Category Archives: Uncategorized

2015 – 042 Magna Carta & Europe – Yesterday & Today

April 27, 2015
Magna Carta & Europe – Yesterday & Today

see also http://magnacarta800th.com/articles/magna-carta-europe-yesterday-today/
By Torquil Dick-Erikson
The opinions expressed in the following are the views of the author, and do not represent the views of the Magna Carta 800th Anniversary Committee, or the Magna Carta Trust.
Magna Carta crossed the oceans. In all the lands where English is spoken, its principles are known and recognised.
But it never crossed the Channel.
In 1215, in England the Barons were confronting King John; in Rome Pope Innocent III was setting up the machinery of the Holy Inquisition.
A major purpose of Magna Carta was to limit the powers of the King – the central State authority.
In contrast, the Inquisition expanded and deepened the power of the authorities over the individual. Not only actions, and words, but even thoughts, were scrutinised and, if “culpable”, punished.
In ancient Rome, an accuser faced a defendant, and the case was decided by a judge, independent from both. Under the Empire, the Emperor’s word became law. The dark ages saw more primitive forms of judgement (trial by ordeal, by combat…)
As analysed by the late, great, Italo Mereu, Professor of the History of Law at Ferrara University, in his painstakingly detailed history of the Inquisitorial system from the origins to the 1970s, “Sospettare e Punire” (“To suspect and to punish”), the Inquisition brought together the functions of prosecutor and investigator with that of the judge, in the new figure of the Inquisitor. The Inquisitor’s job was to identify, seize, and interrogate a suspect, in order to arrive at the “truth”. Or, it might be said, at the desired result.
The arbitrary powers of the inquisitor, and of his superiors, were clearly vast. The machinery of the Law became a tool for the ruler to ensure complete command and control over his subjects.
Clearly Magna Carta constituted a potent obstacle to such arbitrary exercise of power. In fact the Pope was furious when informed about what had happened at Runnymede, and wrote to the English bishops and abbots who had helped set it up telling them they had done something “abominable” and “illicit”.
The specific constraints on the power of the State provided by Magna Carta include the famous and much celebrated clauses 39 “No free man shall be…. punished… save by judgement of his peers and by the law of the land”, and 40 “To no-one shall we deny, delay, or sell justice”. Clause 39 in particular removed from rulers a crucial power of government, the power to decide who should be punished and who not. This power was placed in the hands of a jury of the defendant’s peers, thus laying a foundation stone of democracy, and a bulwark against arbitrary punishments.
For eight hundred years since then, the English and the continental criminal procedures have gone off in different directions.
The Inquisition ravaged the nations of continental Europe for centuries, persecuting and prosecuting witches, heretics, and…. scientists. Initially an ecclesiastical institution, its methods were adopted by secular rulers, as a means of suppressing opposition of any kind.
England alone escaped its grip. We fought off the Spanish Armada, which would have brought the Spanish Inquisition to our shores. Elisabeth I rejected the inquisitional method – “I will not make windows into men’s souls”. A sort of papal “fatwa” promised a fast track to heaven for any Catholic who murdered her. Yet she did not outlaw those who followed the old religion, though subjecting them to some constraints.
The power of Parliament grew and in the mid-seventeenth century prevailed over that of the king in the civil war. Parliamentary supremacy – representing ultimately the will of the people – was then firmly consolidated with the glorious – and bloodless – revolution of 1688-89.
Meanwhile across the channel absolutism held sway. The King of France famously proclaimed “I am the State”.
The French Revolution swept away much of the old order. The “rights of man” were proclaimed. Then soon Napoleon took over the helm of France, and his armies set about invading most of Europe to export his notion of the “rights of man”. His codes of law to this day underlie the legal systems used on the continent.
Some of the original thinkers of the enlightenment, like Voltaire, whose ideas helped spark the French revolution, had drawn inspiration from the very different system of government they had seen in England. But Napoleon did not adopt Magna Carta, nor its principles, in criminal procedure. He adopted and adapted the basic elements of the inquisition, redirecting it to serve not the Church, but the State.
In the traditional English system, the powers of jurisdiction governing the different parts of criminal procedure are attributed to different bodies. Essentially, the police, divided into 43 independent local constabularies, investigate a case; the magistrates (mostly non-lawyers, unpaid volunteers working part-time) sign arrest warrants, and then decide bail and committal to trial in public hearings; a barrister is hired to conduct the prosecution in court, where he or she faces another barrister hired by the defence; the judge presides over the proceedings in court deciding procedural disputes between the parties, and handing down the sentence after a guilty verdict. And crucially, the verdict is entirely in the hands of a jury of 12 ordinary citizens, voters selected by lot from the electoral register, peers of the defendant, just as was establsihed by Magna Carta so long ago.
The distribution of these powers into different hands provides essential checks and balances, not just between the legislative, executive and judicial functions, as famously prescribed by Montesquieu, but within the judicial function itself, on whose delicate balance depends the individual freedom of each and every citizen from arbitrary arrest and wrongful imprisonment. The use of legal violence on people’s bodies, by arrest and imprisonment, is an exclusive prerogative of the sovereign State in any society. Its arbitrary use is a prime tool of tyranny. This is why effective legal safeguards against misuse are so necessary. Here lies the genius of Magna Carta, which 800 years ago in England provided the first legal safeguards against such arbitrary misuse.
Compare and contrast with today’s Napoleonic-inquisitorial systems, where a career judiciary, whose members are State employees, comprises prosecutors and judges, but excludes defenders. The prosecutor is nowadays no longer the selfsame person as the judge, but they are both servants of the State (though they may sometimes be institutionally independent from political control), and they are close colleagues, who can work in tandem together on case after case. The judges may have been prosecutors during the course of their careers, but normally they will never have been defenders.
Under the Napoleonic-inquisitorial dispensation used in continental Europe, all these powers are placed in the collective hands of one brotherhood – the career judiciary.
In Italy, for example, criminal investigations, prosecutions, assessments of evidence, decisions on arrest, bail or remand, the direction of courtroom proceedings, judgements of guilt or innocence and sentencing are all under the exclusive control of members of the career judiciary (“magistratura” – not to be confused with the idea of an English “magistrate” for which there is no equivalent).
After a law degree, young law graduates face three career alternatives: attorney, notary, or the judiciary (“magistrato”). To become a judge, they must pass a stiff State exam (set and marked by existing members of the judiciary), and then they are in. After one year’s “apprenticeship”
(“uditorato”), they are assigned to a judicial office as a prosecutor/investigator or a judge, where they sit, pen in hand, empowered to order criminal investigations, arrests, bail, committals, etc. They are not trained in detective techniques, relying on their book knowledge of the law. But they direct the police (who may have such training) in the conduct of criminal investigations. It is said that this separation between competence and responsibility in criminal investigations explains why numbers of cases are not investigated as fruitfully as might be hoped.
Trial by Jury – that great heritage of Magna Carta – has no place in the Napoleonic-inquisitorial dispensation. Most cases are dealt with by professional judges alone. Very serious cases are heard by what might look like a jury of ordinary citizens chosen by lot. Actually, the verdict and the sentence are decided by a mixed panel of six lay “jury-people” and two professional career judges. They all go into the jury-room together, where the “judge’s summing-up” is delivered in secret. Although the six jury-people can outvote the two professionals, the latter obviously take a leading role in guiding the verdict. They also have other means of ensuring that what they consider a “perverse” verdict can be appealed against. There are no safeguards against double jeopardy – the prosecution are perfectly entitled to appeal against an acquittal, even if no fresh evidence has emerged.
Two other direct legacies of Magna Carta are clause 40 – “to no-one shall we delay justice”, and the not-so-often celebrated clause 38. The latter is worth quoting in the original: “Nullus ballivus ponat de cetero aliquem ad legem simplici loquela sua, sine testibus fidelibus ad hoc aductis” – “No judicial officer shall initiate legal proceedings against anyone on his own mere say-so, without reliable witnesses brought for that purpose”.
These provisions are ensured by Habeas Corpus. Under Habeas Corpus, a suspect if arrested must be brought into open court within hours (or at the very most, a few days), and there charged formally. And the charge must be based on enough hard evidence, already collected, to shew that there is a prima facie case to answer.
It is perhaps taken for granted in English-speaking countries that any proceedings must be based on evidence. Not so however on the continent. In Italy, for example, a person may be arrested on the orders of two members of the judiciary (one acts as “prosecutor-cum-investigator” and the other as “judge of the preliminary investigations”), at the outset, on mere suspicion based on clues (“indizi”). Hence the title of Professor Mereu’s book. The prisoner becomes a “person-under-investigation” (“indagato”), and can be kept in prison during the investigation, which can last months, before the authorities are ready to commit him. There is no right to any public hearing during this time. Within hours of arrest, the prisoner is interrogated by the two judges who ordered his arrest, in a secret hearing. He is assisted by his lawyer (or by a lawyer appointed by his interrogators if he cannot afford his own), and he can try to persuade them that they have got the wrong person, but he cannot see any evidence against him until much later.
All this directly violates clauses 38 and 40 of Magna Carta. Yet this is what happens to British subjects and others who are subjected to the European Arrest Warrant. Under the EAW no British court is allowed to ask to see any evidence of a prima facie case. Presumably the Parliamentarians who voted for this measure must have believed that the foreign judicial authority issuing the EAW would already have the necessary evidence, to be exhibited in a public hearing soon after extradition took place. Yet numbers of innocent Britons can testify that this is not the case. Famously, Andrew Symeou spent 11 months in a Greek prison before his first appearance in an open court hearing, where the case was dropped, owing to lack of any serious evidence.
It is thought that the European Convention of Human Rights offers adequate safeguards for the innocent. It does not. The ECHR makes no provision for Habeas Corpus, let alone Trial by Jury. Article 6 vouchsafes an appearance in a public hearing within a “reasonable” time after arrest, but does not specify what is “reasonable”. For us it is a matter of hours or at most days. In Europe it can be months or even longer.
Our forefathers, in their wisdom, laid down these safeguards for our freedom. Their words have rolled down eight centuries, to protect us. Yet today, we are abandoning them, for an illusion, based on wishful thinking.
This 800th year after Magna Carta is also the 200th anniversary of Waterloo. How ironic if Napoleon should have the last laugh after all.

2015 – 041 EU to devastate UK TV, Film and digital media.

EU to switch off British film Industry

The fanatics in the European Commission now have their sights set on the UK television, film and music industries. They want to destroy them in the name of creating a pan-European identity. Same game, different day. We’ve got to get Britain out of the EU as soon as possible

Bafta
Give the EU a Bafta for best comedy act?

Luke Stanley The Commontator

On 8 April 2015 10:04

After successfully destroying our agricultural and fishing industries and making a start on bringing ruin to the City of London, Brussels has now revealed the next batch of prosperous British sectors on its hit list — our envied television, film and music industries.

Continue reading

2015 – 040 Police cashing in on Speed awareness courses

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3049962/Are-police-cashing-driver-education-courses-Number-motorists-sent-classes-breaking-rules-road-triples-five-years.html

Are police cashing in on driver education courses? Â !!!

“Almost 1.2million took courses last year, three times as many as in 2010†.. and that seems to have coincided with INCREASING road casualty when it was falling before.

“The problem is that branches of the police profit financially from the fact that people take them. There’s a clear incentive here to get people on the courses.†But of course, they will LIE to try to try to hide that, as Dorset Police did, for example on the greed on green camera which made about a £million for Dorset Police through courses and justified only by at least 4 other lies, the  FAQ states: “Is Holes Bay a “GREED ON GREEN CAMERA? No, this camera is now only a red light camera [so it was before then??!!] Contrary to recent publications, if a fine is paid by an offender …¦ the money goes to the Treasury, …. the fine paid does not and has never gone to the DSCP or the relevant council†and this was when Dorset Police were already raising over £1.5 million of courses, and when they knew very well that the vast majority of those caught by the camera were paying them directly for the course rather than opting for the fine!

“Last year a record 1.19million people took up the offer of a course†Now we see the scale of this. It’s a tenth of a £BILLION per annum industry, which seems to be INCREASING road casualty – which is not at all surprising. This industry operates under prrotection of the law, where some of those involved have direct personal interests in the money made through job security and promotion and the responsibility to choose the types of operations carried out – as I have frrequently said, a blatantly toxic and unacceptable situation, what did anyone think was going to happen?

“The National Police Chief’s Council denied that profits were being made from the courses, saying the fees were designed to cover the cost of filling out paperwork.†Good grief. In which case, you would expect transparency? Want to know what happens if you try to find out about the costs? You will get into years of buck passing, hiding, misrepresentation, and when you take it to the modern day PCCs to investigate, (in the case of Dorset, Martyn Underhill), they will just cover it up. And I estimate (and that’s all I can do because it is IMPOSSIBLE to get proper accounts) that the course profit is an eye-watering 700%!!

Full detail, analysis and evidence, and name and shame, at www.dorsetspeed.org.uk

2015 – 039 Who did you vote for? Check here to see if you did the right thing.

The Sleazy Three? – The Conservative Party, the Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats.
Are they the right people to run our country? They are all complicit in a range of appalling misconducts.

Harriet Harman (Labour Party deputy leader), Patricia Hewitt (Labour MP) and their associates in the Labour Party heavily supported the Paedophilia Information Exchange (PIE) for adults to have sexual relationships with children. The Party Bosses knew about their activities but nevertheless promoted them to higher office. Political pressure by the party on the Rotherham Police prevented them from stopping gangs sexually exploiting 1400 little girls there and it is reported that there are still as many as 4-600 more still being exploited. The gangs claim they are ‘untouchable’. This was allowed by Labour to protect their Muslim vote.

The LibDems in full knowledge of his activities allowed Cyril Smith and others to continue for years abusing little children from Care Homes. They knew what he was doing but chose to cover it up to protect their Party’s image rather than protect the children so are they equally complicit.

Allegations of paedophilia have been swirling around the Tory Party for many years. They are desperately trying to prevent the alleged sexual abuse of little children by the Westminster establishment being investigated and the guilty exposed. They want to appoint a chairman from one of their own in the establishment to head an inquiry. They can easily allay these rumours but will not. Those who are covering up the crimes of their chums are equally guilty.

• All three are guilty of disgraceful abuse of expenses and are still trying to prevent the taxpayers from knowing what hooky expenses are they are claiming.
• All three are guilty of giving their chums lucrative jobs as rewards such as knighthoods and peerages for their support not their ability. The Labour party inserted their Special Advisors (SpAds) into Charities, when they lost their jobs after the last election, on excessive salaries and pensions. They then changed the rules to allow Charities to be politically active on behalf of Labour Party.
• All three parties are guilty of perverting the Honours system by rewarding their toadies for donations to their parties.
• All three are guilty of squandering vast sums of taxpayer’s money on bogus, ineffective Green policies and EU demands such as Windmills, HS2. (theeuroprobe.org 2012 – 015 & 2014 – 076 The Economics of the Madhouse)
• All three are guilty of continually deceiving us with weasel words or sometimes blatantly lying.
• All three support the EU policy of open borders and uncontrolled mass immigration (theeuroprobe.org 2013 – 043).
• All three have agreed to accept the EU/US Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership to enable US Corporates to buy up our NHS and pay less than the legal minimum wage. (theeuroprobe.org 2014 – 051 ). UKIP would keep the NHS free at the point of need.
• All three want our Armed Forces to be run down and handed over to EuroCorps.
• All three are intent on impoverishing the Brits while making their toff friends richer.

The SNP is essentially a Cultural Marxist party. All countries that have adopted such Marxist doctrines have, despite promises of milk and honey, eventually led to servitude and poverty of the masses and slumped into brutal, bankrupt chaos – except for the political elite of course. theeuroprobe.org 2015 – 028

Continue reading

2015 – 038 After 2020 all EU members will have to use the EURO

After 2020, all EU members will have to adopt the euro – Telegraph

Recent events have made the British political commentariat more aware than before of just how committed European political leaders are to delivering political union in a Single European State.
It should now be clear that this is not the unlikely ambition of a few starry-eyed visionaries. It is the stated official goal of the Italian Prime Minister, the French President, the German Chancellor, the current and next Presidents of the European Commission, the President of the European Council, and just about every significant mainstream political figure in the Eurozone.
It is also, according to a Eurobarometer opinion poll in 2013, the desire of 60pc of Eurozone citizens.
What may still be less clear to some in the UK is that in the Eurozone this is not seen only as a culturally and politically desirable objective. It is also regarded as an existential necessity, a sine qua non for economic prosperity, and the answer to Euroscepticism of the sort seen in the 2014 European Parliament elections. So when British politicians propose that EU political integration should slow or that the EU should prioritize some other objective (e.g. the Single Market), that is not merely seen as unattractive — it is impossible.
The reasons why are economic. As was widely discussed in the UK debate about the euro in the 1990s and early 2000s, to make a single currency such as the euro work, one needs an adequate combination of trade integration, similarity of economic cycles (so that one size fits all interest rate and exchange rate policies do indeed fit all), capital and labour mobility (to offset any “asymmetries” in economic shocks – that is, economic shocks hitting some parts of the Eurozone harder than others) and fiscal transfers (to compensate for any large or long-term differential performance that is not offset by capital and labour mobility).
The Eurozone has fairly good trade integration, some material differences in economic cycles (though not especially larger than the differences between regions within the UK or US), and fairly high capital mobility. But even when they occur at around the same time (so cycles are not out), economic shocks affect some parts of the Eurozone much worse than others (as we have seen in the Eurozone crisis). And, Ireland excepted, labour mobility is not particularly high (despite all the complaints about immigration in some Member States).
That means – as has been argued all along – that for the Eurozone to work over the longer term there will need to be much more significant fiscal transfers between regions.
The EU has a modest system of fiscal transfers (the “structural and cohesion funds”) but these are only of order €60 billion across the whole EU, much of which currently goes to non-Eurozone Member States.
A country like the UK has internal fiscal transfers between regions (e.g. London to Liverpool) of some 3 per cent of GDP (more on some definitions). For the Eurozone, with its €9.6 trillion GDP, that would imply nearly €300 billion of fiscal transfers — several times the current amount.
One option to make the Eurozone work without adding significantly to budgets would be for Member States to cease their own internal regional transfers, with funds instead going to create a system of centralized fiscal transfers, with a Eurozone treasury distributing funds. That may be more than is required, however. It could perhaps be adequate only to have around €100 billion extra distributed directly from the Eurozone.
But even at only €100 billion, the Eurozone would still need an income stream to fund such transfers. The Financial Transactions Tax was intended to provide an initial funding stream for the Eurozone, but some other tax will in due course be identified. The key will be that such taxes will be imposed and levied directly by Eurozone tax authorities – not received as “contributions” from Member State treasuries. With its own tax stream, the Eurozone will also be able to raise debt, and that debt can straightforwardly be backed by the European Central Bank (in a way that individual Eurozone Member State debt cannot).
As a body that raises taxes and debts and distributes hundreds of billions in funds, the Eurozone treasury will need to be politically accountable to those that pay it taxes. That will mean pan-Eurozone elections of politicians to oversee Eurozone tax-and-spend decisions. Greater tax- and debt-raising powers at Eurozone level will inevitably entail some limitations upon spending and debt-raising at Member State level.
Furthermore, increased capital mobility also means greater financial linkages between banks. So if a bank becomes distressed in one Member State that has increasing implications for other Member States and for the functioning of the Eurozone payments system.
In the Eurozone, the lack of such mechanisms of fiscal transfers, banking system oversight, constraints upon Member State spending and debt-raising decisions, and the associated much deeper political union are seen as a key cause of the Eurozone crisis.
The Eurozone crisis, in turn, is seen as creating economic hardship and anxiety that has fostered Euroscepticism and in some cases racism and other forms of political extremism.
If adequate economic mechanisms and political union are not introduced, it is believed that the Eurozone crisis will return and anti-European sentiment will (rightly) increase, ultimately destroying the Eurozone and the EU project as a whole. Banking union and constraints upon Member State budgets have been introduced. Even more political integration is on the way.
So in the Eurozone, the answer to increased Euroscepticism is not seen as any form of rowing back on integration. Quite the opposite — Euroscepticism has arisen because political integration had not proceeded rapidly enough.
For the Eurozone and EU to survive at all, deeper political integration, including Eurozone-level tax and spending decisions and democratic mechanisms to oversee them plus reduced control over tax and spending decisions for Member State, are an existential necessity.
The only remaining question is whether this Single European State, formed from the Eurozone, will be something distinct from and alongside the European Union, or simply identical to or part of the European Union.
When the euro was first agreed, the UK and Denmark “opted out”. But at that stage that only meant they were not joining at the start. There was never intended to be any long-term form of EU membership that did not include euro membership. The UK did not say “never” to begin with, and all new EU members since the euro began in 1999 have had to commit to joining. Indeed, by 2020, all but five member states of the EU are due to be euro members and Poland is likely to join by then as well, leaving just the UK, Denmark, Sweden and Bulgaria outside.
That means that at some point, perhaps shortly after 2020, with the Eurozone constituted as a confederate Single European State and wanting to use the institution of the EU as its institutions — the European Parliament as its confederation-level Parliament, the Commission as its civil service and so on — the residual nugatory non-Eurozone EU will have to be wound up.
The most likely course is for it to be fused together with the non-EU members of what is called the “European Economic Area” (Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein). The Single European State will set the rules for the Single Market, and the other members of the European Economic Area will be welcome to trade with each other and with the Single European State provided they abide by those rules.
This all means current debates about whether the UK will have a referendum and how folk will vote is of only passing significance. What counts fundamentally to whether the UK stays in the EU after about 2020 is whether there are any non-euro members of the EU at all, given the existential economic necessity of the Eurozone forming into a deeper political union. At present that seems highly unlikely.
Andrew Lilico is the Chairman of Europe Economics

2015 – 037 Your pensions are at risk

From the Daily Mail.

The Gov is allowing your pension secrets sold to conmen for just 5p: On eve of pensions revolution, an exposé that will horrify every family in the land
Boss
Highly sensitive details of the pension pots of millions are being sold for as little as 5p and ending up in the hands of criminals. A Mail investigation reveals today how private financial information is being passed on by firms without their customers’ knowledge. This valuable data is then repeatedly sold on, ending up in the hands of fraudsters and cold-calling firms. We found some firms were willing to sell financial data on thousands of people without making any checks on what it would be used for. A director (Nick Sayer, pictured offering to sell details to undercover reporters) of one firm – B2C Data – boasted he had access to the salaries, investments and pensions of ‘a million people’. The information he sold to the reporter includes details of the salary, pension pots and investments of 15,000. Such information would be a godsend to criminals looking to exploit those approaching retirement.

2015 – 036 How to govern Cicero, 55 BC

“The Budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed, lest Rome will become bankrupt.

People must again learn to work instead of living on public assistance.”

Cicero, 55 BC

2015 – 035 The 20 mph speed limit nonsense,

From: Brian Marks
To:
Subject: 20 MPH In Stroud
Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2015 10:06:30 +0000

Dear Idris

I have been studying your website over the last week or so as we have recently had a 20 MPH zone introduced in Stroud by a “Green Party” Councillor, Sarah Lunnon who was given £10k to spend on roads “for the wider good of the community” and decided that what we needed in a town in the heart of 5 valleys and subsequently big hills, was a speed limit that I suspect is more about political dogma than road safety.

Studying the RTO (copy attached) there are many flaws and it turns out the average speed across the roads surveyed prior to implementation was only 23.7 MPH so motorists were pretty much self regulating. Even the chap at Gloucestershire County Council has stated in an e-mail to me that they have a “growing body of evidence that 20 MPH doesn’t work without traffic calming” and “drivers in areas where 20 MPH already exists don’t change their driving behaviour or habits with 20 MPH alone”. Which I believe is a view supported by The AA & Institute Of Advanced Motorists.

A few of us that don’t see the need for 20 MPH in Stroud for a “Blanket 20 MPH” have a meeting with the local councilor and pro 20 MPH guy (Charles Pedrick) tomorrow evening and I was wondering if you have any specific information from your vault of what must be thousands of hours work and research which may be useful for us to argue against the blanket 20 MPH. We can see the benefit of it around schools at certain times etc, however a blanket 20 MPH seems ridiculous.

Any information you have would be gratefully received.

Regards

Continue reading

2015 – 034 House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee says no convincing case for HS2

The government has no convincing case for spending £50bn building the HS2 rail link between London and the North, a report by the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee says.
The government’s main arguments in favour of HS2 – increasing railway capacity and rebalancing the economy – were still to be proven, peers said.
There are less-expensive options than HS2, they said on Wednesday.
A government spokesman said HS2 would deliver big benefits.
Lord Hollick, chairman of the Lords’ committee, said overcrowding on the West Coast Main Line was largely a problem on commuter trains and on long-distance services on Friday nights and some weekends.
“The Government have not carried out a proper assessment of whether alternative ways of increasing capacity are more cost-effective than HS2,” he said.
“In terms of rebalancing, London is likely to be the main beneficiary from HS2. Investment in improving rail links in the North of England might deliver much greater economic benefit at a fraction of the cost.”
Committee member and Labour peer Lord McFall told Wake Up to Money on BBC Radio 5 live that the committee was not against HS2 in principle, but that the government needed a firmer transport strategy if it wanted to achieve its aim of rebalancing the economy.
“We’re against the government initiating public projects at £50bn without adequate assessment against their objectives,” he said.
“Can you imagine going forward with a project of this magnitude without a national transport strategy?” Lord McFall added.
“If we’re going to rebalance the economy, then we must have a fundamental appraisal of the impact in the North, and that hasn’t taken place to date,”
‘Satisfactory answers’
Lord Hollick called on the Department for Transport to provide detailed answers to the questions set out by the committee.
“Parliament should not approve the enabling legislation that will allow HS2 work to begin until we have satisfactory answers to these key questions,” he said.
The peer sets out arguments against the investment in a YouTube video.
A Department for Transport spokesman said the case for HS2 was “crystal clear” and claimed it would have a “transformational effect”.
“It is a vital part of the government’s long-term economic plan, strongly supported by Northern and Midland cities, alongside our plans for better east-west rail links confirmed in the Northern Transport Strategy last week.
“Demand for long distance rail travel has doubled in the past 15 years… it is crucial we press ahead with delivering HS2 on time and budget and we remain on track to start construction in 2017,” the spokesman said.
‘No blank cheque’
Shadow transport secretary Michael Dugher said that Labour supported HS2. However, he added: “It’s vital that ministers win public confidence for this important investment and ensure that the economic benefits are felt as widely as possible. We have said there will be no blank cheque for the project under Labour.”
Rhian Kelly, CBI director for business environment, said a modern railway was needed to deal with lack of capacity on the West Coast Mainline.
“HS2 will better connect eight of our 10 biggest cities, boosting local economies along and beyond the route together with complementary road and rail investment. It’s vital we avoid any further delays to the project,” she said.
HS2 route
The proposed route for HS2 has attracted protests from some residents
The Lords report echoed a similar report published by the Commons Public Accounts Committee in January.
The MPs said that ministers lacked a “clear strategic plan for the rail network” and were “sceptical” about whether HS2 would deliver value for money.
The £50bn price tag included a “generous contingency” that could be used to mask cost increases, they added.
The first phase of HS2 will be between London and Birmingham opening in 2026, followed by a V-shaped section to Manchester and Yorkshire.
It promises to reduce journey times between Birmingham and London from 81 minutes to 49 minutes, and slash the trip to Manchester by an hour to just 68 minutes.

2015 – 033 Agenda 21 and it’s covert control of citizens.

Heartland Institute
Population Control Behind UN’s Agenda 21

By Nancy Thorner and Bonnie O’Neil –

Obama and UN seek to transform 2014 – 014 The Wildlands Project to control all humans and Agenda 21. The ultimate aim is for the plebs to be a subject group stripped of all l rights, liberties and privacy.

The following commentary by Ben Zycher on the United Nations’ top climate change official, Christiana Figueres, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), tells how the goal of UNFCCC is to “intentionally transform” the world’s economic development model. In Christina Figueres own words, spoken on February 4th:

This is probably the most difficult task we have ever given ourselves, which is to intentionally transform the economic development model. This is the first time in the history of mankind that we are setting ourselves the task of intentionally, within a defined period of time, to change the economic development model that has been reigning for the last 150 years; since the industrial revolution.

Instead of focusing on the central issue which is addressing the cost effectiveness of the global warming issue, the main focus continues to be on the nearly irrelevant causation issue. Neither does Christiana Figueres seem to understand that a transformation of the “economic development model” is a repository of consequences unintended but predictable; foremost among them, the impoverishment of many millions of people.

Africa in the crossfire with other 3rd world countries

Continue reading

2015 – 032 New report debunks the EU jobs myth

New report debunks the EU jobs myth

see also 2014 – 066 Clegg’s 3 million lost jobs whopper.

3 million jobs would not be at risk in the event of a British exit from the EU.

Exposing Nick Clegg’s Three Million Lost jobs lie . Free Booklet available from CIB 78 CarltonRd, Worksop, S801PH – explaining all.

Politicians who continue to claim that three million jobs are linked to our EU membership should be publicly challenged over misuse of this assertion. Jobs are associated with trade, not membership of a political union, and there is little evidence to suggest that trade would substantially fall between British businesses and European consumers in the event the UK was outside the EU.

In a new report from the Institute of Economic Affairs, author Ryan Bourne calls for a rational debate, acknowledging how the structure of the UK labour market is fluctuating constantly; prior to the financial crisis, the UK saw on average 4 million jobs created and 3.7 million jobs lost every single year.

Leaving the EU would see a multitude of new policy decisions which would affect trade flows and the composition of the workforce, from trade arrangements through to the regulatory policies adopted. Whatever the policy climate, it can be said with certainty that three to four million jobs are not at risk if the UK leaves the EU. There may well be net job creation or a range of other possible outcomes which should be debated reasonably.

Five reasons why three million jobs are not dependent on our membership of the EU:

Continue reading

2015 – 031 How the Global Warming Scam is controlled

BREAKING: Senate Committee Report Details Environmentalists’ Inner Workings

buff.ly/UD7eeM

see 2014 – 002 The Club of Rome invented Global Warming.

Over the past fifty years, America’s environmental movement has grown from college kids adorning flowers to a billion dollar industry. With huge budgets to employ lobbyists, lawyers, and public relations professionals, many of America’s leading environmental non-profits are unrecognizable from their modest beginnings. What may seem like an organic, disparate movement is actually a well oiled machine that receives its funding from a handful of super rich liberal donors operating behind the anonymity of foundations and charities, according to a new report out today by the Committee on Environment and Public Works (EPW).

The EPW report titled The Chain of Command: How a Club of Billionaires and Their Foundations Control the Environmental Movement and Obama’s EPA meticulously details how the “Billionaires’ Club” funds nearly all of the major environmental non-government organizations (NGO), many media outlets, and supposed grassroots activists. The Billionaire Report continues by describing the cozy relationship many environmental groups have with the executive branch and the revolving door that makes this possible.

The most striking aspect of the Billionaire Report is the sheer amount of money that is in play. In 2011 alone, ten foundations donated upwards of half a billion dollars to environmental causes. Many of these foundations, whose assets are valued in the billions, meet and coordinate under the framework provided by the Environmental Grantmakers Association (EGA). Described as the “funding epicenter of the environmental movement,” EGA members doled out $1.13 billion to environmental causes in 2011. EGA’s membership is not public but its clout is self-evident given the amount of money its members direct to recognizable environmental NGOs.

Often times, EGA members will elect to indirectly fund organizations that are the face of the environmental movement. For example, instead of directly cutting a check to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) or the Sierra Club, the Hewlett Foundation or the Packard Foundation will contribute to the Energy Foundation. The Billionaire Report describes the Energy Foundation as “a pass through charity utilized by the most powerful EGA members to create the appearance of a more diversified base of support, to shield them from accountability, and to leverage limited resources by hiring dedicated energy/environment staff to handle strategic giving.”

The Energy Foundation’s funding paths are depicted in the Billionaire Report chart below.

Continue reading

2015 – 030 BBC Bias and License Tax Bullies

From http://www.boilingfrogspost.com

BBC License Tax Bullies

It is well documented that the state broadcaster known as the BBC has an institutional left wing bias, or more accurately perhaps we should describe it as has having a Guardian-based (London centric) bias – which is not necessarily the same thing.

More objectionable, from this blog’s point of view, is BBC bias regarding membership of the EU – this becomes acutely apparent with its EU coverage. Leaving aside the techniques it used in the early ’70s of removing “anti-marketeer” broadcasters at the behest of the then Tory Heath government, subsequent and various internal reports have detailed the fundamental lack of BBC impartiality.

The BBC’s own internal reports acknowledges albeit very reluctantly the problem of EU coverage – this is evident in the infamous Wilson report for example. The BBC’s “we’ve listened but we’ll do nothing” response to the Wilson Report is very familiar to any of us who have complained – as taxpayers our impotency is laid bare by BBC’s stock answers which amount to little.

The Wilson report is not the only accusation of BBC pro-EU bias – further independent analysis of BBC coverage of EU matters has delivered more damning evidence:
Consistent airtime imbalance between advocacy and presentation of the Europhile perspective and the Eurosceptic case in an overall ratio of 2:1.
Consistent presentational bias (in the limited time allocated) through treating Eurosceptic opinion as extreme rather than as an alternative policy approach ñ reflecting and supported by public opinion ñ to membership of the EU.
Poor journalistic standards, including inaccurate reporting of statistics and sources. For example, the BBC Programme Complaints Unit has acknowledged that figures on Irish inward investment were used misleadingly.

The wrong use of these figures influenced the coverage of the second Irish referendum on the Treaty of Nice in October 2002.
Of course it’s not helpful trying to persuade us that the BBC is impartial when it receives millions from the EU itself; funding which it tries to hide. Those of us who have fought for many years know the BBC pro-EU bias, and certainly I experienced it directly as a Parliamentary candidate in the 2010 election on a number of occasions.

Continue reading

2015 – 029 roy_jez The Times They Are A-Changing – with apologies to Bob Dylan

nice one roy_jez Author
The Times they are a changing

Come all the electorate throughout the UK
It’s time to ignore what the LIBLABCON say
Lets face it these parties have all had their day
Our politics need rearranging
So go out and vote UKIP lets sweep them away
For the times they are a changing

Not one of them listens to our point of view
They’d sooner give our cash to the EU
So lets kick them out and try something new
We can’t afford this lot remaining
Political rethink is long overdue
For the times they are a changing

They lied about Lisbon and promised a vote
They’re all Europhiles and in the same boat
Their treachery just bring a lump to my throat
As each other they just keep blaming
So send them a message and let them take note
That the times they are a changing

We will no longer tolerate lies being told
Tax breaks for the rich but more tax for the old
Ruled from the EU and our birthrights sold
They ignore us when we are complaining
If we all vote UKIP there out in the cold
For the times they all need changing

2015 – 028 We are becoming controlled by Cultural Marxists, What is it all about?

Bx5t08eIAAEKr5BCultural Marxism from UrbanDictionary

“The very essence of Cultural Marxism is the support of mass immigration / open borders.”

“The end goal of Cultural Marxists is white genocide.” see 2013 – 043 The EU Coudenhove Kalergi plan and the UN Agenda 21 which is the driving force behind mass migration.

Orwell wrote 1984 as a warning to mankind. Cultural Marxists and New World Order are using it as an instruction manual. .

“Political correctness is the public manifestation of Cultural Marxism.”

Continue reading

2015 – 027 The Politics of Bureaucracies and Global Warming

IPCC The Politics of Bureaucracies: Pachauri’s Bizarre Tip Of Iceberg
Guest Blogger / 15 mins ago March 4, 2015
its-not-the-size-of-the-iceberg-take-into-account-shrinkage-demotivational-poster-1263080467[1]

Guest Opinion: Dr. Tim Ball

Why do polls show the public is unconcerned about global warming or climate change, yet most politicians continue to support considerable funding for research and the push for remedial action? The Pew Centre consistently place global warming near the bottom (Figure 1).

clip_image001

Figure 1

A UN poll, which should influence activities and priorities of that agency show the same pattern (Figure 2).

clip_image003

Continue reading

2015 – 026 British Public Officials who are Freemasons or Bilderberg attendees

Information from FALLING MASONRY http://fallingmasonry.info/

Shining light on the Corruption and Deceit of the Freemasons

A list of British Public Officials who are Freemasons or Bilderberg attendees

(These lists are currently being researched – keep checking back for the latest information.)

Source of evidence / Person’s Masonic Lodge

Is this significant? Make up your own minds.

David Abbott
Environmental Protection Officer at Mid Suffolk District Council LinkedIn

Bill Abram
Inspector with Bedfordshire Police (and part-time Magician) Sine Favore Lodge #9856

Continue reading

2015 – 025 Austrian Professor says “Execute all Global Warming Deniers”.

Death threats anyone? Austrian Prof: global warming deniers should be sentenced to death

Richard Parncutt, Professor of Systematic Musicology, University of Graz, Austria, reckons people like Watts, Tallbloke, Singer, Michaels, Monckton, McIntyre and me (there are too many to list) should be executed. He’s gone full barking mad, and though he says these are his “personal opinions” they are listed on his university web site.

For all the bleating of those who say they’ve had real “death threats“, we get discussions about executing skeptics from Professors, wielding the tyrannical power of the state. Was he paid by the state to write these simplistic, immature, “solutions”? Do taxpayers fund his web expenses? (And what the heck is systematic musicology?)

Prof Richard Parncutt says:

“I have always been opposed to the death penalty in all cases…”

“Even mass murderers [like Breivik] should not be executed, in my opinion.”

Continue reading

2015 – 024 After 31 March 2017 UK will lose the right to leave EU unilaterally

After 31st March 2017 we lose right to use Article 50 to unilaterally leave the EU and the right to Repeal European Communities Act 1972. Qualitative voting kicks in then and we will need 14 countries to agree we can leave. If they do not agree then we cannot leave
UK will then be completely hog tied by the EU.

see 2013 – 013 How the Lisbon Treaty was voted through when none of the MPs had seen it.

Comment:
I too have wrote a piece on this, as the rules of QMV have now been rewritten? Originally we were to ask 27 members and we needed 255 votes, as all members would have been ‘weighted’, this has now changed. We now need 20 countries to agree and their populations must add up to 65% of the population of the Union? http://t.co/1HhnvYsoyU all links included. We become FULLY INTEGRATED after 31st March 2017, which is why Cameron said LATE 2017 also on this date, we lose right to use Article 50 and the right to Repeal European Communities Act 1972?

2015 – 023 If you feel you have been wrongly or unfairly accused.

If you feel you have been wrongly or unjustly accused of an alleged offence go to http://www.rmbconsulting.co.uk/HOME.html

2015 – 022 Schools teaching ‘invented’ history of Europe.

Children being taught ‘invented’ version of European history

By ScottHarrison | Posted: February 26, 2015

Schoolchildren are being taught a “invented” version of European history which is “papering over” past disunity on the continent, a leading British academic has claimed.

Professor David Abulafia of Cambridge University told the Daily Telegraph history textbooks attempted to create an “artificial notion of Europe” in order to further integration under the European Union.

The paper reported that he was among 30 leading historians, also including David Starkey, who were calling for a “redrawing” of the UK’s relationship with the continent.

Prof Abulafia said: “There is a soft push to create a sense of European citizenship which is based on frankly an invented common history, because the history of Europe is to a large extent the history of division, not the history of unity.

“When it has been the history of unity, as we’ve seen under Napoleon and Hitler or under the Soviets in eastern Europe, it has gone disastrously wrong. It is a papering over the discordant elements in European history to create this idealised event.

Continue reading

2015 – 021 Education Authorities indoctrinating the minds of little children

CHIPS with everything using more or less the same techniques as Hitler to produce the Hitler Youth.

The State is allowing the sexual grooming of our Primary School children for same sex attraction.

Force schools to promote gay lifestyles in lessons, says teaching union

Whether this is a good idea or not is a matter of opinion. What is not is that is being implemented by an unelected, special interest shadowy group without the positive consent of the parents or even telling them. This is how such changes are made in an Authoritarian or Police State not a Democratic society.

“To achieve One World Government it is necessary to remove from the minds of men their individualism, their loyalty to family traditions and national identification.” Brock Chisholm, when director of the UN World Health Organization.

CHIPS (Challenging Homophobia in Primary Schools), is being rolled out this year facilitated by our government,
Using the bizarre excuse that young primary school children are constantly taunting each other about ‘homosexuality’, CHIPS is indoctrinating children to confuse their gender identity and encouraging them to read stories about, to think about and to sing songs about same sex attraction and then to act them out in class.
Here is the text from a page from Year 2 week 3 (6-7 year olds) teaching material:
© Educate and Celebrate
Making all schools and work places LGBT friendly
http://www.ellybarnes.com/chips-lesson-plans-and-activities/
My Princess Boy (dancing song children holding hands)
Come and play my Princess Boy
Princess Boy, Princess Boy
Come and play my Princess Boy
Now take my hand
Take my hand my Princess Boy
Princess Boy, Princess Boy
Take my hand my Princess Boy
Now dance with me
Dance with me my Princess Boy
Princess Boy, Princess Boy
Dance with me my Princess Boy
Back in the round.
La la-la-la la la la!
La la la, la la la!
La la-la-la la la la!
La la la la!
This song is a playground song* or circle song, so you will
need enough space for the amount of children playing. Make a
circle holding hands and skip around in time to the music.
Hold hands of partner and turn around.
Children find a partner and hold their hand
(choose a different partner every time)
Skip back to form a circle.You can then start all over
again and keep going round until everyone has danced
with everybody else, or as long as you wish!
* My emphasis Comment:
“Princess Boy” × 12 = Remembered! ‘Multiple partners’
Comment:
”Princess Boy• × 12 = Remembered! Multiple partners‘ made to seem normal.
Boy says to Girl – ”Take my Hand•; Girl says to Boy – ”Princess Boy• etc.
Intentional Result: Gender Confusion. (gender mainstreaming‘)
Here is a page from Year 4 (8-9 year olds) week 3:
KING & KING
Chorus:
King and King – A royal celebration!
King and King – Let’s sing our congratulations
Verse:
Mother, my heart just skipped a beat
That Prince just knocked me off my feet
Now you’ll have some time alone
I’ve found a King to share my throne!
Queen: “You’re in love?!”
Prince: “Yes mother!”
Queen: “With the Prince?”
Prince: “Yes mother!”
Queen: “How wonderful!”
Prince: “Yes mother!”
Queen: “I’ll order a new crown then!”
Chorus
Let the fanfare ring out loud
And make everybody feel proud*
See the Kings walk hand in hand
Spread the joy throughout the land!
Chorus
King and King – A royal celebration!
King and King – Let’s sing our congratulations!
King and King – Toot toot t-toot t-toot toot!
King and King – Toot toot t-toot t-toot toot!
King and King – Toot toot t-toot t-toot toot!
King and King – Toot toot t-toot t-toot toot!
Comment:
NB Princesses‘ are all ignored in the song because they are girls. This is the only
page about marriage‘ of any kind.
* proud‘ is a clear reference to Gay Pride‘.
Aim: to normalise same sex attraction
Wave arms up high from side to side in time
with the music.
Students can help make up actions to suit
the words in verses. E.g. Heart shape with
hands.
Spoken. Choose 2 people or 2 groups – could
be girls and boys.
Students can help make up actions to suit the
words in verses. E.g. Play trumpet, hold hands.
Pretend to play the trumpet to tune of
melody. Can also play kazoos if you wish!
No child is allowed to opt out of these activities* as they may not be introduced
under the usual sex education‘ (SRE) lessons, which technically can still be opted
out of, but under another subject heading.
[Why does this technique sound familiar? Remember Mr Major trumpeting his
victory‘ that he had opted the UK out of the Social Chapter‘ only to find all its
regulations and directives were introduced under Health and Safety‘!]
Peter Hitchens wrote in The Mail on Sunday (8/2/15):
People still mistakenly think that there is an important difference between the
Tory and Labour parties over sex propaganda in schools.
On the contrary, both parties are entirely wedded to the radical sexliberation
policies of the 1960s, now the iron-bound law of the land, which it is
dangerous to question, let alone disobey.
Mr Cameron, when he was still Leader of the Opposition in April 2010, had
this exchange with Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight:
Paxman: You‘re in favour of faith schools being able to teach sex education as
they like?‘
Cameron: Not as they like. That‘s not right. What we voted for was what the
[Labour] Government suggested in the end, which is proper sex education…‘
Paxman: Should they be free to teach that homosexuality is wrong, abortion is
wrong, contraception is wrong?‘
Cameron: No, and the [Labour] Government discussed this and came up with a
good idea, which is to say that we wanted a clearer path of sexual education
across all schools, but faith schools were not given any exemption, but they
were able to reflect some of their own faith in the way that this was taught.
But no, you must teach proper lessons in terms of gay equality and also
combat homophobic bullying in schools, I think that‘s extremely important.‘
What is going on?
What the LGBT is achieving, of course, is a recruitment drive. As
such people cannot reproduce their own kind, they must recruit
fresh blood‘ and this is best done among children in schools, the
younger the better. The Government, through Gove and Morgan,
has given them carte blanche.
Jesus said,”But whoever shall cause one of these little ones who believe in me to sin, it
were better for him that a millstone were hung about his neck, and that he were
drowned in the depth of the sea. Woe to the world because of offences! for it must
needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!
Matthew 18:6—7
Is Ms Morgan, as a professing Christian, aware of the danger in which she stands?
* but see Article 26(3) Universal Declartion of Human Rights overleaf.
What can we do?
Part of our problem is the universal human embarrassment of parents in explaining
sex to teenagers. Too many are only too relieved that so-called professionals will
do it for them; but the price paid is increasingly terrible.
Every parent still has the right to žnd out what their children are being told
and what they are watching at school – this latter is very important as what children
see is even more damaging than what they hear or read. Don‘t be fobbed off with
some bland handout. Demand to see the full material – including DVDs.
Alert other parents – most of whom have no idea what their children are being
taught. A child is not likely to tell their parents, ”We learned today what gays and
lesbians do• as children still have a natural sense of shame about such things, even
though they are being taught to suppress it.
Ideally we should work towards the removal of all sex education‘ from state
schools. Even before this latest campaign, the more sex education that was given
the more teenage pregnancies have occurred, the more abortions (purely as a form
of contraception) have been taking place, the less marriages have taken place, the
divorce rate has sky-rocketed and STDs have increased.
”Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting
different results.• – Albert Einstein
The State seldom knows best‘. That‘s why Article 26(3) of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights gives parents ”a prior right to choose the kind of
education that shall be given to their children.•
Some organisations involved in this želd
CORE Issues Trust: http://www.core-issues.org/
Angilcan Mainstream: http://anglicanmainstream.org/
Christian Concern: http://www.christianconcern.com/
Christian Institute: http://www.christian.org.uk/
GayMarriageNoThanks: http://www.gaymarriagenothanks.com/
Family Education Trust: http://www.famyouth.org.uk/
Copies of this leaŸet as a PDF can be obtained from the email address below.
philip

2015 – 20 The Appalling Malfeasance of the traffic police.

Telegraph.co.uk

Speed cameras: the twisted truth

A speed camera
Big earner: speed cameras were raising more than £120 million from two million motorists in 2003
By Christopher Booker and Richard North 12:01AM GMT 10 Nov 2007
In a new book, Christopher Booker and Richard North reveal the damage caused by scare stories, from salmonella and satanic child abuse to passive smoking and global warming. Here we publish an edited extract from the chapter on speed – a scare that cost lives
Speed kills: inconvenient facts
“Road deaths are a global epidemic on the scale of malaria and tuberculosis.” Commission for Global Road Safety, 2006.
One of the successes of modern Britain was the constant fall, over three decades, in the number of fatal accidents on the roads. This gave the UK a safety record better than that of almost any other country in the world.
Easily the highest-ever figures were recorded in the early years of World War Two, when the blackout (and masked headlights) temporarily pushed up the yearly total to more than 9,000. It then fell back, but, with a three-fold growth in car ownership in the first 20 years after the war, the annual total again rose, from about 5,000 to a peak of 7,985 in 1966.
From then on, despite a continuing rise in the number of vehicles, the fatal accident figure steadily dropped, at an average rate of more than five per cent a year. By 1980 it had fallen to slightly more than 6,000. By 1993 it was below 4,000. Britain’s roads were the safest in Europe. In France and Germany, the annual death toll was more than 9,000. In Portugal it was well over three times as high.
Then the rate of decline suddenly slowed. Over the next decade the total fall was smaller than in any of the years between 1990 and 1993. Four times the yearly figure actually rose. So what had changed?
The most obvious difference in the mid-1990s was a radical shift in road safety policy. Ministers and officials had become persuaded that by far the most important single factor in causing accidents was speed. The main focus of police road safety strategy, designed to cut the accident rate further, now became the rigorous enforcement of speed limits, backed by a growing army of speed cameras.
Yet it was at this very time that the fall in the accident rate markedly slowed. Although millions of motorists were caught by the new “safety cameras”, which were soon costing them more than £100 million a year in fines, the number of people dying on Britain’s roads was no longer declining at anything like the same rate as before.
Inevitably road-safety experts connected the two. Had this slowing of the decline in deaths been caused by the switch in policy? If the policy had not been changed, they asked, might 7,000 lives have been saved? Had not this new fixation with “speed”, to the exclusion of almost everything else and supported by highly dubious statistics, taken on many of the familiar characteristics of a scare?
How the obsession with speed developed
Undoubtedly one important factor in the steady fall in the fatal accident rate in earlier decades, despite a doubling in the number of vehicles on the roads from 12 million in 1966 to 25 million in 1994, had been the technical advances that made vehicles much safer. But this could not have explained the slowing in the fall of accidents in the 1990s, when new regulations had made vehicles safer still.
Another factor in earlier decades had been Britain’s policing methods. The efficiency of the UK’s traffic police, respected as an elite, had won international recognition. Regular patrols enabled them not just to pick up drivers breaking the speed limit, but those whose driving or vehicles might need to be checked for other reasons. Not least of these was a severe clampdown on driving under the influence of alcohol.
By the late 1980s, however, technology had been supplying the traffic police with new tools. Laser guns enabled them to measure the speed of a vehicle more precisely. The emphasis in traffic surveillance began to shift away from human judgment towards the simple act of measuring whether a driver was breaking a speed limit.
In 1991 the government launched its first £1 million TV ad campaign centred on the dangers of speeding (“Kill your speed, not a child”). In 1992 the police were given a new weapon when the first speed cameras were installed in west London. Trials on the M40 had shown just how frequently drivers broke the limit, when cameras capable of taking 400 snapshots on each roll of film had used up their quota in 40 minutes.
By September 1994 government spending on TV ads was running at £2.7 million a year, now centred on the slogan that was to become familiar: “Speed kills”. In 1997 the yearly advertising budget reached £3.5 million. Cameras were now proliferating the length and breadth of the land. Police patrols, except on motorways, were being reduced. In 1999, as income from penalties for offences recorded by cameras soared towards £100 million a year, the first “Safety Camera Partnerships” were formed, allying police forces with local authorities. Yet, in two years out of four, the number of fatal accidents had actually risen.
In March 2000 the government launched a new “road-safety strategy”, aimed at reducing the number of people killed or seriously injured by 40 per cent within a decade. Tony Blair told of how he had “received countless letters from parents, brothers, sisters, friends of those killed and injured on our roads”, every one telling of “a family devastated, lives blighted, of pain, sorrow and anger and the waste of it.” The government, he promised, would now take action, with a strategy that “will focus especially on speed”. A DfT strategy paper claimed speed was “a major contributory factor in about a third of all road accidents”. The “excessive and inappropriate speed” that helped “to kill about 1,200 people” each year was “far more than any other single contributor to casualties on our roads”.
The source given for this claim, to be repeated as a mantra by ministers and officials for years to come, was a report from the government’s Transport Research Laboratory, TRL Report 323: “A new system for recording contributory factors in road accidents”.
Not many people would have looked at this report, since it was only available for £45. But some who did were amazed. The evidence the report had cited to support its claim that speed was “a major contributory factor in about a third of all road accidents” simply wasn’t there. Many other factors were named as contributing to road accidents, from driving without due care and attention to the influence of drink; from poor overtaking to nodding off at the wheel. But the figure given for accidents in which the main causative factor was “excessive speed” was way down the list, at only 7.3 per cent.
So startling seemed the government’s exaggeration of the TRL’s figures, based on data provided by eight police forces, that it set off an increasingly fractious debate. A leading role in this was to be played by Paul Smith, an engineer turned road safety expert, who was so shocked by the government’s misuse of its own experts’ statistics that in 2001 he set up a website, (www.safespeed.org.uk) dedicated to analysis of why, in his view, the government’s misconceived policy, far from making Britain’s roads safer, could only make them more dangerous.
Initially, a key part of the debate was focused on how the government could justify its inflation of the report’s 7.3 per cent finding into a claim that speed caused a third of all road accidents. The TRL itself argued, in an attempt to support the government, that speed was also a factor in many accidents listed under other headings, such as careless driving or sudden braking.
Smith and other critics pointed out that this was given the lie by the TRL’s own report. Not only did it cite excessive speed as the “definite”‘ cause in only 4.5 per cent of accidents, but it found that speed was a “probable” or “possible contributory factor” in only 8.2 per cent more. Not only was the government thus bending the truth; it had brought pressure on the TRL to give a wholly misleading picture of its own findings.
The more the government’s case was examined, the more statistically dubious it became. So determined was it to claim that speed was the chief cause of accidents, it would stop at nothing in misrepresenting the evidence.
The critics, on the other hand, maintained that, in this single-minded obsession with speed, taking their eye off all the other complex causes of accidents, ministers and officials were being dangerously simplistic. Of course speed was a factor in any accident involving a moving vehicle, even if it was moving at only 1mph. But to anyone seriously interested in why accidents happened, the important thing was to determine what were the real reasons why a driver had made the mistake. Lack of attention? Reckless overtaking? Alcohol? Fatigue? One or more other causes?
The ministers and officials responsible for the new policy appeared to have convinced themselves that, if only speed itself could be reduced, this would, in itself, remedy all those other failings in driver behaviour that the TRL had identified in its report as the chief cause of the vast majority of accidents.
Even more simplistically, the government also seemed to be defining “excessive speed” much too narrowly, only in terms of exceeding a speed limit. In fact its own figures showed that only 30 per cent of accidents attributed to “excessive speed” actually involved breaking a speed limit. The vast majority, 70 per cent, involved vehicles travelling within the limit. Yet the effort to improve road safety was now being directed almost entirely at enforcing limits, which would do nothing to affect two thirds of the accidents caused by speed.
In 2003, to justify its “safety camera” policy, the government produced a report purporting to show that, where cameras had been installed, the accident rate had been reduced by “35 per cent”. But again it was manipulating the figures. Several significant confounding factors had been left out of the calculations; not least the fact that, on many sites, cameras had been installed following an atypical blip in the accident rate. When the rate had fallen back to its previous average level (regression to the mean) this allowed the government to ascribe the reduction to a camera.
So great now was the pressure on ministers, officials and the police to keep on repeating the two key official mantras – “a third of accidents are caused by speed” and “speed cameras reduce accidents by 35 per cent” – that few were prepared to challenge them. One exception was Paul Garvin, chief constable of Durham, who refused to install speed cameras, In an interview, Garvin explained why. He insisted that, while he believed strongly in “casualty reduction and trying to make the roads safer”, he could not agree that curbing speed was the central answer. The statistics for Durham showed that, of 1,900 collisions each year, only three per cent involved cars that were exceeding the speed limit, just 60 accidents a year.
Look more closely at the causes of these 60 accidents, the “actual cause of the accident invariably is drink-driving or drug-driving”. Drug-taking was now involved in 40 per cent of Durham’s fatal road accidents. Many accidents, he said, were caused by fatigue, although one of the most common causes was the failure of drivers to watch out for oncoming vehicles when turning right. To none of these could speed cameras offer any remedy. “The cause of accidents,” Garvin concluded, “is clearly something different from exceeding the speed limit”.
Meanwhile the senior policeman in charge of speed cameras in England and Wales, Richard Brunstrom, chief constable for North Wales, had just sent a remarkable confidential letter to all police forces and local authorities, revealing just how unnerved those running the speed-camera campaign had become at charges that their policy had failed in its aim of reducing accidents.
Signing himself as “Chair of the Association of Chief Police Officers Roads Policing Business Area”, Brunstrom instructed all responsible for operating speed cameras – which in 2003 were raising more than £120 million from two million motorists – that they must on no account respond to any further requests for factual information from Safe Speed’s Paul Smith.
Smith’s offence, according to Brunstrom, was that his “sole intent seems to be to discredit Government policy”. He had not only “inundated” the DfT and police forces with requests for information, but then published their replies on the internet. Brunstrom was also concerned that dozens of serving police officers had contacted Smith to express their personal concern at the way reliance on cameras has become a substitute for a road safety policy which, until 10 years previously, had been acclaimed as the most successful in the world.
In 2004 Smith was able to reveal even worse news for the government. For some time he had argued that, far from reducing the risk of accidents, speed cameras actually increased it, by distracting drivers and causing them to act unpredictably. This was now confirmed by another report from the TRL, Report 595, commissioned by the Highways Agency, looking into the effect of cameras on motorways.
The TRL had found that, where fixed cameras were installed at road works, the risk of accidents giving rise to injury was increased by 55 per cent. Where fixed cameras were installed on open motorways the risk was increased by 31 per cent. In general, fatal and serious crashes were 32 per cent more likely where cameras were being operated. But conventional police patrols reduced the risk of crashes by 27 per cent at road works, and 10 per cent elsewhere.
The report bore out precisely the case Smith had been making. But the DfT had ruled that it was not to be published. If a copy had not been passed to Smith, to be reported on the Safe Speed website, it might never have seen the light of day.
The anti-social bastards in our midst One of the side-effects of the government’s decision to centre its road-safety strategy on speed cameras had been to widen considerably the gulf between many normally law-abiding citizens and the police.
Opinion polls consistently showed, by ratios of two to one, that the cameras were highly unpopular, and were widely regarded as less a road safety measure, more a lucrative source of income. Other electronic means of reducing speed, such as radar-operated “slow down” signs indicating to drivers that they were exceeding a speed limit, met with very significantly more approval, and were welcomed as making a positive contribution to road safety.
The public, and the tabloids, had become noticeably sensitive to the idea that, when it came to observing speed limits, the police now appeared to operate a double standard. Cases where police drivers were not penalised for flagrant breaches of the law were eagerly reported, such as that in 2000 when the Home Secretary’s car had been driven at 103mph.
In December 2003 a police driver was recorded by a patrol car driving at 159mph on the M54 near Telford, Shropshire, and charged with speeding and dangerous driving. However, when in May 2005 his case came before District Judge Bruce Morgan in Ludlow, he was cleared on all charges, the judge noting that two senior police officers had testified that the defendant’s driving was “not dangerous”.
Equally, as a measure of the decline in police driving standards, it was noted that deaths caused by police cars, often travelling in excess of the speed limit, had risen sharply, from 17 in 2000/01 to 36 in 2003/04 and 44 in 2004/05.
In the summer of 2006, the DfT itself published a paper noting the curious discrepancy between the road-accident figures as reported by the police and those shown by the records of NHS hospitals.
While the police were claiming that the yearly number of people killed or seriously injured had dropped since the mid-1990s by 33 per cent, the hospitals gave a very different picture.
According to the police, the total number of emergency hospital admissions following traffic accidents in 1994/95 was 38,641, which by 2002/03 had dropped to 31,010. According to the NHS, however, the respective figures were 32,285 and 36,611.
In September 2006, the DfT finally conceded one of the central points that Safe Speed’s Paul Smith had been arguing for five years: that only five per cent of road accidents were caused by drivers who were breaking the speed limit. In The Daily Telegraph, Smith was quoted as saying “the government’s case for continuing to install cameras has been destroyed”.
The government’s determination to reduce accidents by focusing its efforts on speed still had surprising supporters. In December the Guardian’s star environmental columnist, George Monbiot published a ferocious attack on all those who dared to challenge the government’s policy, describing them as the “road rage lobby”.
Foremost among his targets was Smith, whom he painted as a member of the “boy racers’ club” and as one of “the anti-social bastards who believe they should be allowed to do what they want, whenever they want, regardless of the consequences”. Monbiot added with a sneer: “With the help of some of the most convoluted arguments I’ve ever read, Safe Speed even seeks to prove that speed cameras ‘make our roads more dangerous’.” Monbiot cannot have read very far into Smith’s “convoluted arguments”, or he would have seen that, far from arguing for a free-for-all on the roads, Smith’s prime concern was to return to a road safety policy that worked, based not on some abstract dogma but regulated by the methods that had formerly given Britain’s traffic police such an enviable reputation and the UK the best road safety record in the world.
In February 2007, the DfT announced that the number of people killed in road accidents in the 12 months to September 2006 had risen to 3,210, compared with 3,177 in the same period a year earlier. As one report put it, the new figures “come three months after the influential Commons Transport Select Committee said an obsession with cameras was responsible for a “deplorable” drop in the number of officers patrolling Britain’s roads”.
Strongly supporting this point was Kevin Delaney, a former head of the Metropolitan Police traffic division, who said, “Any figures that show an increase against a downward trend ought to be ringing alarm bells in Whitehall, in local authorities and in police headquarters.” He went on, “The deterrent effect on motorists of a police officer enforcing traffic regulations is incalculable, but we are seeing fewer and fewer of them.” Paul Smith would have agreed. George Monbiot would probably have dismissed the former head of the Metropolitan Police traffic division as just a “boy racer” and an “anti-social bastard”. Such had been the power of the great speed scare.
Scared to Death: The Anatomy of a Very Dangerous Phenomenon, by Christopher Booker and Richard North (Continuum, £16.99, ISBN 9780826486141), is available for £14.99 + £1.25 p&p fromTelegraph Books on 0870 428 4112 or www.books.telegraph.co.uk

2015 – 019 Basic principles of paying tax. Tax evasion and tax avoidance

The 1929 case of Ayshire Pullman Motor Services & Ritchie versus the
Inland Revenue makes the tax position perfectly clear, “No man in
this country is under the smallest obligation, moral or other, to
arrange his legal relations to business or to his property so as to
enable the Inland Revenue to put the largest shovel into his store”

“The taxpayer is entitled to be as astute to prevent, as far as he
honestly can, the depletion of his means by the Revenue”

Charles Oliver, SW London.

From that time or even before, the distinction between tax avoidance
which is perfectly legal and tax evasion which is a criminal offence
has also been perfectly clear – albeit in marginal court cases the
law needs to be clarified – very different from the law being
changed, which is the responsibility of Parliament not the Courts.

Also, for centuries, it has been understood in this country that
retrospective legislation is pernicious and wrong. i.e. that people’s
actions must be judged in the context of then current laws.

Continue reading

2015 – 018 Ukraine, The EU and Russia

Russia, notwithstanding Russia is very brutal and undemocratic but so is the EU quite undemocratic and authoritarian.

Russia has suffered 3 massive and disastrous invasions. The Teutonic Order, Napoleon and Hitler. Each time Russia was saved by the enormous distances necessary to resupply the invading armies and the Russian winter.
They have a compulsive need for buffer countries between them and Germany/France. They achieved this after WW11 with Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. These countries have been peeled away into the EU.
However the EU (ie Germany) still wants more Lebensraum in the East. They are trying to achieve this now dangling bribes for the Ukraine bureaucrats and politicians to join the EU with promises of salaries and pensions they can only dream of instead of tanks.
The EU has said it wants to extend from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
No wonder Russia is nervous.
This does not make Russia anything but a brutal regime.