Wednesday, 26 September 2007

The United Nations or is it 'The United States UN' ?

Freedom of Speech, but i will spend at least 15 minutes to condem you before you have a chance to start. Oh and i will use all the propaganda that i can find in the local press.. 'The Devil walks among us'

Full transcript of Ahmadinejad Speech at Columbia University

Imagine Bush going to Iran, there is nothing he could say, because it is all made up.

So lets ask the nice man at the Columbia University to answer some of our questions ...

Iranian University Chancellors Ask Bollinger 10 Questions

But we must remember HE is the enemy, just listen how he speaks with such hatred at the UN assembly. Not like the French and German Leaders who say that War is the right thing to do, when you consider making the planet safe.

Transcript of UN Speech

Peace is going to take all the nations working in cooperation to limit naked aggression and human rights' violations, not just the ones which the US declare as evil. How many nukes do we have? How many does Pakistan have? How many does India, Israel, North Korea, and the former Soviet Union have? Should the rhetoric be about destroying all weapons of mass destruction and not just prohibiting Iran from obtaining one?

Many countries are committing human rights' violations and sending arms and troops into many parts of the world. America's biggest export is violence and we would do well to call for an end to all occupations and violence by beginning to end our own.

Monday, 24 September 2007

Will Gordon Brown win the next election?

The people did not elect this man to be Primeminister as this was Tony Bairs plan. It is all to do with joining the EU, this will happen if Gordon brown wins the next election.
So far Gordon has handled a number of problems that have happened in our Country quite well with immediete response.
I do not think even if their is any opostion from any other party that he will lose the election.
I think that if Tony Blair had left at the end of his term that Gordon would not have been elected to be Primeminister, so what he did was quite clever to leave earlier to become president of the EU. I think the majority of our Country will have more confidence in Gordon especially if Tony creates some publicity just before the election.
I also think that if the pound became quite weak due to the dept crisis and our banks being too greedy that there would be no excuse not to join the EU. This is an interesting question, what would happen if we join the EU with a strong pound?
I think that Gordon has been re-structuring his party quite well. He has made a Policeman into a minister and a surgeon from the NHS into a minister, it all appears quite professional for a man we have not ellected.
The only thing I hated about Gordon is that when he was Chacellor he taxed us all to the hilt that meant he was able to keep up with most of the overspending of our Country.
I do think that it is quite clear that if he holds an election in as early as October this Year he will win.

Friday, 21 September 2007

Long Term Adult Unemployment

The classic situation is for the main breadwinner in a family having been employed a number of years is made redundant. That type of employment in the area has dwindled away due to general reduction of manufacturing, as it goes overseas, or due to a government establishment closing down, or a large company going bust. That person and the family have long established roots in the area and clearly are reluctant to move.

Now the present system is that to continue getting dole money you go on training schemes or educational courses. But these often are just used as interludes between periods on the dole, they cannot solve the problem unless they can provide the skills needed for particular employment which does exist in that area. If there is no employment which can provide adequate income for the breadwinner to keep the family, then it will not solve the problem.

No-one should be entitled to be supported endlessly by society just because they don't want to move.

It obviously costs the government a tremendous amount of money supporting people in this situation. It would be more cost effective for the government to pay for the family to migrate to an area where there is work. Then to provide assistance for the family during the time the breadwinner is learning the required skills needed to get the job that will support the family.

If the family really doesn't want to move, then the breadwinner must work away from home and return at weekends. That is what many do already by commuting to the big cities and staying in basic accomodation during the working week.

Before the advent of the welfare state, if you didn't work you didn't eat. It might seem tough, but why should anyone get a free lunch if they are capable of working?

Toenail

1 Million Young People on the Dole

Young people leaving school do not instinctively want to work. In fact many people don't instinctively want to work.

The motivation to do work is primarily to provide income to support a lifestyle. The other motivation for those who have learned a skill or craft is the satisfaction of a job well done.

Young people who do not do well at school often lack the self discipline required to see a task through. It is possible that they just don't take to academic work, there is no particular reason why they should.

No-one is entitled to be kept by society free of charge, unless due to impediment they are unable to contibute in any way. To have food and shelter and money for pursuits must require that these are earned.

I believe that everyone leaving school should be routed into something to inprove their ability to find work and to provide for themselves.

I don't believe in Degrees for a large proportion of young people, they are a massive waste of resources and leave the people with huge loans at the very start of their lives. Entrance to university should be made very much harder. For those who do wish to pursue an academic career there should be no fees!! They or their families should have to pay for food and lodgings though.

For those who are wild and lack discipline, a form of national service, with pay.

For those who are unskilled and unisterested in learning a trade or national service, join a community service where they do menial tasks in society, clearing banks of roads, cleaning streets, mending fences etc., etc, with a basic wage a bit better than present dole money.

For those who wish to learn skills, an apprenticeship, with pay, and with the opportunity to study at college paid for by the apprentice master and ultimately the government.

The people will benefit, the country will have no shortage of skilled workers, and unemployed yobs will be removed from the streets, and our neighbourhoods will be well maintained.

Toenail

Thursday, 20 September 2007

The UN and Israel

Try in vain to get the UN to do something about Israel. Hasnt happened yet, but you have to keep trying


Egypt and Syria urged the UN nuclear watchdog on Wednesday 19th Sept. to pass a resolution condemning Israel for possessing nuclear weapons.Israel insisted there was no basis for the resolution, scheduled to be presented on Thursday, and called upon the other member states of the watchdog International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to reject the proposal.On Wednesday, however, the Egyptian and Syrian ambassadors signalled that their patience was wearing thin.Syrian ambassador Othman complained that Israel was the only country in the Middle East "to have nuclear weapons and nuclear capabilities which are not under international control."


Israel is the target of at least 65 UN Resolutions and the Palestinians are the target of none.

For a full list click here

Aside from the core issues—refugees, Jerusalem, borders—the major themes reflected in the U.N. resolutions against Israel over the years are its unlawful attacks on its neighbors; its violations of the human rights of the Palestinians, including deportations, demolitions of homes and other collective punishments; its confiscation of Palestinian land; its establishment of illegal settlements; and its refusal to abide by the U.N. Charter and the 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War.

There are 149 substantive articles of the Fourth Geneva Convention that protect the rights of every one of these Palestinians living in occupied Palestine. The Israeli Government is currently violating, and has since 1967 been violating, almost each and every one of these sacred rights of the Palestinian People recognized by the Fourth Geneva Convention. Indeed, violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention are war crimes.
So this is not a symmetrical situation. As matters of fact and of law, the gross and repeated violations of Palestinian rights by the Israeli army and Israeli settlers living illegally in occupied Palestine constitute war crimes. Conversely, the Palestinian People are defending themselves and their Land and their Homes against Israeli war crimes and Israeli war criminals, both military and civilian.

Hypocrasy

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Wednesday the United States "will not abandon the innocent Palestinians in Gaza," shortly after Israel declared the territory to be an enemy entity in order to cut off power and fuel supplies to the coastal strip. At the same time, Rice said Gaza, ruled by the Islamic militant Hamas group, "is a hostile entity to us as well."

So, we will not abandon you , but we are abandoning you ??? say that again ?

While Hamas has not been directly involved in the rocket attacks, it has done little to halt them. Israel says it holds the group responsible. Impoverished Gaza's 1.4 million people are almost entirely dependent on Israeli suppliers for power and fuel, and a cutoff would draw international condemnation.

At least someone in Israel is willing to stand up and state the obvious


"With our own hands we are uniting a million and half people against us, in bitterness and hatred" says Gush Shalom (Israeli Peace Bloc). "The inhabitants of the Gaza Strip are completely dependent on Israel for their most basic livelihood. This complete dependence was created, consciously and deliberately, by all governments of Israel since 1967. The state of Israel cannot now just shrug off its responsibility for the fate of the inhabitants of Gaza.
The people of the Gaza Strip have already been living for a long time in terrible squalor, on the very edge of starvation. Now we push them even much deeper into hell. The state of Israel is today roughly trampling International Law, in indiscriminate collective punishments of a whole civilian population. We, too, will eventually pay the price.
This policy of force and oppression is also emptying of content the negotiations supposedly taking place with Abu Mazen and the leadership he heads, presenting him and his followers as accomplices in the terrible suffering caused to their people. There can be no peace without talking to and negotiating with the entire Palestinian people, with all its parts including the Hamas leadership, which has explicitly expressed its willingness to discuss a cease-fire and a mutual end to attacks on both sides of the Gaza border. This is the alternative to the policy of trampling force whose main proponent is Defence Minister Barak, formally leader of the Labour Party - effectively leader of the Extreme Right in Israel".

Mercenaries in Iraq

The number of U.S.-paid private contractors in Iraq now exceeds that of American combat troops, newly released figures show, raising fresh questions about the privatization of the war effort and the government's capacity to carry out military and rebuilding campaigns.
More than 180,000 civilians - including Americans, foreigners and Iraqis - are working in Iraq under U.S. contracts, according to State and Defense department figures obtained by the Los Angeles Times.
Including the recent troop buildup, 160,000 soldiers and a few thousand civilian government employees are stationed in Iraq.
The total number of private contractors, far higher than previously reported, shows how heavily the Bush administration has relied on corporations to carry out the occupation of Iraq - a mission criticized as being undermanned.
Continuing uncertainty over the numbers of armed contractors drew special criticism from military experts.
"We don't have control of all the coalition guns in Iraq. That's dangerous for our country," said William Nash, a retired Army general and reconstruction expert. The Pentagon "is hiring guns. You can rationalize it all you want, but that's obscene."
They are equipped with automatic weapons, body armor, helicopters and bulletproof vehicles and operate with little or no supervision, accountable only to the firms employing them.
Many contractors have been accused of indiscriminately firing at American and Iraqi troops, and of shooting to death an unknown number of Iraqi citizens who got too close to their heavily armed convoys, but not one has faced charges or prosecution.
The wartime numbers of private guards are unprecedented - as are their duties, many of which have traditionally been done by soldiers. They protect U.S. military operations and have guarded high-ranking officials including Gen. David
Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Baghdad. They also protect journalists, visiting foreign officials and thousands of construction projects.
That is another reason why all the talk of surge or no surge is irrelevant, as the pentagon can just go out and hire killers to do the job with no questions asked. The only thing is that soldiers are cheaper. At present there are in excess of 350,000 troops and mercenaries.


This has also been going on in
Afganistan with the same companies.

Watch a video of the Contractors in action in Iraq.


There is ample evidence that mercenary companies in Iraq on contract to the Pentagon have been arbitrarily shooting civilians. The recently revealed Blackwater case is not an isolated event. It is part of a pattern, which the mainstream media has carefully concealed. The following 2005 video shows British mercenaries in Iraq shooting civilians "for entertainment". The video shows private security contractors working for Aegis Defense Services "Victory" Group firing indiscriminately at Iraqi civilian motorists in Baghdad.

WMV Windows


Lost History - And we are thinking of doing this again ?

2,000-year-old Sumerian cities torn apart and plundered by robbers. The very walls of the mighty Ur of the Chaldees cracking under the strain of massive troop movements, the privatisation of looting as landlords buy up the remaining sites of ancient Mesopotamia to strip them of their artefacts and wealth. The near total destruction of Iraq's historic past - the very cradle of human civilisation - has emerged as one of the most shameful symbols of our disastrous occupation.
Evidence amassed by archaeologists shows that even those Iraqis who trained as archaeological workers in Saddam Hussein's regime are now using their knowledge to join the looters in digging through the ancient cities, destroying thousands of priceless jars, bottles and other artefacts in their search for gold and other treasures.
In the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf War, armies of looters moved in on the desert cities of southern Iraq and at least 13 Iraqi museums were plundered. Today, almost every archaeological site in southern Iraq is under the control of looters.
In a long and devastating appraisal to be published in December, Lebanese archaeologist Joanne Farchakh says that armies of looters have not spared "one metre of these Sumerian capitals that have been buried under the sand for thousands of years.
"They systematically destroyed the remains of this civilisation in their tireless search for sellable artefacts: ancient cities, covering an estimated surface area of 20 square kilometres, which - if properly excavated - could have provided extensive new information concerning the development of the human race.
"Humankind is losing its past for a cuneiform tablet or a sculpture or piece of jewellery that the dealer buys and pays for in cash in a country devastated by war. Humankind is losing its history for the pleasure of private collectors living safely in their luxurious houses and ordering specific objects for their collection."
Ms Farchakh, who helped with the original investigation into stolen treasures from the Baghdad Archaeological Museum in the immediate aftermath of the invasion of Iraq, says Iraq may soon end up with no history.
"There are 10,000 archaeological sites in the country. In the Nassariyah area alone, there are about 840 Sumerian sites; they have all been systematically looted. Even when Alexander the Great destroyed a city, he would always build another. But now the robbers are destroying everything because they are going down to bedrock. What's new is that the looters are becoming more and more organised with, apparently, lots of money.
"Quite apart from this, military operations are damaging these sites forever. There's been a US base in Ur for five years and the walls are cracking because of the weight of military vehicles. It's like putting an archaeological site under a continuous earthquake."
Of all the ancient cities of present-day Iraq, Ur is regarded as the most important in the history of man-kind. Mentioned in the Old Testament - and believed by many to be the home of the Prophet Abraham - it also features in the works of Arab historians and geographers where its name is Qamirnah, The City of the Moon.
Founded in about 4,000 BC, its Sumerian people established the principles of irrigation, developed agriculture and metal-working. Fifteen hundred years later - in what has become known as "the age of the deluge" - Ur produced some of the first examples of writing, seal inscriptions and construction. In neighbouring Larsa, baked clay bricks were used as money orders - the world's first cheques - the depth of finger indentations in the clay marking the amount of money to be transferred. The royal tombs of Ur contained jewellery, daggers, gold, azurite cylindrical seals and sometimes the remains of slaves.
US officers have repeatedly said a large American base built at Babylon was to protect the site but Iraqi archaeologist Zainab Bah-rani, a professor of art history and archaeology at Columbia University, says this "beggars belief". In an analysis of the city, she says: "The damage done to Babylon is both extensive and irreparable, and even if US forces had wanted to protect it, placing guards round the site would have been far more sensible than bulldozing it and setting up the largest coalition military headquarters in the region."

Air strikes in 2003 left historical monuments undamaged, but Professor Bahrani, says: "The occupation has resulted in a tremendous destruction of history well beyond the museums and libraries looted and destroyed at the fall of Baghdad. At least seven historical sites have been used in this way by US and coalition forces since April 2003, one of them being the historical heart of Samarra, where the Askari shrine built by Nasr al Din Shah was bombed in 2006."
The use of heritage sites as military bases is a breach of the Hague Convention and Protocol of 1954 (chapter 1, article 5) which covers periods of occupation; although the US did not ratify the Convention, Italy, Poland, Australia and Holland, all of whom sent forces to Iraq, are contracting parties.
Ms Farchakh notes that as religious parties gain influence in all the Iraqi pro-vinces, archaeological sites are also falling under their control. She tells of Abdulamir Hamdani, the director of antiquities for Di Qar province in the south who desperately - but vainly - tried to prevent the destruction of the buried cities during the occupation. Dr Hamdani himself wrote that he can do little to prevent "the disaster we are all witnessing and observing".
Last year, Dr Hamdani's antiquities department received notice from the local authorities, approving the creation of mud-brick factories in areas surrounding Sumerian archaeological sites. But it quickly became apparent that the factory owners intended to buy the land from the Iraqi government because it covered several Sumerian capitals and other archaeological sites. The new landlord would "dig" the archaeological site, dissolve the "old mud brick" to form the new one for the market and sell the unearthed finds to antiquity traders.
Dr Hamdani bravely refused to sign the dossier. Ms Farchakh says: "His rejection had rapid consequences. The religious parties controlling Nassariyah sent the police to see him with orders to jail him on corruption charges. He was imprisoned for three months, awaiting trial. The State Board of Antiquities and Heritage defended him during his trial, as did his powerful tribe. He was released and regained his position. The mud-brick factories are 'frozen projects', but reports have surfaced of a similar strategy being employed in other cities and in nearby archaeological sites such as the Aqarakouf Ziggarat near Baghdad. For how long can Iraqi archaeologists maintain order? This is a question only Iraqi politicians affiliated to the different religious parties can answer, since they approve these projects."
The legions of antiquities looters work within a smooth mass-smuggling organisation. Trucks, cars, planes and boats take Iraq's historical plunder to Europe, the US, to the United Arab Emirates and to Japan. The archaeologists say an ever-growing number of internet websites offer Mesopotamian artefacts, objects anywhere up to 7,000 years old.
Ms Farchakh adds: "The longer Iraq finds itself in a state of war, the more the cradle of civilisation is threatened. It may not even last for our grandchildren to learn from."

Iran - The next war ?

The Bush war party claim that their strategy is to end Iran's nuclear threat, but Iran does not posses a nuclear weapon and has never threatened to build one; even the CIA estimates that even given the political will Iran is incapable of building a nuclear weapon before 2017, at the earliest. The other claim that Iran is involved in the cross border supply of weapons is after investigations by among others the New York times, the LA, times, British military officials, and even General Peter Pace chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, have all concluded that no such evidence exists, so just what is going on here? Iran has attacked no other country except to defend itself when invaded by Saddam Hussein in 1980 who was backed and equipped by the US, which supplied chemical and biological weapons produced at a factory in Maryland, part of the axis of evil?

Are we planning to attack all the other NPT signatories who are also enriching uranium? Iran is within its rights to enrich uranium under the NPT and the ongoing inspections ensure that they are not using their centrifuges to produce highly enriched uranium. This is why all NPT countries have such inspections in the first place. It is the big 5 who are in actual violation of the NPT by refusing to disarm. The media should be reporting this issue much more than they are. We are under no threat from Iran's non-existent nuclear weapons but are very much under threat from the large nuclear stockpile of the US, the USSR, the UK et al. The statement from the French foreign minister is shocking in itself, and also represents a shocking shift of France's position.

The UN's chief nuclear weapons inspector yesterday warned against the use of force against Iran, in what UN officials said was an attempt to halt an "out of control" drift to war.

Mohamed ElBaradei told reporters at the International Atomic Energy Agency headquarters in Vienna. "There are rules on how to use force, and I would hope that everybody would have gotten the lesson after the Iraq situation, where 700,000 innocent civilians have lost their lives on the suspicion that a country has nuclear weapons."

Concentration Camp

Use of the word concentration comes from the idea of concentrating a group of people who are in some way undesirable in one place, where they can be watched by those who incarcerated them.
The Fourth Geneva Convention was established in 1949 to provide for the protection of civilians during times of war "in the hands" of an enemy and under any occupation by a foreign power. It was ratified by 194 nations.



Both the Karni crossing and the Rafah crossing for people, which sits between Gaza and Egypt, have been closed since mid-June, and there is little prospect, with Hamas in charge, that Israel will allow them to reopen. The stated reason is security, since Israel regards Hamas as a professed enemy and a terrorist group eager to expand its military expertise and power to the West Bank. Israel does not trust Hamas to operate the Palestinian side of Karni or Rafah, or to hire private companies, even Turkish ones, to do so.
Nor is the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas of Fatah, complaining, since he and his caretaker government in the West Bank also do not want Hamas to succeed in Gaza.
But one result has been the quick collapse of Gaza’s private sector, unable to import necessary spare parts or building supplies or cloth, and unable to export much of anything. According to Faysal G. Shawa of the Palestinian Businessmen Association, 70,000 workers in the private sector have lost their jobs since June; 85 percent of factories are shut or operating at less than 20 percent capacity; and the loss from agricultural exports alone since June is $16 million.
Israel estimates that its own businesses are losing $2 million a day from the closing, but Gaza is losing $1 million a day, an amount it is less able to afford.
“Fatah is paying Palestinian Authority workers to stay at home and not work for Hamas,” Mr. Shawa said. “Hamas is paying its own people. But no one is paying the workers of the private sector. The ones who live on aid do nothing, and the ones who are working get nothing. Soon we’ll all be aid-dependent, and I hate it; it’s destroying us.”
Before the second intifada began in September 2000, Mr. Bowab had 1,200 workers. Before Hamas won legislative elections in January 2006, and the isolation started here, he said, he made up to $120,000 a month in profit. “With the border open, in Gaza you can become a very rich man,” he said. “People are better skilled here than in the West Bank or Egypt, and they work harder and faithfully.”
Hamas is working with the Egyptians to destroy unauthorized tunnels, Muhammad said, while the Egyptians, under pressure from the United States and Israel, have recently changed all the security officers along the border, replacing many of those who had been bought off by smugglers. Egypt, he said, is clearing almost 1,000 feet of houses from the Egyptian side of Rafah, a city cut in two by the border.

Monday, 17 September 2007

Putin - President, Russian Federation

Europe should be more allied with Russia than it is with the U.S. ?
Friend or Foe ?

During this conference it was refreshing to actually hear a leader of a country actually state what seems obvious to most people in the world. It is a shame that no European or US leader had the guts to say this....

"Unilateral and frequently illegitimate actions have not resolved any problems. Moreover, they have caused new human tragedies and created new centres of tension. Judge for yourselves: wars as well as local and regional conflicts have not diminished. Mr Teltschik mentioned this very gently. And no less people perish in these conflicts – even more are dying than before. Significantly more, significantly more!

Today we are witnessing an almost uncontained hyper use of force – military force – in international relations, force that is plunging the world into an abyss of permanent conflicts. As a result we do not have sufficient strength to find a comprehensive solution to any one of these conflicts. Finding a political settlement also becomes impossible.

We are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the basic principles of international law. And independent legal norms are, as a matter of fact, coming increasingly closer to one state’s legal system. One state and, of course, first and foremost the United States, has overstepped its national borders in every way. This is visible in the economic, political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on other nations. Well, who likes this? Who is happy about this?"


It seems that a lot of US / UK companies involved in freelance security (Blackwater) and any involved with manufacture of WMD (made in the West i.e. BAE) ...

"However, today we are witnessing the opposite tendency, namely a situation in which countries that forbid the death penalty even for murderers and other, dangerous criminals are airily participating in military operations that are difficult to consider legitimate. And as a matter of fact, these conflicts are killing people – hundreds and thousands of civilians!"

Double standards... us.. cant be ...

"Did not our country have a peaceful transition to democracy? Indeed, we witnessed a peaceful transformation of the Soviet regime – a peaceful transformation! And what a regime! With what a number of weapons, including nuclear weapons! Why should we start bombing and shooting now at every available opportunity? Is it the case when without the threat of mutual destruction we do not have enough political culture, respect for democratic values and for the law? "

I suppose he can use the word peaceful, compared to the way we bring democracy and peace to IRAQ and AFGANISTAN.

I am waiting for other leaders to stand up against the pressures of the US, apparantly the UK cannot stand up for itself. Far be it from our useless government to stand up and say something is wrong, when it is obvious to most of the planet...


Speech at the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy

The UK Welfare State

The Welfare State

Although set up with the best of intentions, it has become a bureaucratic nightmare. The more successive governments tinker with it the more of a nightmare it becomes. Not only does it take a veritable army of civil servants to administer, it is virtually incomprehensible to the average person.
The majority of households are now in receipt of some kind of benefit, for the average tax-payer this is merely redistribution of their own income, all done at enormous expense.

A Minister appointed by New Labour to ‘think the unthinkable’ lasted just one year. The situation was nicely summed up on the television programme ‘Wife Swop’. An unemployed couple with eight children are receiving £37400 a year tax free in benefits (equivalent to a taxed salary of £70,000). The second couple, both of whom worked, had a combined income of £27,000. Couple two struggled to make ends meet while their counterparts spend £70 a week on bingo and £140 on cigarettes, in spite of having two children with chronic asthma.

Another example concerns a couple, neither of whom have ever had a job, receiving over £1,000 a month in benefits plus free housing. The female, aged 23, is expecting their fifth child and her partner, aged 19, says it would not be fair if he worked and left his partner to cope with the children. Apparently it never enters his head that it is unfair for everyone else to fund him. They are now looking to be re-housed in a larger property.

The Child Support Agency, again set up with good intentions, is a disgrace. The only absent fathers being targetted are those in permanent employment and steady relationships. The rest are able to run rings round the system because of an apparent inability to keep track of them. This, in spite of the fact they must have a National Insurance Number in order to work. The Agency now operates a system of fixed percentages of a man’s income as child support based on the number of children.

The courts invariably decide on child-care arrangements. Return to them the setting of maintenance based on the CSA system. The money could then be allocated by adjusting the tax codes of both parties. The CSA could then be abolished. Non-working carers could be paid the allowances through the tax credit system.

The above is far too simple a solution for our politicians, they are now replacing the CSA with a similar outfit that will no doubt prove to be just as bureaucratic and incompetent.

Lone parent families were 8% of the total in 1975 but now total 26% and rising. This has been exacerbated by government policy that skews the benefits system in favour of single parents. Since Labour came to power in 1997 the welfare budget has risen from £95bn to £121bn. Most of the increase has been due to the introduction of the tax credit system which cost roughly the equivalent of 2p on income tax.

It now pays to be a single parent rather than a married one. In some instances a
couple with a modest income would be £50 per week better off if they lived
separately. No wonder Britain is the divorce and single parent capital of Europe.

Since Labour came to power there has been an increase of 38% in the number of people claiming incapacity benefit (could this be because the payment is much higher than unemployment benefit? Perish the thought). There are 2.4 million claiming incapacity benefit and a further 2.7 million on other health related benefits. None of these are included in the unemployment figures.


The future of welfare reform



The welfare state needs to be policed at the top as well



Single parents could lose benefits unless they work

The Palestinians Plight

When mentioning the Middle East, any conversation will end up concerned with Israel vs Palestinions.

Do we remember this day ?

"Earlier, Fatah legislator Saeb Erekat said after a meeting with Abbas that the party has already decided to serve in the opposition. "Hamas will be asked to form the new government," Erekat said. "We in Fatah will not join them. We will be a loyal opposition and rebuild the party."
Abbas, who favors peace talks with Israel, has said he would resign if he could no longer pursue his agenda. Aides said he planned a major speech Thursday night.
Israel and the United States have said they would not deal with a government led by Hamas, which has carried out dozens of suicide bombings and which they consider a terrorist group.
Acknowledging the Hamas victory, Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia and his Cabinet ministers resigned Thursday — hours before official results were released.
"This is the choice of the people. It should be respected," Qureia said. "If it's true, then the president should ask Hamas to form a new government." The Cabinet remained in office in a caretaker capacity.
By law, Abbas must ask the largest party in the new parliament — presumably Hamas — to form the new government. Abbas was elected separately a year ago and remains president. "

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2006-01/26/content_515857.htm

Unfortunately Fatah was never really ready to release the reigns of power, the corruption continued and the West tried its best to cripple the whole country, not that we condone 'collective punishment'. I am sure there is mention of rules against that sort of thing in International Law, but that only applies to other countries.

But the last thing we would want is Hammas to compromise with Israel and try to restore Law and Order in their territory.

Who ever heard of "The right to resist occupation" anyway. I guess it depends on the occupiers!

Here are a couple of posts worth a read...

Palestinians agree to peace talks



Gaza: The Auschwitz of our Time
Largest detention camp in the World

Ahmadinejad - Iranian President

For the first post on this new blog, i would like to be about the Iranian President.

A lot of mis-information is quoted regarding this person and translations that have been proved incorrect are still quoted by the west to this day.


Ahmadinejad, the son of a blacksmith, was born in Garmsar, near Tehran on October 28, 1956. In 1976, he took Iran's national university entrance exams (konkoor) to gain admission into Iran's top universities. His test score ranked him 132nd among over 400,000 participants that year,[17] landing him at the Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST) as an undergraduate student of civil engineering.

After the Iranian Revolution, he entered the Master of Science program for civil engineering in 1984. In 1989, he became a member of the Science faculty at the university where he had studied.[18] In 1997, he received his Ph.D. in transportation engineering and planning from the Science and Technology University. Even after being elected President, Ahmadinejad continued living in a simple apartment flat and eating meals brought from home, in his office. Both of these traits contributed to his widespread support amongst the poorer classes of Iran.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahmoud_Ahmadinejad

Full transcript: Ahmadinejad interview - 13th September 2007 (CH4 News)

Interview


Iranian President challenges Bush to a debate

Bush would not be up for it, unless he had received the questions at least a month in advance and then still wouldnt.

World to Rights - New Blog

This blog has been created to try and discuss various subjects that have been known to cause many arguments. These subjects relate to local and world issues.

After various emails on these subjects, it is clear that many people hold either out of date or very right wing opinions. Also, even if we are untouched directly by some things, people can have very strong opinions that end with a heated debate.

Sometimes, people state facts that that create tension and then feel that they may have to back down or walk away, because (a) it gets too deep and they start mis-quoting or (b)they dont know enough to carry on.

So here comes the 'blog' a chance to collect your thoughts and not mis-represent yourself by saying something in the heat of discussion.