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6...A Crime Free Society


  1. 6...A Crime Free Society


  2. images my ideas 6/6 SHUT CCTVs.jpg
  3. SHUT: Is prevention thro' CCTVs and tagging, better than arrest, trial, imprisonment?

  4. People have the right to live in a crime free society, and yet many people dismiss such a suggestion as an impossibility. Dense populations affording anonymity, and speedy transport systems offering a quick getaway, are often the recipe for successful crime. Unfortunately most developed countries offer these two values in abundance, but that is no excuse for giving up. My eventual return to Birmingham left me in no doubt that people had done just that, to the point where victim's of crime did not report the matter to the police, whilst the police only investigated some crime superficially. There was a feeling amongst many ordinary citizens that they stood alone in a sea of crime. It was best to lock oneself away at the end of the working day, and ignore whatever mayhem maybe going on in the neighbourhood. There was little confidence in the police, and with a large proportion of adult males having criminal records, the police had alienated themselves from society through their own success and HMG's failure to offer the masses anything better.

  5. The police in Great Britain were inward looking. They were accountable to the local authority, who were hardly expert at managing the police, whilst the Home Office seemed to work in an advisory capacity only. Central government control of the police was considered the first step towards a police state. As such the police appeared autonomous in their actions, any discretions being investigated by other like minded police forces. There was little incentive to reduce crime, since the more crime there was, the greater the job security and the better the promotion prospects. I came to the conclusion that the police forces should be privatised, and paid according to results. An independent unit should monitor the effectiveness of police forces by setting up fictitious incidents, and reporting the results to the local authority concerned. Many people believe that the regional forces should be amalgamated and managed directly by the Home Office. I agree, since central government would be better at managing, coordinating and quicker at introducing new ideas.

  6. It became obvious to me over the years that the police knew little about what was going on in their area. In order to rectify this matter, and bridge the gap of distrust between them and the community, a system of community policing should be introduced. In this system the police, together with education, health, employment and benefit representatives, would visit households and record who lives there, where they work, what they own, including compilation of detailed records of valuable items, discuss anti-theft devices, and note reports of suspicious activity, etc.

  7. To improve the efficiency of police work further, fingerprints, DNA prints, eye prints and dental records of all persons should be on a police computer database. And of course people shown be electronically tagged at birth. All this sounds Orwellian, but it's either that or exist under a forest of CCTV (Closed Circuit Tele Vision cameras), as in the PRC. There, facial recognition has replaced bank notes and coins, even obviating credit and debit cards. Since the police in the UK at least, already had a substantial proportion of the nation's fingerprints on file, obtaining the rest by act of parliament should not be too difficult. Such information would save lives, as well as money in the long term. All people and valuable goods such as road and farm vehicles, TVs and computers should be electronically tagged. Electronic keys for vehicles, et cetera, should be banned. Just recently I saw a man press his fob and the lights of two cars lit up. HMG should have tested this technology before it was allowed to be used. The same goes for the internet and telephone. The only way to stop these scams is to switch to electronic money only, and ban individuals from moving it out of the country. The use of other money in this country should be banned, including cryptocurrencies, the dealers of which should be banned from all retailing and banned from the internet. Of course electronic money has been around for decades, particularly when it comes to share trading. So why don't we all use it? Many people feel that our corrupt politicians avoid its general use, to enable personal money laundering, and the secret financing of political activities. As for me, I would use my RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) enabled debit card more often if I could reach the fixed card reader at a crowded bar. It all boils down to this question. What is more acceptable, living in an environment that is kept constantly secure, or keeping thousands of criminals in prison at great cost to the taxpayer and the economy?

  8. 6...A Crime Free Society - Fraud

  9. In 2021 the total loss from financial fraud in the UK is known to be 4 million pounds per day, that's £1.46 billion per annum says UK Finance. The figure for 2022 is £1.2 billion, involving 3 million scams, mainly with payment cards £300 million of which was with Romania. The UK Department of Works & Pensions reports overpayment £8.2 billion, of which fraud for 2022/23 amounted to £6.4 billion. A further £1.2 billion was stopped by financial institutions. Much of this fraud is being perpetrated by kids, who buy fraud kits off the internet. It is believed that 96% of fraud is unsolved, whilst 3% is being investigated, but less than 1% is solved. Much of this is stolen by organized gangs, many in foreign countries. The government and local police have been informed, and yet it goes on year after year. In the USA, the FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) stated in February 2020 that there was $3.5 billion of reported cyber crime in 2019, based upon 467,361 complaints of phishing and extortion. It amounts to economic warfare, to which a military response should be considered justifiable. But of course our appeasing government hasn't got the guts to do it. The UK is considered to be a soft touch by criminals. These loses and the heartache it creates, will continue until a technocracy imposes the necessary financial controls. When will that be? In 2020 HMG announced its intension to invest £76 million to create the NCF (National Cyber Force) run by the UK's MOD (Ministry of Defence) and GCHQ (General Communications Head Quarters). This will carry out offensive operations, whilst the existing NCSC (National Cyber Security Centre) will perform defensive operations. It will still not stop banks from handing over thousands of pounds in cash to confused elderly customers, who then hand it to con merchants waiting in taxis outside, and of course, when will our plastic bank notes and coins be replaced by secure digital? With bags of cash secretly passed on to political parties, the answer to that question is of course, "never." In May 2023 the BBC finally got the courts to allow the name of a top Conservative Party donor, being investigated in a money laundering scheme, to be named. That man is Javad Marandi OBE.

  10. Some of the frauds (Phishing, identity theft, account theft) are as follows:


  11. List of Likely Frauds

    Don't keep bank account, national insurance / social security number, debit and credit card details on your computer, and don't give them to other people. At home, hide your financial details and cards in a locked room or draw.
    Don't give your name when you receive a telephone call. Wait for them to address you first.
    Don't give your name and address to someone over a phone or internet, that you do not know.
    Don't use websites on the internet that you don't trust, and always check the web address in the browser window for 'variations' by criminals.
    When asked to press a number, do not answer scam calls as you are likely being charged at a premium rate. Keep your telephone number ex-directory.
    Do not respond to cold calls claiming to be from your, bank or Internet Service Provider, claiming your account is to be closed down unless you pay a fee immediately, or from your operating system provider, claiming that it is faulty, and that a fee needs paying to fix the problem.
    Do not respond to a cold call offering a loan/credit/prize or investment in return for an initial fee. Including an offer to launder money for them, from a third world country, in exchange for an initial fee.
    Always purchase items via PayPal, or from a well known website that has an almost fee returns system. Always get a receipt, and keep it.
    For repairs, always go to an established company, never a back street one and never from someone at work. In the UK an item just bought can be returned within 30 days, although you will have to pay for the postage.
    Never answer emails that request or ask you to confirm personal information.
    In the case of debt collectors, be it rent, loans, fees, disputed bills, fines, always check that they are legitimate by phoning the organization first, using a verified phone number, and then pay by debit card. Always get a receipt.
    If requested, don't pay your taxes, bills to an overseas bank account.
    If in doubt about a business address, phone number, email address, look it up on the internet, such as on Wikipedia, or companies house, as they will list the official domain name and postal address.
    Always read the warning letters from your bank, building society, etc., and memorize them!
    Don't develop a financial arrangement with someone on Skype, that you've never met in the flesh, particularly if they take a long time to answer questions, or live in the third world. Chances are that the person is nothing like in the photograph, or its all done by AI.
    Never send money abroad to someone you met through a dating agency, or social network, who possibly claims to be on holiday, and has been robbed.
    Keep your PC's operating system and security software up to date. Start>Settings>Update, in Windows 10, plus security app update, etc. Delete unused passwords from browsers. Don't put bank details on your computer.
    Never accept a cheque (check). Accept money by money transfer, debit or credit card. Never pay fees.
    Never pay someone for money lost in a previous scam. Contact the police with their details.
    Never pay someone on the internet to fix your PC. I've tried Microsoft loads of times without success, so why use a scammer? They're no better.
    Never pay for information via the internet. Always get it from the appropriate legitimate authority.
    Check out all bills you receive, and check your bank statements. Is it from the company you bought it from?
    Don't update your PC's drivers from websites. They are updated automatically in Windows 10 & 11. Many of these websites will download spyware onto your computer at the same time.
    On your PC, don't download free apps unless essential, as they are designed to obtain your info. Often a new competing app will ask for less info about yourself.
    On your PC, delete apps you don't use as they continually collect info. Apple will delete an app automatically, if not being used. Remove cookies using Ccleaner. Remove browser favourites you don't use. Search yourself on the internet, to find out what they know about you and whether it is correct. Check an apps privacy policy regularly as they can change, and always use the check boxes.
    Never accept free offers, including PPI, over the internet, that require your personal data. Should you require a bank account, insurance, pension, mortgage, you approach them through their secure website, not the other way around. Note the padlock next to the domain name.
    Never pay for goods you haven't received, not matter what sorrowful story the seller gives you. And always pay using PayPal, debit or credit card, never cash. And only use websites that have a closed padlock displayed against the domain name. The padlock indicates it's a secure site, but not necessarily genuine.
    Always check out any sudden claims for money, fees, deposits, et cetera, through the appropriate organisation, and pay through the correct procedure. Don't send money to people who claim to know you, or are impersonating a close relative from an unrecognized phone or email address. Always check out the relative along established lines first, even if the phone number was genuine. Technology exists to make your phone deliberately display a falsified number on your caller ID display. This is known as number spoofing.
    Beware of scammers turning up at your door, offering to fix your garage drive, et cetera. Always get a reference, and ask a friend for advice. Make no sudden decisions.
    Don't respond to talent scout's advances, requesting payment for auditions, etc. Go to a registered company only.
    Remember, if your bank gets in touch with you, they will quote the last few digits of your bank account, otherwise delete the email/letter/phone call. Never transfer money to a secure, safe or holding account. And don't transfer money through Amazon or Apple gift cards when told to do so. When it's gone it's gone.
    Don't load bank statements onto your computer. Just in case your security app fails to stop any malware.
    Scan your computer at least weekly for any malware.
    Don't give money to street beggars on a Saturday night whilst out drinking, even if they have got a starving dog.
    If someone damages your property or your vehicle, always report it immediately to the police. I didn't and it cost me 3 weeks wages to fix.
    Never send money to a website claiming to be a charity, possibly using fake news, film stars, genuine news story. Check it out first at: https://www.gov.uk/find-charity-information
    Before you make a purchase at a new site, always check out the company. You can check their website for its professional appearance, reviews and find its domain address through Bing AI, Wikipedia, etc. Make a mistake and it could take you months to get your money back, if ever. Websites can be checked at: https://www.whois.com/whois/
    If the seller is offering something at a price too good to be true, rates of return that can't be found elsewhere, or if they are trying to rush you into making a decision, then it's probably a scam. Check them out through official channels.
    You have just requested a product you bought to be returned to the seller. A day or two later a delivery man comes to your front door. Check to make sure that he is authorized to take the rejected item. I got caught out by that one once.
    If the company you want to do business with uses out of date apps, or inadequate hardware to run it on, causing delays, then have nothing to do with them. This is designed to frustrate you and cloud your judgement. It's used in the advertising sector especially.
    Right now in December 2023 my browser is inundated with dating websites. Do these women really exist? Most aren't the woman in the photo, whilst some aren't women at all. Some are even AI generated. I once went to a free to use audio-visual website. There were about fifty men using it and no women. The only women you are likely to meet, end up begging money from you, usually later on Skype or WhatsApp, or they want you to launder money for them, which is illegal. That says it all doesn't it?
    Always check. Check the grammar, spelling, new telephone numbers, variation of a domain name, new bank account details, etc. Check, check, and check again.
    The moment you realise you have been conned, dial 159 to speak to your bank. After that contact the Action Fraud website. If you are certain it is fraud, then try and close down their website and any other reference to them, such as on Wikipedia. If it's a financial company (bank, building society, pension or insurance), then contact the Financial Ombudsman.

    Remember, cold calls in the UK are illegal, so have nothing to do with these calls. Con calls are based upon psychology. They will pamper you, threaten you with fines, or have your internet cut off, tempt your greed profile by offering a deal too good to be true. Nurture your selflessness by getting you to contribute to a charitable cause, et cetera, and all the while they will chivvy you for a quick decision, so that you don't think straight. By now all the klaxons in your brain should be going off. And on and on. The scams are endless. Be a scrouge, never part with your money. Never trust anyone. Don't you think a reward system that's not based upon money would be better? I get calls threatening to cut off my internet, all the time. So often in fact that these automatic calls must also be sent to policemen's homes and offices also. You look up these phone numbers on the internet, and they will tell you that it's a fraudsters lair. So why aren't they being stopped? It beggars the question, "what use are the police?" This website describes a financial system that does not employ money. Such a system (SPEV's) would be more acceptable to some religions such as Islam.


    images my ideas 6/6 WTN Birmingham West Midlands Police Headquarters.jpg
  12. WTN: West Midlands Police Headquarters, Birmingham, UK

  13. 6...A Crime Free Society - PIBB (Public Information Bulletin Board)

  14. To reduce internet based confidence tricks, ransomeware, viruses, blackmail, slander, hatred and hackers, HMG (Her Majesty's Government)or EC (European Commission) should ensure that each time a person activates their web browser, a PIBB (Public Information Bulletin Board) page appears for at least two minutes, which lists details of likely misdemeanors and possible sentences, if caught. Police telephone numbers and how to gather evidence should also be listed, as should the phone numbers of the Samaritan's, and that of bank security departments. The complete text on PIBB should be read out automatically, starting with the name and address of the computer's owner. During this time the PC would be tested for security and any failings immediately reported to the user. The PC would then be directed to a security update website, where it would 'stay' until the user made it secure. In the case of financial matters, the victim should be empowered with the capability to shut down their accounts, and temporarily shut down joint accounts, whilst the financial institution contacted the other names. Customers should also be allowed to give further details on an electronic form, such as details of where the money has gone, to whom and how much, for the bank to then pass on these details to relevant banks and the commercial branch of the relevant police. Failure of the financial institution to act, would result in a heavy fine, plus compensation for the victim. Prevalent crime types would be transmitted regularly, similar to Microsoft news, to warn users.

  15. And whilst we are on the subject of crime prevention, don't you think it's about time the emergency services 999 and 911 telephone numbers were etched or printed onto telephones, as they used to be, and include 999, then 55 when it is answered for quiet contact, at times when it is too dangerous to speak? And if the government really does want to put a stop to crime, don't you think it would be a good idea to fit electronic trackers to all expensive items and people, and ensure that CCTV was properly located, with data fed in real time to a police database, and to a high photographic standard?

  16. The following is a list of relevant services for the UK, that should appear on PIBB:

  17. ---===000===---


    Public Information Bulletin Board

    Emergency Telephone Numbers
    & Websites for the UK

    ORGANISATION TELEPHONE No. WEBSITE FUNCTION
    Office of the Independent Adjudicator (UK) 0118 959 9813
    Office of the Independent Adjudicator: Student complaints scheme
    Deals with student complaints about higher education courses in England & Wales
    Amnesty International (UK) +44-20-74135500
    Amnesty International
    We campaign for a world where human rights are enjoyed by all
    Legal Aid 0845 345 345
    HMG: Legal Aid check
    See if you qualify for legal aid?
    Solicitor's Regulation Authority write to: The Cube, 199 Wharfside Street, Birmingham B1 1RN
    Solicitor's Regulation Authority
    Handles complaints concerning solicitors, not court verdicts.
    The Legal Ombudsman 0300 555 0333
    Legal Ombudsman
    Fill in the form.
    Independent Office for Police Conduct 0300 020 0096
    (press 1 at prompt)
    Police Conduct
    Formerly IPCC
    National Crime Agency UK 0370 496 7622
    National Crime Agency
    Bribes, money laundering, terrorism investigations
    Cifas (Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System) 0330 100 0180
    Wiki: CIFAS
    CIFAS
    Get Safe Online
    Money laundering, security checks, illegal immigrant databases, protection to victims of identity fraud. Check out a website with Get Safe Online
    Internet or phone based fraud 0303 123 1113
    Data Protection
    To check a website
    To check a charity
    Check security of your email address
    Telephone your bank and visit them immediately. In the case of ransomeware, inform police, who will contact Europol and possibly McAfee.
    Scam HOTLINE to all banks text 159
    Stop Scams UK
    Telephone your bank at 159, and visit them immediately. In the case of ransomeware, inform police, who will contact Europol and possibly McAfee.
    Fraud Advisory Panel info@fraudadvisory panel.org
    020 7920 8637
    Fraud Advisory Panel, UK
    Lists who to contact if you have been a victim of fraud.
    Sort out your tax problems here Contact by internal email
    Tax Policy Associates, UK
    Contact them if you think your HMRC tax demands are unjustified.
    Computer Data Breach None
    Data Protection Complaint
    Address of Information Commissioner's Office
    Your local police 101 for non-emergency or enquiry. 999, 911 & 112 are used for emergency only.
    18000 is text relay call prefix to police for deaf or speech impaired.
    999BSL is an app used by the deaf for help calls by sign language
    For 'Silent Solution' dial 999, then 55, or make a noise when prompted by operator.
    The police will then investigate.
    In remote locations try SMS texting 999, as it uses less bandwidth.
    Police
    This web site lists phone numbers for assault, burglary, vice & missing persons.
    Coronavirus (Covid-19) Pandemic NHS 111
    NHS Covid-19 Pandemic
    Coronavirus Symptoms check.
    Interpol None
    Interpol
    Co-ordinates international investigations.
    Contact your local police only.
    Europol None
    Europol
    Co-ordinates European investigations, including No More Ransom project. Contact your local police only.
    Action Fraud 0300 123 2040
    Action Fraud
    To report fraud or cyber crime to police via telephone.
    Action Fraud 0300 123 2040
    Action Fraud Police
    To report fraud or cyber crime to police via internet.
    Royal Mail
    or
    OFCOM
    text 7726 on mobile phone to report scam text messages and mobile or postal calls.
    Note: 7726 spells SPAM on an alphanumeric keyboard.
    To report postal scam to Royal Mail
    To report phone scam to OFCOM
    To report suspected phishing via SMS text messaging to Royal Mail email: reportascam@royalmail.com
    National Cyber Security Centre none.
    National Cyber Security Centre
    How to stay secure on line, request info, report incident, suspicious email, vulnerability in HMG website, assess product, media enquiries. To shut down rogue website.
    Type 'report a suspicious website' in search
    Wikipedia: National Cyber Security Centre
    NCSC provides advice on how to avoid computer security threats, only.
    To report fraud or cyber crime go to Action Fraud website.
    Your info is then passed on to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau, City of London Police.
    Although fraud amounts to 30% of UK crime, the police only bring less than 4% of cases to court.
    National Fraud Intelligence Bureau
    There is likely to be no improvement until the UK adopts a 100% electronic currency system, and a technocracy. Currently webmasters should replace hyperlinks with case numbers to make their websites more secure for customers.
    National Cyber Security Alliance none.
    Wikipedia: National Cyber Security Alliance
    Online safety basics
    CMA (Competition & Markets Authority) none
    Competition & Markets Authority
    We work to promote competition for the benefit of consumers, both within and outside the UK.
    Anti-Terrorist Hotline 0800 789 321
    Report to MI5 Terrorism
    Accessing terrorist web sites, and financing a terrorist is a crime.
    Crimestoppers 0800 555 111
    Crimestoppers
    Report crime anonymously to police online.
    National Police Air Service 0192 429 2252
    National Police Air Service
    Supports police forces in England & Wales.
    Disclosure & Barring Service 03000 200 190
    Disclosure & Barring Service
    Employer's Criminal Records Check, including migrants.
    Criminal Records Check 03000 200 190
    Criminal Records Check
    Your own personal Criminal Records check, costs 25 pounds
    Advertising Standards Authority 02074922222
    Advertising Standards Authority
    Complaints about advertisements.
    Financial Conduct Authority
    Financial Conduct Authority
    Produces financial information, guidance & expectations. Check out a financial company here. Make sure the domain name on the internet matches the data listed here.
    Financial Ombudsman 03001239123 or 08000234567
    Financial Ombudsman
    Complaints about fraud, loans, investments, pensions, banking, insurance, mortgages, etc. Contingent Reimbursement Model (CRM Code), Authorised push payment fraud details (APP)
    NHS Complaints Guide none
    NHS Complaints Guide
    Complaint against GP, dentist, etc, your directed to NHS England
    Complaint against hospital, out of hours, etc., your directed to clinical commissioning group.
    Or contact local government ombudsman
    NHS Complaints Advocacy 0300 330 5454
    NHS Complaints Advocacy
    A free service.
    Internet Watch Foundation (UK) 0122 320 3030
    Internet Watch Foundation
    Child porn investigations. It will seek out and remove nude photos of yourself from internet when requested.
    Childline (UK) 0800 1111
    Childline
    Childline is a free, private and confidential service where you can talk about anything. It will seek out and remove nude photos of yourself from internet when requested.
    Safer Internet for Kids None
    Safer Internet for Kids
    Pressure Group calls to shut down offending web pages
    NSPCC Helpline 0808 800 5000
    National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
    National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children.
    BBC Bitesize
    BBC Bitesize
    BBC Bitesize: Education for children via the internet.
    Oak National Academy
    Oak National Academy
    Oak National Academy: Education for children via the internet.
    Victim Supportline 0808 168 9111
    Victim Supportline
    For victims of crime including domestic abuse, harassment, stalking, coercive behaviour, threats to kill.
    Stalking & harassment
    HMG Domestic Abuse Register 0845 122 8606
    Domestic Abuse Register
    Domestic abuse: how to get help
    Respect: Domestic Abuse Against Men 0808 8010327
    Domestic Abuse Against Men
    Domestic abuse: financial, physical, mental.
    Rights of Women: Domestic Abuse Against Women info@row.org.uk
    Rights of women
    Domestic Abuse Against Women
    Domestic abuse: What the law says.
    Refuge for Women & Children Against Domestic Violence. 0808 2000 247
    Women & Children Refuge
    Download Brightsky app onto mobile phone:
    BrightSky
    Foreign & Commonwealth Office 020 7008 1500
    Report Missing Persons
    Report missing person abroad.
    Missing Persons Bureau 116 000
    Missing Persons Bureau
    Can you identify missing persons shown here.
    Missing People 116 000
    Missing People
    Help us find someone, charity.
    Lucie Blackman Trust 01983 718802
    Lucie Blackman trust
    A charity supporting British nationals in crisis overseas.
    Salvation Army none
    Salvation Army Missing Persons
    Finds missing persons in UK and worldwide.
    Reunite none
    Reunite People
    Finds missing persons in UK.
    British Red Cross none
    British Red Cross
    Find person due to armed conflict, disaster, migration.
    Gas leak emergency 0800 111 999
    Gas Leak Emergency
    For essential gas & electricity info read online 'Staying Connected' by Consumer Focus
    Gas or electricity supply, staying connected
    Electricity emergency 105
    Electricity Emergency
    For essential gas & elec. info read online 'Staying Connected' by Consumer Focus
    Gas or electricity staying connected
    Samaritans 116 123 or jo@samaritans.org
    Samaritans
    Feeling suicidal? Advice on stress and emotional support caused by domestic, legal, financial, or IT problems.
    Which? none
    Which? consumer advice
    How to report email scams to ISP that sent it.
    How to report scam to legitimate company being mimicked.
    Royal Mail - Mailing Preference Service 0845 703 4599
    Mailing Preference Service
    Report postal delivered scam
    For a full list of regulators in the UK see:
    Wikipedia: UK Regulators
    OFCOM - regulator for the communications services 020 7981 3040 or
    0300 123 3333
    Communications Regulator
    Report telephone or internet nuisance calls, also radio/TV quality. Either silent, abandoned, scam, telesales, recorded message, marketing or abusive calls.
    You can also check your internet speed & communication service availability. In October 2021 OFCOM announced that con calls from abroad, pretending to come from this country, would be stopped. It remains to be seen just how effective this approach is.
    OFWAT - regulator of water industry in England & Wales 0300 034 2222 England,
    0300 034 3333 Wales
    Water Regulator
    Complain here if complaint to water supplier is exhausted.
    OFGEM - regulator of gas & electricity industry 020 7901 7295 or
    consumeraffairs@
    ofgem.gov.uk
    Gas/Electricity Regulator
    Complain here if complaint to gas or electricity supplier is exhausted.
    Info on smart meter, bill calculations, moving home, etc.
    Phone Paid Services Authority 0300 303 0020
    Phone Paid Services Authority
    Report premium rate phone scam
    Consumer Fraud Reporting none
    Consumer Fraud Reporting
    Contains extensive list of websites internationally. Also lists fraud types.
    Credit Score Check many
    Experian Credit Score Check
    Equifax Credit Score Check
    Transunion Credit Score Check
    Check your credit score after a scam, and rectify any inaccuracies
    Trading Standards (local) Citizen's Advice: 03454 04 05 06, England: 0800 144 8848, Wales: 0800 702 2020, Scotland: 0800 028 1456
    Finding Local Trading Standards
    Local Citizens Advice
    To report scams particularly in local area.
    National Debtline 0808 808 4000
    National Debt Line
    Fact sheets, Online tools & Chat to sort out your debts
    Step Change Debt Charity 0808 138 1111
    Step Change
    Questionnaire, then Chat to sort out your debts
    Highways England Co. Ltd. (formerly Highways Agency) 0300 123 5000
    Highways England
    Operates, maintains & improves motorways and major A roads.
    Provides traffic & incident information.
    AA Automobile Association 0800 88 77 66
    AA Automobile Association
    Provides insurance, driving lessons & breakdown cover
    RAC Royal Automobile Club 0330 159 0382
    RAC Royal Automobile Club
    Provides roadside assistance and other services to motorists.
    Green Flag 0800 400 600 or
    44 141 349 0516
    from Europe
    Green Flag
    Provides roadside assistance, route planner and insurance to motorists.
    Be Gamble Aware 0808 8020 133
    Be Gamble Aware
    Gambling blocking software. How to self exclude.
    NHS - Gambling addiction none
    NHS Gambling Addiction
    Questionnaire and feeds to other websites.
    Gamblers Anonymous info@gamblersanonymous
    .org.uk
    Gamblers Anonymous
    Includes forum and chatroom
    Drink Aware none
    Drink Aware
    Self assessment and links to relevant websites
    NHS - Alcohol Support none
    NHS Alcohol Support
    How to care, and links to relevant websites.
    NHS - Drug addiction none
    NHS Drug Addiction
    How to care, and links to relevant websites.
    For Police, Fire Brigade, Ambulance, Coast guard (RNLI),
    Cliff Rescue, Mountain Rescue, Cave Rescue, where there is danger to
    life (ill or injured), or where there is a crime in progress, then dial
    999, 911 or 112. Calls can be made from a locked mobile phone.
    UFO, Unidentified Flying Object sighting.
    Imperative that you obtain close up photos first, for YouTube.
    Contact your nearest RAF base and speak to duty officer, immediately.
    Report incident to the police, especially if a crime has been committed,
    such as damage, injury or abduction.
    Otherwise report it to the Sun, Daily Mirror or Daily Express newspapers.
    Record the following: date, time, location, altitude, speed, direction of
    travel, colour, shape, size of object(s), noise, weather, special effects,
    such as light beams, St. Elmo's fire, ground impressions, etc.
    Also names of witnesses and their contact details.
    We know who you are.
    There is no anonymity on the internet, no refuge.
    Don't get talked into it by your mates, especially over a pint or drugs.
    Imprisonment is only the start.
    After release you will be denied access to certain areas of employment,
    denied insurance and access to some countries.
    Your relatives will shun you, whilst other people will despise you.
    It simply isn't worth it.
    It will be on your conscience for life, no escape, no let up.
    Don't destroy your future.
    Don't let down those that depend on you.
    Be loyal, be dedicated, and be proud.
    Remember, if you see a crime or injustice,
    do not hesitate to complain to the appropriate authority.
    Make sure your computer security software is kept up
    to date, and you scan at least once per week. And if you have anything
    expensive on wheels, fit it with an inexpensive GPS tracker.

    Laws & Punishment

    OFFENCE PENALTY - YEARS
    Animal Cruelty 5 Years
    Child Cruelty 7 Years to Life - Sexual Offences Act 2003
    Malicious website denial of service 5 Years - Computer Misuse Act 1990
    Via phone or PC to commit fraud, or money laundering Generally 4 years, but 7 Years,
    the latter if over half a million pounds. Fraud Act 2006
    Computer virus attack, hacking, sabotage Life - Computer Misuse Act 1990
    Revenge porn, image based sexual abuse, blackmail 2 Years - Criminal Justice & Courts Act 2015
    Ransomeware virus attack, data reactivation, extortion 14 Years - Theft Act 1968
    Inciting violence ? - Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006,
    Serious Crime Act 2007
    Pyramid selling, cryptocurrency dealing 0.5,0 Years, Plus fines and recovery of assets.
    Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Act 2008.
    Employing illegal migrants 5 years and unlimited fine, 20,000 pound fine for each illegal worker not checked.
    Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002, Accession (Immigration and Workers Registration) Regulations 2004, Asylum and Immigration Act 1996, Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006
    Murder, Manslaughter, Attempted Murder Life (30 Years), and Life Licence for Murder - Common Law
    Cyber Bullying A Fine and Restraining Order -
    Malicious Communications Act 1988
    Protection from Harassment Act 1997
    Dark web illicit drug dealing transactions using cryptocurrencies
    (Silk Road, Black Market, AlphaBay, etc.)
    2 Years to Life, in the latter case to Class A drugs.
    - Misuse of Drugs Act 1971
    Money Laundering Up to 14 years max.
    Proceeds of Crime Act 2002
    Criminal Finances Act 2017
    Terrorism Act 2000
    Anti-Terrorism Crime & security Act 2001
    Serious Organised Crime & Police Act 2005
    Sanctions & Anti-Money Laundering Act 2018
    For a full list of prison sentences in the UK see:
    The law pages
    Sentencing council


    ---===000===---

  18. By far the most important parts of this list relate to fraud. Bing AI on Edge browser, has the following to say on the subject, but it is important that you ask your browser's AI so that you get the latest information. Above all contact your bank first, then Action Fraud and the Financial Ombudsman. Regrettably, it is unlikely in this age of apathy, that the villains will be apprehended and your money recovered. Your banks security telephone number will be on their website. Compensation from banks through the CRM code applies to money transferred from one UK bank to another UK bank. Getting restitution from a bank abroad is very difficult, if not impossible at the time of writing (January 2024).


  19. “APP” stands for “Authorised Push Payment”. According to Forbes, it is the most common type of financial scam in the UK, costing the economy almost £240 million in the first half of 2023 alone 1. During an APP scam, criminals manipulate their victims into making payments, or sharing personal details, under false pretences. Often fraudsters will pose as well-known legitimate business or government body in order to win a victim’s trust. These scams are called ‘authorised’ because they depend on the victim voluntarily transferring money. But this does not mean the victims of APP fraud are to blame – and if you've fallen prey, you may be able to claim back your losses 1.

  20. I hope this helps! Learn more 1=forbes.com 2=experian.co.uk 3=psr.org.uk


  21. 6...A Crime Free Society - Crime prevention

  22. In February 2020, HMG announced that violence, cyber bullying and child abuse on social media websites Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat and others, will eventually be monitored by OFCOM, backed up with heavy fines, following the failure of a voluntary code of practice. Two years later it emerged that HMG is to introduce the online safety act. This will include threats, human trafficking, knowingly false information, harmful content such as suicides, revenge porn, firearms, hoax treatments and illegal drugs; extremism such as terrorism and coercive control. Social networks can be fined up to 10% of their global turnover. How long will it be before this act is used to shut down my website, and other reactionary websites in this country?


  23. images my ideas 6/6 WC Muhirehussein12 Nation_police.jpg
  24. WC Muhirehussein12: Police Car & Motorcycle escort

  25. There are many websites offering advice on cons listed here, some with donation buttons. Are they legitimate? Who cares? When you look at this list, you ask yourself the question, how can this sort of thing be going on in such an advanced nation? You've got all those agencies on the PIBB, and yet we don't have a crime free society. Life is a bit like politics. Nothing is as it first appears. Our laws and associated agencies aren't designed to protect us. They are there to protect the privileged elite. Politicians, human resource directors, legal buffs, financial experts and of course the upper crust, without whom the nation would be little better than a banana republic. The way the establishment works ensures the job security of them all, to the detriment of everything else. A few years ago I wrote to the Queen and Prince Charles about the sorry state of the nation. I'm sorry I didn't delete the expletives. I wasn't looking for an honour. I don't trust anyone with a swinging sword. All I want is for everyone on this planet to be well off and happy. And by well off I mean healthy, intelligent, well housed and free from all criminal activity. I won't see it before I die, but that doesn't stop me from trying.

  26. By July 2023 I thought I knew it all, and could avoid fraud on the internet. I looked for a training course on the subject of advertising websites. I came across one by the WEA (Workers' Educational Association). Their website looked professional. I looked them up on Wikipedia, and they looked legitimate. I found what I was looking for and paid £88-80 for a three month course which consisted of two hours of internet based class work per week. The course start date came and went. The money was paid to WEA by WorldPay on the first day, but the course did not materialize. The help desk was not manned, whilst the internal email I sent was not answered. I sent an email to WorldPay but got no reply. I sent an email to the email address on the WorldPay receipt but again got only an acknowledgement. I phoned the Birmingham office of WEA but they said it was a different department and nothing to do with them. Their HQ was in Leeds, and the phone number on their website didn't work. I had been conned.

  27. I wrote to the prime minister's office, since I had no faith in Action Fraud, based upon my previous experience (see Intro page). The letter was passed onto the Home Office and Dept. For Education. I also contacted Action Fraud. I also got in touch with my bank. I got nowhere, apart from having thoughts of massacring a few people. The Department of Education said they had no business with WEA. However, Wikipedia said WEA was part funded by HMG's Skills Funding Agency, so I filled in their complaints form and waited. I thought about closing down their website and having their article removed from Wikipedia, but didn't know how. That left a registered letter of dispute to send, didn't it? Numerous government departments had failed me, and no doubt many other people. It occurred to me that this was only a few steps from our economy being run ostensively by organised crime, after which the UK will have become a third world nation with a currency value to match. It seams hard to believe, but based upon present trends, inevitable.

  28. Clearly HMG was unable to manage the internet, never mind prevent internet based fraud. Just how seriously bad this state of affairs was, can be judged by looking at the Post Office - Fujitsu app fraud/theft cases, that ruined the careers and private lives of hundreds of employees. This crime started 25 years ago, and HMG is still trying to decide whether those wronged should be offered a group appeal process. We have a legal system which is totally out of step with the modern world. This is what happens when you have an amateurish system of government. Read the hyperlink.

  29. Fraud via the internet, is costing the citizens of this nation £27 billion pounds per annum says The Office of Cyber Security and Information Assurance (OCSIA). You may therefore think that to prevent it is impossible, but it isn't. What's impossible is trying to get politicians to understand how IT works. There are two types of website, the ones that are dumb like mine, and the ones that enable interactive financial transactions. Currently they are mostly on the World Wide Web, which is clearly not being policed. It needs to be policed by AI, but the chances of getting international co-operation to protect from espionage and terrorism are zero. The alternative is for each nation to have its own intranet, onto which all of its interactive websites are located. Each nation would have its own operating system, browser and secure money transaction gate, like PayPal but more secure. The software would be owned by the state and operated by the police and intelligence services. To simplify matters, and thereby make the system more effective, governments would introduce command economies, scrapping self employed companies, a plethora of dummy companies and all organisations employing less than one thousand people. This would make it easier for 'AI bladerunners' to find culprits. All computers, mobile phones, etc. in the country would have to use that nation's approved software, and the owners would have to be registered with that nation's transaction gate. Routers would only permit access to the intranet and internet for approved users. The approved software would probably be enhanced AI versions of existing open software, making it more secure and intuitive, with extensive help files.

  30. December 8th, 2023...BBC News announced by teletext that personal AI assistants, created by ChatGPT, can be used for criminal purposes. Pre trained transformer created by this AI software can create emails, texts and social media posts for scams and hacks. No mention of websites and Wikipedia accounts. Well the cat was now out of the bag. Can the software industry neutralize this software? Can HMG & Co. prevent a global economic collapse? On that same day, Google launched Gemini AI. Start praying!

  31. In the cashless society, the need for an ultra secure debit card will become very obvious. The government could maintain such a system in the form of a state identity card. Such a card would help not just the police, financial institutions, housing benefit investigators, but also customs & immigration and voting officials checking identities. The holographic identity card displaying large full and profile facial views of the holder, would also display the holders full name, height, weight, colour of hair, eyes and skin, distinguishing features, together with serial numbers related to birth certificate, passport, national health, national insurance, inland revenue, driving licence and military service number. On a micro-chip would also be encoded details of one of the holders finger prints, eye prints or both. The biometric identity card would also display the holder's postal address, updated by bank or medical officials. Since this was written in 1987, HMG's identity card project has progressed at great expense. In 2008 HMG will introduce electronic borders. In 2010 HMG will introduce identity cards costing at least 90 pounds per person. At least that was the plan. As with many IT projects, HMG's biometric identity card has been scrapped, and without it there can be no National CV Centre, details of which appear later. There can also be no electronic money system. I wonder why? Could it be that politicians don't want it because they are corrupt, and because they want dodgy money invested here from abroad, in order to stimulate the economy and finance political parties? The identity card could be replaced by facial recognition, but since the best technology is from Chinese company Megvii, I doubt whether HMG will accept it anymore than they will allow Huawei 5G mobile phone cell technology to be used here.

  32. The use of two way mirrors for identity parades, and sound recording of suspects being interviewed, were introduced years after they had been brought in by other countries. The use of video cameras to deter vandals on buses, in lifts and other places, only began to take off in the late 1980s. It was also at this time that the police, and local businessmen through the police, started offering rewards for serious crimes. A final admission that the general public had a major role to play in controlling crime. Until then the offering of rewards had been left to insurance companies. I could not help thinking that there should be standard rewards for the arrest of all perpetrators of crime.


  33. images my ideas 6/6 WC David Stowell Queen_Elizabeth_Law_Courts Birmingham UK.jpg
  34. WC David Stowell: Queen Elizabeth Law Courts, Birmingham, UK

  35. Without a doubt the biggest deterrent to crime would be for everyone to undergo a lie detector (polygraph) test annually at their local police station. For those that fail this test, truth drug (sodium pentothal, etc.) interviews should be offered. Certainly this should be made available to those who at present consider themselves to be unjustly imprisoned. On January 28th, 1988 the Birmingham pub bombers appeal against conviction finally failed. The cost to the British tax payer of weeks of appeal hearings was enormous. Whilst I was a believer in the stories of police brutality during the original interrogations, it did not detract, my mind from the obvious question. No doubt at the back of everyone's mind was the question, which was the greater injustice? Keeping six innocent men in prison, or releasing six guilty men. No one suggested to me that I should take a lie detector test, and none was offered to any other inmate as far as I know, whilst I was at the remand centre. Certainly lie detectors or polygraphs as they are correctly termed, work perfectly in the hands of a competent person. The Birmingham pub bombers later obtained their freedom and compensation for unjust conviction. As for lie detectors, they are used by security agencies and also by the Jamaican government to stamp out corruption.

  36. The numerous agencies on the PIBB imply that we live in a police state. At present, much is being said about facial recognition and how it can be linked to bus passes, supermarket club cards, and so on to create a personal profile of just about anyone. Of course there would be no police state if we had a true government of the people, for the people. The constitution for a technocracy would be written by legal experts, computer programmers and contributors to internet based forums, ensuring that the workings of government were completely transparent. That way global CCTV incorporating facial recognition, would be considered acceptable.

  37. There is no doubt in my mind that the lack of responsible journalism is a contributing factor to many crimes. These glorified stories remain dormant in the brain, feeding on video nasties, firearm, survivalist, war and keep fit magazines. Such magazines were allowed in prison, a place where many inmates had mental problems. To many normally adjusted people, the banning of these magazines would appear draconian. It therefore seems best to find out why many inmates are susceptible to suggestion. Maybe there is a medical answer related to vitamin deficiency or blood grouping, as some have postulated.

  38. As for firearms, there is no place for them in a civilised society, outside the armed services and the police. After the Hungerford massacre in which sixteen people were shot dead at random by a young man in August 1987, I came to the conclusion that firearms should not be allowed to leave the premises of secure gun clubs, and that these clubs should only be used by the armed services, police and reservists. As for the reporting of the Hungerford massacre, after committing suicide the gunman apparently achieved immortality when newspapers gave six or seven page write ups about the incident, leaving one with the impression that they were too bone idle to report any other news that day. Television news was little better. Had the killer done it after hearing about similar incidents in the USA and Australia at this time, or was survivalism simply becoming too popular? After such a send up by the news media, one was left to wonder who would copy him. That answer was quick in coming. Fed on videos of the massacre, and armed to the teeth, a mentally deranged young man beat his mother and sister to death at home, before shooting dead two men in a computer factory where his ex-girlfriend worked. On March 28th, 1988 he was committed to Broadmoor Mental Hospital for an indefinite period, after he had pleaded guilty to manslaughter. I came to the conclusion therefore that the reporting of crime by the news media, should be left to merely reproducing police bulletins word for word. Another criminal influence is soap operas on television. Since scenes of suicide are banned from TV, its about time that other unacceptable acts were also banned from these programmes.


  39. images my ideas 6/6 WC Adirach Toumlamoon Ankle_Electronic_tagging.jpg
  40. WC Adirach Toumlamoon: Electronic ankle tagging

  41. Ten percent of the British economy is considered to be the black economy, the proceeds of crime, namely theft, fraud, tax evasion, smuggling, prostitution, illicit drugs, etc. Much of it involves illegal immigrants whom our border police fail to apprehend and deport, or they are people who have overstayed, usually because they have a partner in this country, and HMG fails to distinguish between the two, thereby refusing to give British citizenship. The UK is considered to be one of the most law abiding countries in the world, and yet it fails miserably to come up to the standards of a truly civilised civilisation. Under a world technocracy, by eradicating money in all its forms, most of these crimes would cease, including most violence, especially terrorism. Most of the money spent on law enforcement, law courts, prisons, together with almost all money spent on defence, could be diverted to improving people's quality of life. However, crimes of passion generally have no financial basis.

  42. It is far easier and more cost effective to prevent crime than to follow a course of retribution. If people are to have vastly extended lives then clearly subjecting criminals to a century or more of retribution, after they leave prison, is just not acceptable. It would clearly be a violation of human rights. To truly rid society of crime, it would be necessary to control people's emotion. Why is it for instance that people in the west appear to control their emotions better than those in the middle east. Is it simply because the people in Iran and many in Iraq, for instance, are descended from blood thirsty Mongols? Experiments in Russia for instance, involving the breeding of animals such as foxes, have shown that a violent trait can be bred out of them. In the west much of this violent urge, or lack of self control, was removed through enthusiastic use of the death penalty during the middle ages, an unnatural selection. This shows that crimes of violence have a genetic basis. To counter it therefore, one has only to find the gene that promotes good behaviour, and enhance it, whilst reducing the presence of any gene that promotes violence. People brought up in a friendly environment are generally speaking not violent, because experiences in life wire the brain that way. People who have too much to lose by being violent are also benign. Environmental factors such as lead poisoning, that increases violent behaviour, should be eliminated.

  43. Whilst the solution to this problem may seem extreme, it is the only solution when it comes to crime on the internet. Judging by how advanced malware is becoming, much of it being produced by governments, the inevitable conclusion is that someone or something will generate a virus that is self replicating, stealthy and indestructible. In next to no time the internet and all internet connected computers, including their data, will have been trashed. It has the potential to wipe out the capitalist system and trigger world war. Whilst the UK's HMG has the National Cyber Security Centre, it's clear from the FBI's appeal to US companies for support in defeating the MSIL / Samas ransomeware, that that may not be enough.

  44. Suicide is not a crime in the UK, but it does involve a lot of police time and expense. It is the duty of government to improve the quality of life for all, in order to reduce the frequency of these incidents. After half a century of trashing marriage and the family, and hence the incentive for men to work, it is perhaps time to rectify matters. HMG's attempts at social engineering have been a disaster, with murders in the family taking place almost every week. Laws creating women's lib and casual divorce should be replaced by state approved marriage only, whilst homosexual advances should be illegal. I do not believe that people should be allowed to engage in sexual practices that endanger the lives of other people, nor to act as an impediment to creating friendships. It's about time parliament and government admitted its mistake and put things right. In addition it's about time trials were treated as courts of inquiry, rather than simply pinning guilt upon relatively defenseless individuals. The truth is that most of these crimes would not take place if society and the economy were managed to a professional standard. It is also clear to me that evidence not obtained through a polygraph test should not be allowed.

  45. Recently I watched a TV programme about the 'Manchester Pusher', a person thought to have pushed sixty people into the canals of the city of Manchester, UK, over a six year period. The police said they were probably all accidents. If they were accidents then Manchester City Council, in collaboration with the British Waterways Board, has a health and safety requirement (duty of care) to fence off the canals and fit access gates, locked and guarded by police officers on a Friday and Saturday night in order to ensure that no drunk climbs over them, since the council has given planning permission and drinks licenses to these canal side public houses. The police also have a health and safety obligation to fit and monitor high definition closed circuit television cameras along the cities canals, in order to find out whether foul play is taking place and also to provide information which would improve the safe design of the canal network. In a world technocracy with no capitalism, no one would be complaining of lack of funding from central government or elsewhere. Under British law health and safety is everyone's responsibility, which opens up these organisations to compensation to next of kin and dependents, through the courts, since they appear not to have carried out a risk assessment whilst this redevelopment was underway. We no longer have horses towing narrow boats, so why aren't the canals fenced off? In the UK, health and safety applies to the work area, but as far as I know the UK's canals have not been formally removed from this designation.

  46. Steps in bioengineering have made me think again about all the proposals listed here. If there is one thing that criminals hate more than anything else, it's the aftermath. Their conscience. What creates one's conscience I have absolutely no idea, but it recently occurred to me that if one could enhance everyone's conscience, then it would be a way to deter people from committing crimes. And if they did commit a serious crime, their conscience would force them to commit suicide. Just think of it. There would be no need for police, courts and prisons. The financial savings would be dramatic. Whether you could make humans resistant to carrying out criminal acts, via hypnosis or group consensus, remains to be seen. As for the cemeteries, I visited my local crowded cemeteries recently and concluded that we would have to re-open the catacombs, for the ashes.



  47. images my ideas 6/6 WTN crime free Birmingham%20Warstone%20Lane%20Cemetery%20Catacombs.jpg
  48. WTN: Warstone Lane Cemetery Catacombs, Birmingham, UK

  49. Many of the above proposals would require a more democratic system of government to be established in the UK, and no doubt in other countries too, if an Orwellian style of government was to be avoided. A complex society requires strict rules if it is to function smoothly. Liberating divorce, homosexuality and one parent families is, if one is prepared to listen to some prison inmates, not a step in the right direction. So too is the failure of the state to ensure that couples are suitably matched before they marry, since domestic problems associated with incompatibility, lack of marriage guidance, lack of support from relatives and ease of divorce, can lead to serious domestic incidents. In the age of the cashless society, CCTVs and electronically tagged goods and people, domestic violence may well turn out to be the most serious crime in the twenty-first century....apart that is from breeding too many children.

  50. You may well ask who polices the police. In the PRC the Communist Party has its own legal system. In the UK and most democracies, everyone is in theory covered by the same laws. In 2016, the police forces of England and Wales stated that there were 436 allegations of sexual gain made against 306 police officers (The Guardian), whilst between 2009 and 2015 a total of 1629 police officers were arrested for various crimes (Sunday Times). This leads one to assume that its only a matter of time before human police are replaced by androids. So what do you want, a no messing hard nosed robo-cop or a crime free society?

  51. I have serious doubts as to whether these recommendations will be implemented. When one looks at the list of law enforcement agencies on the terror page in this website's introduction, one realizes that hundreds of thousands of people rely upon crime as a career. Police, secret agents, magistrates, judges, court clerks, police back-up, prison wardens, parole staff, et cetera, all rely upon criminal activity to ensure their job security, and in the case of police, a retirement pension after thirty years service. Are police unfit for service after only thirty years? Will they be too old to police the internet? As it is they can only solve one crime in ten. What use are they? Imagine the cost of all this to a bankrupt nation. Isn't crime prevention a better alternative? Of course politicians will say that there is too much public resistance to these proposals, never mentioning the prospect of a referendum. But what they really mean is that the privileged elite are better off as the system now stands. Politicians, bankers, HR directors, advertising executives, financiers, legal experts, et cetera, are alright Jack, and are determined to stay that way. They couldn't give a damn for all those that have been accosted, raped, burgled, property burned to the ground, conned out of there life savings, or murdered. They couldn't give a damn about all those ex-cons who have been denied employment and self respect. They're living for the moment, on a roll, whilst all you dumb dumb electorate go to hell.

  52. As if that wasn't enough, in December 2020 we learn that Greater Manchester police have consistently failed to report an average of 220 crimes per day in the year up to June 2020. What do they think they're at, a fancy dress ball? Whose getting fired? The establishment's thinking and structure is totally out of date. We urgently need a WT. Heads must roll.

  53. Well words almost fail me. Tragic isn't it? Almost makes you want to stand at the next general election as an independent technocrat, doesn't it? Oh, how I wish I could conscript the lot of ya.

  54. In December 2021 it was revealed that cocaine had been found in numerous toilets in the Houses of Parliament. In an immediate knee jerk response the PM announced that since half of financial crimes in UK were committed by people on drugs, HMG would spend £300 million providing rehabilitation to 300,000 drug users, whilst tackling 2,000 cross county lines drug gangs. There is one police force in each UK county, so criminal gangs assume they are less likely to get caught if they operate over county lines. They also employ less suspicious looking children. Drug dealer's phones will be used to send pre-recorded police messages to drug buyers phoning them up. Driving licences and passports will be confiscated from drug dealers. It remains to be seen just how enthusiastically HMG and the police implement these measures. Will police sniffer dogs be sent into parliament?

  55. In June 2022 Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary & Fire and Rescue Services, stated that there were now six police forces in England operating under special measures, due to failings within their operations. These were the Metropolitan (London), Greater Manchester, Gloucestershire, Staffordshire and Wiltshire police forces. Many of the problems were due to ill discipline. Clearly there needed to be a reintroduction of national service. If the Russo-Ukraine war was to continue for years, that development may not be too far off.

  56. January 2024 saw the start of the Post Office-Fujitsu Horizon IT Scandal, in which 700 sub-postmasters were prosecuted, officially investigated. Many were obliged to sign a pre-written letter admitting fraud, then have the disputed amount taken out of their wages/bank account, or go to prison. The Post Office ran the scheme like a protection racket for years from 2000 to 2014. What were the police doing during this time? It has taken another ten years for HMG to promise a reversal of verdict, compensation and justice, by act of parliament.

  57. So what would it take to create a crime free society?

  58. 1...Clearly the police would have to be replaced by robo cops.

  59. 2...Everyone would have to be tagged with a bio implant that would monitor your location, stress levels, etc.

  60. 3...Money would have to be replaced by SPEVs

  61. 4...Everyone would have to have a purpose, a job. The working environment would have to be improved substantially. Everyone would have a contract of employment stating what their duties were, and what are regarded as misdemeanors.

  62. 5...Computer based training and management via IT, would reduce stress in the workplace.

  63. 6...The traditional family unit would be the norm.

  64. 7.. Depictions of violence would be removed from TV, Cinema and Sport. This it to prevent pathways for violence from being hard wired into the brain.

  65. 8...The threat of violence between nations would be removed by the creation of a world order.

  66. That brings us to the subject of social laws:

  67. On the internet social laws relate to the right to have a home, employment law, unionization, worker cooperatives, state pension, minimum wage, welfare benefits, negotiation procedures, compensation for unfair dismissal, wrongful arrest and imprisonment, brutal or degrading treatment. At the present time there is no compensation against landlords that fail to maintain their occupied properties, and neither is there compensation to people forced into breaking the law in defence of their home, family or fellow human, nor even their own sanity. There is no compensation for someone who has had their life made a misery through the actions of others. Compensation is just a belated act anyway. The conduct should be prevented in the first place, through clearly defined acts of parliament. However, to monitor such an act would require far more police in the UK, at a time when police numbers are inadequate for even basic tasks. In the case of fraud, police forces refer the matter directly to Action Fraud. They have a staff of no more than 90, when it should be ten times that. As such the UK has become the El Dorado for fraudsters. Young people see how years of unemployment and low pay has effected their parents, and are therefore determined to avoid this trap no matter what. They buy fraud kits on the internet. Make their life supporting wealth, then jet it off to Costa Rica or similar, for that perpetual life in the sun. Just about all government departments are short staffed, and as a result endemic problems like this, only get worse. And this includes our defence forces, that are at least ten per cent undermanned. To say social laws are on the back-burner would be an understatement.

  68. When you look at these requirements you realise that the human race is unlikely to adopt these measures until it becomes highly intelligent through the bio-engineering of the human brain, which would also incorporate an enhanced conscience. Politicians certainly don't have that, as in August 2022 the UK's Criminal Bar Association announced that barristers had voted to go on an indefinite strike. Such action is incomprehensible as it would bring the legal process in the UK to a standstill. The maintenance of law forms the very foundation of democracy. The barristers want to be paid for the research involved, not just the time in court, plus improved working conditions and improved legal aid funding for cases. The problem had been simmering for years, with many barristers leaving the profession as a result. For a government to turn its back on this problem, undermines the legitimacy of government itself.