Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Cleveland Biotech combines with Welsh rival Biological Preparations


A Teesside waste management company is combining with a Welsh firm to become a UK market leader in biological solutions.


Stockton-based Cleveland Biotech (CBio) has grown rapidly since a £4.4m management buyout in 2013 led by managing director Ben Hoskyns, a move which was backed by £3m of investment from Newcastle-based NVM Private Equity.


The firm creates bacterial-busting products which can break down organic pollutants including oil, grease and limescale, which are found on supermarket shelves in the UK and Europe.


Now NVM has invested a further £3.5m to create a new business that will combine the knowledge and resources of Cleveland Biotech with another firm in its portfolio – Caerphilly-based Biological Preparations (BP).


Established in 2008, BP specialises in the development of biotechnology solutions for a wide range of sectors including food and drink, water treatment, agricultural and cleaning services.


The company formulates and blends its unique products using microbial, enzyme, plant extract, organic acid and biocide technology, all of which are supplied from its own facility in Caerphilly.


The initial funding injected into the Stockton business by NVM has been used alongside the further £3.5m investment in a deal totalling £10.4m to create the new combined entity.


The two firms plan to continue under their own names, but will offer the full range of biological cleaning and waste products to a wider customer base, effectively bringing together two competitors to create a greater force in the market.


James Patterson, managing director of BP, said: “We are delighted to be partnering with CBio and NVM to create an enlarged business that will offer an extensive range of products and services to exploit the growing demand for biotechnology solutions for waste control and cleaning requirements.”


Ben Hoskyns, managing director of CBio, said: “There are obvious synergies between CBio and BP, especially as both businesses have been competitors.


“We have both built up a strong reputation in the biological treatment market, so bringing together our FOG solutions with BP’s complementary cleaning solutions will offer considerable benefits to both our existing and new customer bases.”


Mauro Biagioni, partner of NVM Private Equity, said: “The CBio and BP management teams have over 60 years of combined experience in the biological treatment marketing.


“Both teams have built successful and competing businesses, so the partnership will give the new company a market leading position – especially in light of increasing pressures on companies that produce waste to actively demonstrate their green credentials.”



North East jobless rate on the way down again new figures reveal


Unemployment on Teesside has fallen again after it rose in January for the first time in ten months.


In February, 15,998 people in the area claimed Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA) compared with 16,525 the previous month, according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).


The 3.2% fall will boost hopes that the 2.1% increase in January was a blip in an otherwise downward trend that has seen the jobless rate on Teesside fall steadily over the last year.


In February, all five local authority areas saw a fall in the claimant count and there were several other encouraging trends locally, including a 2.5% dip in youth unemployment - defined as the number of 18-24 year-olds out of work. There was also a 5.7% decrease in the number of people out of work for more than 12 months – classed as the long-term unemployed.


The positive picture on Teesside was replicated across the North-east, with unemployment in the region falling 16.1% to 99,000 in the three months to January.


The North East Chamber of Commerce said the figures highlighted a consistent improvement across the local labour market.


Mark Stephenson, NECC policy and research manager, said: “Progress is balanced across our region and we are showing that that the North-east is ready to do business and be a major part of the Northern powerhouse. We are closing the gap with the rest of the UK and I have confidence this trend will continue.”


Professional services firm Deloitte said the figures highlighted the growing momentum of Britain’s economic recovery.


Paul Feechan, North-east-based office senior partner at Deloitte, said: “The big picture is of strong growth in full-time jobs in the private sector, record employment and the highest level of vacancies in 12 years.


“A tightening labour market is bringing the long-awaited wage recovery. After falling for six years, real earnings are growing at the fastest rate since 2008.”


Nationally unemployment fell by 102,000 between November and January to 1.86 million - the lowest level since the financial crash of 2008 and almost half a million down on a year ago. The jobless rate is now 5.7%, significantly lower than the European Union average of 9.8%.


Average earnings rose by 1.8% on the year, with low inflation depressing prices and giving workers more money in their back pocket.


Work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith claimed the “remarkable” figures underlined the Government’s success in backing businesses to create jobs.


But shadow work and pensions secretary Rachel Reeves said workers were £1,600 a year worse off since 2010 due to a “failing” Tory economic plan.



#OnThisBoroDay 2011: Boro edge closer to Championship survival with crucial 2-1 win over Watford


Slowly but surely Boro were edging towards Championship survival as Tony Mowbray mopped up the mess Gordon Strachan left at the Riverside.


And the crucial 2-1 victory over Watford at the Riverside on this day in 2011 went a long way to ensuring Boro avoided what would have been an absolutely disastrous relegation into the third tier.


The 5-2 hammering at Reading at the start of March had set alarm bells ringing that, despite the improvement under Mogga, Boro were still not out of the woods.


But Boro bounced back in the best possible fashion with a win over Derby, a hard fought draw at Portsmouth and three more points against the Hornets.


“We are not there yet,” insisted Mowbray, despite the fact Boro had opened up a nine-point gap on the bottom three.


There was no way the boss was going to allow his players to believe the job was done with eight games of the campaign still to play.


“Looking at the other results, a lot of them went our way,” Mowbray told the Gazette.


“It means that some of the teams at the bottom are looking to win four of their remaining games.


“But we won’t be believing that we have done anything yet.



“A couple of disappointing results and you start looking over your shoulders again.


“So we have to keep driving on and make our league position even stronger.”


Andrew Taylor was the unlikely matchwinner.


Becoming accustomed to his new role on the left side of midfield, the Hartlepool-born left-sider slotted home the winner on the stroke of half-time as the ball landed at his feet in the box.


A first half that had started in the worst possible fashion finished with Boro in complete control of the game.


Danny Graham’s Riverside return was marked with a goal as the prolific striker put the visitors ahead before Scott McDonald scooped the ball into the net to drag Boro back level.


And although Boro failed to add to their lead in the second half, Taylor’s goal on the brink of the break took the stuffing out of Watford.


Much-improved Boro looked anything but relegation candidates under Mogga and outplayed play-off chasing Watford throughout.


It was a far cry from the start of the campaign when Strachan’s outfit limped to a 3-1 defeat in the reverse fixture at Vicarage Road.



Josh Cowperthwaite celebrates medal with England call-up


Josh Cowperthwaite saved his best cross country race until the very last.


And after claiming a silver medal in the English Schools Championships at Witton Country Park in Blackburn he received a further boost with news he had been selected by England Schools for this weekend’s international in Dublin.


Competing against in-form inter-counties champion Zakariya Mahammed from Southampton in the junior boys’ event, Cowperthwaite ran almost the perfect race over the 3.6km course, to claim the silver medal just 11 seconds down on the former Ethiopian athlete.


The junior girls’ team will have learnt valuable lessons from what was for many their first experience of national competition.


Rebecca Tilley (171st) and Frances Bell (184th) were both in the top 200 as the team - one of the smallest of the 44 counties taking part - finished in 42nd place.


Nathan Baker was in great form in the intermediate boys’ race.


He was the leading competitor from Clevelandand finished a commendable 17th place.


Two other team members finished inside the top 100 with Harry Allan and Aidan Rigby coming home 82nd and 96th respectively.


Reece Curtis also ran well and was just outside the top 100 in 117th place.


Hollie Elliot was the first Cleveland finisher in the intermediate girls’ category, running a strong race to cross the line well inside the top 100 in 84th place.


Libby Hedger, Isabelle Wherritt and Ellie Barnbrook packed well in the middle of the field of over 300 to finish within 25 places of each other.


The squad finished in 25th place overall out of 44.


If Cowperthwaite provided the individual highlight for the Cleveland team, the best squad performance on the day came from the senior girls.


They were led by Phillipa Stone in a very creditable 27th place and Hanna Kitchener inside the top 100 in 85th.


The remaining counters - Emma Wortley, Grace Cuff Alice Rigby and Emily Palmer all excelled to help their team into 22nd place.


The senior boys’ team however could not match their female counterparts and finished last of the 34 teams completing the race.


The only glimmer of hope came from Matthew Bailey who finished in 161st place while the rest of the team sadly languished the rear of the field of 300.


Cleveland competitiors:


Junior Boys 3.6km (341): Josh Cowperthwaite 2, Luke Petit 48, Daniel Currie 119, Daniel Gunn 155, Oscar Brown 253, Adam Cowperthwaite 328.


Junior Girls 3.2km (331): Rebecca Tilley 171, Frances Bell 184, Rebecca Hall 209, Elecia Smith 313, Erin Peters 321, Phoebe Jennings 33.


Intermediate Boys 5.5km (335): Nathan Baker 17, Harry Allan 82, Aidan Rigby 96, Reece Curtis 117, Luke Duffy 245, James Greenwood 298.


Intermediate Girls 3.6 km, (339): Hollie Elliot 84, Libby Hedger 130, Isabelle Wherritt 142, Ellie Barnbrook 155, Rebekah Kitchener 198, Eve Russell 275.


Senior Girls 4.3 km (300): Philippa Stone 27, Hannah Kitchener 85, Emma Wortley 106, Grace Cuff 152, Alice Rigby 193, Emily Palmer 218.


Senior Boys 6.7 km (300): Matthew Bailey 161, Callum Martin 242, Alex Grant 262, James Keenan 267, Jason Simpson 283, Matthew Bowman 298.



Obama Urges Soviet-Style Voting Laws


obama Forcing Americans to vote under threat of legal penalty would help to fundamentally transform America, President Obama told a town hall-style meeting in Cleveland yesterday.


It is the latest radical leveling scheme that flows from the president’s totalitarian impulses. It is also consistent with his support for “Net Neutrality,” which is a form of censorship and his opposition to the landmark Citizens United decision that affirmed a conservative activist group’s constitutionally guaranteed right to make a movie critical of Hillary Clinton. It is an assault on American democracy itself because one of the ways that people express themselves politically is to stay home on Election Day. Compelled speech is not free speech.


“It would be transformative if everybody voted,” Obama said just months after his party was crushed in off-year congressional elections that gave Republicans control of both houses of Congress.


“That would counteract [campaign] money more than anything,” the president said during a discussion about reducing the role of money in elections. “If everybody voted, then it would completely change the political map in this country.”


Australia and a handful of other countries have mandatory voting laws, he noted. Pushing for such laws in the U.S. “may end up being a better strategy in the short term” than attacking Americans’ right to make campaign donations.


It would be “fun” for the U.S. to look at a constitutional amendment taking aim at campaign money, he said, but “realistically, given the requirements of that process, that would be a long-term proposition.” (Such a proposed constitutional amendment is currently pending in Congress.)


Obama whined that Democrats often don’t get around to voting in midterm elections. “The people who tend not to vote are young, they’re lower income, they’re skewed more heavily towards immigrant groups and minority groups,” he said.


But Obama only wants the right people to vote. That didn’t happen in the fall so he wants to force lazy Democrats off their couches and into voting booths. As the Washington Times reports, “in House races nationwide last November, about 5 million more Republican voters cast ballots than Democratic voters.”


What Obama didn’t say was that forced voting would benefit the Left. Making everyone including ultra low-information voters cast ballots would promote the redistribution of wealth and provide Democrats a permanent electoral advantage.


Honest leftists admit this while they clothe their rhetoric in moral garments and hoary civic cliches about the joys of full political participation.


Leftist academics, for example, favor mandatory voting because it leads to Marxist mobocracy.


The pursuit of the holy grail of so-called social justice serves as the justification for a never-ending war that the Left helps the nonproductive elements of society wage against the productive. Left-wingers suffer from a pathological hatred of material inequality and they abhor the freedoms guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution. It bothers them to no end that some Americans have more stuff than others.


Academics “Down Under,” where failing to vote is against the law, apparently share the same pathologies as their American counterparts.


According to Lisa Hill, a politics professor at the University of Adelaide in Australia, “America has a serious voter turnout problem,” and as a result “American democracy is dying.” Of course this foreign doomsayer presents no credible evidence that this is a problem in American society. Her chief concern is that there are some Americans who have more money than other Americans.


Forcing Americans to vote would boost the redistributionist efforts of government, transferring wealth from those who earned it to those who did not, she openly admits:



“The most decisive means for arresting turnout decline and closing the socioeconomic voting gap is mandatory voting: in fact, it is the only mechanism that can push turnout anywhere near 95 percent. Places with mandatory voting also have less wealth inequality, lower levels of political corruption and higher levels of satisfaction with the way democracy is working than voluntary systems.”



Boiled down to its essence, Professor Hill’s phony, self-serving, good-government claptrap, promotes the growth of government and involuntary transfers of wealth.


Besides, close to 100 percent voter turnout isn’t necessarily a sign that democratic culture is thriving in a country, contrary to Hill’s implication. History suggests the opposite. Sky-high voter participation is associated with despotic regimes that punish citizens for not voting. (The Stockholm-based International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, or International IDEA, offers an interesting primer on compulsory voting at its website.)


“In undemocratic regimes it is often the case that political and social pressure, intimidation or other means drive people to the polls,” according to the Centre for European Policy Studies. “This was the case in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe and still occurs in Central Asia and North Korea.”


But left-wingers are broken records, always complaining about supposedly inadequate voter participation rates, something that is only a problem in the eyes of control freaks. They want to expand the electorate by any means possible. They want, as the fraudsters of ACORN demonstrated for four decades, the dead, cartoon characters, and fictional figures to be registered to vote and to actually cast ballots. The want felons, an important constituency in the Democratic Party, to vote.


Boosting voter turnout was President Bill Clinton’s first legislative priority even though he “had just won an election in which the country had seen the largest increase in voter turnout in a generation,” according to journalist John Fund. “Nonetheless, President Clinton declared a ‘crisis’ in civic participation and proceeded to ram the proposed law through Congress.”


Trotskyist academics Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven lobbied vigorously for the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, commonly known as the Motor-Voter law.


Flooding the electoral system with massive numbers of know-nothing voters would promote radical upheaval in American society, Cloward and Piven argued.


“Enlisting millions of new and politicized voters is the way to create an electoral environment hospitable to fundamental change in American society, they explained in a 1983 article titled “Toward a Class-Based Realignment of American Politics: A Movement Strategy,” as I wrote in my book, Subversion Inc.: How Obama’s ACORN Red Shirts are Still Terrorizing and Ripping Off American Taxpayers.



“An enlarged and politicized electorate will sustain and encourage the movements in American society that are already working for the rights of women and minorities, for the protection of the social programs, and for transformation of foreign policy. Equally important, an enlarged and politicized electorate will foster and protect future mass movements from the bottom that the ongoing economic crisis is likely to generate, thus opening American politics to solutions to the economic crisis that express the interests of the lower strata of the population … The objective is to accelerate the dealigning forces already at work in American politics, and to promote party realignment along class lines.”



Artificially enlarging the electorate beyond those who bother to keep abreast of public affairs can only help progressives. Obama knows this. This is why he spends so much time trying to be cool, reaching out to the uneducated and the ignorant, reading comical Top 10 lists on late night TV shows, and referencing trivial things in interviews. He knows he can lie to his audience with impunity because its members have little to no idea what he actually stands for. They vote for him because they like him and feel that he cares about them. They are unable to connect him to the his disastrous policies that are destroying America. In other words, they are ideal voters, as far as the Left is concerned. And it is no coincidence that Obama and other left-wingers also support open borders and immigration amnesties for illegal aliens because they know the new voters will be grateful to Democrats and support them for life. After all, who doesn’t like Santa Claus?


Obama, the Red diaper baby, embraced Cloward and Piven’s class warfare-based electoral strategy in 1992 when he worked for ACORN’s Project Vote affiliate. “All our people must know that politics and voting affects their lives directly,” he said. “If we’re registering people in public housing, for an example, we talk about aid cuts and who’s responsible.”


Out of appreciation for their hard work on the Motor-Voter legislation, President Clinton hosted Cloward and Piven at the signing ceremony for the bill and thanked them by name.


That law turned welfare offices into voter registration centers and encouraged nonprofit groups to conduct registration drives. It also opened the door to massive voter fraud. The law invites voter fraud by forcing states to register on the spot anyone seeking a government benefit such as a renewal of a driver’s license or welfare.


The statute also forbids officials from demanding proof of U.S. citizenship or identification. States were also forced to allow mail-in voter registration, which made it easy for troublemaking activists to place false names on the rolls without any human contact with a government official. Mail-in voting, of course, is the opposite of the secret ballot because a bureaucrat has to examine the mailed-in ballot. States were also under orders not to purge the dead, criminals, or people who moved from the voter rolls for a minimum of eight years.


Now that the Left has partially rigged the electoral system, they want to force everybody to vote.


An Obama alumnus brought up mandatory balloting almost three years ago. During the 2012 election cycle when ever so briefly it seemed that Mitt Romney might actually have a shot at ousting Obama, Peter Orszag, former head of the Office of Management and Budget, floated the idea of coerced voting.


Orszag moaned that even though the U.S. “prides itself as the beacon of democracy … it’s very likely no U.S. president has ever been elected by a majority of American adults. It’s our own fault — because voter participation rates are running below 60 percent, a candidate would have to win 85 percent or more of the vote to be elected by a majority.”


The former top Obama bureaucrat then revealed that his real motivation was to launch an assault on Americans’ constitutionally protected free speech rights.



“Beyond simply raising participation, compulsory voting could alter the role of money in elections. Turn-out-the-vote efforts, often bankrolled by big-money groups, would become largely irrelevant. Negative advertising could be less effective, because a central aim of such ads is to discourage participation in the opponent’s camp.”



Obama and his lackeys only support democracy when they are on the winning side. When they lose and their candidate is in the White House, they become staunch advocates of overbearing executive actions. They rejoice at Obama’s ugly boast that he wields “a pen and a phone.”


They want to make it more difficult for Americans to express themselves during election season. They want to make it easier for people who don’t give a farthing’s cuss about the governance of the country to find their way into voting booths. They support protracted early voting periods because that makes it much more expensive to get messages out to voters. They want people who are easily manipulated and susceptible to demagoguery to cast ballots.


Left-wingers support all these things because they know that in a fair contest they could never beat patriotic Americans who aren’t hellbent on fundamentally transforming the United States of America.


Their salvation lies in ridiculous schemes like compulsory voting and lying to the public.


And they will demonize anyone who gets in their way.


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Israel’s Leftist Losers


pl_edited-1 For thousands of years the Jews dreamed of reclaiming their country. The left had another dream.


It dreamed of a country run by bureaucrats that worked only three days a week. It dreamed of unions running monopolies that worked whenever they liked and charged whatever they wanted. It dreamed of children raised on collective farms without parents and of government as a Socialist café debate.


Most of all it dreamed of a country without conservatives. It still hasn’t gotten that wish.


Netanyahu’s victory hit hardest in Tel Aviv where, as Haaretz, the paper of the left, reports, “Leftist, secular Tel Aviv went to sleep last night cautiously optimistic only to wake up this morning in a state of utter and absolute devastation.”


Tel Aviv is ground zero for any Iranian nuclear attack. Its population density makes it an obvious target and Iran threatened it just last month. A nuclear strike on Tel Aviv would not only kill a lot of Israelis, it would also wipe out the country’s left.


Haifa and Tel Aviv are the only major cities in Israel that the left won in this election. And it was a close thing in traditionally “Red Haifa” whose union dockworkers these days are Middle Eastern Jews who vote right. The left took a quarter of the vote in Haifa to a fifth for Netanyahu’s conservative Likud party.


In Tel Aviv however, the Labor coalition and Meretz, the two major leftist parties, took nearly half of the vote. Amos Oz’s daughter told Haaretz that everyone in the left had been upbeat because everyone they knew was voting for the left. Now the leftist elite is once again forced to come to terms with the tragedy that much of the country doesn’t want to hand over land to terrorists, live on a communal farm or turn over the country to Marc Rich’s lawyer and his American backers who make Slim-Fast and KIND bars.


There are however days when they think Israel might be better off without certain parts of Tel Aviv.


The left doesn’t want a country. It wants a Berkeley food co-op. It wants a city with some ugly modernist architecture. It wants a campus with courses on media studies and gender in geography. It wants an arcade where unwashed lefties can tunelessly strum John Lennon songs on their vintage guitars. It wants cafes with Russian Futurist prints on the walls. It wants to be about excited about political change.


Its only use for Israel was as a utopian theme park. Its allegiance was not to Jewish history or democracy, but to its crackpot leftist fantasies. Now its fantasies are dead and it wants to kill Israel.


The left spitefully alienated every immigrant group from Holocaust survivors to Middle Eastern Jews to Russian Jews. It also had slurs for each of them. The Holocaust survivors were ‘Sabon’ (soap) and the Middle Eastern Jewish refugees were ‘Chakhchakhim’. That particular slur at an election rally cost Peres and Labor the 1981 election. Another slur at an election rally now hurt the left and boosted Netanyahu.


But if you ask the left why it lost, it will blame Israeli racism.


The Israeli left slurred Middle Eastern Jews as “primitives” and used them as cheap labor to maintain the Kibbutz collectivist lifestyle until they stood up for themselves and the experiment in ‘equality’ ended. It slurred Russian immigrants as “prostitutes”, Settlers in ’67 Israel as “bloodsuckers” and Ultra-Orthodox as “parasites”.


Netanyahu’s likely coalition will lean heavily on parties that draw their support from Middle Eastern Jews, Settlers, Russian Jews and the Ultra-Orthodox.


These groups are also known as the majority of the country. That’s why the left lost. Again.


The left wants its clubhouse back and it can’t get it back. Demographics and immigration turned the ideal Israeli leftist, a wealthy secular Ashkenazi urbanite from an important family, into a minority. The only reason the left still exists is because its phantom Apartheid State of media outlets, courts and academics still maintains a death grip on the system.


The other reason that the Israeli left exists is that its malicious oppression of new immigrants splintered them into warring groups, much as the Democratic Party’s Tammany Hall did in the United States. The left couldn’t own them, but it did set them against each other in order to maintain a dysfunctional political system in which the strongest form of central authority comes from an unelected judiciary.


The left hasn’t managed to conquer Israel, but it has succeeded in dividing it. Every new group of immigrants has been indoctrinated, not with allegiance to the left (that was a lost cause early on) but with resentment of each other. The Russian Jews are told that they live badly because of the Ultra-Orthodox Jews. The Middle Eastern Jews are told that they live badly because of the Russian Jews. The Ultra-Orthodox are told that they live badly because of the Settlers. There’s plenty of overlap between these groups, but the tactic still works well enough for the left to stay in the game.


The real Apartheid State in Israel is this Deep State of the left. It’s the one you see on display when former heads of the Mossad and Shabak denounce Israel and Netanyahu. It’s in the phony media polls and exit polls that were skewed in favor of the left. It’s in the candidacy of a cretin like Herzog with his high voice and his old guard last name promising to do whatever Obama and the left tell him to do.


The left tried to sell Herzog, the errand boy for international leftist criminals like Marc Rich and Octav Botnar, as the future of Israel. The public never bought it.


The left has no leadership. It has nothing to offer. It has no reason to exist except malice and spite.


Since the left lost control of Israel, it has been hell-bent on destroying it. The PLO deal was one step in a process meant to destroy Israel and return to the bi-national state that Ahdut HaAvodah, the ancestor of the Labor Party, and Ben Gurion had been flirting with in the twenties and thirties.


The Two-State Solution was always meant to end in a One-State Solution.


The Israeli left has despaired of turning the country into the utopia that it wanted. There are still plenty of bureaucrats and union monopolies, but children are raised by their parents and most of them are born to the types of Jews that they hate.


The more philosophical members of the left see the “peace process” that they illegally initiated and passed as a cleanup operation that removes the failed experiment of Israel to make way for the Muslim “decolonization/ethnic cleansing” of Israel. They usually have homes in France and tenure in the US.


And the rest of the Jewish population that doesn’t have homes in France is meant to become Sabon.


The remainder had decided that the only hope for the leftist dream is to unite with their Socialist comrades in the PLO and build a bi-national state using Muslim demographics to counter the demographic growth of Middle Eastern and Ultra-Orthodox Jews. Israel will become Lebanon. The Jews will become the Lebanese Christian minority in this utopian experiment and it doesn’t matter if they get killed as long as some of them go on living in pricey neighborhoods and strumming guitars in Tel Aviv.


It would be nice to think that the Israeli left was transformed into this twisted thing by the loss of its utopian dreams, but it was always like this. It was never patriotic. It was forced to become patriotic by the Muslim rejection of all its efforts at co-existence. It was never Zionist. Zionism was forced on it by the anti-Semitism of its Russian Socialist colleagues. It never wanted to be Jewish. It was forced to be.


Muslim hate turned the Israeli left into the unwilling caretaker of a Jewish State. G-d kept Israel alive despite the left’s incompetence, its treasons and its slavish instinct for appeasement.


Today the left can no longer even pretend that it has a vision. All it can do is howl about peace and justice and how the Middle Eastern Jewish Schorim (blacks) and the Ultra-Orthodox Schorim (also blacks, for their hats) and the Russians destroyed ‘their’ country.


Then it can go back to its French villas and have its bi-national Muslim state there.


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Bill Whittle: The Criminal Arrogance of Hillary Clinton


30,000 deleted emails… Bill Whittle looks at the lawlessness, the arrogance, and the unmasked contempt that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have for the American people. See the video and transcript below:


TRANSCRIPT:


Hi everybody. I’m Bill Whittle and this is the Firewall.


The American experiment was many things, but first and foremost it was an attempt, for the first time in human history, to create a society based upon the rule of law. The Declaration of Independence lists, in exhaustive and minute detail, nearly thirty enumerated cases of lawlessness on the part of King George III. This nation showed the world that common people could not only rule themselves; they could do so without an aristocracy and especially do so without an aristocracy that was, like King George, above the law.


Here’s a law: U.S. Code, Title 18, Part I, Chapter 101, Section 2071, Paragraph a: “Whoever willfully and unlawfully conceals, removes, mutilates, obliterates, or destroys, or attempts to do so, or, with intent to do so takes and carries away any record, proceeding, map, book, paper, document, or other thing, filed or deposited with any clerk or officer of any court of the United States, or in any public office, or with any judicial or public officer of the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.”


Paragraph b: Whoever, having the custody of any such record, proceeding, map, book, document, paper, or other thing, willfully and unlawfully conceals, removes, mutilates, obliterates, falsifies, or destroys the same, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both; and shall forfeit his office and be disqualified from holding any office under the United States.


Hillary Rodham Clinton decided to conduct, for four years, the office of Secretary of State using her own private email server. Because these emails were not transacted and recorded through the official State Department servers, Mrs. Clinton “willfully concealed and removed” these critical documents from the records and archives of the United States Government. You can further argue that by electing to not have these records placed onto government servers – which are secure, routinely backed up, and most importantly subject to Freedom Of Information Act requests, that she has, by any reasonable interpretation, “mutilated, obliterated and destroyed” these essential records, which belong not to Hillary Rodham Clinton but rather to the Secretary of State of the United States of America, and her employers, the people of that nation.


The penalty for this is a fine or up to three years imprisonment, or both. That’s paragraph (a) of the law.


By her own admission, transacting ALL of her State Department business through her private server means that by not turning the entire server over to the State Department – all of it, that’s for us to decide what is important or incriminating, not her – she has in fact “willfully and unlawfully concealed, removed, mutilated, obliterated, falsified, or destroyed the same.”


That too is punishable by fine, up to three years imprisonment, or both… and, parenthetically, forfeiture of office and disqualification from holding any office under the United States.


That’s the law. That’s what the law says.


The lawlessness is endemic in this administration. But beyond the lawlessness is, of course, the contempt. The contempt for the very idea that these Harvard and Yale Law School grads have to actually, you know, obey the law. The contempt for the American people’s right to know what their elected officials are doing. And beyond all of this, the towering, monumental, criminal arrogance of it: that the official business of the United States of America; the nation’s diplomacy, strategy, defense posture, privileged communications between our allies and in point of fact every particle of our nation’s foreign policy was being discussed and archived in a single box in either Texas or Manhattan or wherever the hell it is; that this server’s basic, routine, Microsoft security updates – the kind you and I get pestered with every day — were not complied with; that the vital security interests or in fact the very lives of 320 million people did not warrant the effort to even obtain a unique encryption certificate but rather used the same one issued to thousands if not millions of users; all of this gets to the heart not only of who Hillary Clinton is and the contempt in which she holds the American people. It is deeper than that.


When the President of the United States gets an official notification from his Secretary of State from BestMattressDeals99@yahoo.com, or any email that does not end in dot gov, then he too is complicit in this lawlessness, and for the same reason.


Barack Obama’s Press Secretary, Josh Earnest, admits that the President did receive emails from his Secretary of State, and went on to say this:


Feel better now? The President of the United States, receiving emails from an illegal source, did not know or care or take any action whatsoever to ensure that she complied with the federal law she was in violation of. And neither did any of the people we pay to be responsible for the security of the communications of those at the uppermost level of the most powerful nation in the world.


This country was founded to be rid of the incompetence, reckless arrogance and casual stupidity of Kings and Queens who acted as though they were above the law. If we let these crimes go unpunished it will die of that same parasitical disease.


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Obama Comes to Castro’s Rescue — on The Glazov Gang


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This week’s Glazov Gang was joined by Humberto Fontova, the author of four books including his latest, The Longest Romance; The Mainstream Media and Fidel Castro.


Humberto came on the show to discuss Obama Comes to Castro’s Rescue, unveiling how the Radical-in-Chief threw a lifeline to a dying tyranny. The dialogue occurred in the context of The Truth About the Cuban ‘Embargo’.


Don’t miss the Glazov Gang’s second episode this week with Dr. Mark Christian, the President and Executive Director of the Global Faith Institute (GFI). He is an Egyptian-born Christian convert from Sunni Islam and is related to high-ranking leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood. (Learn more about his background and contemporary battle with the Muslim Brotherhood here.)


He came on the show to discuss the pro-Israel evening he is hosting in Omaha, “Israel in the Heartland,” on March 19 to honor Israel. It is the first ever pro-Zionist event to be held in the United States heartland and the state of Nebraska:


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Winston Churchill’s War Against Islamists


win In 1897, twenty-three-year-old Winston Churchill waged war against the Islamists of that day on the North-West Frontier of India. Churchill used his mother’s political influence to take leave from his regiment, the Fourth Hussars, and get attached to the Malakand Field Force as a war correspondent. This assignment resulted in a series of articles for the Daily Telegraph and his first book, The Story of the Malakand Field Force. Churchill’s observations about the nature of the enemy and the half-measures taken by the British government of the time to deal with the enemy have an eerie resemblance to the West’s contemporary struggle against the Islamists.


The Malakand Field Force, led by General Sir Bindon Blood, was dispatched to relieve the Malakand Pass and Fort Chakdara, which guarded the important road to Chitral on India’s North-West Frontier. Churchill, although a war correspondent, served at the front and saw action with British and Indian forces fighting the uprising by Muslim tribesmen. Though some non-religious leaders were involved in the uprising, the tribesmen were largely inspired by Muslim holy men, one of whom Churchill called the “Mad Mullah.” Churchill described him as “[a] wild enthusiast, convinced alike of his Divine mission and miraculous powers [who] preached a crusade, or jihad, against the infidel.”


The outbreak of war on the frontier, Churchill wrote, was due to the mullahs recognition that “[c]ontact with civilisation assails the superstition, and credulity, on which the wealth and influence of the Mullah depend.” The mullahs, wrote Churchill, sent messengers “to and fro among the tribes. Whispers of war, a holy war, were breathed to a race intensely passionate and fanatical.” “Vast and mysterious agencies,” he continued, “the force of which are incomprehensible to rational minds, were employed. The tribes were taught to expect prodigious events. A great day for their race and faith was at hand.” The infidel would be destroyed.


Churchill noted that the mullahs and tribesmen were also affected by “a strange combination of circumstances,” including a Turkish victory over the Greeks, “the publication of the Amir’s book on Jihad; his assumption of the position of a Caliph of Islam, and much indiscreet writing in the Anglo-Indian press.” These circumstances, he wrote, “united to produce a ‘boom’ in Mohammedanism.”


The tribesmen pressed their attack on the Malakand Pass and Fort Chakdara in late July-early August 1897, but were repeatedly repulsed. Churchill described fighting in which “no quarter is ever asked or given.” “The tribesmen,” he wrote, “torture the wounded & mutilate the dead.” He noted that field hospitals and convoys of the sick “are the especial targets of the enemy.”


Other mullahs proclaimed a jihad against the infidel, inciting the tribe of Mohmands to rise up against the British and their Indian allies. The mullahs asked their followers: “How long should Islam be insulted? How long should its followers lurk in the barren lands of the north?” The Mohmands were urged to “rise and join in the destruction of the white invaders.” They were promised that all who fell in battle would become saints, and all who lived would become rich. Churchill called this the “combined allurements of plunder and paradise.”


Churchill called this Muslim-inspired uprising “the most successful attempt hitherto made to combine the frontier tribes,” and he warned that “[it] will not be the last.” He ridiculed the timid and half-measures that constituted British policy on the frontier. “Civilisation is face to face,” he wrote, “with militant Mohammedanism. When we reflect on the moral and material forces arrayed, there need be no fear of the ultimate issue,” he continued, “but the longer the policy of half-measures is adhered to the more distant the end of the struggle will be.”


With an eloquence that he would repeatedly demonstrate throughout his literary and political careers, Churchill described British policy toward the Islamists as “[a]n interference more galling than complete control, a timidity more rash then recklessness, a clemency more cruel than the utmost severity.” “To terminate this sorry state of affairs,” he concluded, “it is necessary to carry a recognized and admitted policy to its logical and inevitable conclusion.” In other words, the enemy must be defeated and British interests protected and preserved.


Like the British Empire of 1897, the United States today is the world’s superpower with global interests and responsibilities. The United States and its Western allies—indeed Western Civilization—is today under assault by Islamists motivated by the same allurements of plunder and paradise that motivated the Muslim tribesmen in 1897, and who, like their forbearers, use torture and mutilation in their war against the infidel.


Western Civilization today, in Churchill’s words, “is face to face with militant Mohammedanism” in the form of Iran, ISIS, and other modern day Islamists. Were he alive today, Churchill would no doubt criticize the West’s timidity and its use of half-measures to combat its enemy. Indeed, he would be incredulous that so many Western leaders refuse even to describe the enemy as “Islamic.” The enemy must be defeated and U.S. and Western interests must be protected and preserved.


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Middlesbrough landlord caught on camera as he dumped furniture


A landlord who dumped furniture in an alleyway handed himself in after being caught on camera.


David Medland was filmed as he and another man left a sofa and armchair in an area behind houses in central Middlesbrough.


But following an appeal for information about the incident including footage of the pair the 62-year-old contacted Middlesbrough Council admitting he was one of the men.


Yesterday Medland, of Allendale Road, Billingham appeared before Teesside magistrates where he admitted depositing controlled waste on land otherwise than in accordance with an environmental permit.


He was given a six-month conditional discharge and ordered to pay a £15 victim surcharge, the Council’s legal costs of £100 and the £75 cost of removing the waste.


The court was told the footage taken in central Middlesbrough in December, 2013 showed a white van in an area behind houses, with two men seen dumping an armchair and a sofa before driving off again.


Following the publication of stills from the film Medland - the older of the two men - contacted the Council and was subsequently interviewed by Enforcement Officers.


CCTV cameras caught these two fly-tippers in the act CCTV cameras caught these two fly-tippers in the act


He told officers he was a property landlord and owned the vehicle involved in the footage and that he was one of the men.


He confirmed that the furniture seen abandoned in the footage was from a property he owns in Billingham, and admitted during the interview that he should not have left the items in the alley and that no one had given him permission to do so.


He accepted all responsibility for his actions that day and said the person with him was an employee and was only acting on his instructions.


Councillor Tracy Harvey, Middlesbrough Council’s Executive Member for Environment, said: “Fly-tipping leads to environmental eyesores, and those tempted to use it as a shortcut will be prosecuted where possible.


“Bulky items like these can be disposed of safely and responsibly at minimal cost, and we are always happy to offer advice and guidance.”



Yanic Wildschut scores as Boro Under-21s book their place in cup final


Boro Under-21s booked their place in the Final Third Development League Cup final after a 3-1 win over Derby County tonight.


Goals from Harry Chapman, Adam Jackson and Yanic Wildschut ensured double delight for the Teessiders in Derbyshire, after the first-team's 1-0 win at the iPro Stadium 24 hours earlier.


Paul Jenkins made four changes to the side beaten 3-0 by Reading last week, with Chapman, buoyed by his England Under-18 call-up, restored to the starting line-up.


There were also starts for David Atkinson, Wildschut and Luke Williams, the latter making his first Boro appearance since his loan spell at Coventry City was ended.



Boro started brightly and took the lead on 21 minutes when Chapman rifled home after good work from Robbie Tinkler.


That lead was doubled five minutes later when Jackson stabbed home after a goalmouth melee, but the Rams halved that deficit on the half hour through Tom Koblenz.


Wildschut then grabbed Boro’s third on 81 minutes, booking the Teessiders’ place in the northern final against Wigan Athletic.


Boro: Fryer; Atkinson, Jackson, Burn (c), Bennett; Tinkler, Maloney, Chapman (McAloon 69), Williams (Fewster 88), Brobbel, Wildschut. Subs not used: Coddington, Fry, Kitching.



Budget 2015 RECAP: Build-up and reaction across Newcastle and the North East


Chancellor George Osborne will attempt to present the Conservatives as the party of the North in his pre-election Budget - but Labour have accused him of ignoring the North East.


The war of words comes as Mr Osborne is expected to announce a series of measures aimed specifically at northern voters in his Budget statement.


In the North East, The Budget is likely to include announcements such as £20m Health North initiative funding, faster broadband pledge to remote communities, 15-year transport links plan and a high-speed rail line across the Pennines known as HS3.


I'm Daniel Milligan co-ordinating this live blog but we'll have updates from political reporters Kate Proctor, Rachel Wearmouth and political editor Jonathan Walker


Follow this live blog for all the build-up, live coverage of the Chancellor's speech and reaction from the North East.



What you need to know about the pre-election budget


2015 Budget - key measures:


- £1 million for the Centre for Process Innovation to support the region’s science sector.


- New enterprise zone for oil and gas decommissioning to be launched at South Bank Wharf - a move which could bring “many hundreds” of jobs to Teesside.


- £1.3bn package of measures for the oil and gas industry. Includes:


- Petroleum revenue tax cut from 50% to 35% to support oil production in older fields


- Cut in the supplementary charge on companies’ profits from 30% to 20%, backdated to January.


- tax allowances to stimulate investment in the North Sea


- Compensation for energy-intensive companies to be brought forward to this autumn.


- £300,000 to be made available to promote tourism links between the North East and Scandinavia.


- Automotive industry support including £100m for driverless technology.


- Extension of small business rate relief.


- Corporation tax to be cut to 20% in April.


- Business rates system to be reviewed.


- A new Help To Buy Isa for first-time buyers.


- Personal income tax threshold to rise to £10,800 in 2016 and £11,000 from 2017. The move will cut tax for 27m people and make the typical working taxpayer £900 a year better off.


- Funding for UKTI-led activities in China to be almost doubled.


- Cancellation of fuel duty rise scheduled for this autumn.


- Annual tax return to be abolished.


- Pension pot lifetime allowance to be reduced from £1.25m to £1m from next year, saving £600m a year.


- Beer duty to be cut by 1p in the pint. cider duty reduced by 2% and wine duty frozen.


- Cut in lifetime pensions allowance from £1.25 to £1m.



Fan Cam: Watch Boro supporters celebrate crucial win at Derby


What a night to be a Boro fan!


The travelling army at Derby roared their side on to three points after Patrick Bamford's superb finish silenced the home support.


Teesside voices boomed out of one corner of the iPro Stadium in celebration of a crucial win that sent Boro back into the automatic promotion places.


The above footage, sent to us from Ray Blake, Blain Allinson, Graham Cousins and Curtis Graham, shows fans celebrate Bamford's second half strike and celebrate at the end of the game.


Boro's next away game, at Bournemouth on Saturday, is another sell out.



Table Tennis: Ormesby's British League treble


Triumphant Ormesby are celebrating a historic British League title treble.


The club’s senior team lifted the Premier Division trophy to add to the Women’s and Junior British League crowns already won in a hugely successful season.


They did it in style too, winning three of their matches 8-0 and drawing with outgoing title holders Sycamore when they hosted the final round of matche.


It was an all-round team performance with all four members – Darius Knight, Enio Mendes, Helshan Weerasinghe and Tom Jarvis - winning seven of their eight sets.


The season climaxed after Ormesby had improved their sets average with 8-0 victories over Kingfisher of Reading and Bournemouth while their main challengers, Sycamore, had dropped sets as they beat London Academy 7-1 and Drumchapel 6-2.


That meant that provided Ormesby had a good result against Drumchapel, a 4-4 draw against Sycamore would be sufficient to win the title.


The match started badly for Ormesby when Sycamore’s Japanese player, Kenichi Matsubuchi, scored a very narrow victory over Mendes at 11-9 in the fifth and deciding game.


John Upham Photography (Left to Right): Enio Mendes, Tom Jarvis, Alan Ransome (Womens and Junior Coach), Darius Knight


(Left to Right): Enio Mendes, Tom Jarvis, Alan Ransome (Womens and Junior Coach), Darius Knight

Knight, in a second thrilling match, levelled the score by beating English international and Six Nations champion Chris Doran 14-12 in the decider.


Then came the two big surprise results for Ormesby as Jarvis scored a comfortable win against the higher-ranked Mathew Ware in three straight games and Weerasinghe beat Irish No 1 Paul McCreery 11-2 in the deciding game.


Sycamore came back into the match when Matsubuchi scored a comfortable win against Knight but Mendes proved too strong for Ware, winning with three comfortable games to make sure of at least a draw.


As anticipated, Sycamore finished the match strongly with Doran beating Weerasinghe 3-1 and McCreery defeating Jarvis 3-0 but the all-important draw from Ormesby’s perspective had been achieved which simply left a 6-2 win over Drumchapel of Glasgow, the third-placed team, required for Ormesby to win the title.


Ormesby started strongly when Knight defeated Scottish international Craig Howieson in straight games and then Mendes beat Drumchapel’s star man, China’s Sung Meng Cheng, by the same score.


From that point it was Ormesby all the way as they wrapped up a maximum victory.


At the same time deflated Sycamore lost their final match against London club Fusion 5-3 to give Ormesby a clear two-point lead at the top of the final table.


Mendes won the League award for the player who won the most matches during the season with 24 victories from 28 matches while Knight was in second place with 23.


Weerasinghe was fourth with 20 from 25 while Jarvis was in seventh place with 15 from 17.


Michael Marsden, the player/coach, won six from 12.



Your School: Durham Lane Primary School Eaglescliffe


VIEW GALLERY


School: Durham Lane Primary School


Address: Amberley Way, Eaglescliffe, Stockton-On-Tees, TS16 0NG


Head: Jacqueline Ball


What are your school aims/policies? At Durham Lane Primary School we aim to maintain a secure, caring and stimulating community in which children are encouraged to have respect for themselves and each other. Through quality teaching and learning, children are given the opportunity to develop individuality and responsibility, and are challenged to achieve their full potential.


We believe it is important that we develop the whole child, nurturing the academic, creative, spiritual, aesthetic and social aspects equally. Self-discipline and acceptable codes of behaviour are valued and promoted.


We see our school as being at the heart of a larger community and we encourage our children to value and celebrate the diversities they encounter in this community, in Britain and in the wider world.


Everything we do is for our children.


What were you rated in your last Ofsted? Good with Outstanding (Leadership and Management, Behaviour and Safety)


Do you have a school council? If so, what are you currently working on?  Our School Council plays a really important role in our school. It has just planned the fund-raising (and fun!) activities for Comic Relief which include dressing in red and a joke competition in assembly.


They have also just chosen some new books to put in classrooms from our recent Book Fair.


What after school clubs do you run? Eco Team, Football, Maths in Motion, Puzzle Club, Origami, Choir, Textiles Club & Library


Tell us something we didn’t know about your school? Every year, we spend two weeks involved in a whole school cross-curricular creative project. In the past, we have studied each of the continents and the Olympics.


We have just finished this year’s project which was Healthy Living. We found out all about healthy eating and exercise and had lots of visitors in to help us.


All of the children did some cooking with our school cook (Mrs Prosho), or with a dad who is a chef, or at Egglescliffe School, or with a company called Little Sprouts.


We also had an after school session with Little Sprouts for families to cook and eat together. We had a storyteller from the library (Ivan Limon) who entertained everyone and also delivered some Dementia Awareness sessions. Y5 and 6 learned how to resuscitate someone using CPR on dummies.


Everyone learned relaxation techniques, the importance of having clean hands, how to be motivated to exercise, how to make good food choices, as well as covering lots of other English, maths, science and art work.



Jeff Winter: 'Surely Steve Gibson and Boro deserve bigger attendances at The Riverside?'


I know that Saturday’s game with Ipswich was the lunchtime kick-off and it was shown live on Sky Sports.


But surely Steve Gibson, Aitor Karanka and the Boro players deserve greater numbers than the 18,500 home supporters that attended?


I won’t knock our regular fans - we have the second best away support in the division and the fanatical support of Red Faction and Twelfth Man have revitalised the previously sterile atmospheres at home games.


But surely for the last few games of the season on our own patch, the people of Teesside can muster larger numbers to help see us over the line?


It’s embarrassing to see the thousands of empty seats shown across the country.


We all know that if and when we reach the Promised Land, the “casuals” will be back in their thousands to watch Chelsea, Arsenal, City and Manchester United.


Also if we don’t get automatic promotion, then 30,000 plus regulars will want to go to Wembley.


Season Card holders should be okay but those who haven’t committed and attend home games regularly might miss out.


I hope that there is some way that loyalty can be shown to those that have boosted attendances this season, rather than the glory hunters.


We only have one more 3pm Saturday game at The Riverside, but surely we can muster well over 20,000 for our last four home games?


Away from the tension and drama of Boro’s promotion push, we have recently seen more evidence of the sinister side of the sport we all love.


Dutch referee Bjorn Kuipers was in charge of Chelsea’s Champions League match with Paris Saint Germain last week, and he was hardly helped by Jose Mourinho’s players.


There’s hardly any surprise there, as Mourinho’s sides are notorious for their gamesmanship.


We all know the esteem that Aitor Karanka holds his mentor in, but I hope and pray that he never copies this more devious side to his game plan .


We all want to win and be successful, but the Portuguese manager adopts the ‘win at all cost’ method that blights the modern game.


The harrassment of match officials is a clear ploy that he thinks will influence decisions.


In truth, I have seen examples of it creeping into Boro’s game of late. Hopefully it’s been brought about by the tension of the games and nothing more premeditated.


I am sure it works for some sides and that’s why they do it.


With me, I always thought it was more likely to have the opposite effect.


Think it through. If someone is constantly in your face and annoying you, doesn’t that mean you are less likely to get a close call in your favour ?


The old Cloughie suggestion that if you are bothering the referee then you aren’t concentrating on the game was always a sensible argument.


You never got any hassle from his sides and they were very successful.


Perhaps Mourinho and some of the current managers should take a leaf out of his book.


******************


‘YOU’RE not fit to referee’ is a popular chant from the stands these days - replacing some of the ruder insults thrown at match officials.


In the vast majority of cases, those sentiments are more about the referee’s perceived inabilities rather than any physical aspect.


Referees do get injured during games, though, and in the main they are muscular injuries.


That’s when the fourth official can escape the moaning of the benches and at least be responsible for what’s happening on the pitch, rather than just be a sounding board for managers’ frustrations.


On Saturday at The Emirates we saw a rare example of a referee having to leave the field when Chris Foy was replaced by Anthony Taylor.


Had the same have happened at The Riverside on Saturday, audible groans would have followed.


Our fourth man against Ipswich was Stuart Attwell - the man who disallowed Albert Adomah’s overhead kick at Elland Road back in August.


At least we would have had an experienced referee taking over, which is completely different to what used to happen in my early days.


Back then, mainly as a cost-saving measure, the fourth official was a referee from a local league. In our case, it was often a Northern League official.


Indeed, I acted in that capacity on many occasions at Ayresome Park.


In the main, my responsibilities were substitutions and that was fine by me.


The biggest game I was involved in was Boro’s second leg play-off semi-final at home to Bradford City.


I had been to Valley Parade the previous Sunday for the first leg as a Boro supporter, and three days later I could have been involved in a crucial decision - had I been called into action.


Obviously I would have been neutral, but imagine if I came on to replace an injured assistant referee and flagged a penalty against Boro, or an offside disallowing a goal.


At least the insults from the stands are left behind as you drive back to another part of the country these days. I would have had to live and work in the town - and fans have long memories.


Thankfully the situation wouldn’t occur in big matches nowadays, as senior referees are appointed as the spare man.


However, that in itself does present a different problem if it’s the linesman that’s injured, rather than the referee.


As officials progress through the levels from junior football to the very top they always referee and run the line. You usually line at a one level above where you referee.


A Conference referee could run the line in the Football League, so is familiar with both roles, which are very different.


If you get to the referee’s list in the Football League, that means you can throw away your flags and concentrate just on the refereeing side.


But the downside to that is when acting as a fourth man, and the linesman gets injured.


It happened to me 10 years after I had lined up at Mogga’s testimonial against Celtic.


I was thrown into second half action at Blackburn Rovers v Arsenal, and Ashley Cole wasn’t slow to remind me that I was a bit rusty, to put it mildly.


‘You don’t know what you’re doing’ was probably quite appropriate that night.



Durham bowler Mark Wood earns first England call-up alongside Yorkshire sextet


Durham fast bowler Mark Wood was a surprise inclusion in England’s squad for the upcoming Test series with West Indies.


The Ashington-born star impressed during the recent England Lions tour to South Africa and has now been called up to the senior squad for the first time in his career alongside county teammate Ben Stokes.


Wood, 25, made his first class debut in 2011 and has since taken 74 wickets at an average of just over 26.


Along with the rest of the Durham squad, Wood is currently in Dubai preparing for the new season but his call-up means that the Royal London One-Day Cup champions will be without his services at the start of the summer.


“I am delighted. Especially when I haven’t played that many games, it is good that people have seen something in me.” Wood said.


“The Lions tour was fantastic and couldn’t have gone any better for me.


“I managed to put a run of games together and put in the performances and that has obviously stood me in good stead.”


The Durham duo join six Yorkshire players called up, as captain Alastair Cook picks up the reins after being replaced as World Cup captain before Christmas.


Yorkshire spinner Adil Rashid and batsman Adam Lyth could both pick up their first caps, with the latter likely to contend with Jonathan Trott for a vacant opener’s slot alongside Cook.


There are also places for Yorkshire duo Liam Plunkett and Jonathan Bairstow, alongside England regulars Gary Ballance and Joe Root.


Chris Woakes has been ruled out of the West Indies tour through injury, while Moeen Ali has not been included in the official tour party as he recovers from a side strain


The three-match series between England and West Indies gets underway on Monday, April 13 in Antigua, with the first of two warm-up matches scheduled to take place seven days earlier.



Budget 2015: George Osborne claims Britain is 'walking tall again' and says austerity will end a year early


George Osborne claimed Britain was "walking tall again" as he set out his final Budget before the general election.


In a nod to the May 7 poll, he said Britain was facing a "critical choice" as he highlighted economic successes.


Mr Osborne said the Office for Budget had ticked up its growth forecast for this year - to 2.5% compared to the 2.4% it was predicting at the time of the Autumn Statement in December.


Growth will also be slightly higher next year at 2.3% as against a previous forecast of 2.2%, he said.


He told MPs: "Today, I report on a Britain that is growing, creating jobs and paying its way. We took difficult decisions in the teeth of opposition and it worked - Britain is walking tall again."


He said that after a collapse greater than almost any country five years ago, in the last year the UK has grown faster than any other major advanced economy.


He went on: "Five years ago, millions of people could not find work. Today, I can report: more people have jobs in Britain than ever before.


"Five years ago, living standards were set back years by the Great Recession. Today, the latest projections show that living standards will be higher than when we came to office.


"Five years ago, the deficit was out of control. Today, as a share of national income it is down by more than a half."


And he added: "The critical choice facing the country now is this: do we return to the chaos of the past? Or do we say to the British people, let's go on working through the plan that is delivering for you?"


Claiming austerity would be ending a year earlier thanks to the Government's policies, Mr Osborne declared: "The hard work and sacrifice of the British people has paid off. The original debt target I set out in my first Budget has been met.


"We will end this Parliament with Britain's national debt share falling. The sun is starting to shine - and we are fixing the roof."


And in a dig at Labour he said: "The bank sales, lower debt interest and lower welfare bills presents us with a choice. We could treat it as a windfall, even though we know the public finances need further repair. And with an election looming, some of my immediate predecessors may have been tempted to do this.


"But that would be deeply irresponsible. We'd be spending money we didn't really have."


He said the OBR was predicting that debt as a share of GDP will fall from 80.4% in 2014-15 to 71.6% in 2019-20.


He told MPs: "Because the national debt share is falling a year earlier than forecast at the Autumn Statement - the squeeze on public spending ends a year earlier too.


"In the final year of this decade, 2019-20, public spending will grow in line with the growth of the economy. We can do that while still running a healthy surplus to bear down on our debt."



Teesside lock Geoff Parling set for England start in Six Nations decider


Teesside lock Geoff Parling is set to make his first England start in more than two years against France in Saturday’s Six Nations decider at Twickenham.


Stuart Lancaster’s men could clinch a first title since 2011 when they face Les Bleus.


With fellow Championship contenders Wales and Ireland playing earlier in the day, England will know how many points they must notch to claim the Six Nations crown.


And Stockton-born Parling is expected to be named in Lancaster’s starting XV this week, after coming off the bench for the final half-hour in England’s 25-13 win over Scotland following a knee injury.


Second row Parling has endured a difficult time with injury recently, missing all of England’s Autumn Internationals through concussion.


The 31-year-old British and Irish Lion is likely to replace Dave Attwood in England’s pack - and admits France are a dangerous proposition.


“First and foremost we need to beat France. They haven’t been going too well but you never know which French team is going to turn up - they could be absolutely outstanding,” Parling told Sky Sports.


“They rely on the set piece from their forwards and then individual brilliance probably more so than other teams. It’s a bit different and unpredictable, and sometimes quite hard to play against.


“If you know what you need to do at the start of the game it doesn’t affect you. In the first 20 minutes you’ve got to try and build the score, and take the points when they’re on offer and get into the game.


“Maybe in the second half you can alter things a little bit, but in the first half it won’t change anything.”


France head to Twickenham on the back of an unconvincing 29-0 win against Italy in Rome last weekend.



Wounded soldiers charity trek gets a Royal helper


Prince Harry has announced he will walk with five wounded service personnel on part of their 1,000-mile (1,609km) trek around Britain later this year.


The Walk Of Britain is designed to raise awareness of the work of the charity Walking With The Wounded, which supports injured members of the armed forces back into independence through employment.


Harry met the team of four men and one woman at a reception at the Mandarin Oriental hotel in Knightsbridge, central London, to launch the challenge.


The event came shortly after it was confirmed that Afghanistan veteran Harry will end his military service in June after a four-week secondment to the Australian Defence Force in April and May.


In a short speech, the Prince said: "It is an honour to be stood on this stage as we announce that Walking With The Wounded is coming home to walk amongst the people they have helped and the communities who have supported our armed forces so enthusiastically.


"I'm delighted to say that I will be joining the team for a small part of their journey and I'm hugely looking forward to it."


Embargoed: For publication from the 11th March 2014 From Twofour Productions HARRY'S SOUTH POLE HEROES Sunday 16th March on ITV Pictured: Prince Harry leads the British Team during training in Iceland followed by polar team guide Conrad Dickinson, Capt. Guy Disney, Sgt. Duncan Slater, Capt. Ibrar Ali and Maj. Kate Philp in Iceland. Prince HarryĂ­s epic 200km trek to the South Pole with wounded service men and women is captured in this new two-part factual series. Led by Prince Harry, the British team taking part in the Walking With The Wounded South Pole Allied Challenge 2013 were, double leg amputee Duncan Slater, arm amputee Ibrar Ali MC, a member of the Yorkshire Regiment who walks in memory of two colleagues killed in action, left leg amputee Kate Philp, the first British woman to lose a limb on the frontline, right leg amputee Guy Disney, taking on a second pole after joining Walking With The Wounded and Prince Harry in the Arctic in 2011, and guide Conrad Dickinson. In episode one, we meet Prince Harry and Team UK, learn about the serious injuries suffered by each of them, and watch as they undergo an intensive training regime, which includes spending a night in a specialised cold chamber normally used for testing vehicles. The team also meet the Queen at Buckingham Palace and bid tearful farewells to their family and friends before arriving in Antarctica. © Twofour Please credit photographer: Petter Nyquist For further information please contact Peter Gray 0207 157 3046 peter.gray@itv.com This photograph is © Twofour and can only be reproduced for editorial purposes directly in connection with the programme HARRY'S SOUTH POLE HEROES or ITV. Once made available by the ITV Picture Desk, this photograph can be reproduced once only up until the Transmission date and no reproduction fee will be charged. Any subsequent usage may incur a fee. This photograph must not be syndicated to any other publication or website, or permanently archived, without the express written permission of ITV Picture Desk. Full Terms and conditions are available on the website www.itvpictures.com


Harry said the British trek would be just as difficult as previous expeditions around the world.


"Walking With The Wounded has given men and women the opportunity to push themselves to extremes in some of the most inhospitable places on Earth - both the Poles and Mount Everest," he said.


"The challenge we are launching today, although closer to home, is no less formidable in scale - walking 1,000 miles around Britain.


"The public's support for our armed forces continues to be extraordinary. However, as the memory of our military commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan fade, we must encourage people to continue supporting our servicemen and women, particularly those who are seeking to transition into civilian life.


"This process can be challenging, as it is for anyone seeking a new career. As I make this transition myself, I'm determined to do all I can to help others."


Harry has supported the charity since it was formed, taking part in a trek to the North Pole in 2011 and South Pole in 2013. He was also patron of its Everest expedition in 2012.


Those taking part in the walk will engage with local communities every day to highlight the determination of wounded personnel and raise awareness of the work the charity is doing in the community to support them.


The five will be joined by other wounded personnel each week in different parts of the country.


The walk will start on August 22 in Scotland and finish in London on October 31.


Harry has said his experience in the Army will stay with him for the rest of his life and he considers himself "incredibly lucky" to have had the chance to carry out challenging roles.


In the autumn, he will volunteer with the Ministry of Defence's Recovery Capability Programme, supporting the rehabilitation of wounded, injured or sick service personnel where he has worked previously, while he considers what to do next.


The Prince's decision to leave the Army was a surprise to many as he is a passionate member of the forces who had always dreamed of being a career soldier even as a young boy.


During his 10-year full-time military career, he went on two tours of duty to Afghanistan and qualified as an Apache aircraft commander.



'Where will we go after the Bongo?' Distraught parmo lovers react to The Europa closure fears


It's the news that’s got lovers of a parmo unsettled to say the least.


Concerns have been raised over the future of the Europa restaurant, in Borough Road, Middlesbrough.


The restaurant - famous for its late night parmos - has been the final port of call on town centre nights out for decades.


But loyal customers have been frustrated in their attempts to either eat in or order a takeaway since the beginning of this month.


The Gazette reported how a ‘Re-open The Europa’ Facebook group has been set up.


And since the story was published, customers have contacted us with their memories of the restaurant.


Chris Cook sent in a selfie taken at the Europa during New Year celebrations.


He said: “ I’ve been going to Europa for years. Very sad it’s closed. It’s the best place for a parmo after a night out and by far the best tasting parmos anywhere.


"Hope it re-opens soon. Top food and top staff.”


Chris Cook


Chris Cook sent us this Europa selfie

Mary Rooney said: “Myself, sisters and freinds have had many a good meal here and we can’t believe they are closed,


“I was looking forward to going back there in the very near future good meals, brilliant service and impeccable staff!! Please re-open!!!!”


On the Gazette’s Facebook page, dozens of people wrote of their distress over the news.


Anthony Small said: “Really sad news. End of a parmera”, while Denise Clark added: “My first parmo was from Europa. Sad day if it closes.”


Tracy Cope said: “Best parmo in town. Will miss going for a night out.”


Marky Salkeld said: “If it’s true then that’s an end to some great nights and great parmos. The memories of some great nights will forever be mine though. Shame really.”


Dominic Plutino from Europa Restaurant in Middlesbrough


And Bill Currey asked the question: “Where will we go for parmos after our Bongo night out? So sad.”


The Europa was voted the best place on Teesside to buy a parmo in a Gazette poll conducted in 2011.


Neighbouring businesses on Borough Road told The Gazette they had heard rumours the restaurant had closed but were unaware of the reasons why.


The Gazette has been unable to contact the business for a comment.



Islamic rights system honors all human beings


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RIYADH: MOHAMMED AL-JATHLANI – Arab news

Centuries before the International Declaration of Human Rights was formulated, our Prophet (peace be upon him), spoke about the true and holy Islamic rights system, which honors all human beings.

Today we live in a Muslim nation in which the government’s administration is based on the solid foundation of Islamic law. It is therefore unacceptable for any organization or individual to use a human rights discourse to question our judicial system or understanding and application of the provisions of God.

The Kingdom’s leadership, as expressed in a statement a few days ago, condemned this criticism, which it said encroached on its sovereignty and attempted to undermine its judicial system.

We all know that such attacks on our social and political systems are a form of political maneuvering supported by actors with various hidden agendas.

These agendas, although ostensibly in support of human rights and justice, are in reality driven by a desire to undermine the sovereignty and independence of states, and damage the image and legitimacy of their judicial systems. The Kingdom has rejected these attempts, and said it would continue to defend the country’s laws and the impartiality of its judges.

The Kingdom previously refused to take up a seat on the Security Council because it judged that the body had failed to live up to its mandate of maintaining international peace and security. This decision by the Kingdom is a clear sign that it refuses to accept the actions of any country, organization or media outlet that denies people their human rights.

I do not believe that human beings, especially Muslims and Arabs, can be deceived by organizations or actors claiming they support human rights for all, especially since they are the very same people disregarding the continual killing of Muslims, and the ongoing international tyranny and terrorism in the Arab and Muslim world.

Where are these human rights advocates when the blood is spilt of children in Syria, Iraq, Burma and other parts of the world? Where are their slogans when there is desecration of Islam’s mosques and sanctuaries? Who is speaking out about the insults aimed at our Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him)?

The Kingdom, which is fiercely independent and has a stable leadership, is not an easy target for such false allegations. It is supremely confident in the fairness and integrity of its judicial system, and will never retreat from applying the provisions of Islamic law. This is the law on which the state was built, and that has allowed it to remain stable politically, prosper economically, and avoid regional conflict and unrest.

While maintaining the fundamentals of Islamic law, the Kingdom is moving with complete confidence and determination toward greater modernization, development and judicial reforms, while applying the latest methodologies in terms of litigation and human development. It has severe penalties in place for anyone trying to undermine this system.


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