Friday, 25 January 2008

Kate depicted as Marilyn Monroe

Glamorous super model Kate Moss is in the news again this week. Nothing particularly unusual about that, after all she is probably one of the worlds most photographed women.

However she has appeared twice in the mainstream news this week, portrayed not in model photography, but in art. On both occasions as a peroxide blond, but in two very unusual roles.

Here we see Kate Moss as convicted child-killer Myra Hindley:



Please see here for further details



And...Here we see an image of Kate, as peroxide blond Marilyn Munroe:


A screenprint of Kate Moss, Banksy's take on Andy Warhol's Marilyn


PLEASE CLICK HERE FOR FULL STORY

Two peroxide blond double takes, of kate Moss, as works of art, in the media in one week ?!?!
Doesn't that strike you as a bit 'odd' ?
hmm.....thoughts anyone, please?
thanks

Thursday, 24 January 2008

MP backs plans for a 60m high sculpture costing £800,000.00

MP BACKS 60-METRE ARCHERY SCULPTURE
TANYA HOLDEN

09:00 - 24 January 2008

An Mp has backed plans for a 60-metre high sculpture in Nottingham - and called for at least two more major pieces of public art to be built in the city.

Graham Allen, who is chairman of regeneration organisation One Nottingham, has called for a 60m archery bow to be sited at the new Eastside development and a statue of bare-knuckle boxer Bendigo at Bestwood Heights.

His suggestions follow the University of Nottingham's unveiling of plans for an £800,000 'Aspire' sculpture, which will be the tallest freestanding work of art in the UK.

READ ON

Kate Moss and Pete Doherty depicted as murderers Myra Hindley and Ian Brady

On first glance, the chilling stare, peroxide-blonde hair and snow-white skin are unmistakeably that of convicted child-killer Myra Hindley pictured in the same woollen coat she wore for her 1965 mugshot.

But on closer inspection, the mouth is noticeably more of a model pout, and the face prettier - as the person in the picture is revealed as supermodel Kate Moss. And Myra's evil partner Ian Brady is unveiled as her former paramour Pete Doherty.


Double take: Kate Moss and Pete Doherty depicted as murderers Myra Hindley and Ian Brady

READ ON

Tuesday, 15 January 2008

Whose body is it anyway?

From
January 15, 2008

Whose body is it anyway?

Two thorny problems, organ donation and records of parentage, have clear solutions

Naked we come into the world, naked we leave it. But in the meantime we do own our bodies. Parents don't, spouses don't, the State doesn't. From hair to toenails, these marvellous organisms are our sole inalienable property. So where state authority is concerned, lines need to be drawn carefully. Two examples lie before us right now.

The first is the Prime Minister's enthusiasm for a new law on transplant organs. It would enshrine the presumption of consent: unless you previously opted out

READ ON

Microchips cause cancer and now Prisoners 'to be chipped like dogs'


Prisoners 'to be chipped like dogs'

Hi-tech 'satellite' tagging planned in order to create more space in jails
Civil rights groups and probation officers furious at 'degrading' scheme

By Brian Brady, Whitehall Editor

Published: 13 January 2008

Ministers are planning to implant "machine-readable" microchips under the skin of thousands of offenders as part of an expansion of the electronic tagging scheme that would create more space in British jails.

Amid concerns about the security of existing tagging systems and prison overcrowding, the Ministry of Justice is investigating the use of satellite and radio-wave technology to monitor criminals.

But, instead of being contained in bracelets worn around the ankle, the tiny chips would be surgically inserted under the skin of offenders in the community, to help enforce home curfews. The radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, as long as two grains of rice, are able to carry scanable personal information about individuals, including their identities, address and offending record.

The tags, labelled "spychips" by privacy campaigners, are already used around the world to keep track of dogs, cats, cattle and airport luggage, but there is no record of the technology being used to monitor offenders in the community. The chips are also being considered as a method of helping to keep order within prisons.

A senior Ministry of Justice official last night confirmed that the department hoped to go even further, by extending the geographical range of the internal chips through a link-up with satellite-tracking similar to the system used to trace stolen vehicles. "All the options are on the table, and this is one we would like to pursue," the source added.

The move is in line with a proposal from Ken Jones, the president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo), that electronic chips should be surgically implanted into convicted paedophiles and sex offenders in order to track them more easily. Global Positioning System (GPS) technology is seen as the favoured method of monitoring such offenders to prevent them going near "forbidden" zones such as primary schools.

"We have wanted to take advantage of this technology for several years, because it seems a sensible solution to the problems we are facing in this area," a senior minister said last night. "We have looked at it and gone back to it and worried about the practicalities and the ethics, but when you look at the challenges facing the criminal justice system, it's time has come."

The Government has been forced to review sentencing policy amid serious overcrowding in the nation's jails, after the prison population soared from 60,000 in 1997 to 80,000 today. The crisis meant the number of prisoners held in police cells rose 13-fold last year, with police stations housing offenders more than 60,000 times in 2007, up from 4,617 the previous year. The UK has the highest prison population per capita in western Europe, and the Government is planning for an extra 20,000 places at a cost of £3.8bn – including three gigantic new "superjails" – in the next six years.

More than 17,000 individuals, including criminals and suspects released on bail, are subject to electronic monitoring at any one time, under curfews requiring them to stay at home up to 12 hours a day. But official figures reveal that almost 2,000 offenders a year escape monitoring by tampering with ankle tags or tearing them off. Curfew breaches rose from 11,435 in 2005 to 43,843 in 2006 – up 283 per cent. The monitoring system, which relies on mobile-phone technology, can fail if the network crashes.

A multimillion-pound pilot of satellite monitoring of offenders was shelved last year after a report revealed many criminals simply ditched the ankle tag and separate portable tracking unit issued to them. The "prison without bars" project also failed to track offenders when they were in the shadow of tall buildings.

The Independent on Sunday has now established that ministers have been assessing the merits of cutting-edge technology that would make it virtually impossible for individuals to remove their electronic tags.

The tags, injected into the back of the arm with a hypodermic needle, consist of a toughened glass capsule holding a computer chip, a copper antenna and a "capacitor" that transmits data stored on the chip when prompted by an electromagnetic reader.

But details of the dramatic option for tightening controls over Britain's criminals provoked an angry response from probation officers and civil-rights groups. Shami Chakrabarti, director of Liberty, said: "If the Home Office doesn't understand why implanting a chip in someone is worse than an ankle bracelet, they don't need a human-rights lawyer; they need a common-sense bypass.

"Degrading offenders in this way will do nothing for their rehabilitation and nothing for our safety, as some will inevitably find a way round this new technology."

Harry Fletcher, assistant general secretary of the National Association of Probation Officers, said the proposal would not make his members' lives easier and would degrade their clients. He added: "I have heard about this suggestion, but we feel the system works well enough as it is. Knowing where offenders like paedophiles are does not mean you know what they are doing.

"This is the sort of daft idea that comes up from the department every now and then, but tagging people in the same way we tag our pets cannot be the way ahead. Treating people like pieces of meat does not seem to represent an improvement in the system to me."

The US market leader VeriChip Corp, whose parent company has been selling radio tags for animals for more than a decade, has sold 7,000 RFID microchips worldwide, of which about 2,000 have been implanted in humans. The company claims its VeriChips are used in more than 5,000 installations, crossing healthcare, security, government and industrial markets, but they have also been used to verify VIP membership in nightclubs, automatically gaining the carrier entry – and deducting the price of their drinks from a pre-paid account.

The possible value of the technology to the UK's justice system was first highlighted 18 months ago, when Acpo's Mr Jones suggested the chips could be implanted into sex offenders. The implants would be tracked by satellite, enabling authorities to set up "zones", including schools, playgrounds and former victims' homes, from which individuals would be barred.

"If we are prepared to track cars, why don't we track people?" Mr Jones said. "You could put surgical chips into those of the most dangerous sex offenders who are willing to be controlled."

The case for: 'We track cars, so why not people?'

The Government is struggling to keep track of thousands of offenders in the community and is troubled by an overcrowded prison system close to bursting. Internal tagging offers a solution that could impose curfews more effectively than at present, and extend the system by keeping sex offenders out of "forbidden areas". "If we are prepared to track cars, why don't we track people?" said Ken Jones, president of the Association of Chief Police Officers (Acpo).

Officials argue that the internal tags enable the authorities to enforce thousands of court orders by ensuring offenders remain within their own walls during curfew hours – and allow the immediate verification of ID details when challenged.

The internal tags also have a use in maintaining order within prisons. In the United States, they are used to track the movement of gang members within jails.

Offenders themselves would prefer a tag they can forget about, instead of the bulky kit carried around on the ankle.

The case against: 'The rest of us could be next'

Professionals in the criminal justice system maintain that the present system is 95 per cent effective. Radio frequency identification (RFID) technology is unproven. The technology is actually more invasive, and carries more information about the host. The devices have been dubbed "spychips" by critics who warn that they would transmit data about the movements of other people without their knowledge.

Consumer privacy expert Liz McIntyre said a colleague had already proved he could "clone" a chip. "He can bump into a chipped person and siphon the chip's unique signal in a matter of seconds," she said.

One company plans deeper implants that could vibrate, electroshock the implantee, broadcast a message, or serve as a microphone to transmit conversations. "Some folks might foolishly discount all of these downsides and futuristic nightmares since the tagging is proposed for criminals like rapists and murderers," Ms McIntyre said. "The rest of us could be next."

implants linked to animal tumors please click here

Friday, 11 January 2008

Parted-at-birth twins 'married'

Parted-at-birth twins 'married'
Twins (anonymous)
It is thought the pair did not know their relationship when they married
A pair of twins who were adopted by separate families as babies got married without knowing they were brother and sister, a peer told the House of Lords.

A court annulled the British couple's union after they discovered their true relationship, Lord Alton said.

The peer - who was told of the case by a High Court judge involved - said the twins felt an "inevitable attraction".

He said the case showed how important it was for children to be able to find out about their biological parents.

Details of the identities of the twins involved have been kept secret, but Lord Alton said the pair did not realise they were related until after their marriage.

FULL STORY HERE

Thursday, 10 January 2008

The dangers of watching or reading the news!

one of my favorite youtube contributers...
enjoy :-)

The dangers of skiing




Swiss skiers are being tracked by radar monitors as part of an insurance company's bid to raise awareness of the dangers of taking to the slopes too fast.

Full story here

Devilish debate on end for Church of England


AFP - Thursday, January 10 12:57 pm


LONDON (AFP) - Eyebrows were raised in the House of Commons on Thursday when a motion calling for the Church of England to be disestablished was listed with the number 666, symbol of the AntiChrist.

"This number is supposed to be the mark of the Devil. It looks as though God or the Devil have been moving in mysterious ways," said Bob Russell, a Liberal Democrat MP among those proposing the motion for debate.

"What is even stranger is that this motion was tabled last night when MPs were debating blasphemy," he added.

The motion calls for an end to the formal link between Church and State in England -- embodied in the monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, who is both head of state and head of the Church of England.

The number 666 is referred to in the Book of Revelations in the Bible: "Here is wisdom. Let him that hath understanding count the number of the beast for it is the number of a man; and his number is six hundred, three score and six."

"It is is incredible that a motion like this should have, by chance, acquired this significant number," said Russell.

Under the rules of the House of Commons the motion by backbenchers has little chance of actually being debated in parliament.

Wednesday, 9 January 2008

IS PYRAMID QUAY TO THE FUTURE?

Controversial plans for a 45m high, solar pyramid, spark absolute outrage amongst local Poole residents.
Who can blame them?

READ ON

Tuesday, 8 January 2008

Corpse Heat

Unbelievable!

Bosses on Tameside Council are planning to use the heat generated from cremating bodies to keep the mourners warm at Dukinfield Crematorium.

Full story here

Wednesday, 2 January 2008

Armless king Alfred & Headless Statue of Liberty

Hello Folks,
Please find below two recent British news articles, which have captured my attention. Obviously, please do draw your own conclusions...

"As it comes to rest on the road beneath them they realise; it is the head of the Statue of Liberty."
31/12/2007 -
Source : Nameless Horror Movie gets internet guessing


King Alfred's arm left in pieces
The vandalised statue of King Alfred in Wantage
The statue has stood in the town since 1877
A statue of King Alfred which stands in the centre of an Oxfordshire town has had its right arm - which brandished a battle axe - cut off and smashed.
SOURCE:
BBC NEWS FOR FULL STORY PLEASE CLICK HERE

unexploded bomb unearthed by a metal detector enthusiast in East Yorkshire.

Last Updated: Wednesday, 2 January 2008, 19:45 GMT
M62 may close for bomb detonation
Unexploded bomb found in East Yorks
The bomb was photographed soon after it was unearthed
Police and army experts are meeting to discuss how to make safe an unexploded bomb unearthed by a metal detector enthusiast in East Yorkshire.

The 500lb device was found in a field at Balkholme near Goole on Monday and police have imposed an exclusion zone.

Army bomb disposal experts are discussing whether to close the nearby M62 at some point while they deal with the WWII bomb.

It is deeply buried and it could take some days to make safe, police say.

War memorial
A war memorial remembers crews who died nearby

The B1230 is closed between Howden and the turn-off for the village of Eastrington, where there is a memorial to bomber crews who died locally.

More than 60 years ago two Halifax bombers collided in the field - leaving behind the device.

Diversions are in place via Eastrington village or the M62 motorway.

A Humberside Police spokesman said: "The army's explosives ordnance officers are at the scene along with representatives of the electricity company, Yorkshire Water and the gas board making an assessment of the area to make sure it is safe to deal with the piece of ordnance."