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23rd
FEBRUARY 2006: -
22nd
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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Hospital to radio-tag surgery patients:
RFID bracelets improve patient safety in Birmingham NHS trust - The UK’s first electronic patient tagging pilot is being expanded to cover all patients admitted for ear, nose and throat
(ENT) or thoracic surgery. Once in place, all patients on five wards at Birmingham Heartlands Hospital
(BHH) will be fitted with radio frequency identification (RFID) bracelets, which will be linked to a digital photograph and the electronic medical records for their visit.
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Token fine for Diana paparazzi - A Paris appeals court fined three photographers 1 euro each for invasion of privacy for taking pictures of Britain's Princess Diana and boyfriend Dodi Fayed the night of their fatal 1997 car crash, officials said Wednesday.
The appeals court fined them the symbolic 1 euro ($1.19) sum in a ruling on Friday, which was not announced until Wednesday. Jacques
Langevin, Christian Martinez and Fabrice Chassery were acquitted of the invasion of privacy charge in 2003 after judges said a crashed vehicle on a public highway is not a private area. But France's highest court disagreed in a ruling last April and sent the case to the Paris appeals court for review.
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Policemen face criminal charges over Brazilian's shooting - British police officers, involved in the killing of an innocent Brazilian in an anti-terrorist operation here in July last, are facing criminal charges over allegations that they tampered with evidence after the shooting incident.
The officials, who oversaw the anti-terrorist operation, will be charged by Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) officials with attempting to pervert the course of justice by disguising the fact that they had mistaken 27-year-old Jean Charles De Menezes for a terrorism suspect, the 'independent' reported today.
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Neocon architect says: 'Pull it down' - NEOCONSERVATISM has failed the United States and needs to be replaced by a more realistic foreign policy agenda, according to one of its prime architects.
Francis Fukuyama, who wrote the best-selling book The End of History and was a member of the neoconservative project, now says that, both as a political symbol and a body of thought, it has "evolved into something I can no longer support". He says it should be discarded on to history's pile of discredited ideologies.
21st
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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Electronic surveillance enters EU statute books -
EU legislation allowing telecoms and internet data surveillance by security agencies will enter into force by August 2007.
Europe’s justice ministers have given final approval to controversial rules forcing telephone operators and internet service providers to store data. Information such as call logs, numbers called, email or web addresses can then be accessed by law enforcers investigating terrorism or serious crime. Surveillance of the content of calls or emails is not covered by the EU directive and remains under the scope of national security laws.
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Shop regrets
'hoodie' humiliation - A supermarket has apologised to a 58-year-old teaching assistant who was asked by an over-zealous security guard to remove her hooded top.
Kay Parncutt was challenged over the
"hoodie" - clothing often linked with thugs - at a Tesco store in
Swindon. She said: "I told him 'no, my hair's a mess'. He didn't think it was very funny, but I did. But I did
oblige."Tesco said: "Although our security guard's intention was good, it seems as if he was a little over-zealous." Mrs Parncutt, a teaching assistant at Longleaze School in Wooton Bassett said: "I couldn't believe he was talking to me. I'm supposed to look like a nasty thug?" Hooded tops have been banned from some shopping centres and schools because they conceal the face and have been associated with crime and anti-social behaviour.
(COMMENTARY:
This has nothing to do with security and everything to do with ushering
in a police state via incrementalism and acclimatisation. If this
kind of confrontation ever happens to you in a store, refuse to remove
your hood and let the real 'thugs' drag you out if need be. If you
suffer injury, take the buggers to court and your story to the
press. This kind of bully tactic needs standing up to.)
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Actors detained in security check - The stars of 'The Road to
Guantanamo' were detained by London police after returning from the Berlin Film Festival where the film won an award.
The six actors who portray British inmates at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, detention camp were stopped by police Thursday at London`s Luton airport under the British Terrorism Act, the BBC reported Tuesday. One of the actors, Rizwan Ahmed, said he was verbally abused by police, who took his cell phone and asked if he was going to make any more political films.
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U.K. e-passports start their travels:
The United Kingdom's first e-passports, which feature personal information stored on a chip, have been
issued - According to the U.K.'s Home Office, e-passports are now being issued by the Foreign Office in Washington, D.C. Offices in the U.K. itself are expected to start issuing them to applicants for new passports and renewals, starting in April. In the early stages of the changeover, some people will receive a new biometric passport while others will receive a passport with existing digital identification. The switch is expected to be complete at summer's end.
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BIS Calls For Global Currency: Nazi bankrollers want elimination of national sovereignty for world cashless control grid -
The scandal-ridden and highly secretive Bank For International Settlements, considered to be the world's top central banking policy, has released a policy paper that calls for the end of national currencies in favor of a global model of currency formats. The BIS is a branch of the of the
Bretton-Woods International Financial architecture and closely allied with the Bilderberg Group. It is controlled by an inner elite that represents all the world's major central banking institutions. John Maynard Keynes, perhaps the most influential economist of all time, wanted it closed down as it was used to launder money for the Nazis in World War II.
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I confessed to escape Guantanamo torture - A British student secretly released after more than two years in America's notorious Guantanamo Bay terror suspect prison told last night how he had been barred from returning to the UK.
And, as Jamal "Tony" Kiyemba spoke of the systematic torture he suffered at the hands of his captors, The Mail on Sunday has learned that Home Secretary Charles Clarke personally intervened to keep him out of Britain on "national security grounds".
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Biometrics, ID cards, tagging, DNA kits being pushed on kids:
By Steve Watson for Prisonplanet.com -
"A Reader has alerted us to the following website and stalls all around the country that are actively pushing biometrics, ID cards and "do it yourself" DNA kits on
children".
20th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
|

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New face ID system from China - A biometric face recognition system has been approved in China and will be used in the country for ID purposes, which includes surveillance and security.
Inventor Su
Guangda, an electronics professor at Beijing's Tsinghua University, says his system reduces the chances of mismatching identities by using multi-camera technology. Its other strong point, reports 'China Daily' is the ability to capture moving facial images accurately. The system, approved by the Ministry of Public Security, is expected to be used at airports, customs entrances, banks, post offices, residential areas and other public places in the near future. |
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UK radiation jump blamed on Iraq shells - RADIATION detectors in Britain recorded a fourfold increase in uranium levels in the atmosphere after the “shock and awe” bombing campaign against Iraq, according to a report.
Environmental scientists who uncovered the figures through freedom of information laws say it is evidence that depleted uranium from the shells was carried by wind currents to Britain. Government officials, however, say the sharp rise in uranium detected by radiation monitors in Berkshire was a coincidence and probably came from local sources.
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Police criticised over child DNA -
A "postcode lottery" exists over whether police keep innocent children's DNA on file, a Tory MP has claimed.
Police can retain DNA samples from 10 to 18-year-olds whether they have committed a crime or
not. But there are big differences across England and Wales - Durham police had 830 samples per 100,000 children compared with 52 on
Merseyside. MP Grant Shapps said ministers should admit they were building a national DNA database or erase the
records.
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Google preps privacy defences - Google is preparing a robust defence of its refusal to give the US Department of Justice
(DoJ) access to its search logs. The company has now published its response (PDF) to the DoJ's subpoena. The document suggests that the government request is not only unnecessary but would also damage Google's business.
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'The Americans are breaking international law... it is a society heading towards Animal Farm':
Archbishop Sentamu on Guantanamo - The Archbishop of York, Dr John
Sentamu, has launched a passionate attack on President George Bush, saying his administration's refusal to close the notorious Guantanamo Bay camp reflected "a society that is heading towards George Orwell's Animal Farm".
Dr Sentamu, the Church of England's second in command, urged the UN
Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) to take legal action against the US -
through the US courts or the International Court of Justice at The Hague
- should it fail to respond to a report, by five UN inspectors, advising
that Camp Delta at Guantanamo Bay should be shut immediately because
prisoners there are being tortured.
19th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
TWO
NEW ITEMS ADDED TODAY!
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China's stifling of Web detailed U.S. firms often cooperate, experts reveal to Congress - Keeping Chinese citizens from sensitive online information about such subjects as democracy, Taiwan and the Dalai Lama is a full-time job for the Beijing government.
An army of Internet police removes objectionable postings on message boards. Automated filters block access to thousands of Web sites. Then there's the role of private businesses. Companies, including several U.S. technology giants, censor their Chinese Web sites and turn over e-mail records of dissidents, fearing that doing otherwise will jeopardize their business licenses and get their employees thrown in jail.
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Diebold machines get state approval: Electronic voting systems can be used for the 2006 elections but firm ordered to eradicate security flaws -
After almost three years, Diebold Election Systems won approval Friday to sell its latest voting machines in California, despite findings by computer scientists that the software inside is probably illegal and has security holes found in earlier Diebold products. The scientists advised Secretary of State Bruce McPherson this week that those risks were ``manageable'' and could be ``mitigated'' by tightening security around Diebold's voting machines.
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Children 'wrongly given' Ritalin -
THOUSANDS of Scottish children, some as young as six, are wrongly being labelled hyperactive and given controversial drugs to stop anxious parents thinking they are to blame for unruly behaviour, a leading academic has warned.
Dr Gwynedd Lloyd says doctors are wrongly diagnosing ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) when many youngsters are just behaving badly as a normal part of growing up.
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Sorry, Tony. The ID cards vote was the easy part - The ID card scheme is too complex to be introduced by 2008 -
MPs voted to approve the Government's controversial national identity card scheme last week, to the relief of Tony Blair, if not of civil liberty campaigners and rebel backbenchers. But now comes the hard bit. How will the scheme work? Or more to the point, can it work?
(COMMENTARY:
Security-wise, it won't work, nor is it meant to. All it does is
keep us that much more under the thumb of the totalitarian globalists,
until the time comes that we 'will' all accept an implantable microchip
under the skin... by then the New World Order agenda will be near
completion)
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40% Muslims want Islamic law in Britain: poll - A survey revealed on Sunday that some 40 percent British Muslims want sharia law, the Islamic law, introduced into Muslim predominant areas in the country.
The Islamic law is used in large parts of the Middle East, including Iran and Saudi Arabia, and is enforced by religious police. Special courts can hand down harsh punishments which can include stoning and amputation.
18th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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'ATM' licences to revolutionise system - It's like something from a Star Wars movie - the live scanning unit tests your eyes, scans your fingerprints, signature, takes a "mug shot" and e-mails your details to a central data base to have your new driver's licence issued within a month.
The live scanning units (new electronic processing machines dubbed Robocop by some traffic officers) are being rolled out at municipal offices across South Africa and are expected to revolutionise the way in which drivers' licences are renewed or issued.
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CANADA ID CARD: Day puts national ID card back on the agenda -
The new federal minister of public safety, Stockwell Day, is suggesting that a national identification card is inevitable for Canadians. Day suggested in an interview with The Canadian Press that a government-issued national ID card, which Britain could begin to phase in by next year, is likely forthcoming for Canadians.
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HOW
'INCREMENTALISM' WORKS: New Fingerprint Biometric Safe Introduced -
Artemis Solutions Group unveils a home or small business safe which uses fingerprint biometric technology to grant access to its contents. Intelligent Biometric Solutions and its parent company Artemis Solutions Group today announced the availability of a new home safe which uses fingerprint biometric technology as its opening mechanism.
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AND MORE
INCREMENTALISM: Washington to be first state to use live scan fingerprint technology -
Washington racing officials will be able to expedite the finger-printing process for license applicants when they introduce live scan fingerprint technology for Emerald Downs's meet, which begins April 21. Live scan technology transmits fingerprints directly to the FBI's national criminal database via the Internet, giving the commission same-day feedback on criminal records of license applicants. The new process replaces the ink pad method of fingerprinting and eliminates the need to mail fingerprint cards to the FBI database, which usually takes from four to six weeks to complete.
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EPA, Whitman blasted for lies about post 9/11 air quality - A federal judge blasted the Environ mental Protection Agency and its former head Christie Whitman on Feb. 4 for issuing public and repeated statements that Lower Manhattan air was safe to breathe in the days right after 9/11.
Safety and health activists have long contended that post-9/11 health and environmental risks were not fully reported. Falling and burning buildings released 2,000 tons of asbestos, lead from 50,000 computers, 424,000 tons of concrete pulverized into dust, cancer-causing PCBs and other toxins.
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Google rips Bush administration's search request - Google called the Bush administration's request for data on Web searches as ``so uninformed as to be nonsensical'' in papers filed in San Jose federal court Friday, arguing that turning over the information would expose its trade secrets and violate the privacy of its users.
The 21-page brief filed by the Mountain View search giant angrily dissected the government's claim that the search results would produce useful evidence regarding child pornography.
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Multimedia: Ralph Nader on the Bohemian Grove -
Ralph Nader was interviewed on KSRO by Pat Thurston in July 2005, talking about the annual retreat of the Bohemian Grove Society about to take place along the Russian River. In the interview Ralph explains what these rich and powerful men do up in the woods each summer, and why we should care. The interview is available here in four files, mp3 format.
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Boy charged with felony for carrying sugar - A 12-year-old Aurora boy who said he brought powdered sugar to school for a science project this week has been charged with a felony for possessing a look-alike drug, Aurora police have confirmed. The sixth-grade student at Waldo Middle School was also suspended for two weeks from school after showing the bag of powdered sugar to his friends.
17th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
|
 
www.jackblood.com |
BE
SURE TO CHECK OUT 'DEADLINE LIVE' WITH RADIO TALK SHOW HOST JACK
BLOOD TONIGHT (FRIDAY 17TH FEB).
Joseph
Skelton, webmaster of UK based cremationofcare.com is due on as a
guest at approx. 20:30 UK-GMT (14:30 USA-Central Time).
Listen
Live at gcnlive.com |
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Use of 'stop and search' terror law alienating Muslims, warns Yard -
The head of Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist branch yesterday admitted that police use of controversial stop and search powers under the terror laws needs to be much more tightly focused.
Peter Clarke told a London conference of security experts there had been difficulties with the use of powers under section 44 of the Terrorism Act after warning that anti-terror measures which alienate the Muslim community were fundamentally misguided.
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Abu Ghraib leaked report reveals full extent of abuse -
Nearly two years after the first pictures of naked and humiliated Iraqi detainees emerged from Abu Ghraib prison, the full extent of the abuse became known for the first time yesterday with a leaked report from the US army's internal investigation into the scandal.
The catalogue of abuse, which was obtained by the online American magazine Salon, could not have arrived at a worse time for the Bush administration, coinciding with yesterday's United Nations report on abuse of detainees at Guantánamo, the release of a video showing British troops beating up Iraqi youths, and lingering anger in the Muslim world over cartoons of the prophet Muhammad.
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Authorities Again Looking Into Murder Of 'God's Banker' As Investigation Leads Right Into The Belly Of The Beast, The Vatican, As Well As Masonic Lodges: The Vatican Bank scandal of the 1980's may open up clues to the death of Pope John Paul I, as well as turning up the 'real culprits' behind the murder of Roberto
Calvi, the prominent Italian financier and P2 Masonic Lodge member found hanging from the Blackfriars Bridge in London -
The story behind the brutal murder of the man called 'God's Banker' has never been fully resolved or his death adequately explained to the American public, a naïve public kept from the truth about so many things, including corruption in the Vatican.
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Great firewall of China: Hand-wringing by high-tech executives is an insufficient response to collusion with Beijing -
OFFICIALS from four of the biggest names in global information access danced on the head of a pin Wednesday as they sought to explain why their firms have played footsie with China on limiting and monitoring Internet access. They were defending the indefensible, as several members of a properly riled House international relations subcommittee let representatives of Yahoo, Google, Microsoft and Cisco know. "Sickening collaboration," as Rep. Christopher Smith,
R-N.J., acurately described it.
16th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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Anti-terror chief demands reforms to system - Scotland Yard's top anti-terror official today called for radical changes to the way terrorism is investigated and prosecuted.
The deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan police, Peter Clarke, called for a new national structure to police terrorism that goes beyond the current plans to merge a number of forces. Mr Clarke also called for changes to rules on what evidence jurors are allowed to hear in court, and for a tightening of the use of controversial anti-terror stop-and-search powers in order to avoid alienating ethnic minorities.
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Proposed law targets tech-China cooperation -
Nearly every U.S. company with a Web site located in China will have to move it elsewhere or its executives would face prison terms of up to a year, according to proposed legislation expected to be introduced this week in the U.S. Congress.
A draft version of the bill reviewed by CNET News.com represents the first serious attempt to rewrite the ground rules controlling how U.S. Internet companies may interact with foreign governments. If enacted, it would dramatically change the business practices of corporations with operations in China, Iran, Vietnam and other nations deemed to be overly "Internet-restricting."
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Zambia deports
'satanist' pastors - Two Brazilian pastors of an evangelical church accused of satanism were deported from Zambia at the weekend, an official said on Monday.
Carlos Barcelos and Jamir Craveiro of the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God
(UCKG) were sent back to Brazil on Saturday night after the home affairs ministry said they posed a security threat. The UCKG was banned last year in Zambia for allegedly practising satanism but they were later allowed to operate after the government conceded before the high court that procedure was not followed when banning the sect.
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Call to allow body organ selling - Two US doctors have suggested the sale of organs such as kidneys should be legalised to meet the rising demand.
They said bids to increase the donor pool were failing, and a black market in organ sales was booming. Writing in Kidney International the pair said, while it remained a taboo, legalisation should be considered.
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Iraq abuse images aggravate Arab hostility to West
(...by design we would add!) - Arabs said on Thursday new images of U.S. troops abusing Iraqi prisoners had eroded their respect for the West and would fuel the fury raging over cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad.
The photographs made headline news in the Middle East the day after an Australian television station broadcast previously unpublished film and photographs of violations at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib jail.
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BATMAN TO TRACK DOWN BIN LADEN - Superhero Batman will turn his attention to real-life bad guy OSAMA BIN LADEN in an upcoming comic book.
The Caped Crusader will take on the might of the al-Qaeda terrorist network in new graphic novel HOLY TERROR, BATMAN! Batman writer FRANK MILLER tells the New York Post, "It is, not to put too fine a point on it, a piece of propaganda. Batman kicks
al-Qaeda's a**."
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Peers plan for Terror Bill fight - Conservative and Lib Dem peers are expected to fiercely oppose the creation of an offence of "glorifying" terrorism after it was backed by MPs.
The government comfortably won a Commons vote on the issue on Wednesday overturning an earlier Lords vote. Tony Blair's reluctance to compromise has angered Tories and Lib Dems who say a deal was there for the taking.
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Congress accuses Google of collusion - The giants of the internet were hauled before Congress yesterday, accused of colluding with China's secret police and censors to wield a "cyber sledgehammer of repression". In a hearing of the House international relations subcommittee, Yahoo!, Cisco Systems, Microsoft and Google were repeatedly accused of collusion with an oppressive regime, and of selling out the principles of democracy and free speech for profit by bowing to China's demands to censor web content and monitor email.
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China defends internet control -
China has defended its internet censorship policies, saying its rules follow international norms and claiming no one has been detained for writing online content, say reports on Wednesday. Liu
Zhengrong, deputy chief of the internet affairs bureau of the state council information office, argued that China was being no different from western nations, whose criticisms smacked of "double standards". Zhengrong said: "Regulating the internet according to law is international practice.
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Britain has new weapon against loitering youths -- Sonic Teenager Deterrent - Shopkeepers in central England have been trying out a new device that emits an uncomfortable high-pitched noise designed to disperse young loiterers outside their stores without bothering adults.
Police carrying out the pilot project in Staffordshire say some of those who have tested the "Sonic Teenager Deterrent," nicknamed the mosquito, have talked of buying one of their own. The device which costs 622 pounds (908 euros, 1,081 dollars) "doesn't cause any pain to the hearer," according to Inspector Amanda Davies, quoted by Britain's domestic Press Association news agency.
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The propaganda we pass off as news around the world - A British government-funded fake TV news service allows mild criticism of the US - all the better to support it -
A succession of scandals in the US has revealed widespread government funding of PR agencies to produce "fake news". Actors take the place of journalists and the "news" is broadcast as if it were genuine. The same practice has been adopted in Iraq, where newspapers have been paid to insert copy. These stories have raised the usual eyebrows in the UK about the pitiful quality of US democracy. Things are better here, we imply. We have a prime minister who claimed in 2004 that "the values that drive our actions abroad are the same values of progress and justice that drive us at home". Yet in 2002 the government launched a littleknown television propaganda service that seems to mimic the US government's deceptive approach to fake news.
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The politics of fear (or how Tony Blair misled us over the war on terror) - On 28 February 2005, with the Prevention of Terrorism Bill being discussed in Parliament, Tony Blair made the following comment to listeners to Women's Hour:
"What they [the security services] say is that you have got to give us powers in between mere surveillance of these people - there are several hundred of them in this country who we believe are engaged in plotting or trying to commit terrorist acts - you have got to give us power in between just surveying them and being sure enough to prosecute them beyond reasonable doubt. There are people out there who are determined to destroy our way of life and there is no point in us being naïve about it. "
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Terror threat: The great deception:
As MPs vote today on another security bill, we reveal how the public was misinformed and manipulated over the war on terror -
Today, The Independent publishes detailed analysis of how Tony Blair manipulated the serious threat of terrorism facing Britain to suit the Government's political agenda. It argues the Prime Minister has repeatedly misrepresented security intelligence to the British people, pandered to the right-wing media, and scuppered a golden opportunity to achieve a cross-party consensus on terrorism in the wake of the London bombings of 7 July. The revelations come in an extract from the Centre for Policy Studies pamphlet by the journalist Peter
Oborne. The Use and Abuse of Terror is an examination of the actions of the Government, the police and security services in the heightened state of alert since 11 September 2001.
15th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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New 'Abu Ghraib abuse' images screened
(on the heels of both the hate mongering Danish 'Prophet
Mohammad' cartoons and the recently released video of UK troops abusing
Iraqis... gee how does this work I wonder?) - Previously unpublished images showing US troops apparently abusing detainees at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison in 2003 were broadcast today by an Australian television
station. Still and video images were broadcast on Dateline, a current affairs programme on SBS television, which appeared to show dead bodies and Iraqi prisoners being tortured by US troops.
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MORE POLICE STATE MEASURES FOR THE
UK: MPs back ban on glorifying terror -
Tony Blair's controversial plan for a new law to stop people "glorifying" terrorism has been backed by MPs. The House of Lords voted last month to remove the measure from the Terrorism Bill, but the Commons has now voted by 315 to 277 to reinstate the plan. Mr Blair said the vote was a "signal of strength" which could outlaw placards glorifying the bombers who attacked London last July.
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The Terrance Yeakey Cover-Up - Terrance Yeakey was the first police officer to arrive at the Murrah Building following the Oklahoma City bombing.
Terrance called his wife that morning and cried to her over the phone. He told her repeatedly "It's not true. It's not what they are saying. It didn't happen that way." Apparently, Officer Yeakey saw something he wasn't supposed to. He was harassed for a full year after the bombing and expressed his belief to loved ones that he would be murdered because of what he knew. One evening, Yeakey called his then ex-wife to inform her that he was being followed by what he thought were federal agents and he was going to try and lose them. His patrol car was found abandoned along a dirt road near El Reno, the front seat soaked with blood.
(RELATED: See
our 'Problem
> Reaction > Solution'
archive for more
info into the Oklahoma bombing of 1995)
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Crytographer: mobile phone could crack RFID codes: The security of RFID tags has taken another hit -
In the wake of an embarrassing two-hour dismantling of an RFID passport, a crytographer known for his success in the field has suggested that mobile phones could be used to crack RFID tag
codings. It would have to be operated by someone who had training in advanced algorithms, of course, insisted Adi
Shamir, professor of computer science at the Weizmann Institute.
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TIME FOR ANOTHER MEDIA DISTRACTION?: Cheney, Facing Criticism on Shooting, to Comment for First Time -
Vice President Dick Cheney, facing criticism over how he handled the disclosure of a weekend hunting accident, is scheduled to make his first public comments about the incident today in a television interview. Cheney plans to give the interview to the Fox News cable channel at 2 p.m. for broadcast at 6 p.m. Washington time, Jenny Mayfield, a spokeswoman for the vice president, told reporters.

"Watch
the hand on the left... pay no attention to the hand on the right!"
(Readers
from outside the UK are probably thinking "?????")
14th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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Compulsory ID cards for UK citizens within five years: Critics warn UK is "sleepwalking towards a surveillance state" -
UK citizens will be forced to register for biometric ID cards when applying for a new passport within two years after MPs voted on Monday night to make the controversial scheme compulsory and to not put the costs under independent scrutiny. In the end Prime Minister Tony Blair's enforced absence from the ID cards vote due to a faulty plane in South Africa didn't matter as the government comfortably defeated a threatened backbench Labour rebellion, albeit with a reduced majority.
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NO2ID: Identity scheme reminscent of Big Brother - Anti-ID card campaign group NO2ID has said it was outraged at the outcome of yesterday's Commons vote, which obliges citizens to apply for an ID card when they renew passports.
The group said this was "a convenient loophole", where "90 per cent of people" would, over time, be forced to leave details on a national database and pay for an ID card. National coordinator Phil Booth said: "New Labour's definition of civil liberties seems to have been written by Big Brother - or perhaps Alice through the Looking Glass.
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More Questions Raised About Delay in Reporting Cheney Misfire - The more than 18-hour delay in news emerging that the vice president of the United States had shot a man, sending him to an intensive care unit with his wounds, grew even more curious Monday with word from the White House that President Bush had been informed of the incident Saturday but not immediately about Dick Cheney's role.
Earlier, E&P had learned that the official confirmation of the shooting came about only after a local reporter in Corpus Christi, Texas, received a tip from the owner of the property where the shooting occurred and called Vice President Cheney's office for confirmation.
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The top two Republicans in Congress caught in an outright lie -
A Republican staffer has named Frist and Hastert as the two lawmakers that added the vaccine makers liability protection to the defense
bill - after the committee had met several times that day, and Dems even asked Alaska Senator Ted Stevens if the language was in the bill, and he told them no.
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Satanic 333 Skyscrapers Look Down on Useless Feeders and Slaves - President George W. Bush recently gave a speech about the 2002 alleged terror plot on the “Library Tower” skyscraper in Los Angeles. This appears to be a good point to begin. The name has been changed now for several years, it is now called the U.S. Bank Tower. The address is numbered 633. It was designed by
I.M. Pei the architect responsible for the Louvre Pyramid made famous by the Da Vinci Code and other odd buildings that will be noted in this article.
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Biometric scans for passports from April:
ID card vote paves way for detailed national database -
The final Commons votes last night cleared the way for the first national identity card scheme in Britain for 50 years. Parliament's approval of ID card legislation signals the start of a procurement process for the largest public sector computer project in Europe, which carries a minimum official price tag of £5.8bn in running costs over the next 10 years. A debate launched in 1995 by the former Tory leader Michael Howard, when he was home secretary, is set to become law. It will eventually mean that 38 million British citizens over the age of 16 and resident foreign nationals who have lived here for more than three months will have their details registered on a powerful national identity database.
AND
YOU KNOW WHAT'S COMING NEXT, AFTER THE BIOMETRIC I.D. CARD...

THAT'S
RIGHT FOLKS... THE FIRST BATCH OF COMPULSORY IMPLANTABLE MICROCHIPS WILL BE
SHOVED DOWN YOUR THROAT (THOUGH THE PREFERRED PLACEMENT WILL BE THE HAND
OR FOREHEAD ACCORDING TO THE BOOK OF REVELATIONS) FASTER THAN YOU CAN
SAY "GET THAT HYPODERMIC NEEDLE AWAY FROM MY KIDS!".
13th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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Blair Survives First Vote on ID Cards With Reduced Majority -
U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair won the first of several votes set in Parliament on his national identity card plan, surviving a rebellion by lawmakers from his own Labour Party.
Lawmakers in the House of Commons voted 310-279 to reject an amendment to the legislation by the House of Lords that would have made the cards optional. The Commons has yet to vote on another Lords amendment to force the government to produce full audited costs for the project.
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Porton Down compromise angers veterans - The Ministry of Defence today reached a settlement with the family of an RAF serviceman who underwent lethal nerve gas tests at Porton Down more than 50 years ago. Leading Aircraftsman Ronald Maddison, from Consett, County Durham, died aged 20 after having droplets of sarin dabbed on to his arm at Porton Down chemical warfare testing facility on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, in 1953.
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PRINT ROW: CLUBBERS are being asked for fingerprints when they enter nightspots in a scheme to cut violent
crime - A database of name, date of birth, photo, and a scan of the right index finger will be checked so known trouble-makers can be banned in seconds. Civil rights groups have voiced concerns and one club owner admitted it "sounded like Big Brother." But police sergeant Jackie Gold defended the £6,000 trial in Yeovil, Somerset, saying: "There are no negatives. This will have a significant impact on crime."
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Hunter 'very stable' after Cheney shooting mistake - A hunting companion of Dick Cheney was doing well in hospital on Monday after the U.S. vice-president accidentally sprayed him with shotgun pellets during a weekend quail shoot in south Texas.
Harry Whittington "rested well" overnight in the trauma intensive-care unit of Christus Spohn Hospital (Memorial), hospital administrator Peter Banko said in a morning news conference. He said Whittington, a 78-year-old lawyer from Austin, was in "very stable" condition. Cheney – who was carrying a 28-gauge shotgun – sprayed Whittington with shots late Saturday afternoon at the Armstrong Ranch.
(COMMENTARY:
Dozy bugger!)
-
Opus Dei tackles
"Da Vinci Code" image problem By Claudia Parsons - Portrayed in the best-selling novel "The Da Vinci Code" as a secretive cult willing to murder to defend a fictional 2,000-year-old Catholic cover-up, Opus Dei is promoting its softer side before the movie of the book arrives in May.
Published in March 2003, Dan Brown's "The Da Vinci Code" is one of the most popular books in publishing history with more than 40 million copies in print worldwide in 44 languages.
-
The Lowdown on Sweet? - A study conducted at an Italian cancer research center, above, has rekindled the debate on aspartame.
Aspartame is sold under the brand names
Nutra-Sweet and Equal and is found in such popular products as Diet Coke, Diet Pepsi, Diet Snapple and Sugar Free Kool-Aid. Hundreds of millions of people consume it worldwide. And Dr. Soffritti's study concluded that aspartame may cause the dreaded "c" word: cancer.
-
CIA chief sacked for opposing torture - The CIA’s top counter-terrorism official was fired last week because he opposed detaining Al-Qaeda suspects in secret prisons abroad, sending them to other countries for interrogation and using forms of torture such as “water boarding”, intelligence sources have claimed.
Robert Grenier, head of the CIA counter-terrorism
centre, was relieved of his post after a year in the job. One intelligence official said he was “not quite as aggressive as he might have been” in pursuing Al-Qaeda leaders and networks.
-
Security cameras at
GHS? - Security cameras in the student center could become a daily reality for Greenwich High School
(GHS) students if the Board of Education has its way. At a Feb. 2 work session, board members said they supported a proposal by Superintendent of Schools Larry Leverett to expand an existing program and install new cameras inside the student center and outside the school as part of an overall effort to improve school security and cut down on fights and vandalism.
12th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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Electronic scanner helps catch criminals -
Police no longer need an ink pad to get a person's fingerprints.
And before long, they might never need to worry about wet wipes either. A new tool - the Integrated Biometric Identification System, or IBIS - is a portable fingerprint scanner now helping police officers and sheriff's deputies in San Bernardino and Riverside counties identify people faster and more efficiently. The handheld device, manufactured by Identix in Minnetonka, Minn., electronically scans a person's photograph and thumbprints, then transmits that data via a wireless modem through cell phone towers to the Cal-ID fingerprint database maintained by law-enforcement agencies in the Inland Empire.
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Banks fail to promote alternatives to chip and pinBack to Credit Cards - Consumer groups have hit out at Banks and shops who they say should do more to promote the alternatives to chip and pin because many elderly and disabled people struggle to use the cards.
The Royal National Institute for the Blind
(RNIB) claim it has received more than 100 calls during the past few weeks from people worried about the changeover to chip and pin cards, whilst at the same time the Disability Rights Commission
(DRC) maintains it has seen a sharp increase in calls to its helpline during the past few days.
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Asda fined for trying to make workers quit union -
The US-owned Asda Wal-Mart supermarket group has been ordered to pay £850,000 for breaking new trade union laws by offering illegal inducements to workers to quit the GMB union.
Some 340 drivers and warehouse men at a Washington, Durham, distribution depot were offered a 10% pay rise if they left the union. The members rejected the offer and later took a 5% pay offer. A tribunal in Newcastle ruled yesterday that the company had breached legislation introduced in 2004. The company was ordered to pay every worker at the depot £2,500 in compensation.
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Only on Fox: Cable channel aired photos of aliens attacking Library Tower -
In a February 9 speech, President Bush disclosed details of what he described as a foiled Al Qaeda plot to fly a commercial plane into the tallest building in Los Angeles. Shortly after his speech concluded, Fox News aired numerous images from the 1996 film Independence Day (Twentieth Century Fox) showing the reported target of the attack -- the Library Tower, now known as the U.S. Bank Tower -- being destroyed by alien invaders.
(RELATED: See
our 'Problem
> Reaction > Solution'
archive for more background info)
-
Is Bush The Lifetime President? - Those confident in the fact that President Bush will leave office in January 2009 after his second term ends would be wary to check out images posted on the Huffington Post website.
During a National Guard ceremony gala on Thursday night, Bush was presented with a life-size marble pedestal of his own head and shoulders. Look closely at the inscription on the statue reads 2001-BLANK, indicating that the date when Bush will leave office isn't yet known, despite the fact that the 22nd Amendment to the US Constitution only allows incumbents to occupy the office of President for a maximum of two terms.
11th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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SURPRISE SURPRISE: 'White House knew of Katrina levee breach' -
Twenty-eight government agencies, from local Louisiana parishes to the White House, reported that New Orleans levees were breached August 29, the day Hurricane Katrina roared ashore, documents released on Thursday show. A timeline of e-mails, situation updates and weather reports, pieced together by Senate Democrats, indicates the Bush administration knew as early as 8:30 a.m. EST about levee failures that would ultimately lead to massive flooding of the city and its surrounding parishes.
(RELATED: See
our 'Problem
> Reaction > Solution'
archive for more background info)
-
Microchip implanted in brain may offer hope to people who are paralyzed - A microchip implanted onto the surface of the human brain called the
BrainGate, developed by Brown University and a company called
Cyberkinetics, offers hope for those who are paralyzed. “BrainGate is a device that senses, analyzes and transmits data from the brain of people with paralysis to the outside world so they can communicate or move or be more independent,” says John Donoghue of Cyberkinetics and Brown University. “What happens is we try to take the signals from the movement area of the brain, and that carries activities patterns on movements from the brain to the outside world. And now it goes into a cart and then the cart processes these signals and basically it turns it into a control signal that's very much like a mouse cursor. Now the thoughts control the computer cursor up, down, left and right, so with that type of technology you can control all sorts of devices like a telephone, a TV, maybe even an arm.”
10th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
Hang
on a minute... I've seen that Phoenix bugger somewhere before haven't I?
PERSPECTIVE:
ONE ASPECT OF WHY WE ARE ALLOWED TO GET AWAY WITH EXPOSING THE NEW WORLD
ORDER...
(i.e.
WHY WE HAVEN'T BEEN 'TAKEN OUT' FOR DOING WHAT WE ARE DOING)

STOP
PLAYING ALONG WITH IT AND IT ALL COMES DOWN...
-
Movie planned for Diana murder book - A book which claims Diana, Princess of Wales was murdered by the security services is to be made into a film, it has been reported.
A UK production company has bought the rights to Princess Diana: The Hidden Evidence by Jon King and John
Beveridge, according to Screendaily.com. The book claims Diana was killed in an assassination plot by MI6 and the CIA.
(COMMENTARY:
Let me guess... it'll be a bloody comedy with Will Ferrell as Prince
Charles and Jessica Simpson as Diana... I digress, but don't be so
sure!)
-
ADHD drugs warning - DRUGS used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder may be required to carry the most serious type of warning on their labels after health regulators found the medications might cause heart attacks and strokes.
A US Food and Drug Administration advisory panel is investigating whether ADHD drugs, including Ritalin, were linked to the deaths of 25 people, including 19 children, between 1999 and2003. The drugs were also associated with 54 cases of cardiovascular episodes including heart attacks, strokes and serious heartbeat disturbances.
-
EFF issues Google Desktop warning: Configure it carefully, or forget it -
Google has released a revamped version of its desktop search tool which introduces the ability to search the contents of one computer from another. Previous versions of the tool indexed files on user's PCs, but using the optional "Search Across Computers" facility in Google Desktop 3 temporarily stores text copies of searchable items on Google's own servers for up to 30 days.
-
Police State High School - It has been said that fascism will take root in the United States through
incrementalism. Meaning, the government will get progressively invasive, step by step. This way, people get used to the changes and don't remember it ever being different. This is no more apparent than in our school systems. The ICU has documented many incidences of fourth amendment violating random drug searches in our schools. Recently, when I was a guest at my girlfriend's high school dance, I quickly realized how much the rush to fascism has sped up.
-
Pharaonic tomb find stuns Egypt - Archaeologists have discovered an intact, ancient Egyptian tomb in the Valley of the Kings, the first since King Tutankhamun's was found in 1922.
A team led by the University of Memphis found the previously unknown tomb complete with unopened sarcophagi and five undisturbed mummies. The archaeologists have not yet been able to identify them.
09th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
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The Terrorists of Tiny Town: Homeland security keeping our country safe from kindergarteners (hey, they could be Al Qaeda...) -
WHILE ATTORNEY GENERAL Alberto Gonzalez assures the U.S. Senate that the Bush Administration’s domestic eavesdropping program is a vital “early warning system” for terrorists, another homeland security measure strikes at a local elementary school.
-
Google's newest search tool raises privacy concerns - Internet search giant Google, which raised eyebrows when it fought the Department of Justice's attempts to monitor personal search queries, today unveils a new desktop search tool that accesses more private records than ever — of those who choose to use it.
Google Desktop 3, the latest version of software that helps users find files on personal computers, has a new feature that can track data from multiple PCs. To do that, it copies personal text files to Google servers, which eventually route them back to the PCs. Previous versions merely indexed files, without storing copies at Google.
-
Taser victim was trying to get life back together
- Two people have died in Southwest Florida after taser guns were used on them, fueling the debate over their use.
The mother of one of those who died speaks out for the very first time. Tracy Shippy was tasered by Lee County sheriff's deputies after she thrashed around a Hallmark store in Page Field Commons, swinging a piece of metal. Minutes after she was tasered, Tracy Shippy died.
-
US plans massive data sweep: Little-known data-collection system could troll news,
blogs, even e-mails. Will it go too far? - The US government is developing a massive computer system that can collect huge amounts of data and, by linking far-flung information from blogs and e-mail to government records and intelligence reports, search for patterns of terrorist activity. The system - parts of which are operational, parts of which are still under development - is already credited with helping to foil some plots. It is the federal government's latest attempt to use broad data-collection and powerful analysis in the fight against terrorism. But by delving deeply into the digital minutiae of American life, the program is also raising concerns that the government is intruding too deeply into citizens' privacy.
-
Researchers find animal antibiotics in vegetables - Antibiotics given to livestock can end up in vegetables and pose a health threat to consumers, according to a study looking at the use of animal manure as a fertilizer.
The University of Minnesota study will add to the level of public concern about the food the eat. It also serves as a warning to food processors that they need to be vigilant when sourcing their vegetables.
-
Yahoo accused in jailing of 2nd China Internet user -
Yahoo Inc. provided evidence to Chinese authorities that led to the imprisonment of an Internet writer, lawyers and activists said on Thursday, the second such case involving the U.S. Internet giant.
The company cooperated with Chinese police in a case that led to the 2003 arrest of Li Zhi, who was charged with subverting state power and sentenced to eight years in prison after trying to join the dissident China Democracy Party, writer Liu Xiaobo said.
-
Babies to be given 25 vaccinations in a year -
Babies are to be given 25 vaccinations in a year in a move which sparked fears of
'immunisation overload'. The current 21 will be increased by three of pneumococcal vaccine - against meningitis, blood poisoning and pneumonia - and a booster against Hib, an infection that can cause bacterial meningitis.
-
IBM
brings hyper-realistic imagery closer with new chip - A highly touted microprocessor designed to provide hyper-realistic imagery in video games is making its first appearance in a computing system made by the chip's leading designer, International Business Machines Corp.
IBM announced yesterday that it will incorporate the "Cell" chip into a new line of servers for
defence, medical imagery, entertainment and other applications that require sterling graphics and intensive computing.
-
Brothers in arms - Israel's secret pact with Pretoria -
During the second world war the future South African prime minister John Vorster was interned as a Nazi
sympathiser. Three decades later he was being feted in Jerusalem. In the second part of his remarkable special report, Chris McGreal investigates the clandestine alliance between Israel and the apartheid regime, cemented with the ultimate gift of friendship - A-bomb technology.
08th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
07th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
-
Antispam group rejects e-mail payment plan - A leading antispam agency has struck back at moves to charge companies a fixed fee to ensure e-mails are delivered, saying it will erode freedoms.
On Monday, Richard Cox, chief information officer at antispam organization
Spamhaus, said that "an e-mail charge will destroy the spirit of the Internet." "The Internet has become what it is because of freedom of communication. Open discussion is what gives it value. There should be no cost for particular services, and e-mail should be free and accessible to all. This will disenfranchise people," Cox said.
-
Afghan police kill four amid rage over cartoons - Afghan police killed four people protesting on Tuesday against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad which have unleashed waves of rage and soul-searching across the Muslim world and Europe.
Fresh unrest erupted in the Middle East, Asia and Africa over the drawings, which were first published in Denmark, then Norway and then several other European countries. Some Muslim leaders urged restraint.
-
PRETEXT TO CURB INTERNET FREEDOM: BT concern as child porn traffic spirals - BT released figures today which showed that the number of attempts to access websites hosting child pornography have trebled in the past 18 months.
BT reports that it is now blocking 35,000 attempts to access child pornography in Britain every day. And one leading e-commerce figure has described over Internet Service Providers' failure to block access to such sites as "outrageous", and called on other ISPs to follow BT's lead.
(COMMENTARY: Don't
get me wrong, people who prey on the young are the scum of the Earth, however we need to watch this convenient pretext as it pertains to the desire to erode free speech and a right to
dissent online. Hate speech, 'Sexcrime', breach of copyright, its
all being thrown together to shut the internet down.)
-
RECYCLING BIN FINES - PEOPLE who put the wrong type of rubbish in their recycling bins are to be hit with an £80 fine.
They will get a football style yellow sticker for a first offence, red for a second and then fined. Councillor Albert Pearce accused Babergh Council in Suffolk of "acting like a police state".
-
Cartoons 'part of Zionist plot' - The furious international row over the publication of cartoons satirising the prophet Muhammad intensified today when Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, claimed it was an Israeli conspiracy motivated by anger over Hamas's win in the Palestinian elections. Iran today also announced it was suspending all trade and economic ties with Denmark in protest of the caricatures. The move came after the EU had warned Iran that boycotting Danish goods would place further strain on already frosty relations.
-
Torture scenes go mainstream - In the first hit film of the year, screaming, helpless young people are brutalized by power tools and blowtorches wielded by gleeful tormentors.
One of TV's most popular cable series ends its third season with the mutilation of a pre-operative transgender woman, and the severing of a plastic surgeon's finger. On the same show, a psychopath treats one of his kidnapped victims to extensive plastic surgery on her face and body -- without anesthesia.
06th
FEBRUARY 2006: -
|

|
DIANA CRASH 'CAUSED BY LASER BEAM' - The crash that killed DIANA, PRINCESS OF WALES and her lover DODI FAYED was caused by a laser beam being flashed into the eyes of their driver, it has been claimed.
New witnesses have told British detectives, leading a fresh enquiry into the fatal August 1997 accident, they saw a motorcyclist point a laser into the eyes of chauffeur HENRI PAUL, causing the Mercedes to crash inside the Pont De L'Alma tunnel in Paris, France. |
|

|
Hitachi develops smallest IC chip -
Japanese electronics maker Hitachi Ltd. has announced it has developed the world`s smallest integrated circuit chip.
The wireless IC chip measures 0.0059 inch by 0.0059 inch. It is also the world`s thinnest, with a thickness of only 0.00029 inch, less than the 0.0027 inch of a newspaper page, the Asahi Shimbun reported Monday. If an antenna is attached, the chip will still be thinner than copy machine paper, and the information can be obtained without being touched. |
-
Biometric Authentication is Used in New Online Pay By Touch Product -
Leading biometric authentication, loyalty, membership and payment solutions company, Pay By Touch, has launched Pay By Touch Online, a new Internet payment and identification service.
According to the company, the new service gives consumers a fast, easy and secure way to identify themselves and make purchases on the Internet. Pay By Touch Online, which debuted today at DEMO 2006, is the only solution that increases security and convenience at the same time. The new service is based on Pay By Touch's patented biometric technology.
-
Tasers On Campus -
Police officers working in the some of the largest school districts in Northwest Arkansas are carrying tasers every day.
Officers in Fayetteville, Rogers and Springdale are carrying the weapons, which fire electrified darts designed to incapacitate a suspect. Police officers describe the Taser as simply another tool in the tool belt to keep order in schools where 17-year-olds can come as large and as strong as grown men.
-
Big Brother is watching you on Britain’s roads -
Big Brother-style surveillance is growing on Britain’s roads, where police will have the greatest ability in the world to
scrutinise, control and record the movements of drivers by the end of the year.
Thousands of cameras reading vehicle number plates and comparing data with a central data base will analyse some 35 million pieces of information per day. The data will be transmitted to the police and also MI5, Britain’s domestic intelligence agency, to help in the hunt for suspected criminals or terrorists. It will be kept for two years, but the period may be extended to five years.
-
Astronomers shed light on mystery of 'dark matter' -
British astronomers have come a step closer to understanding one of the most mysterious substances in the universe - the "dark matter" which acts as a kind of cosmic glue, holding galaxies together.
New research into dark matter, believed to make up 23 per cent of the cosmos compared to the 4 per cent of "normal matter" that can be seen and felt, has for the first time pinned down its behaviour and properties, which are essential to anchoring an ordered universe.
05th FEBRUARY 2006: -
-
Revealed: secret plan to keep UK troops permanently in Iraq - BRITAIN is laying secret plans to maintain a permanent military presence in Iraq.
Ministers and military officials are in negotiations with their American counterparts over the British contribution to the long-term effort to maintain peace and stability in post-Saddam Iraq once the country is handed over to its newly elected government.
-
SHUNNED IN AMERICA:
AUSTRALIAN NAT. TELEVISION AIRS 9-11 DOCUMENTARY -
Perhaps the most controversial documentary produced about the 9-11 attacks was recently aired on Australia's "TEN" television network and placed second in the ratings. Despite efforts to suppress the information and questions raised in "911 - In Plane Site," an increasing number of military experts and commercial airline pilots are coming forward to support and validate the information contained in the documentary. Many are now calling for a re-opening of the investigation into the September 11 attacks. The 90-minute program was aired nation-wide in Australia and resulted in a much higher than usual response from viewers.
-
EARLY SIGNS OF THE WAR ON NEWS GATHERING (WHAT WE DO):
Newspapers Fight Back Against Search Engines -
An international group of publishers is exploring options, including collective action at either a national or international level, for enforcing copyright and preventing search engines from taking their content for free. A task force of global and European publishers has agreed to examine ways to receive payment from Internet search engines and news aggregators that the group claims are making money by taking someone else's content for free. Led by the Paris-based World Association of Newspapers, the group of newspaper, magazine and book publishers are hoping to write standards and policies that define the commercial relationship between publishers and search engines, such as Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc., and content aggregators.
-
ID fraud figures 'inflated to play on public fears' - THE Government was accused
Thursday of playing on people’s fears by producing hugely inflated figures on the cost of identity fraud.
In a report published yesterday, the Home Office said that the annual cost of ID fraud had reached £1.7 billion. However, this figure was undermined by
Apacs, the group that represents payment organisations such as banks and credit firms, which said that the cost had been grossly overestimated and that its own figures had been misrepresented. Ministers included in their total the figure of £395 million as the annual cost of money laundering alone. But the Home Office admits that this figure is only “for illustrative purposes” and that “no figures are currently available on the proportion of money laundering that relies on identity fraud”.
04th FEBRUARY 2006: -
-
NORAD and U.S. Coast Guard Set for Super Bowl Security – The North American Aerospace Defense Command and the U.S. Coast Guard will contribute to security operations for the Feb. 5 Super Bowl at Ford Field in Detroit, Mich. The aerospace command will fly Operation Noble Eagle air defense protection missions in the Detroit and Windsor, Ont., Canada area, officials said. Windsor is just across the Detroit River from Michigan. And NORAD has military assets from both Canada and the U.S.
-
Pentagon to keep civilians under surveillance -
U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld revealed on Thursday that civilians in the United States are under surveillance in a program to protect military personnel and bases.
The "counter-surveillance" program, in line with the Defense Department's responsibility to protect U.S. forces, is aimed at preventing civilians gathering sensitive information and taking pictures of security installations, Rumsfeld said at the National Press Club.
-
Maine Peace Group Under Federal Surveillance - The domestic spying topic we've heard so much about nationally, is now closer to home.
The Maine Civil Liberties Union has learned the FBI has a surveillance file for the Maine Coalition for Peace and Justice.
-
World Tracker turns anyone into a cellphone spy - Forget those piddly wiretaps. The next frontier in warrant-free surveillance is upon us, and it's open to everyone.
A UK service called World Tracker apparently uses cell tower data (or GPS, when available) to track the location of just about any GSM
cellphone. Just enter the number you want to track into the service's handy Google Maps-based interface, and you'll be able to zoom in on the device's location, with accuracy somewhere between 50 and 500 meters. The first time you try to track a phone, a text message is sent to the owner, who must reply in order to enable tracking (we'll leave it to you to figure out how to work around this if you need to track a spouse, kid or employee).
-
The End of the Internet? - The nation's largest telephone and cable companies are crafting an alarming set of strategies that would transform the free, open and nondiscriminatory Internet of today to a privately run and branded service that would charge a fee for virtually everything we do online.
Verizon, Comcast, Bell South and other communications giants are developing strategies that would track and store information on our every move in cyberspace in a vast data-collection and marketing system, the scope of which could rival the National Security Agency.
-
Whitehall's £1.7 billion case for ID cards is 'claptrap' - Home Office claims that identity cards would stop credit card scams and other frauds were denounced as "claptrap" yesterday.
Ministers said their multi-billion pound identity register scheme would help counter a problem costing the country £1.7 billion a year, up from £1.3 billion four years ago. But critics said ID cards could make identity theft worse, not better, and they also challenged the veracity of the statistics used by the Government to support its case. The £1.7 billion included £395 million for "money laundering" even though a Home Office study concedes that this figure is only "illustrative".
-
Zionist Threats And Harrassment Continue - Beginning three days ago, two more so-called 'men' began their tirade on this writer. Like the first person, they informed me that I was a Rense supporter and that makes me an anti-Semite. Me. Of all people, with a Jewish side to our family in which 2.15% survived the camps. That would be two out of 93 human beings. You picked the wrong person, guys.
-
Bush to seek $439.3 billion U.S. defense budget - President George W. Bush will ask Congress for $439.3 billion in defense spending for fiscal 2007, a 4.8 per cent increase over the current U.S. military budget, defense and administration officials said on Thursday.
The proposed budget for the financial year beginning next October includes $84.2 billion to purchase fighter jets, ships and other new weapons and $73.2 billion for military research and development programs, according to the officials, who asked not to be identified.
-
Company Refuses To Pull Aspartame From Parkinson's Drug -
It has been almost two weeks since I wrote you this letter.
And I called before that. I just want to advise you if aspartame is not removed from Parcopa within two weeks, the information below will go out as a global press release. One victim just went through the agonizing withdrawal from the aspartame in the product. I do not want to see anyone go through what she did, sick taking the drug in the first place, and then the withdrawal process from the aspartame. Aspartame liberates free methyl alcohol. Methanol is classified as a narcotic. The chronic methanol poisoning affects the dopamine system of the brain and causes addiction.
-
Tied up in the Rat Lines - It is possible that within a short time a court in the United States will prohibit the publication of the account before us.
In the meantime, Haaretz has obtained the testimony given last month by William
Gowen, a former intelligence officer in the United States Army, at a federal court in San Francisco. The testimony contains historical and political explosives. It links Giovanni Battista
Montini, who later became Pope Paul VI, to the theft of property of Jewish, Serb, Russian, Ukrainian and Roma victims during World War II in Yugoslavia. Many studies and stories have already been written about the thundering silence of Pope Pius XII, who reigned in the Vatican during World War II. Now the former intelligence officer's testimony has revealed that after the war,
Montini, who during the war served as the Vatican's deputy secretary of state under the pope, helped hide and launder property that had been stolen from, among others, Jews and was involved in the sheltering and smuggling of Croatian war criminals, such as the leader of the Ustashe movement, Ante
Pavelic.
02nd FEBRUARY 2006: -
01st FEBRUARY 2006: -
-
AT&T sued over NSA warrantless wiretapping - US telco AT&T is being sued over allegations it helped the National Security Agency
(NSA) in its "massive and illegal program" to wiretap and data-mine Americans' communications.
A class-action lawsuit by the Electronic Frontier Foundation
(EFF) alleges AT&T collaborated with with ultra-secretive communications agency in intercepting communications without court
authorisation. The practice of so-called warrantless wiretapping came to light after the New York Times reported that the president had authorised the agency to intercept communications inside the US.
-
British Police Investigate Diana Crash Site: Experts to Create 3-D Model of Tunnel -
More than seven years after the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, Scotland Yard investigators returned to the tunnel in which she died with the latest laser technology to investigate the crash site again. The laser technology, which was not available in 1997 when Diana, Dodi Fayed and their driver Henry Paul died, investigators scanned the Paris tunnel in which their Mercedes crashed. The operation costs at estimated $3.7 million.
-
County, city, 12 officers sued over Taser death: Mother says 9 shocks were wrongful assault -
The mother of a man who died after he was shocked nine times with a Taser is suing the Toledo police officers and Lucas County sheriff's deputies involved in the incident. Betty Turner claims in a lawsuit filed yesterday in Lucas County Common Pleas Court that police officers and deputies engaged in misconduct and wrongfully assaulted her son, Jeffrey Turner, causing his death a year ago today.
-
Police Remove Sheehan From Bush Speech - Cindy Sheehan finally got her invitation to see President Bush again, but before she set eyes on him at the State of the Union address, Capitol Police removed her from the gallery overlooking the House chamber.
The offense: her shirt, bearing an anti-war message and other "unlawful conduct," police said.
|
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