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OBJECTIVE

HOLISTIC AND NATURAL HEALTH


Web Journal Friday 15th September 2006

Fri Sep 15 16:07:39 BST 2006: "We'll just have to learn," said one of those carrying out the surveillance technology abuse minute-by-minute indicating the ongoing experimental character of this activity using a nonconsenting human guinea pig 24/7 for eight years and one month now. They haven't brought about death with the lethal use of this surveillance technology, so they will continue the experiment in all its aspects while learning the best way to kill. Makes "Pretexting" positively attractive doesn't it? This is "social engineering" taken to its extreme.

This generally represents some kind of excuse when SR or BS deliberately destroy some activity of mine on the computer technology such as locking a system which just occurred a short while ago or using surreptitious medication to an excess wiping me out for a while which also just occurred a short while ago. They know exactly what they are doing but want to pretend that some kind of accident happened to hide their malicious use of the surveillance technology. They are more "Pretenders" rather than "Pretexters." In either case it is subterfuge but the former is lethal while the latter is innocuous. Each, however, invades privacy. It's a question of degree, accountability and responsibility.

1. The former Secretary of State for Defence and now Europe Minister Geoff Hoon says Blair should go sooner rather than later fanning the sparks some more keeping this issue alive.

BBC News Friday, 15 September 2006, 13:29 GMT 14:29 UK

Blair must go sooner, says Hoon

Geoff Hoon
Geoff Hoon says Mr Blair should "go out on a high" and not cling on

Labour could be "in a very bad place" at the next general election if Tony Blair does not quit as leader by May, Europe minister Geoff Hoon says.

The party faced being "wiped out in a lot of places" in elections for English councils, the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Assembly in 2007, he added.

This could create a dangerous "air gap" for Labour and allow a Tory recovery, he told the London Evening Standard.

Downing Street said Mr Blair was focusing on "getting on with the job".

The prime [sic] has said he will stand down within a year, with allies stressing that May is a likely date, to coincide with the polls being held on the third day of that month.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5348554.stm

2. Everybody's creeping in from the fringe as time shortens for those in power. Now Harriet Harman of some notorious recent history relating to her hubby being the Labour Party Treasurer during the recent campaign "loan problems" takes up the challenge to campaign for the deputy leader post "should that become vacant." She's only one of three so far should there be a vacancy.

BBC News Friday, 15 September 2006, 17:06 GMT 18:06 UK

Harman intends Labour deputy bid

Harriet Harman
Ms Harman wants a woman to be at the top of government

Harriet Harman, the Constitutional Affairs minister, has confirmed she will stand for deputy leader of the Labour party when it becomes vacant.

The 56-year-old is the first woman to enter the race for the position.

Ms Harman, the MP for Camberwell and Peckham in south London, said there needed to be a woman involved in the government's decision-making process.

Tony Blair has said that he will stand down as the party's leader "within the next 12 months".

Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain has already announced a challenge for the deputy leadership, when a vacancy arises, while Labour backbencher and ex-Downing Street aide Jon Cruddas has said he is also considering a bid.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/5350360.stm

3. This Labour Government manages for votes which is the central factor in carrying out the 24/7 surveillance activity against me for over eight years. I am just one vote, but many votes can be gained in this Labour Ward with its Labour Member of Parliament from all those others involved. This also is reflected by the tight tenant management local control, and the clashes between the Lancaster West Estate Management Board (EMB) and the Tenant Management Organisation (TMO) both of whom are creatures of the Council.

The EMB has power but not accountability or responsibility while the TMO has accountability and responsibility but not power. The local tenant management (EMB and TRA) create an enemy by pandering to the local elements, and they have the power to sustain a vigilante mobster activity against me with the surveillance technology in local control. Decisions are made in the interest of votes and not standards by this Labour Government as noted below.

Times Online Friday 15th September 2006 10:30 am BST update

Labour 'manipulated hospital closures'

By Nigel Hawkes, Health Editor

A secret meeting has been held by ministers and Labour Party officials to work out ways of closing hospitals without jeopardising key marginal seats, The Times can reveal.

Concerns about the political impact of planned hospital closures and other cuts to the NHS, which had a deficit last year of more than £500 million, prompted ministers to organise the closed-door discussion. Details of the meeting, revealed in e-mails passed to The Times, show that it included Hazel Blears, the Labour chairman, political advisers from No 10 and even — at the request of Ms Blears — a Labour Party representative.

Opposition politicians said yesterday it was "deeply inappropriate" that party officials should have had an influence over plans drawn up by civil servants for changes in services on medical grounds. They also expressed concerns that hospitals in Tory constituencies were more vulnerable.

Reacting to the Times story, Rosie Winterton, the Health Minister, this morning denied that Ms Blears had any influence on the planning of health "reconfigurations".

Ms Winterton told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "First of all, let’s be clear that Hazel Blears, as chairman of the party, within Cabinet, will want to know about what is happening in terms of the politics of some of this, will want to know what is happening.

"It isn’t about Hazel Blears having any influence over the decisions that are taken. That would be quite wrong and that doesn’t happen."

The e-mails show that Patricia Hewitt, the Health Secretary, called for those at the meeting to be provided with "heat maps", showing marginal Labour seats where closures or reconfigurations of health services could cost votes. She also asked for lists showing hospitals where the European Working Time Directive is likely to hit hardest, making 24-hour rotas hard to sustain.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,17129-2359540,00.html

4. And then, of course, Unison members vote for a strike against the NHS run by this Labour Government as described below. They aren't stupid. They know what's going on.

BBC News Friday, 15 September 2006, 13:45 GMT 14:45 UK

Union names date for NHS strike

Stethoscope
NHS Logistics supplies medical equipment and food to the NHS

The first national strike in the health service for 18 years is to go ahead next Thursday.

The health service union Unison announced hundreds of workers in the agency NHS Logistics will walk out for 24 hours.

The protest, over the sell-off of the network to German firm DHL, could lead to English hospitals running short of vital equipment.

But the government said it believed any impact would be limited.

A second 24-hour strike is also planned, the date of which will be announced early next week.

Further industrial action will follow.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/5346652.stm

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