-Caveat Lector-


Begin forwarded message:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: January 21, 2007 11:49:53 PM PST
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Where Is "V" When the UK Needs Him?



Blair Set To Radically Enhance

British Police State

While the non-debate over who'll be Britain's next leader continues, Blair aims to cement the Big Brother agenda before he leaves

Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Wednesday, January 17, 2007

A series of policy review documents have been published today by the Cabinet Office of the British Government that detail Tony Blair's desire to implement radical "crime tackling" measures that would not look out of place in the most hellish of dictatorship states on the face of the planet.

Blair has said that measures including microchipping the mentally ill and injecting sex offenders with hormones to negate their desires, so called "chemical castration", are aimed at ensuring that a "new New Labour" agenda will take the Government into the next election after he steps down.

Blair announced that the measures were intended to shake up a public that are "getting bored" of the government.

One document, entitled Crime, Justice And Cohesion, says there will have to be "trade-offs" between liberty and security as technology and profiling are used to tackle crime.

The policy paper also calls for the possible implementation of technology such as face and voice recognition, a DNA database, identity cards, and satellite surveillance.

The papers come at a time when Blair is fiercely defending plans to centralise data on all citizens, calling it "sharing data in a sensible way so the customer gets a better service", while critics and opposition MPs are labeling it "a database from the cradle to the grave".

The plans for a central database are nothing new, we have previously highlighted the long term agenda to centralise information into one giant hub that will link into the already existing DNA database and hook up to a national ID card.

Without ANY parliamentary debate or legislation, every person in this country is being targeted for inclusion on a DNA database from birth. Hundreds of thousands of children aged between 10 and 18 have had their DNA added to the database despite never being cautioned or charged for any offence.

The British government has also passed legislation to make every offence arrestable. Under Section 44 of the Terrorism Act, this includes not giving your details if stopped by police. Every suspect arrested, even if proven innocent, has their DNA added to the criminal database and stored forever in perpetuity.

Meanwhile EU officials are crying out for a massive pan-European network of DNA and fingerprint databases which would also be open to the Department of Homeland Security in the US. This does not bode well for anyone who values privacy given that the UK, the most advanced big brother state, is also the biggest critic of such a project.

Medical records would be stored on the database also, as well as on an implantable chip that may be given to anyone considered to be mentally unstable. Under the new mental health act you can be sectioned for mild depression.




Take the recent case of Anna McHugh, who visited her GP after a failed intensive cycle of IVF treatment. She admitted that she was a little depressed and needed some help.

Four hours later she found herself admitted to St Pancras Hospital. Then, having admitted to the attending doctor that she had contemplated suicide, she was sectioned under Section 5.2 of the Mental Health Act and detained in a lock-down ward. When her husband tried to rescue her, she was held in a headlock while a doctor discussed her case with him.

In light of this and many other cases, is it so far fetched to imagine people being forcibly implanted with microchips under the mental health act?

The government doesn't seem to think so.

The paper also notes how Switzerland prescribes heroin rather than the substitute methadone to addicts and prisoners in Texas are forced to wear pink T-shirts to make them look gay.

Blair will be proud to see these things and more associated with his legacy in Britain.

---------------------------

"THOSE DAMNED PROLES!"  (Can State-Run EUGENICS be Far Behind?)

21 January 2007 23:36

The Government is ... concerned about the growing divide

between a fat, depressed underclass and a slim-line elite ...


By Marie Woolf and Francis Elliott

03 December 2006

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article2035175.ece
It's a big fat figure -- and it is getting bigger each year. Britain's worsening obesity crisis is already costing the country £3.3bn annually, a bill that will expand along with our ever- increasing waistlines.

The entire developed world may be putting on weight. But Britain is piling on the pounds faster than most -- a trend confirmed by the fact that our children are among the most obese in the world.

While the economic costs of Britain's obesity crisis are alarming, its social consequence could be catastrophic.

A government study commissioned by Caroline Flint, the public health minister, predicts how a fat, depressed underclass is set to sprawl beneath a slim elite. And Britain's children are at the forefront of this social revolution.

"Trends indicate there may be continued polarisation of the population, into the junk food-eating, less-educated poor and functional food-eating, better-informed higher classes," warned a report by the Foresight Programme in the Office of Science and Technology.

The future of the NHS itself is at stake. Once health insurance firms vary premiums by weight, how long will a divided nation support a health service swamped by the poor and obese? It is little wonder ministers are prepared to risk accusations of "nannying" in their efforts to get individuals to change their behaviour.

This week, GPs will be asked by the Government to hand out questionaires to all patients visiting their surgery. The surveys are designed to establish just how unfit and overweight the nation is.

Most people in the UK fail to meet the Chief Medical Officer's recommended guidelines of half an hour of moderate activity at least five days a week. Children should spend an hour exercising every week if they are to fend off the threats of obesity, heart disease and diabetes, but an increasing number are settling in front of the television with a packet of crisps instead.

Physical inactivity costs the nation £8.2bn a year, for example, in lost work days and NHS bills. This week Sport England will publish a survey indicating just how inactive we are. The survey of 364,000 people will show which areas of the country are the most sporty and which age groups are most likely to participate in sport.

Efforts are already under way to save the next generation. One of the most successful pilot programmes to cut weight was run by Hastings and Rother Primary Care Trust, which used a £200,000 health service grant to set up programmes aimed at teenage girls, "overweight and sedentary children" and teenage mothers.

The Girls Getting Active programme, aimed at 10- to 16-year-olds, built physical activity into fashionable and social programmes, including street dance classes. "We wanted to appeal to girls who might not be very sporty, for example with trampolining and power walking and games," said Hayley Martin, Local Exercise Action Pilot (Leap) physical activity co-ordinator at the Trust.

For older people, the thought of signing up for football or hockey after work is deeply unappealing. Some may have been turned off sport at school, and it is this group that often shies away from sporting activities in later life, leading to a host of problems including diabetes, depression, hypertension and heart disease.

Health experts have been trying for years to send out the message that remaining healthy need not involve competitive sport but can be achieved through a host of everyday activities, including walking. To reinforce this message, the National Institute of Clinical Excellence will this month publish a report on how people can integrate moderate exercise into their daily lives.

The health watchdog is expected to recommend that, instead of taking the lift, people climb the stairs or carry the shopping home instead of leaping into the car for a five-minute trip.

There is some room for optimism. A government pilot scheme to get people involved in physical activity has proved an overwhelming success. The Department of Health has invested £2.5m in programmes to get "priority groups" - including overweight children and the inactive elderly - to increase the amount of activity they undertake.

Using novel means to make physical activity fun, the pilots across the country have invested in boxing and tango dance for the over-50s, street dance programmes for teenage girls and "twister on the beach" parties.

The results from Leap have shown a dramatic improvement in the amount of exercise people took. A report to be published this week will show that 60 per cent of participants who were classified as either sedentary or lightly active achieved the Chief Medical Officer's recommended guideline of being moderately active after participating in Leap.

What really convinced the Government that the programme, run by NHS trusts, should be extended across the country is that it showed "physical activity interventions are cost-effective and can save the NHS money in the long term by reducing ill-health".

The programme was designed to improve not only physical but also mental health. Now the Government is to urge local trusts to invest in such programmes. Admirable as these initiatives are, the odds are against them turning the situation around completely. There is -- as yet -- no example anywhere in the world of an effective national programme that has reduced obesity rates.

According to the Foresight Programme: "There are no proven, national-level precedents for action to reverse obesity. We found insufficient evidence of effective programmes that have reduced obesity ... Indeed, we were told that these do not exist."

Dr Stephen Morris, of the Health Economics Research Group at Brunel University, and an expert on obesity, agrees that there is very little evidence that such policies work. "Initiatives like dance classes on the NHS are probably cost-effective if people actually take any notice. Policy-makers like to suggest advice because advice is cheap. But how many of us have paid the £400 joining fee for a gym and gone three times? The problem is there is very little research as to what interventions actually work."

Looming in the background is the issue of compulsion. If people won't take advice and cannot be tempted from their sofas by dance or football classes, should we start forcing them to be active? The notion is not as outlandish as one might think: ministers are seriously considering forcing parents to accept that their children should be weighed in what will amount to a compulsory obesity screening programme.

This summer the Department of Health announced plans to weigh all children in England when they start primary school, and again when they leave, as part of the Government's campaign against obesity. The results of the survey have not yet been released, but at a Department of Health seminar last week, officials admitted that fewer than half of the children had been measured.

Additional reporting by Martin Hodgson

--------------------------

Smokers and alcoholics 'should pay for operations'

"A poll by the British Medical Journal found that 40% of doctors believed that overweight people, smokers, and drinkers should be denied medical treatment."

Sarah Hall

The Guardian (UK), June 29, 2006
http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,,329516628-110418,00.html

Smokers who need heart bypasses and alcoholics who need liver transplants should not get them free through the National Health Service <state-sponsored medical insurance plan>, according to four out of 10 hospital doctors. A quarter of those questioned in a survey also believe obese patients should not be given free anti- obesity drugs or receive free orthopaedic treatments.

The majority also oppose free gender reassignment and cosmetic surgery, and a third believe that patients suffering from infertility should have to pay for IVF (in vitro fertilisation) treatment.

The findings emerged in a poll conducted by the medical pollsters Medix for the Hospital Doctor newsletter sent to all 70,000 hospital doctors.

It comes amid increasing awareness of drug rationing - provoked by the "postcode lottery" over the breast cancer drug Herceptin - and of financial constraints imposed by the NHS's £1.3bn deficit. It follows a smaller poll earlier this year for the British Medical Journal which found that 40% of doctors believed that obese people, smokers and heavy drinkers should be barred from treatments.

At present, doctors are supposed to oppose treatment only if there is a clinical reason for doing so, such as a patient being so obese that there is too great a risk of their dying if they undergo surgery. But financial reasons were cited by one primary care trust, East Suffolk health trust, last year as it barred obese people from having hip and knee operations.

The survey, of 663 doctors, reveals that only 42% believe that alcoholics should receive liver transplants on the NHS, with 41% opposing this. Nearly half believe that smokers should be able to have heart bypasses on the NHS, but 37% do not, and 13% are undecided.

Only 63% believe obese patients should be given free anti-obesity drugs, and only 59% believe they should receive orthopaedic treatments such as hip and knee replacements. More than three- quarters back charges for herbal medicine and homeopathy treatments and 63% fees for cosmetic operations such as breast reductions, nose jobs and varicose veins.

Nearly a third (31%) believe elective caesarean sections should be paid for. Opinion is split on IVF, with 33% saying patients should bear the whole cost, the same number believing it should be partially subsidised and a quarter saying it should be provided to those with significant need. At present, infertile couples are meant to have one free cycle on the NHS.

Comments from those surveyed suggest frustration with patients treated after excessive smoking or drinking and a demand that they take responsibility. One doctor said: "In a health insurance culture, a habitual smoker who suffers a [heart attack] or lung cancer should expect to 'pay' a premium for their lifestyle." Another said: "There is no point in putting joints into very obese people or doing vascular surgery again and again if the obese patient has not shown efforts at weight reduction before the op, or if the vascular patient demands to smoke his first post-op cigarette on day one."

But Chris Spencer-Jones, chairman of the BMA's public health committee, accused such colleagues of wanting to "ration healthcare on the basis of prejudice".

"Most taxation is paid by poor people, many of whom smoke, are obese and drink too much, and we should be helping rather than criticising them. The public health perspective is very clear: we don't blame people."


Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/";>ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to