Pat Condell:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwAhrU_wTdA
Interesting reading, putting 'police' into the search facility threw up some familiar names for me:
http://www.cpexposed.com/graduates
Condell may be wide of the mark as far as any actual conspiracy behind Common Purpose, but he is spot on about the political correctness agenda in UK public services and it's been around for years. I remember going on a lengthy course in the 80s to qualify me as a police trainer. If you didn't appear to buy in to the PC message then there was no way you were passing the course. Even back in those days we used to refer to the course directors as 'mullahs' because of the fanatical way they behaved towards anyone who questioned the party line. It was a long 3 months. The other side of the coin is that the attitudes in police and public services needed to change in those days because society was changing. But the pendulum can and clearly has swung too far, leading to the criminal and morally repugnant wilful blindness we have seen in Rotherham and elsewhere. I'm not sure how you put these things right?
I actually went on the website, and after searching for some kind of managerial, technical or vocational skill that was being taught on the courses, probably involving study, a written exam and final interview it dawned on me, that that was not being offered at all! What was being offered was the chance to network and possibly get out on the lash at company expensewith some likeminded individuals who realised that being on a work sponsored course with no examination was ten times better than being in the office or House of Commons. Naturally, I've warmed to Common Purpose, it's values, aims and principles, that I can see operate very much at a strategic level where I can hide from all the nitty-gritty, pointy-end tactical stuff, and ideally be incubated from the results of my actions for several years or decades.
Reinforced with the fact that I will be able to "graduate" after a mere week or weekend course, has me hooked. I am especially interested in the complete immersion course, where you go to some exotic city for a weekend and immerse yourself in its local culture and customs. All character building stuff. And at five and half thousand quid, it seems quite reasonable to me, I am sure my HR Dept. will see what I see in this opportunity to reinvigorate my organisation and understanding of the unique culture that is Venice, or New York.
I am very sceptical about any conspiracy theories to be honest, as governments and their agencies are typically to incompetent and negligent to carry them off, as recent events in Rotherham show.
As for Condell, I would like to see him take on a more public role, appear on QT or something similar, not because I necessarily agree with everything he says, but it would be nice to see him have to argue his points under 'pressure'.
They won't let Condell on QT - the revolution that follows that would not be tolerated. They prefer their illiterate Tommy types who they can hook-up with the baffoon Mo down at the local curry house to keep a lid on the real situation.
The word is already out, the dialogue has changed, the LGBT readership of The Guardian are also waking-up and smelling the real risk to their very existence:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFvY04byQ5M
The real game changer will be, when or if, the British hostage is decapitated by that pretend Brit.
If the poor British hostage is killed there will be a fuss about it and RAF jets will take a token part in airstrikes against the militants. I wonder how much will change at home after the initial press outrage?
The Rotherham story has slipped off the front pages, the public have gone back to their iPhones and the doings of the Kardashians. A couple of sacrificial lambs have resigned and the whole thing seems to have died a death. The police commissioner for South Yorkshire is still in his post despite having been impotently called on to resign by the P.M. This has highlighted that, in their rush to create the police commissioners, the government failed to include any way of removing the individual commissioners from their jobs if turned out to be unsuitable or incompetent. What a screw up.
The failure to include a clause in the contracts of the commissioners covering termination in the event of gross misconduct, or negligence is beyond incompetent, every contract I've signed or prepared includes such a clause. One can only conclude that its ommission was done on purpose, to protect the guilty when the proverbial inevitably hits the fan.
One good policy of the Millipede, is that he has committed the Labour party to abolish the commissioners.
The Investors in People accreditation appears, from my distance, to have died a death?
One of the company's I worked for was in the first wave to achieve it and to be fair, I did get 4 x 5 day courses in supervisory management specifically tailored to the industry I was in, so no complaints from me. It's the ubiquitous IS014001 accreditation for companies whose biggest environmental impact is waste paper and disposing of a tungston light bulb that grates with me, whilst many of the companies who have potential to impact the environment ignore it.
^ It might well have disappeared or been replaced. It was a big deal at the time but fashions change.
It was definitely a major time stealer though.
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zf-uAcmeDo4
Difficult to argue with some of the opinions here.
Yes, I agree completely, as David Cameron informed us only today "Islam is the religion of peace."
This has become the newspeak of our time, after every atrocity, the same mantra is repeated, but nobody's listening Cameron, least of all the Scots, who are going to blow you and your metropolitan centred cronies away next week.
Time to storm the reality studio and splice the tape decks!