Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iraq. Show all posts

Superbug pandemic confirmed

Back in April last year, I revealed that the world was in danger of being overrun by the latest superbug Americanus 4nPolyC.

Well, I am sad to have to announce that in recent weeks the disease has reached pandemic status.

The bug has already been responsible for thousands of deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, and there are unconfirmed rumours of an outbreak in Iran.

The recent events in Tunisia indicate that there may be the start of an outbreak there, and over the past week there have been many cases reported in Cairo. The authorities in Egypt have confirmed that there have been a number of deaths reported.

A spokesman for the international health organisation 'Mediciens sans Scrupulo' says that nothing much can be done under the prevailing circumstances and believes that regimes must change in order to bring this bug under control.

So far, the only country that seems to be uneffected is the United States. A White House representative told us : "4nPolyC has so far not worried us in the US. We believe that we have the finest system in the world for dealing with things and if everyone else did it our way, then the world would be a better and safer place."

Doctors warn that there may be a danger of the disease mutating into something far more worrying. Already another strain 4nCIA may already be in situ in other countries...
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The murder of David Kelly

Nobody is ever going to convince me that UN weapons inspector  Dr. David Kelly was not murdered.

What makes me even more suspicious is that the inquest into his death was suspended and never resumed.

Lord Hutton concluded that "the principal cause of death was bleeding from incised wounds to his left wrist which Dr Kelly had inflicted on himself with the knife found beside his body".

But now some very knowledgable and eminent people are calling for the case to be reopened. Nine experts including Michael Powers, a QC and former coroner, and Julian Blon, a professor of intensive care medicine, said in a letter to the Times that the official cause of death – haemorrhage from the severed artery – was "extremely unlikely" as "insufficient blood would have been lost to threaten life."

Now prominent politicians, including former Tory leader Michael Howard and labour leadership hopeful Dianne Abbott, have called for the inquest to be resumed.

Furthermore, Hutton made a ruling to keep medical reports and photographs closed for 70 years. He said that he had made the gagging order to spare Kelly's family "unnecessary distress".

Bullshit. This is sparing no-one but the guilty. What you smell is a good old fashioned political cover up.

New Labour's house of cards has already collapsed around its ears and this whole affair reeks of the sort of manoeuvre that Francis Urquhart would have been proud of. The state cannot hold itself out to be above the law.

Something needs to be done about this right now...
READ MORE » The murder of David Kelly

War - a fresh perspective

Seems there have been one or two fuck ups lately on the warfare front.

First, Nick Clegg stands up in his first Prime Minister's Questions and describes the Iraq War as 'illegal'. Oh dear. Sharp intakes of breath from the Tories behind him who voted for the war.

It should, however, be remembered that the Lib Dems have always regarded the war as illegal. It should also be remembered that just because someone voted for the war, that didn't make it legal. Show me the dodgy dossier and persuade me that Blair has integrity (difficult in my case), and I might have voted for it. But that still doesn't make it legal - so I reckon fair enough, Cleggy.

Then Call-me-Dave pops across the water to liaise with the great black hope. Unfortunately, he then pisses off the yanks by describing Britain's presence in Iraq as a 'supporting role'. True, but not very palatable. It's America's war, they're fucking it up and we seem to be covering all the difficult stuff. Truth hurts!

But just to show that he's not biased, Dave then pisses off his own veterans by saying that Britain played a junior role in World War II. Well, Dave, that's bollocks because if the Japs hadn't bombed Pearl Harbour we'd still be waiting for the yanks to arrive - just like in the first war.

So, all in all, I reckon that's 2-1 on the war front. Not a great result, but a result nevertheless...
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The Manifesto Song 2010




Click image to play

I've decided that we should commemorate manifesto week with a musical look back over Labour promisses of the recent and distant past just to prove that nothing has really changed at all. Some of these posters are classics!



Who could forget that great manifesto of 1997? After all, don't forget that "Things can only get better"...

Suggestions for other songs I can butcher in my own inimitable way are always gratefully recieved

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Tony and Wubya go to Baghdad

So at last we know. Tony Blair has appeared in front of the Chilcott enquiry and has told us all what happened in the lead up to the Gulf War. Or has he?

Much seems to have been said about the legality or otherwise of going to war in Iraq. It transpires that dozens of lawyers in the foreign office advised the then Foreign Secretary that in their opinion taking military action against Saddam Hussein would be illegal without a further UN mandate. It would also seem that the Attorney General agreed with this view, so how did we end up going to war?

Enter Tony Blair. With his usual customary lawyer's skills and much gesticultaion, he told us in considerable detail pretty much nothing at all. It seems that he was quite happily go to war and had assured our good friend Bush that should America decide to invade Iraq, the British Army would be right behind him. This is quite wise as the worst possible place for anyone to stand is in front of the American Army - unless you want to be shot at...

So was the Iraq war illegal? - and in any case does it really matter? Perhaps we should be concentrating not so much upon the presentational skills of a trained lawyer who we all know to be a master of spin, and concentrating more upon whether or not the war was morally justified in the first place. It is true that Saddam Hussein had access to chemical weapons and is quite clear that he was prepared to use these as he had already used them against his own people. Clearly the sexed up dodgy dossier's claim of an imminent delivery method for these weapons was grossly exaggerated, but at the same time it is but a short step to making these weapons available to international terrorists.

This is a compelling argument and yet it is not one that appears to have been put forward. Rather Mr Blair's justification for the debacle that has turned out to be the aftermath of the Iraq war was simply that Saddam Hussein needed to be removed because he was "a bad man".

Whilst it is difficult to argue the case for Saddam being a good man, one wonders why this same argument is not used against other tyrants such as Robert Mugabi. The cynical amongst us would perhaps suggest that the main reason for the initiation of the war in Iraq was not to remove a "bad man" but for Dick Cheney to regain control over the oilfields which Saddam nationalised. This argument certainly explains why we have never invaded Zimbabwe. After all, there is no oil there.

Many questions have been asked about exactly when Blair agreed with Bush that Britain would stand shoulder to shoulder with the United States. I suspect that we will never know the exact timing of this agreement.

But the most worrying thing about this week's events in the Chilcott enquiry, in my view, is Mr Blair's insistence that it was "the right thing to do" and he would have no hesitation whatsoever in doing it again. Such deeply held conviction is seriously unnerving.

So we should be grateful that this dynamic duo is no longer in power. There never was an exit strategy for Iraq and Obama would appear to be coming clean that he has a long-term mess on his hands. Whilst Mr Blair is no longer in situ, we are saddled with a Prime Minister who was happy to go along for the ride and to ensure that he could pick up the reins when the time came.

The change of President in the United States and has been a breath of fresh air, and perhaps the same thing will be said of Great Britain after the forthcoming election. While Obama received an overwhelming mandate from his people, we should remind ourselves that Gordon Brown was never elected by anybody. In a democracy this cannot be healthy. Let's either give Brown a mandate or kick him out. This would, after all, be "the right thing to do"...
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