Lets put everyone on a ration  

Posted by Lamont

Children shunning veg in school canteens

Almost half of vegetables served to primary school children are going to waste, despite a Government drive on healthy meals, according to research.

 

The Government's School Food Trust, which carried out the research, admitted that "more needs to be done" to encourage pupils to finish eating healthy food served in canteens.

Researchers also found that starchy food cooked in fat was served more than three times a week on average – above strict guidelines.

But the trust, which was set up to drive Labour's healthy-eating campaign, insisted that lunch standards had significantly improved.

Children were more likely to choose fruit, vegetables and salad than they were five years ago, the study said, and fewer were consuming fatty food and savoury snacks.

Ministers launched a crackdown on unhealthy school meals after it emerged that pupils were regularly being fed chips and reconstituted meat, such as Bernard Matthews' Turkey Twizzlers.

The sale of high-fat and sugary food was restricted in canteens and vending machines following the disclosure.

In the latest study, researchers examined what food was chosen and eaten by almost 6,700 children at 136 primary schools in England – six months after the introduction of new mandatory nutritional standards in September 2008.

Under new legislation, every pupil should get two of their "five a day" servings of fruit and vegetables from their school lunch.

The study found three-quarters of children aged five to 11 were choosing vegetables or salad – or both – with their lunch, compared with 59 per cent in 2005.

But it also found that large amounts of healthy food went to waste.

Some 40.7 per cent of vegetables were uneaten, while 32.6 per cent of salad and 32.7 per cent of fruit was left.

By comparison, only 14 per cent of baked beans and 20 per cent of high-starch food cooked in fat was wasted.

The study said: "This suggests that more needs to be done to encourage pupils to finish eating the vegetables, salad and fruit which have been taken."

In total, around 24 per cent of pupils' food and drink was wasted, the study concluded, compared with 23 per cent in 2005.

The report said that pupils were taking and eating healthier lunches now than in 2005, and that the meals on offer had "changed substantially for the better".

Judy Hargadon, the trust's chief executive, said: "Caterers across the country deserve an enormous pat on the back for the huge shift in what's being offered to children, and for all they've done to encourage pupils to give healthier options a try.

"The figures certainly show that there's still a lot of work to do, both in fully meeting the standards across the board and in encouraging children to eat what's on their plate, but everyone involved with school food in primary schools can feel very proud of what's been achieved so far."

According to the trust's latest figures, only four-in-10 primary pupils and a third of those in secondary schools eat a cooked lunch.

Mandatory new nutrient standards mean that an average school lunch must contain at least one portion of vegetable or salad, and one portion of fruit. Fat, sugar and salt is restricted and each meal must contain minimum levels of nutrients including iron, zinc, calcium and vitamins.

didn't they do this in 1936?  

Posted by Lamont

Now Labour recruits army of child spies to report anti-social neighbours

 

Child spies will be encouraged to report their neighbours as part of the latest drive to cut thuggery and anti-social behaviour on estates.

As part of a campaign launched yesterday, youngsters will look for residents with untidy or litter-strewn surroundings and then try to persuade them to clean up their homes.

Children involved should also write to authorities to demand action against those whose houses are labelled anti-social, ministers recommended.

 

Big brother: Children are being urged to report cases of antisocial behaviour on estates in a campaign to prevent child crime

Using young people to target residents identified as letting the neighbourhood down 'teaches the children a sense of pride' and shows them they have the power to get things done, the Department of Communities and Local Government said.

But critics warned that anti-social behaviour on estates is routinely committed by children and recruiting school-age youngsters to report their neighbours is a recipe for intimidation.

'A plan like this can easily be milked by young people,' criminologist Dr David Green of the Civitas think-tank said. 'I worry that it would become a licence for children to harass people.'

The child spy scheme was launched by Communities Secretary John Denham and Home Secretary Alan Johnson, who called for 'an army of community champions to challenge anti-social behaviour'.

 The plan is to be backed by leaflet drops to ten million householders across 130 areas of the country affected by violence, vandalism and gang activity. It follows growing disillusion with Labour's decade of campaigns to reduce anti-social behaviour and a widespread perception that Asbos have been ineffective in deterring youngsters from crime.

Ministers said the child spies idea had been tested in Nottingham, where volunteers had 'got young people themselves involved in challenging anti-social behaviour and learning that they do have the power to get things done'.

The Communities Department said that under the system children 'spotted problems' in their neighbourhood and then wrote letters to the authorities to demand action.

In one instance, it said young people identified untidy gardens, these residents received letters from the housing manager and 'as a result these gardens have been tidied by residents'.

Mr Denham said neighbourhoods had been transformed by volunteers and hoped 'their example can inspire many others to get involved'.

But Dr Green said: 'There is a risk here that the same people who break up your car will then complain that you have left a wreck outside your house.'

● Snoopers could be given cash rewards for identifying benefit cheats under controversial plans being drawn up by ministers. They are considering whether informers should be given a share of the money saved.

Ministers believe offering incentives for reporting cheats will be a powerful tool in the battle to tackle benefit fraud, which costs taxpayers around £1billion a year.

But privacy campaigners called the idea 'immoral and dangerous'.



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1249769/Children-spy-bad-neighbours.html#ixzz0f7OjiYaQ

give me liberty or ..?  

Posted by Lamont

How grotesque to see MPs hide behind their ancient freedoms when they've spent the past 13 years trampling on ours

 

The irony of the situation would be richly comic, were it not at the same time so profoundly offensive.

Three Labour MPs (and one Tory peer) have been formally charged with fiddling their expenses. So what defence are they seeking to use? The centuries-old Parliamentary Privilege law which allows them to speak freely in parliament.

It beggars belief. For in truth, no government in history has done more to undermine the ancient concepts of civil liberty and freedom of speech than Labour in its past 13 years in office.

 

Defence: Three Labour MPs and one Tory peer have been suspended over their expenses claims. They hope to use the centuries-old Parliamentary Privilege law

Perhaps because so many of these infringements on our traditional rights have been linked to the fight against terrorism, the general public - currently more preoccupied with keeping their jobs and paying bills than their civil liberties - have quietly gone along with the changes.

As a result, there's a real danger we're all going to wake up one day in a country where state control is the rule and close personal surveillance the norm to such an extent that we might as well be in communist China or Eric Honecker's East Germany.

Arrest

Our emails will be read, our telephone conversations listened to and our every movement monitored by CCTV. And if we try to protest, we're likely to be bundled straight into a police cell and left there.

Do I exaggerate? I don't think so; having trained and practised as a criminal barrister before going on to writing scripts for legal dramas such as Kavanagh QC and New Street Law, I am steeped in what I learned from day one at university: that the right to silence, freedom from arbitrary arrest and the concept of innocence until proven guilty were all absolute and inviolable.

 

Nevertheless, two decades on I now find myself living in a country where terrorist suspects can be locked up for 28 days without any evidence, where the results of the postmortem of Dr David Kelly, the former weapons inspector, can be kept secret for 70 years and where vulnerable individuals such as Gary Mackinnon can be extradited to the United States, despite the complete absence of proper reciprocal extradition arrangements with that country.

Truth is becoming far stranger than the fiction I have spent the past ten years conjuring.

It's not quite all the Labour government's fault; the right to silence was actually eroded by the Conservative administration in 1994 which, having borne the brunt of IRA terrorist attacks for so long, passed the Criminal Justice And Public Order Act which allowed juries to infer anything they wished, including guilt, from a defendant's failure to give an account of himself.

It may sound sensible, but has there been any increase in criminal convictions? No.

Since then, however, it's been Labour doing the damage, as it certainly did with the Criminal Justice Act 2003, which gave the courts power to order a nojury trial where there was real evidence that jury tampering might take place. The first trial of this kind is now under way, ending a right to trial by jury that goes all the way back to Magna Carta.

What is worrying about this (apart from the clear inference that the police aren't up to the job of protecting jurors) is that, until now, British juries have been able to return whatever verdict they wish, regardless of the letter of the law, the direction of the judge or even the wishes of the government.

In other words, it enshrines the right of British subjects to be the judges of their peers. Jury-less trials take it away.

The Coroners And Justice Act 2009 does similar damage to the ancient principle of coroners' inquests being held in public. The traditional understanding has been that we all have a right to know how any unnatural death occurred.

But now, if the Lord Chancellor - currently Jack Straw - so desires, a politically uncomfortable inquest can be avoided and a secret inquiry, with no jury, no publicity and no public scrutiny, held in its place.

So the next time a top government scientist is found dead in an Oxfordshire field or an innocent Brazilian is shot on the London Underground, we may never find out why.

Even freedom of speech, perhaps the most precious liberty of all, has come under attack. Once again, it's been sacrificed in the name of the fight against terror, with the creation of offences such as the 'encouragement' and ' glorification' of terrorism.

Where will it end? Such is the madness surrounding these so-called 'hate crimes' that old ladies are visited by the police for writing in objection to a Gay Pride march, while Tony Blair was investigated by the police for allegedly shouting 'f****** Welsh' at his television as he watched election results coming in.

Suspects

Faced with stories like that, it's tempting to smile and think that no damage is being done. But it is. Thanks to the Terrorist Act of 2000, innocent tourists and amateur and professional photographers alike are being treated like criminal suspects by the police - simply because they are taking photographs in what have been deemed sensitive areas.

And yet conversely, the Government has absolutely no compunction about taking photographs of us just about anywhere it likes. Its traffic cameras track our journeys by car, while CCTV cameras monitor just about every step we take on foot.

When the next generation of cameras comes in, detailed enough to allow facial recognition, Big Brother will know where we are almost from the moment we step out of the front door.

As for what we get up to indoors, the vast computer currently under construction at GCHQ, designed to intercept all our emails and telephone conversations, will take care of that. It's the equivalent of the secret police steaming open private letters.

Intolerant

Add in serious curbs on the right to protest, the prospect of biometric passports and increasing limitations on the freedom to express one's religious preferences at work, and it is difficult to see in what sense we remain a 'free' country.

 Fiction: John Thaw played Kavanagh QC on screen - but truth has become stranger than fiction in Labour's Britain

Like many, I would rather live with the moderate risk of terrorism than endure the suffocating safety of an intolerant surveillance state.

Magna Carta says: 'No freeman shall be taken or imprisoned or be disseised [illegally dispossessed] of his freehold, or liberties, or be outlawed, or exiled or any other wise destroyed; nor will we not pass upon him or condemn him, but by lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land. We . . . will not deny or defer to any man either justice or right.'

Now and again in history, definitive words are written which stand good for all time. Those agreed at Runnymede don't need amending, they need implementing; before Britain forgets what true freedom is.

They are words that all MPs - not only those now seeking so cynically to hide behind their own ancient legal rights - would do well to scrutinise



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1249539/MPs-expenses-Hiding-ancient-Parliamentary-Privilege-law.html#ixzz0f7NFIFv6

climate change  

Posted by Lamont

here are some recent ADVERTS about act on co2,  think it would be interesting to see what you guys think, these are some of the millions the government has spent on adverts.

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA9656 the bedtime story one.

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA4097 carbon footprint one

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA4790 climate change

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA9910 drive 5 miles less

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA9835 drive miles less 2

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA10163 drive miles less 3

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA7349 energy saving bulbs

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA8098 green cars

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA7375 roof insulation

http://www.tellyads.com/show_movie.php?filename=TA7317 wasting electricity

Full Body Scanning  

Posted by Lamont in

Well yet another step upon the loss of human rights. The body scanner devices have been made compulsory, first it makes me think about airplane 2, and the scanners there.

Second this is a  step along a short road of loss of human rights.  I am tempted to if i was going to fly, to if they want me to go to the scanner i will say  ok just one moment and strip off naked, whats the difference.

I feel like a stranger in my own homeland. Theres the control of us, by the state, the stop drinking, stop smoking, stop eating so much, eat less salt,  and so on.. we are in a police state, we are worse than china, we have more surveillance than china, we cant even take pictures of our own landmarks, under section 44 of the terrorism act.

These laws will NOT stop terrorism, i can see just off the top of my head, ways around it. and i am not the cleverest.

These new body scanners, there were problems with human rights and possible pedophilia, and the government said we wont do it. Isnt it a massive coincidence that there was an attack and it would have been "stopped"  if these scanners were on, and they are now in.. what an amazing coincidence.