Tuesday, February 28

The Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill; Some Questions HM Government might wish to avoid answering:
by
ContraTory
on Tue 28 Feb 2006 10:08 GMT
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Why does the Bill change the current procedures for the enactment into our law of EU legislation?
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What guarantees are there that the Bill could not be used to bring in the EU Constitution by the back door?
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If the Bill is just a simplifying measure for deregulation, why does it contain no requirement for any orders to actually reduce the amounts of red tape and regulation?
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Why does the Bill give the power to create new law, including new criminal offences, to the Law Commissions, which are unelected quangos appointed by Ministers?
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If the Law Commissions are supposed to be staffed by impartial technical experts, why are Ministers taking the power to amend the recommendations of the Law Commissions before they are fast-tracked into legislation?
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Why do protections in the Bill against new laws to permit forcible entry, search, seizure or compelling people to give evidence not apply to reforms recommended by the unelected Law Commissions appointed by Ministers?
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If the Bill allows Ministers to “amend, repeal or replace legislation in any way that an Act might”, does this not give them an unlimited power to ignore a democratic Parliament and legislate by decree?
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If the Bill is so sensible, why has Parliament used a different way of making laws for 700 years?
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If the Bill is meant to retain Parliament’s ability to scrutinise regulations and regulators, why does it not contain a provision for automatic sunset clauses in orders issued under the Bill?
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If the Bill gives Ministers powers to charge fees by decree, is that not a charter to bring in unlimited stealth taxes?
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As the Bill permits an order to be made by a Minister under the Bill provided its effect is “proportionate” to his “policy objective”, since when in our history as a democratic country has a Government Minister’s “policy objective” directly received the force of law?
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What guarantees are there that the Bill could not be used to bring in ID Cards by the back door?
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Why does the Bill give the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Assembly a veto over Ministers’ power to change the law which it denies to English MPs?
For more “stuff” about this Bill, see Right Links
Sunday, February 26

The silencing of opposition by terror
by
ContraTory
on Sun 26 Feb 2006 22:15 GMT
Those amongst us who resort to the threat or use of violence to win an argument number a few score and their supporters, no more than a few hundred. Yet such is the climate of cowardice in Europe, that rather than to face them down we appear to seek to appease them. It was depressing to read the article of Douglas Murray in The Sunday Times today (26th February 2006) which seems to suggest that Holland is being cowed by Islamic fundamentalists. Is this the same Holland that fought for freedom successfully against the invincible Spanish in the 16th and 17th centuries and allied with the Austrians and English in the early 18th century, successfully resisted French hegemony in Europe? Apparently, it is.
The threat posed by these “Islamic” terrorists is nothing as compared with the armed might of Spain or Louis XIV’s France. The Dutch did not flinch against the Spanish or French and if the challenge ever arose again, they would not do so in the future, either. The problem is that whereas it is easy to mobilise against an aggressive foreign power, it is not so easy when dealing with an aggressive cancer in your own society. Dutch silence is not a sign of weakness or of submission but of indecision. How do you deal with your own nationals who do not wish to live by your rules, but theirs? It is their democratic right to agitate for a society in which they wish to live and in which they wish us to live.
The Dutch know the answer is simple, though unpalatable. At the risk of alienating their minority Muslim population and perhaps provoking a violent backlash, the secular Dutch must campaign vigorously for a society that remains forged in their image. They know that they must confront and challenge the fundamentalists. They must hunt down the terrorists and bring them to justice. They are gathering the resolve to do what must be done … and so must we, for their battle is ours.
Saturday, February 25

The Tide turns against the “Animal Rights” lobby
by
ContraTory
on Sat 25 Feb 2006 21:38 GMT
Laurie Pycroft: Sixth form drop-out. Pro-vivisectionist. Blogger. Hero.
True, Mr Pycroft does not understand yet the true nature of the animal rights lobby and has yet to face the prolonged campaign of threats, intimidation and violence that must, sooner or later, be directed against him and his family. However, unlike the majority of us, he has made a stand. He has said what he believes, that is to say, that he considers that research involving tests upon animals is vital for making advances in medical science. The evidence that it does is overwhelming, but that has not prevented the rest of us, the silent majority, from keeping our heads down whenever the Animal Rights lobby come to Town.
Let me make it plain. Mr Pycroft is not for instance, a lab technician or a scientist dealing with animal experimentation. He is not linked in any way to the targets of the Animal Rights lobby’s ire. He does not hunt or shoot or in any way cause any “suffering” to animals. He has simply spoken his mind and set up a pro-vivisection website. In consequence, he has been targeted by the lobby. First, there has been the usual misinformation spread by the anti-vivisectionists. The Police have had to provide Mr Pycroft and his family with advice as to how to protect their property and keep safe.
The Animal Rights movement has declared War against people who have a different opinion to them. Their tactics are the same as against the scientists and others whom they seek to terrorise. As well as the threat of and use of violence, their targets are smeared. Recent opinion polls have suggested that support for the antivivisection lobby is declining – a drop of ten per cent since 1995. Now more people support animal testing than do not. By all accounts the aggressive tactics of the lobby are proving counter-productive. Ordinary people are beginning to put their heads above the parapet and challenge the views of the animal rights movement. Hundreds of people, including students, scientists and members of the public, marched in Oxford today in support of research using animals. We owe it to them to voice our support for their cause, not only for continued research using animals, but more importantly, for freedom of speech. The animal rights lobby cannot threaten us all, for we are too many.
Thursday, February 23

The Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill – even The Guardian has rumbled it
by
ContraTory
on Thu 23 Feb 2006 21:48 GMT
Opposition is growing to the Government’s latest attempts to enact to itself powers formally exercised by Parliament. The Bill is drawn so widely that Government Ministers could rewrite current Laws and enact new Laws that at present Parliament only can make. The Government claims that “safeguards” are in place, but no matter which way you look at it, the Government will have wide powers that it did not have before. It might not be so much a case of the “Divine Right of Kings” but rather one of the “Divine Right of the Executive”, once the Bill becomes Law.
Wednesday, February 22

Putting the record straight
by
ContraTory
on Wed 22 Feb 2006 21:17 GMT
By any account, Christian Europe did not cover itself in glory, military or otherwise, when conducting its numerous Crusades in the Middle East during the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Those who have sought (with some remarkable success) during the course of the past forty years or more to rewrite the history of our civilisation, have constantly berated us for warmongering against the peace loving (Muslim) peoples of that region. I do not have any argument with the proposition that “we” were looking for a fight. However, the suggestion that the Muslim powers were not aggressively expansionist, offends against the truth.
It is often forgotten (or more likely not even known) that Charles Martel’s Frank army saved North West Europe from conquest by the Muslims at the Battle of Poitiers in 732 AD. Spain had already fallen to the conquering Muslims, as had all of North Africa and the Middle East. The Austrians were still fighting for their survival against the most successful Muslim Empire, that of the Ottoman Turks, in the late seventeenth century. Barbary pirates raided villages along the coast of southern England (seizing villagers for sale into white slavery) until the middle of the eighteenth century.
It is too readily forgotten that Europe’s (and now, the United States of America's) World ascendancy has been achieved only in the past two centuries. Before that, it was the nearest run thing you ever saw in your life.

By their words, we know them
by
ContraTory
on Wed 22 Feb 2006 19:53 GMT
Whatever demons Austria is seeking to exorcize, it should not do so by way of having laws that penalise freedom of speech.
It is mostly irritating but occasionally deeply offensive, when individuals hold views that fly in the face of the evidence. It is even more disgusting when those unfounded views seek to deny for instance, genocide. Such views though, are better expressed than allowed to fester in silence. Once propagated, they can be countered forcefully and exposed for the nonsense they are. Any people espousing or adopting such views identify themselves as fools or at the very least as lacking in any critical faculty and unworthy of any serious attention.
That there is a significant minority of people holding bizarre and unsubstantiated opinions or prejudices, should not disturb those who are possessed of the truth (or anything closely approximating to it.) There will always be those who must believe in the most grotesque falsehoods and myths just because it suits them. However, there are many, many more people of sound judgment who, once fully informed, will never be misled by lies.
See Roger Boyes article in The Times (21st February 2006)
Monday, February 20

Bin Laden: "I will never be taken alive"
by
ContraTory
on Mon 20 Feb 2006 13:54 GMT
So says a report in The Guardian today. Ok, I'll accept "dead", then.
Thursday, February 16

A gallop down the road to serfdom
by
ContraTory
on Thu 16 Feb 2006 21:50 GMT
Dr Theodore Dalrymple doesn’t pull any punches in telling it as it is.
Wednesday, February 15

Just ignore spokesmen for PETA. They talk garbage.
by
ContraTory
on Wed 15 Feb 2006 22:06 GMT
PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) whose animal rights campaigns include seeking to end fur and leather use, meat and dairy consumption claimed the scalp of US socialite Paris Hilton upon the occasion of her opening Julien Macdonald’s London Fashion Week. As Ms Hilton and Mr Macdonald were making their way to the after-show party they were pelted with flour bombs in a fur protest.
Whilst this largely American organisation does not resort to grave robbing and various other terrorist acts routinely committed by their hard-line British cousins, they are similarly afflicted by an aversion to the Truth.
The BBC reports that the spokeswoman for PETA Europe, Yvonne Taylor explained,
“There is nothing remotely fashionable about the torture and death of animals killed for fur.”
And,
“Julien Macdonald may have been able to ignore images of bloody skinned animals gasping for breath in the past, but hopefully a dash of flour will help him rise to the occasion and forsake fur once and for all.”
Now, just hold on a moment,
“…nothing…fashionable about the torture and death of animals killed for fur.”
Animals bred for fur are not tortured. The animal rights fraternity always claim that animals are tortured routinely by the humans processing them. It is a blatant untruth. Is it truly PETA’s case that animals bred for fur are skinned alive? If so, where is their evidence?
“…ignore images of bloody skinned animals gasping for breath…”
Oh dear. This all smacks of hyperbole to me. Now, where did I put those rotten eggs I was saving for Ruth Kelly…
Monday, February 6

Threats by animal rights activists are backfiring at Oxford
by
ContraTory
on Mon 06 Feb 2006 19:59 GMT
So says Grace Phillips in the Sunday Times on 5th February 2006. This follows the ill judged statement of intent issued by animal rights activists who threatened violence against all staff and students at Oxford by virtue of the University’s plans for a £20 million animal research laboratory. You can do no better than read the report of Ms Phillips’ defiance. There is more about the matter and student reaction to the threats, in a report by Patrick Foster and Nicola Woolcock in The Times (1st February 2006).
I wish Ms Phillips well and I hope she is not subjected to too much intimidation by the faceless individuals who seek to terrorise anyone who opposes their view. It would be a serious error of judgement for anyone to threaten her, because rather than being an “animal murderer” or “torturer”; she is merely holding a point of view. It would not be only students who would turn against the “animal rights” movement. Then again, those who God wishes to destroy, first he turns mad…
Friday, February 3

An issue obscured
by
ContraTory
on Fri 03 Feb 2006 23:11 GMT
I am not aware of the full circumstances in which a Danish newspaper felt it appropriate to publish cartoons which caused such insult to Muslims. I am aware of the circumstances in which those cartoons came to be republished elsewhere and doubt the wisdom of them having been so. I suspect it was less a case of those other newspapers exercising their right of freedom of speech but rather more of a raised middle-finger gesture of defiance. I can understand Muslim anger, though its depth betrays a lack of understanding as to why the “secular” West behaves as it does.
I do not have any issue with a Muslim possessing the beliefs that he has. However, for my part I do not accept that The Prophet spoke the words of God any more authoritatively than any of his predecessors. I find that there are jarring inconsistencies in the theories of Islam, Judaism and Christianity. I suspect that if I studied the other religions, I should find fault there too. Persons of religious persuasions other than Islam would not take my heresy as an affront, however. There lies the difference. Only a tiny minority of fanatical “Muslims” would seek to annihilate “non-believers” but I perceive that a small but significant part of the decent, law abiding majority of real Muslims still seems to feel uncomfortable about and is unable to accept people who do not subscribe to its views. They do not have any concept of “live and let live” and would prefer that we all lived in some form of worldwide Caliphate. They acquiesce in the behaviour of the unacceptable, violent, unprincipled minority.
It is this absence of understanding of our point of view and lack of empathy for our feelings that causes our hostility, not Islam. The rant of each fanatic conjures the spectre of every tyrant who sought to bring this island race to nought. Ordinary Muslims should dwell upon that. We use our laws to bear down upon our miscreant racist minority. It is time that they put their house in order and consider how we feel.
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