comes days after the government announced a £20 billion ($30.8 billion) economic stimulus package, is aimed at giving borrowers extra breathing room to restructure their debts, the government said.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Instead of restructuring debts, why not CUT TAXES BY 50%. That will undoubtedly revive any economy!

Nov 28 09:57

'Serious questions' over MP's arrest, says Cameron

David Cameron insisted police and ministers had "serious questions" to answer today after one of his frontbench spokesmen was arrested over Home Office leaks.

Nov 25 18:59

Briton jailed for raping his daughters, fathering their children

A British man who fathered seven children by raping his two daughters was jailed for life on Tuesday in a case described by the judge as the worst he had ever seen.
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The 56-year-old man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, made his daughters pregnant 19 times over a 25-year period of abuse.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Sick. Just sick.

Nov 25 15:37

Why Gordon Brown the manic meddler had to take such a massive gamble

You know what, I have now heard more than enough about how much Gordon Brown is enjoying this recession. Every time you read about the Prime Minister, they tell you that his mood is getting better and better.

Having been known as a gloomy old nail-biting misery-guts, he is now presented to us as a man "in his element", the life and soul of the party, a smile or a witty aside never off his lips.

They say that he was giving a speech the other day, and his mobile phone went. "Aha," quipped funster Gordon Brown, "that'll be another bank going bust!" Isn't he a scream?

Nov 25 11:19

Celebrities like Madonna won't come to Britain because of ID cards

From today, anyone from outside the European Union who wants to live and work in the UK for more than six months will have to apply for a compulsory British ID card.

Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, wants 90 per cent of foreign residents in Britain to have identity cards by 2014.

To get an ID card, people will have their faces scanned and will have to give 10 fingerprints.

Campaigners fear that this will put off celebrities like American singer Madonna from setting up home here and so damage the cultural life of the nation.

Nov 24 10:32

British urged to shop 'til they drop

Critics said that if the recent price-cutting campaign by stores offering discounts of up to 25 per cent had not enticed shoppers to spend, a 2.5 per cent reduction in VAT would not work either.

Webmaster's Commentary: 

Remember, if you don;t go out and buy a bunch of Christmas crap ON CREDIT, the terrorists will have won!

Nov 23 18:57

UK brought to standstill as five inches of snow falls in an hour

Severe weather warnings were issued by the Met Office for much of the south east of England, the east of England, the East Midlands and Yorkshire, with the freezing temperatures and heavy snowfall prompting fears of traffic chaos.

The heaviest snowfall was in Aberdeen, where 14 centimetres (5.5ins) of snow fell between Saturday and Sunday.

Norfolk and Lincolnshire were the most affected places in England, with up to five centimetres (2.4 ins) falling in just one hour.