Thursday, 8 March 2012

remploy up for closer by lab/cons

all i can say is thank you to all that voted conservatives and labour this is what happens when you vote bare faced liers never mined the fact that labour are putting on a sympathy show and saying they are against it its all lies ive personally meet some of the people that work in this factory and the factory is a life line as some of the workers cant or can barely walk i personally am behind the workers down there and i will be asking for a campaign on this from my party stoke bnp just to show the people that work down on these factory that they have proper representation  ive put the article up for your viewing  people need to realise don't keep voting conservatives or labour this is the damage these party's do


Remploy factory to close with loss of 100 jobs

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Thursday, March 08, 2012
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MORE than 100 disabled workers are to lose their jobs after their factory was earmarked for closure.
The Government-funded Remploy plant at Trentham Lakes is to shut "within the year" with the loss of 114 jobs.
The Remploy board has now identified 36 out of its 54 factories as "unviable", despite a 100,000-name petition to safeguard their future.
The announcement comes after the Department for Work and Pensions accepted recommendations set out in the Sayce report that funding should be focused on individuals.
Workers at the Gordon Banks Drive plant were told about the plans at a meeting yesterday and a 90-day consultation period is now underway.
Alex Pullin said he had been promised a job "for life" when he joined Remploy as a 16-year-old in 1988.
The 39-year-old, of Wood Lane, said: "I phoned my fiancee Joanne as soon as we got the news – we were going to get married next year, but I'm not sure if we'll be able to now."
The 36 factory closures will lead to the loss of more than 1,700 jobs and unions fear the remaining 18 sites are likely to shut "in due course".
Calvin Fraser, of Middleport, called on companies such as JCB to give more work to the plant, which carries out jobs, including assembly for car companies and book binding.
The 57-year-old, who has worked there for 32 years, said: "If we got more work perhaps the factory could stop open."
Unite representative Colin Hanley, pictured, added: "We are devastated. All we can do is go down fighting."
Remploy closed its Stoke factory in 2002 and its Newcastle operation in 2007.
More than 3,000 people in the region signed the petition to save North Staffordshire's last Remploy factory last year.
Stoke-on-Trent South MP Rob Flello said: "I'm appalled at how the Government is hitting the most vulnerable people in our society."
Liz Sayce, chief executive of disability rights charity RADAR, was commissioned to find out how the Government's £320 million disability employment services could be better spent last year.
Maria Miller, Minister for Disabled People, said: "The budget has been protected, but by spending the money more effectively, we can get thousands more disabled people in work."
Shop stewards are due to meet later this month to discuss their next move.

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

The murderous British government



Todays news tells us of another 6 of our brave troops have been killed in Afghanistan that brings the running total to 404 since 2001 in Afghanistan alone.
How many more are the murderous British government going to allow to die in a war that has nothing to do with us.
It seems to me that this and previous governments have set out to destroy the British military one way or another.This is tantamount to genocide.
I charge that this and previous governments are tried for the murder of British patriotic soldiers.
I DEMAND THAT ALL BRITISH MILITARY ARE BROUGHT BACK HOME NOW .
If you agree i call on all patriots to bombard your mps with letters and e mails demanding the immediate withdrawral of our brave men and women before any more are killed and maimed in this illegal war

Saturday, 3 March 2012

taken from the bentilee patriot a sick vile paedophile living on our doorstep

BRITISH JUSTICE IS A JOKE


THIS PAEDOPHILE IS A NIGERIAN NATIONAL so why no mention of deporting him.

Its an absolute disgrace he should be castrated and deported after his sentence at the very least

 

Jailed for attempted rape: Taxi driver Azuka Oluh gave schoolgirl £5 'hush money'

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Saturday, March 03, 2012
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CHURCH volunteer Azuka Oluh was today starting a lengthy prison sentence after attempting to rape a schoolgirl.
Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court yesterday heard the 35-year-old married father-of-one stopped his taxi after seeing the girl at a bus stop.
The girl got in, believing he was going to take her to school. But he drove to his home in St George's Avenue, Burslem, where he attempted to rape her.
Prosecutor David Bennett said: "She continually asked him to take her to school. He kissed her mouth. She pulled away, saying she had to go to school.
"The defendant told her he would look after her and give her things."
The court heard he led the schoolgirl to his bedroom and began touching her and removed clothing. He stopped when she said she was a virgin.
"He got dressed and took her to school," said Mr Bennett.
"He gave her £5 and told her not to tell anyone. He offered to give her more money."
The girl went to a friend's house and the police were contacted. A used condom was recovered. His DNA was found on swabs taken from the victim.
Oluh, a Nigerian national, pleaded guilty to attempted rape.
Mark Connor, mitigating, said: "It was an attempt. He asked her if she was a virgin and he stopped. He realised what he was doing was wrong and he stopped.
"He did not go through with it and it was his decision not to go through with it."
Mr Connor added that Oluh was extremely sorry for his actions.
Judge Paul Glenn sentenced Oluh to five years and four months in prison with an extended licence period of four years.
The defendant will be on the sex offenders' register indefinitely and was disqualified from working with children indefinitely.
Judge Glenn said Oluh was a dangerous man. He said: "Your victim was a schoolchild going to school. Instead of taking her to school you took her to your home address, against her express wishes.
"You pushed her upstairs. She tried to push you off without success.
"You gave her £5. That was hush money. She was highly distressed.
"You have admitted being sexually attracted to adolescent girls.
"Your conduct was quite persistent, calculated and deliberate.
"I take the view you meet the criteria of a dangerous offender."

Tuesday, 28 February 2012

how disgusting this all so the Muslims are happy

now there's a point in time where we say enought is enought how much further are the government and the local council going to go CAN WE GO TO PAKISTAN AND ENFORCE LAWS AND WAYS ONTO THEM NO so why should we allow them to do this absolutely disgusting  wake up sheeple wake up 


Crematorium removes glass window featuring 4ft cross to avoid offending other religions (but don't worry, they'll have a MOBILE crucifix for Christians)

Last updated at 3:11 PM on 28th February 2012
Christians have reacted in fury after a managers at a crematorium decided to remove a 4ft cross from the windows to avoid offending other religions.
The giant window at Haycombe Crematorium, in Bath, Somerset, will be ripped out and replaced with a clear glass pane as part of a £140,000 facelift.
It is the last remaining Christian symbol in the chapel and bosses say they will now make a ‘mobile’ cross available for mourners to use if they wish.
But the decision has been met with a furious response from campaigners who claim it is another example of Christianity being sidelined in modern society.
Cross row: The central window at Haycombe Crematorium, Bath, will be removed to appease members of other faiths
Cross row: The central window at Haycombe Crematorium, Bath, will be removed to appease members of other faiths
Hugh Mackay, 82, a former Christian missionary in Nigeria who lives just ten minutes from the crematorium, branded the decision an 'attack'.
He said: 'It seems there is a determined secular campaign to try and obliterate our religious heritage in our country.
'The council says it is not to upset people of all faiths but I’ve talked to Hindus, Muslims and Jews and none of them have ever complained.
'They all respect the cross as a symbol of the Christian faith.
'Some of us feel very strongly that this is a deliberate attempt by the council to downplay our Christian heritage and that we should make our views known.'
 
Bath and North East Somerset Council announced the changes to the crematorium as part of a £140,000 overhaul of the crematorium and cemetery.
The refurbishment, which has not yet been finished, is the biggest improvement to the facilities since the chapel opened in 1961.
The window, which features the 4ft white cross and offers views across the Bath countryside, will be replaced with a plain pane.
Staff have been told they will be given a mobile cross which can be put up or taken down, depending on the religious beliefs of those using the crematorium.
Hugh Mackay, 82, said this was 'a deliberate attempt to downplay Christian heritage'
Hugh Mackay, 82, said this was 'a deliberate attempt to downplay Christian heritage'
Angry campaigners have already amassed more than 100 signatures against the plans.
Edgar Evans, 79, from Bath, a retired patients advocate for the NHS, said: 'The window and cross provides comfort for mourners that look at it.
'It just seems that it is another attack on our Christian culture - while claiming they want to refurbish the existing facilities.
'I believe in prayers before council meetings and I believe we should have the cross at the centre of our war memorials for those who gave their lives.
'We remain a Christian country but this is an example of creeping secularisation.'
The petition, which will be presented to Bath and North East Somerset Council chief executive John Everitt, calls for a new, similar cross to be installed in the window.
Council bosses stressed that the decision to remove the cross had been taken after consultation with funeral directors and local clergy.
A spokesman maintained Haycombe should be a setting suitable for people of all faiths and religious beliefs.
He said: 'Following consultation with local funeral directors, ministers and taking into account our own feedback from customers, the consensus was that the chapel should be a setting where all faiths, including those who are not religious at all, can adapt the surroundings to suit the wishes of their loved ones.
'In line with this consensus, the replacement window will be plain.
'The council’s bereavement services team will discuss with all families and funeral directors ways to provide a suitable environment for any service.
'This could include providing removable crosses or any other symbol that a family feel is appropriate.'

HOW CHRISTIANITY IN BRITAIN HAS BEEN ERODED BY PC JOBSWORTHS

  • Gary McFarlane alleged that the Bristol branch of counselling service Relate refused to accommodate his religious beliefs
    Gary McFarlane alleged that counselling service Relate refused to accommodate his religious beliefs
    Gary McFarlane, 48, a former elder in a church in Hanham, Bristol, lost his fight at the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) in London to prove discrimination by the relationship charity Relate in 2009.
    McFarlane lost his job after refusing to provide sex therapy to gay couples has failed in a further attempt to prove religious discrimination by his former employers.
  • Nadia Eweida, 58, lost her appeal against a ruling which cleared British Airways of discrimination by stopping her wearing a cross visibly at work.
    The tribunal, held in 2010, was told Miss Eweida was sent home in September 2006 over the display of the small silver cross on a chain around her neck, which she wore as a personal expression of her faith.
  • Hannah Adewole complained that wearing trousers goes against her religious beliefs.
    Mrs Adewole, 45, cited a command in the Bible that women should not wear men's clothing, and claimed she was banned from wearing scrub dresses in theatre.

    She pointed out that Muslim midwives are allowed to vary official uniform with their own hijabs and tops.

    She sued Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust in 2011 for religious discrimination and harassment, but lost the case.
  • A homosexual couple who successfully sued the Christian owners of a hotel who refused them a bed are withdrawing a claim for more compensation, it was revealed today.
    Steven Preddy and Martyn Hall had said Cornwall B&B owners Peter and Hazelmary Bull were let off lightly and had called for their £3,600 damages to be increased.
  • Earlier this month, Christians and politicians reacted with dismay after a judge overturned centuries of custom by outlawing a town hall in Devon from putting prayers on the formal agenda.
  • Atheist former councillor Clive Bone started the case against Bideford town council in July 2010, claiming he had been ‘disadvantaged and embarrassed’ when religious prayers were recited at formal meetings.
  • Also this month, Celestina Mba, 57, lost her claim for constructive dismissal after a judge ruled her employer could make her work on the Sabbath.
    The Baptist mother-of-three claims she was forced from her job caring for disabled children after clashing with bosses over the issue.
    But the tribunal ruled that keeping Sunday as a day of rest was not a ‘core component’ of Christianity.


can i put this to everyone's attention

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 Star bikers MCC & Stoke on Trent bikers 

Monday, 27 February 2012

the country's run out of money i wonder why

1 over population over 3 half million  immigrants living here claiming benefits and never paid a dime into the system must be stopped now
2 millions spent on  the EU membership must pull out now
3 million given out on foreign aid must stop now
4 millions spent on illegal wars and we need to pull our troops out now
5 renationalising the gas water electricity bring it back to British company's
6 reintroducing the indusrtys which would create jobs exporting  instead of importing
7 stop borrowing from other country's and sort our own house out first
8 deport all extremists so the burden is not on the tax payers
this is what we need to do to get this country great again

George Osborne: UK has run out of money

The Government 'has run out of money' and cannot afford debt-fuelled tax cuts or extra spending, George Osborne has admitted.

Britain and other leading economies are not ready to fund another eurozone bailout, UK Chancellor George Osborne said on Sunday.
Mr Osborne is under severe pressure to boost growth, amid signs the economy is slipping back into a recession. Photo: PA
In a stark warning ahead of next month’s Budget, the Chancellor said there was little the Coalition could do to stimulate the economy.
Mr Osborne made it clear that due to the parlous state of the public finances the best hope for economic growth was to encourage businesses to flourish and hire more workers.
“The British Government has run out of money because all the money was spent in the good years,” the Chancellor said. “The money and the investment and the jobs need to come from the private sector.”
What should George Osborne do to provide a tax cut?
Mr Osborne’s bleak assessment echoes that of Liam Byrne, the former chief secretary to the Treasury, who bluntly joked that Labour had left Britain broke when he exited the Government in 2010.
He left David Laws, his successor, a one-line note saying: “Dear Chief Secretary, I’m afraid to tell you there’s no money left”.
Mr Osborne is under severe pressure to boost growth, amid signs the economy is slipping back into a recession.
The Institute of Fiscal Studies has urged him to consider emergency tax cuts in the Budget to reduce the risk of a prolonged economic slump.
But the Chancellor yesterday said he would stand firm on his effort to balance the books by refusing to borrow money. “Any tax cut would have to be paid for,” Mr Osborne told Sky News. “In other words there would have to be a tax rise somewhere else or a spending reduction.
“In other words what we are not going to do in this Budget is borrow more money to either increase spending or cut taxes.”
The strongest suggestion of help for squeezed family budgets came from the Chancellor’s claim that he was “very seriously and carefully” considering plans to help lower earners by raising the personal allowance for income tax, a proposal that has been championed by Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister.
But he implied there would be no more help for motorists struggling with record petrol prices this spring. “I have taken action already this year to avoid increases in fuel duty which were planned by the last Labour government,” he said.
The Chancellor’s tough words were echoed by Liberal Democrat Jeremy Browne, the foreign minister, who warned that Britain faced “accelerated decline” without measures to tackle its debt and increase competitiveness.
In an article published today in The Daily Telegraph, he writes that Britain’s market share in the world used to be “dominant” but was now “in freefall” compared with the soaring economies of Asia and South America. “This situation has been becoming more acute for years,” he adds. “It is now staring us in the face. So we need to take action.”
Mr Browne writes that reform of pensions, welfare and defence is essential to stop the departments “collapsing under the weight of their own debt”. “Just because the spending was sometimes on worthy causes does not in itself mean it was affordable,” he says.
“Doing nothing when your prospects are at risk of declining is not the safe option. More of the same may be superficially more popular in the short-term but that does not make it right.”
Amid warnings that Britain urgently needed to adopt a more pro-business outlook, senior Conservatives have urged the Government to get rid of the 50 pence top rate of tax.
Figures from the Treasury last week suggested the policy was not raising the expected amount of revenue and was threatening to drive leading business people and entrepreneurs away from Britain. Dr Liam Fox, the former Conservative Defence Secretary, yesterday argued for the top tax rate to be scrapped, but added that cutting taxes on employment was even more important.
“I would have thought the priority was getting the costs of employers down and therefore I would rather have seen any reductions in taxation on employers’ taxation rather than personal taxation,” he told the BBC’s Sunday Politics show.
Any efforts to scrap the rate this parliament would face severe opposition from within the Coalition.
Simon Hughes, Liberal Democrat deputy leader, said yesterday that keeping the current 50p rate was “the right thing to do”. He told the BBC: “I represent people in a pretty solid working-class community. What they’re concerned about is what happens to ordinary people out of work and where they get jobs.”
Last night, Labour argued Mr Osborne needed to take a more proactive stance on boosting growth by increasing public spending.
Chris Leslie MP, the shadow Treasury minister, said it was wrong of the Chancellor to argue that Britain was broke and to rely on business alone to create economic growth.
“George Osborne can’t complacently wash his hands and claim the lack of jobs and growth in the economy is nothing to do with him,” he said.
“He needs to realise that government has a vital role to play in creating an environment where the private sector can grow and create jobs.”
Harriet Harman, Labour’s deputy leader, urged Mr Osborne to cut VAT.
Meanwhile, the Chancellor made it clear he was resisting pressure to hand over up to another £17.5billion in taxpayers’ money to help bail out struggling European Union countries.
He said Europe had not “shown the colour of its money” by taking measures to help itself tackle its debt problems.
Until that happens, Britain will not give any extra funds to the International Monetary Fund.
The Chancellor was speaking as finance ministers from the world’s 20 most powerful economies met in Mexico.
Mr Osborne said: “While at this G20 conference there are a lot of things to discuss; I don’t think you’re going to see any extra resources committed (to the IMF) here because eurozone countries have not committed additional resources themselves, and I think that quid pro quo will be clearly established here in Mexico City.”