Wednesday, 3 March 2010

Emergency Broadcast! New World Order Ahead!

Distribute this video to everyone who has the ability to think for themselves. Time is running out. The collapse of the worlds economies will be the catalist for bringing in the New World Order. Marshall Law is on its way! (Check out the 'Civil Contingency Act')This is the outline for Britain when the "SHIT hits the fan".

Tuesday, 2 March 2010

Brown defends DNA database and CCTV roll-out as he rejects Cameron's claim that Britain has a 'broken society'

* Brown defends DNA database and CCTV extension
* PM accuses Tories of ramping up fear of crime
* He tells police to get bobbies back on the beat
* Don't blame red tape, forces are told

Gordon Brown defended the controversial DNA database and plans to extend CCTV today as he put the fear of crime and yobbery at the heart of the election campaign.

The Prime Minister attacked the Tories' opposition of the CCTV roll-out and the retention of DNA samples from people arrested but not convicted.

In a major speech on law and order, he promised that both would be 'on the ballot paper' in the coming election.

He also risked a row with the police by promising to name and shame forces which are not getting officers out on the beat.

Speaking to an audience of police officers in Reading, he said he wanted policing to be more 'visible' with officers spending 80 per cent of their time on patrol.

The pledge came as he set out new measures to tackle anti-social behaviour and countered David Cameron's claim that Britain has a 'broken society'.

Mr Brown branded the bleak claim a 'fiction' and accused the Tories of ramping up the fear of crime by 'abusing' statistics.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1254499/Brown-tells-police-Get-bobbies-beat--dont-blame-red-tape.html#ixzz0h4Isswb6

European Court set to give public figures chance to gag press on damaging stories

Mosley case on privacy laws 'is being fast-tracked'

It could spell the end of the kiss and tell: public figures might, within 18 months, have the power to stifle bad news stories before they are published, a senior lawyer has warned.

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) is currently fast-tracking a landmark case, brought by Max Mosley, to tighten UK privacy laws. Mark Stephens, a lawyer acting for a group of media and free speech organisations opposing Mr Mosley in court, believes that the extraordinary pace with which it is proceeding suggests that the judges are about to rule in the former Formula One boss's favour.

That would mean a change in the law that would force the press to contact anyone that they are intending to run a story about to warn them if it could potentially breach their privacy, giving public figures a chance to gag newspapers before publication.

Full Story here