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Police violence and Tomlinson death more important than silly emails

It seems that politicians and the media are getting more concerned over a couple of schoolboy emails about Tory politicians than the death of innocent bystander Ian Tomlinson after a beating by the police at the G20 rally just two weeks ago.

As predicted by The Citizen, the police ‘investigation’ has turned into a sham and no doubt there will be a fudged outcome where nobody gets blamed and nobody is held responsible.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (about as independent as any of these jumped-up quangos are from their masters in government and the civil service) can’t seem to find any CCTV evidence of anything, even though millions of us have seen images on TV which cannot be disputed.   It has taken the IPCC several days even to get to this stage, when other investigations into excessive police violence – but where nobody actually died – were instigated within 24 hours.

It does no credit to the police force or the IPCC that while the offending police thugs have supposedly ’stepped forward’, they don’t appear to have been decent or honest enough to own up to their violent beating of a British citizen going about his business, and which is highly likely to have been a direct cause of his death.

WE SAW what was done to Ian Tomlinson.
WE SAW at least one of the policemen removing his identification badge and covering has face with a balaclava before beating Mr Tomlinson.
WE SAW – in newspapers and on TV – the testimony of various independent witnesses to police attacks on the man.  People not involved in the protest rally. People from other countries with no axe to grind against the police.

People who – unlike our own policemen – have no reason to lie.

WHAT MORE DOES THE IPCC WANT?

We must not let the police off the hook on this. Nor let minor political squabbles get in the way of justice being done for this unfortunate man or for the violence which he suffered in the final hours of his life to go unpunished.

Government and the police need a clear message from us that police violence on innocent citizens exercising their democratic rights is simply not acceptable.

Please don’t let this case be swept away in a tide of indifference. We all need to stop this from becoming even more the norm than it is already.

IT COULD BE YOU – OR YOUR OWN SON OR DAUGHTER – NEXT TIME.

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Nazi police stormtroopers subdue democratic protest

Police Nazis corraling a small crowd at the Bank of EnglandNever a rabid protester in the past, and never one to kick up much of a fuss in public…
I wanted to express my disgust at the mess the bankers and politicians have created for us yet again, and went along to lend a bit of support to the G20 protests in the City of London yesterday.

An ordinary, middle-aged, working-class white male, wanting to try and change things for the better in my own small way.  After all, it’s a democracy we live in, isn’t it? Aren’t we supposed to be good citizens and participate in the decision-making process rather than sit at home in front of the telly, never voting and never taking part as full members of the society in which we live?

When it comes to the next General Election, they’ll be imploring us to vote and take part, maybe even collect us and give us a lift to the polling station to get our vote. They LIKE us to care about our country and get involved, don’t they? Or is that only when it suits them?

Read more of Nazi police stormtroopers subdue democratic protest »»

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G20 march and rally – be there

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G20: don’t assume they’ll get it right this time, either

It’s all very laudable – world leaders getting together to defeat a global economic recession which they managed to create for us in the first place.

But shouldn’t we and the other nations be sending people who actually KNOW what they’re doing? 
We’ll give Obama the benefit of the doubt for the time being, and he’s the Americans’ problem anyway.
In Britain, we continue to assume that our own elected representatives are competent enough to manage our finances and complex economy, otherwise we wouldn’t vote for them, would we? 
We assume they’re able to tell good advice from bad, because…er, well, because they’re our leaders and that’s what leaders do, isn’t it?

Assumptions are dangerous.
We ASSUMED they knew what they were doing when we elected them and they promised us ‘no more boom and bust’.
We ASSUMED they had enough common sense to know that when banks lend £billions in 100% mortgages on stupid multiples of income and ’self-certification’ of earnings to people who can’t afford them, then house prices are going to go through the roof and the balloon’s going to burst eventually.

Was nobody in government – or ‘Her Majesty’s Opposition’ – bright enough to know this basic fact of life?
It truly beggars belief that nobody in parliament could see this coming, when most of us knew it was all too good to be true, and too good to last.

We could put it down to incompetence on their part… or we could put it down to taking the cynical decison to ignore all obvious warning signs in the desperation to stay in power and pretend that it’s a global issue. The head-in-sand philosophy, or ‘admit nothing / deny everything-and-it-will-go-away’ approach to governing the country.

Nor does it matter whether it’s Brown or Cameron or the leader of any other party.
Our ancient parliamentary system which is designed to protect politicians, civil servants and the monarchy from its own citizens means we are stuck with self-seeking politicians and a ruling elite rather than effective managers and leaders.

We choose personalites, political parties and their ‘manifestos’ slavishly, rather than honest professionals and specialists in their field who will make decisons based on sound principles, not political dogma. 

When was the last time a politician did anything positive and successful for our economy?  Something which is long-term and sustainable, and which serves the best interests of the majority of citizens rather than big business, bankers, fat cats and political party donors?

The answer to that one is never – it’s always been a question of spending money on some bright spark’s manifesto promises rather than a measured approach to the country’s needs and priorities. This means it’s always ‘fire-fighting’: short-term, ineffective and wasteful.
And while we persist in allowing our country to be run in this way, it never will.


So are you expecting something positive to come out of the G20 ’summit’?    

Don’t hold your breath.

 

 

G20 - the blind leading the blind


 


 

 

 

 

 

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