Saturday, May 29, 2010

KHOODEELAAR! TOLD the BBC so! That it was one of the most persistent sources, couriers of fabrications, lies and untruths for the Govt of the day. That it fabricated lies for Crossrail. That it continues to fail and refuses to publish the truth about the bogus transport infrastructure project that has been peddled for years at the expense of existing transport needs in and around London. So it is really galling of BBC online to appear to give credit to the Daily Telegraph on 'exposing' David Laws’ expenses fiddle while taking a swipe at 'the other papers’, which had prematurely praised David Laws! CRASS role by BBC here! The BBC should admit that Khoodeelaar! carried out a far more comprehensive and telling exposé’ on Alistair Darling paying £100 million to the bogus CLRL in December 2005 under the bogus Section 6 of the Bogus and the corruptly enacted ‘Railways Act 2005’! Why hasn’t the BBC been admitting that and investigating and updating on that? [To be continued]



    0725 Hrs GMTLondonSaturday29 May 2010







    KHOODEELAAR! TOLD the BBC so! That it was one of the most persistent sources, couriers of fabrications, lies and untruths for the Govt of the day. That it fabricated lies for Crossrail. That it continues to fail and refuses to publish the truth about the bogus transport infrastructure project that has been peddled for years at the expense of existing transport needs in and around London. So it is really galling of BBC online to appear to give credit to the Daily Telegraph on 'exposing' David Laws’ expenses fiddle while taking a swipe at 'the other papers’, which had prematurely praised David Laws! CRASS role by BBC here! The BBC should admit that Khoodeelaar! carried out a far more comprehensive and telling exposé’ on Alistair Darling paying £100 million to the bogus CLRL in December 2005 under the bogus Section 6 of the Bogus and the corruptly enacted ‘Railways Act 2005’! Why hasn’t the BBC been admitting that and investigating and updating on that? 

    [To be continued]



    Newspaper review: Premature praise for minister Laws

    Papers
    Had it not been for the Daily Telegraph exclusive on the expenses claims of Chief Treasury Secretary David Laws, he would have been able to take comfort from the praise offered by other papers for his role in the government.
    Writing in the Times, Matthew Parris says the Liberal Democrat minister is "calm, deft and strong on detail".
    Patrick O'Flynn, chief political commentator for the Daily Express, says when David Laws spoke in the Commons he "instilled belief in the coalition among the Conservative awkward squad".
    Taxing question
    David Laws gives an interview to the Times, which took place before the Daily Telegraph scoop on his expenses.
    He acknowledges that concerns raised by Tory MPs about plans to raise Capital Gains Tax are "very real".
    The Daily Telegraph and Daily Mail warn the rise will harm people on middle and lower incomes who do not want to rely on the state when they retire.
    The FT reports the proposal has led to a raid on gold - UK-minted bullion coins are exempt from the tax.
    Public anger
    The Independent profiles Tony Hayward, the embattled chief executive of BP who continues to grapple with task of plugging the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
    The FT says he has become "the target for rising public anger in the US".
    The Independent says he is managing to "retain his composure" even as the pressure mounts from President Obama.
    A BP insider tells the paper his boss "has shown nerves of reinforced steel". Nevertheless, the Independent warns him that "time is running out".
    Peer pressure
    "Arise Lord Two Jags" announces the Daily Express, as the former deputy prime minister accepts a peerage.
    It and the Daily Mail cannot help but remind John Prescott it comes two years after he said he did not want to be a member of the House of Lords.
    The Mail reports that Mr Prescott is giving up on "class war" because he wants to make a Lady of his wife.
    A Labour source tells the paper: "It's not really John's scene - Pauline is a different matter."

    KHOODEELAAR! Telling Vince Cable to exit the faltering CONDEM COLLUSION fast.




    0215 [0205] Hrs GMT
    London
    Saturday
    29 May 2010


    Editor © Muhammad Haque

    KHOODEELAAR! Told the London EVENING STANDARD so! Now, it attempts to admit part of it. More to follow this "Laws expenses blow rocks coalition”.

    We reiterate the truth: the CONDEM Collusion is based on the premiss of fundamental fakery and fraud. It is based on the cheap marketing ploys touted and touted for by Nick Clegg via that TV Debases! They were not 'debates'. They were DEBASES. Debasing the ordinary, universally understood good faith of the residually alert members of the UK electorate and watching, viewing public.

    They were taken for a ride. A ride made almost exciting in context by the totally barren, empty regime that the remnants of the Bliared regime represented from their political bunkers behind No 10 Downing Street London SW1.

    We were not impressed at the charade that was on.

    We have not been impressed by the post-nupital exhibition of vulgarity and dishonesty.

    We reiterate the unplugged Vince Cable's unsuitability as 'the star' [the fraudulently conceived phrase that UK CON D Cameron used to flatter the confused Vince Cable seriously deflated before any real work is done on the OTT-hyped deficit reduction with any credibility whatever].

    Cable will not be a start for much longer.

    In fact he will be entering the career and power equipment of the star chambers soon.

    Unless he shows any metal and exits out of the Collusion fast. Now.

    Vince Cable has shown his loss of direction by distancing himself from his Party role this week. Not very good omens at all…







    [To be continued]


    Laws expenses blow rocks coalition




    Sponsored links

    Ads by Google

    Contractors can take home up to 88% from contract work safely

    Recommended Defamation Solicitors. Find Legal Experts Near You - Free!

    Maximise Your Contractor Earnings Free Umbrella Company Calculator

    Training videos, manual & updating For law firms or accountants

    The new coalition Government is engulfed in its first crisis after Chief Secretary to the Treasury David Laws was forced to apologise over parliamentary expenses running into tens of thousands of pounds.
    The Liberal Democrat Cabinet minister's job looked to be hanging in the balance after it emerged he channelled more than £40,000 of taxpayers' money to his long-term partner.
    He claimed up to £950 a month in expenses for five years to rent rooms in two properties owned by lobbyist James Lundie. Parliamentary rules ban MPs from "leasing accommodation from a partner".
    On Friday night Mr Laws - who this week promised public spending curbs that would send "shockwaves" through Whitehall - apologised and announced that he would "immediately" pay back the money in the wake of the Daily Telegraph's disclosures, as well as referring himself to the parliamentary standards commissioner.
    The Yeovil MP also chose to 'out' himself as gay - although the newspaper stressed it had not intended to reveal his sexuality. "James and I are intensely private people," he said in a statement. "We made the decision to keep our relationship private and believed that was our right. Clearly that cannot now remain the case. My motivation throughout has not been to maximise profit but to simply protect our privacy and my wish not to reveal my sexuality."
    Since 2006, Parliamentary rules have banned MPs from "leasing accommodation from a partner.
    Mr Laws - a millionaire former City banker - insisted: "At no point did I consider myself to be in breach of the rules which in 2009 defined partner as 'one of a couple... who, although not married to each-other or civil partners, are living together and treat each other as spouses'. However, I now accept that this was open to interpretation and will immediately pay back the costs of the rent and other housing costs I claimed from the time the rules changed until August 2009."
    He added: "I regret this situation deeply, accept that I should not have claimed my expenses in this way and apologise fully."
    Mr Cameron has previously made a point of taking a hard line on expenses abuses among his own ranks, while Lib Dem leader and deputy prime minister Nick Clegg has boasted that his party emerged unscathed from the scandal.
    The episode will also be the first test of how Mr Cameron and Mr Clegg co-operate over man management. Under the coalition protocol that has been hammered out, Mr Clegg must be "fully consulted" before any Lib Dem minister is removed from a government post.

    KHOODEELAAR! Told you so! It was a matter of time, nay, of weeks, not even months, before the CONDEM COLLUSION would be exposed for what it was, a collusion. Nick Clegg in this evening’s [Friday 28 May 2010] exposure done by the Daily Telegraph is losing a big leg in a bigger way than those TV Debases and those stunts would ever allow to be even imagined. We looked at the evidence and we put the facts in context and we concluded that Clegg was faking it big time. We recall Cleggie's boasts staged in the UK House of Commons in the months before the 6 May 2010 staging, to the effect that his Party, the Lib Dumbs, did not indulge in the expenses fiddles that MPs [and peers] from the other 'parties' had done! What a lie! What an insult! How dare the fakers fake so furiously! We say: "David Laws! Best he goes!" He is faking it even in his later, longer statement that the BBC is retailing. The Daily Telegraph was NOT going to talk about Laws' private life! David Laws has not shown he can even learn! We safely ‘product’ that the ‘new’ Treasury Team will make an abysmally crass Big Biz touting mess over the CRASSrail scam. They will essentially keep it! Unless there is an unpredictable overturning of all the Treasury propensities overnight and the Treasury shows it has learnt to at least stop faking…..[To be continued]



    2255 Hrs GMT 
    London 
    Friday 
    28 May 2010. 
    Editor © Muhammad Haque. 

    Khoodeelaar! has been telling you so about the irresponsibility of causing debts as part of the agenda pushed by Big Business. On rare occasions, the mainstream [!] UK Media let in the truth. Only rarely. So we recognise those rare occasions. Here is Nigel Nelson in the London SUNDAY People discussing how the deficit could be cut.  We have run this before mainly because in his list of the dispensable big costs projects was Crossrail. A year a two months on, the principles that Nigel Nelson followed in his piece hold true. As do the wider principles which the KHOODEELAAR! campaign has been advocating for coming on to 7 years now. This NIGEL NELSON piece was published in March 2009. "BLACK HOLE COSTS YOU pounds 25,000; EXCLUSIVE  Here's how they might claw it back 0 Comments | People (London, England), The, March 22, 2009 By-line: By NIGEL NELSON Political Editor  EVERY British taxpayer faces a debt of pounds 25,000 to pay for Alistair Darling's borrowing binge.  New forecasts say the Chancellor needs to splash out pounds 704billion on the nation's credit card over the next five years.  That will leave each taxpayer with a bill equal to the current UK average wage, say economists Ernst & Young.  And it will be FIVE times the amount of debt run up over the last five years, which worked out at just pounds 5,000 per taxpayer.  The predictions from forecasting group the Item Club say Mr Darling will need pounds 180billion this year alone, exceeding his own estimate by pounds 62billion.  Most Popular Articles Health: What does your headache mean? Can shame tame cons? Legend of Lewis Carroll has dark side Ambrose Evans-Pritchard talks about secret life of Bill Clinton A death in Orange County shatters California dreams Most Recent Articles They are so significant because the Item Club uses the same forecasting model as the Treasury.  Shadow Chancellor George Osborne said: "This is the worst fiscal mess any British government has created in peacetime.  "Tax receipts have collapsed but there is a great deal of scope for spending restraint."  Lib Dem Treasury spokesman Vince Cable added: "Spending will rise sharply over the coming months as unemployment surges.  "And the steep fall in output will continue to reduce tax revenues."  Last week the International Monetary Fund said the UK will have to borrow 11 per cent of national income this year, the most of all the world's top G7 industrialised nations. Ernst & Young say it will be 1.6 per cent WORSE.  Item Club chief economist Peter Spencer said: "The outlook is bleak. The Chancellor must present an unambiguous plan for restoring the public finances to health.  "We are all going to find ourselves paying a lot more tax once the recovery begins and our children will be paying that tax for a very long time to come."  The researchers say Mr Darling must now pump more cash into manufacturing to save jobs.  In April's Budget he is expected to cut taxes to encourage spending, as The People said last week.  But once the recession is over the Government will have to claw the money back. And we have some suggestions, see right, for doing it.  For instance Mr Darling could RAISE tax by 5p, SCRAP the Crossrail plan for new London train links or SUPPLY school meals free to cut obesity in kids.   "