Tag Archives: David Cameron

David Cameron's Porn Filter Problem Has Already Been Solved

By Tim Worstall, Contributor I must admit that this rather surprised me with the speed that it came about. Non-British readers might not be aware that David Cameron, our Prime Minister, has been adamant that search engine companies must make certain that no pornography can be found on the internet. This is, as you will imagine, something of a taxing technical task. But in that great British tradition of bodging and innovation we seem to already have the solution to this problem. And it’s being offered for free too: So taking inspiration from other great Internet filtering nations such as North Korea, China, Syria, Iran, Cuba, Bahrain, Belarus, Burma, Uzbekistan, Saudia Arabia and Vietnam I decided to help out the UK government and build an Internet filter that only allows pornographic material through. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Cameron's Bizarre Warning To Google, Bing and Yahoo Over Child Pornography

By Tim Worstall, Contributor There are times when I’m not sure that the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, actually understands this technology stuff. An example is this threat in a TV interview in England today. He’s huffing and puffing that if the search engine companies don’t do what they’re told then they’ll be forced to by law: “I have a very clear message for Google, Bing, Yahoo! and the rest. You have a duty to act on this and it is a moral duty,” he will say. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Satan Makes History Twice This Week

By Rev Michael Bresciani

Satan SC Satan makes history Twice This Week

Centuries of British nobility has turned the corner for the worse. In spite of the British Coalition for Marriage having seven times as many supporters as the conservative party, David Cameron and Queen Elizabeth II are proudly announcing the right for gays to marry in England. The gays and the liberals are ecstatic, but the rank and file across the island nation is repulsed and sickened.

Sir Gerald Howarth, a former government minister, said Britain had no right to re-define marriage; and he said it was an “absolute parliamentary disgrace.”

Nobility and disgrace is a perfect non-sequitur on display in the parliament and the apostate Church of England (Anglican). This announcement brings home, in full clarity, the meaning of the last day’s prophetic warnings of the Bible.

The warning of scripture is that, because the nations choose the prurient, the perverted, and all that opposes the commandments of God, they will be given over to reprobation to prepare them for their own judgment and the last day’s tumults and dark days. To use the most fundamental language of biblical theology – it is Satanic, and it will bring judgment.

Britain’s ignominiousness has been outshined only by America’s contumaciousness.

At about the same time the queen announced her favor for the gays, Rolling Stone magazine published the picture of Boston bomber suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in full color with dazzling air brushed quality on the cover of their latest edition. Famed musician Ted Nugent, who made the cover of RS himself in 1979, said RS produces mostly dope-inspired leftist tripe, and he blasted the magazine for its cover.

Nugent said, “It is important the young readers of RS know how a fellow dope smoker lost his mind and doped his way into the evil, brain-dead Islamist terrorism and the horror he wreaked on innocent Americans.”

Rolling Stone once adorned their cover with a picture of Charles Manson; we can only imagine that they will be perfectly willing to publish the face of the antichrist, when as prophecy promises, he arrives to turn the world completely on its ear.

Those who still trust their bibles know that Satan has many faces, and his doctrine and message have many modern faces and voices.

This writer, along with a myriad of others, is willing to risk being labeled just another bible thumping, right wing voice decrying the world’s plunge into everything evil to declare that we are allowing all that is nascent to lead us into the ancient prophecies of the second coming of the Lord Jesus Christ and the judgment of nations.

From Christian sites on the backwaters of the internet to the voices of our best known preachers and prophets, the warnings are faithfully forwarded to a lost and dying world. The advice is simple, but profoundly important; take heed.

The Apostle Peter charged all believers to ‘take heed,’ but especially as we see the last days approaching. Peter emphatically warned that ‘prophecy’ was the key that alone could keep us from failing as these dreadful times unfold. To wit:

“We have also a more …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Old Coal Plants Raise New Dilemmas

By Richard Martin, Contributor

Since its coal-fired boilers were shut down permanently in 1983, the Battersea Power Station – one of London’s most iconic structures – has been the subject of several different redevelopment schemes, all of which have failed.  The Art Deco monument, with its four tall chimneystacks set against the south London sky, has essentially been abandoned for three decades.  Earlier this month the latest redevelopment plan, from the plant’s current owner, a Malaysian firm called SP Setia, was kicked off by British prime minister David Cameron. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Cameron in Germany for talks on European reform

Britain’s prime minister has arrived for a two-day visit in Germany where he will meet with Chancellor Angela Merkel to discuss European reform.

David Cameron has offered a referendum on whether to leave the European Union if his party wins the next election. Despite his plans to renegotiate Britain’s relationship with the EU, which are viewed with skepticism in Berlin, Merkel spokesman Steffen Seibert praised the two leaders’ strong relationship, “which matches the close friendship and partnership with Great Britain.”

Cameron, accompanied by his wife and children, is expected to discuss “all aspects” of European reform, along with the upcoming Group of Eight summit in Ireland and the conflict in Syria, according to Downing Street.

The Camerons will stay Friday and Saturday at government guest house Merseberg near Berlin.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/4vAC4hOF-ho/

World mourns Thatcher, 'a great Briton'

Global leaders expressed praise and admiration Monday for former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as news spread of her death. Today’s British leader, David Cameron, summed up the consensus from friend and foe alike that the Iron Lady was “a great Briton.”

“As our first woman prime minister, Margaret Thatcher succeeded against all the odds,” Cameron said in Madrid as he cut short a trip to Spain and canceled a visit to France to return home to lead funeral preparations for the longtime leader of his Conservative Party.

“The real thing about Margaret Thatcher is that she didn’t just lead our country, she saved our country,” Cameron said, “and I believe she’ll go down as the greatest British peacetime prime minister.”

As flags across the United Kingdom were lowered to half mast, Buckingham Palace said Queen Elizabeth II would send a private message of sympathy to the Thatcher family.

Across Europe and the world, leaders lauded Thatcher for her steely determination to modernize Britain’s industrial landscape — even at the cost of violent strikes and riots — and to stand beside the United States as the west triumphed in the Cold War versus the Soviet Union.

In Poland, Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said his country should erect a statue of the British leader. In a tweet he praised Thatcher as “a fearless champion of liberty, stood up for captive nations, helped free world win the Cold War.”

Former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who ousted the Conservatives from power seven years after Thatcher’s resignation, conceded that Thatcher had been right to challenge labor union power — the traditional bedrock for Blair’s own Labour Party.

“Very few leaders get to change not only the political landscape of their country but of the world. Margaret was such a leader. Her global impact was vast,” said Blair, who credited Thatcher with being “immensely supportive” despite their opposing views on many issues.

“You could not disrespect her character or her contribution to Britain’s national life,” Blair said.

Discordant notes came from Northern Ireland and Argentina, where Thatcher’s reputation for unbending determination received early tests — when breaking an Irish Republican Army prison hunger strike in 1981, then leading Britain into a 1982 war to reclaim the Falkland Islands from Argentine invaders.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

When Will the Government Sell Shares in Lloyds and Royal Bank of Scotland?

By Tony Reading, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

LONDON — There’s been a distinct change of mood music about prospects for sale of the government‘s holdings in Lloyds   and RBS  . Twelve months ago, the chances of any sale were downplayed. Now both are being openly speculated about.

A sale of some of the government‘s shares should be a big boost for the shares. When might we see some action, and what form might it take?

Tell Sid
It seem pretty clear that David Cameron wants to do something concrete before the 2015 General Election. It would show that the financial crisis is finally being solved, and free the government from the headaches of bank ownership.

All kinds of scenarios have been bandied about. A plan to distribute shares in both banks to all holders of national insurance numbers has apparently been discussed in the Treasury. The complexities of adding 40m-plus investors to the share register would dwarf the logistics of the famous British Gas “Tell Sid” mass privatizations of the 1980s, and to my mind make it a non-runner.

But with politics driving the privatization, there’s a good chance there’ll be some form of public subscription. It would help the government to fudge how much tax-payers lost on the whole bail-out debacle. And it might even serve as a form of “helicopter money,” one of the more extreme options that have been floated for getting the economy moving.

Institutions
For the banks and their existing shareholders, institutional appetite is more significant. Institutions would probably buy new shares, strengthening the banks’ capital. Under its present governor, at least, the Bank of England is still keen to see higher capital levels.

Both Lloyds and RBS have made good progress on restructuring. Last year Lloyds shed $40bn of distressed assets against a plan of $25bn, while RBS is predicting that this will be the last year of substantial restructuring. With PPI and LIBOR settlements largely behind them and hints of resumed dividend payments, the banks are starting to look more attractive to institutions.

RBS: the political football
RBS is the bigger political football, with the government owning a controlling 82% interest.

Management has been swift to respond to the owner’s new rhetoric. Chairman Sir Philip Hampton has said he hopes a sell-off could start as early as 2014, and CEO Stephen Hester has made similar bullish remarks.

Perhaps they perceive that if there’s a political imperative to do something next year, it’s better to be making the running themselves. The government would find it much harder to interfere in RBS‘s business once further shares had been sold.

Lloyds: moving the goalposts
If the government and management are playing political football at RBS, they’ve moved the goalposts at 40% state-owned Lloyds.

CEO Antonio Horta-Osorio’s bonus will pay out if the government sells a third of its shares at more than 61 pence. That’s well below the 74 pence the government paid. But arcane accounting means that 61 pence, the level Lloyds was trading at when it was bailed-out, is the price at which the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

EU Budget Dashes Energy and Efficiency Hopes

By Christopher Coats, Contributor

Those hoping for a bit of energy sector relief from Brussels were dealt a lousy hand with the passage of the European Union’s reduced spending budget earlier this month. Setting aside nearly $10 billion less than proposed for a fund dedicated to transport, telecom and most importantly, energy, the new budget represents the first EU budget cut in its existence. If the late night outcome is any indication, the UK’s austerity-minded David Cameron clearly has gotten his way. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

PM Cameron visits Amritsar – but no apology

By hnn

David Cameron has been criticised for failing to meet the families of Indians killed by British troops as he tried to make amends for a “deeply shameful” Imperial massacre.

The Prime Minister invoked Sir Winston Churchill as he lamented the “monstrous” killings in Amritsar in 1919.

Mr Cameron flew to Amritsar at the end of a trade visit to Delhi and made a public show of British contrition over the massacre, which left at least 379 Sikh civilians dead.

The Prime Minister visited a memorial in the Jallianwala Bagh gardens, laying a wreath and writing in a book of remembrance….

Source:
Telegraph (UK)

Source URL:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/9882090/David-Cameron-makes-historic-visit-to-Amritsar-but-stops-short-of-making-apology.html

Date:
2-20-13

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

These 5 Davos Takeaways are Getting Buzz

By Mark Fidelman, Contributor The trouble with the World Economic Forum and its annual conference in Davos Switzerland, is that they do a poor job of summarizing the main trends, conversations and sentiment about its attendees. Instead they rely on the press and individual observers to convey their own individual accounts. More often than not, they are subjects that most of us don’t care about or misrepresent the majority opinion. What a wasted opportunity. Because of that, I turned to KPMG International and their World Economic Forum Live Twitter aggregation and data visualization service to provide us the key trends and insights from the conference’s world leaders, celebrities and CEOs. Here are the top 5 insights: 1. A lack of women (17% of the total) at the conference caused a stir but were able to have their voice heard anyway. Almost 35% of the social media conversations involved women. 2. “Young Global Leaders” #ygl were the subject of many conversations. In fact much was made of the ability for young leaders to connect and work with each other to cause positive change. 3. British Prime Minister David Cameron caused an uproar with his speech on how the European Union must change or the UK may return to an island state. 4. Global economy appears to be in recovery – delegates optimistic. At least that was the sentiment of delegates at the conference. But George Soros was a notable pessimist. 5. Delegates discussed how to adapt to social technologies and finally seem to recognize its importance in world affairs. While the media delegation to Davos averaged three retweets for every tweet they posted (1,936 tweets to 5,629 retweets), ‘Public figures’ averaged 17.5 retweets for every tweet they posted (433 tweets to 7,591 retweets), including Mario Monti (78 retweets, 16 replies), Christine Lagarde (89 retweets, 95 replies) and David Cameron (79 retweets, 47 replies) — demonstrating the power of social media to enable the public and political leaders to engage more directly. David Green, Global Head of Digital Marketing, KPMG International summarized it this way: “this data shows the power of social media to enable the public and political leaders to engage more directly. There is now greatly transparency around, and public engagement with, important events such as Davos. Business and individuals alike have a chance to air their views on the issues that matter, as the discussions happen.” So, yes, Davos delegates are out of the mainstream. But there’s no doubting the importance of the attending leaders and their conversations. These are the business and government kingpins that are making big decisions that impact the rest of us. So it was refreshing to see how active some of these leaders were on Twitter because we could tune in from afar. Indeed, transparency is a good thing. Let’s hope the rest of them get the message.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Hunt for lost Spitfires comes up empty

By David Piper

The hope was to find scores of the famed British Spitfire planes buried at the close of the second World War in Burma.

But despite spending more than a million dollars to fund the search so far all that has been found in the trenches they’ve dug has been rusting metal.

The quest for the buried Spitfires that American engineers are believed to have buried in large crates in several locations in Burma in 1946, started in earnest a couple of weeks ago after years of trying to track them down.

It was the brainchild of an elderly English farmer and businessman, David Cundall, who has put his life savings into his 17-year hunt for the planes, which helped win the Battle of Britain against Nazi Germany.

He is leading the current team of archeologists, geo-physicists and representatives of the sponsors, video game company Wargaming.net.

But there is now a danger of a war of words breaking out amongst the group over not finding any Spitfires.

Some of the archaeologists working at the dig at Rangoon airport say that the evidence they’ve seen doesn’t support the claim that the historic aircraft, believed to number over 130, are hidden below ground.

A news conference planned in Rangoon on Thursday to highlight their initial findings was hurriedly cancelled after the dig at the airport was halted after they found electricity cables underground where they were excavating, rather than the 36 aircraft they hoped for.

Team leader David Cundall publicly voiced his disappointment at the progress. “The digging went incredibly slowly and I made my opinions known,” Cundall said.

And he questioned whether they were digging at the right place.

“The archaeologists weren’t digging in the area we believe holds the Spitfires, instead they wanted to see what sort of war remains were buried.”

Some on the team have already openly questioned if the aircraft were there, suggesting it wouldn’t have made sense to bury them rather than destroy them after the war because there was very limited earth moving equipment in Burma at that time.

But Mr. Cundall has staked his reputation on finding the Spitfires and has used eyewitness accounts by military personnel in the country at the time to back up his claims.

91-year-old war veteran Stanley Coombe says he witnessed the American and British engineers bury the Spitfires and he’s still optimistic that aircraft can be found.

“It’s been a long time since anybody believed what I said until David Cundall came along,” he said.

Cundall believes there were no orders to take the Spitfires back to Britain at the end of the war and they just disposed of them by burying them.

But so far all they have come up with are rusting metal and bundles of electricity cables.

The reason there is so much interest in the current excavations in Burma is because there remains a huge demand to see the Spitfires at aircraft shows, military fly pasts and at museums.

But there is only 30-40 still able to fly out of the 15,000 produced during the war.

If more than a hundred could be recovered from buried crates in Burma it would be a dream for aviation and military enthusiasts and they would likely be in great demand if they could be made airworthy again.

Interest in the lost Spitfires even went as high as the British government.

There were problems dealing with the secretive military dominated government of Burma to get approval for the excavation team and only the intervention of British Prime Minister, David Cameron, on a visit last April to try to improve relations between the West and this southeast Asian country, to finally get the approval.

Under the deal, Burma‘s government will get half of all those recovered.

A company headed by Cundall will get 30 percent and his local partner 20 percent.

So far all the parties involved have got a percentage of nothing because of the failure to discovery a single Spitfire.

Despite friction in the team it looks likely the hunt for the aircraft will continue.

“We haven’t stopped [searching] and we cannot stop,” Soe Thein, a retired Burmese geology professor who has been helping in the search told the Associated Press.

“It is just a delay in our work.”

Two other sites have still not been excavated at all and they are still hopeful about an excavation in the Kachin state capital Myitkyina where a crate has been discovered, but muddy water has stopped them identifying its contents and will take weeks to pump out.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News