Tuesday, 3 May 2011

http://www.theoneclickgroup.co.uk

1. Half of all parents tried over shaken baby syndrome have been wrongly convicted - Police interference

Impeccable record: Dr Waney Squier says she is determined not to be silenced
About 250 SBS cases go to court each year. Expert witnesses play a pivotal role in trials. Babies often do not have any symptoms other than bleeding to the head and eyes so, unlike most criminal cases, the opinion of the pathologist may be the only evidence to consider. However, some convictions are controversial. The problem has been that there is no single agreed definition of SBS. Instead, for the past 30 years, the findings of a U.S. radiologist, John Caffey, have been used in courts. But Dr Squier is one of a growing number of doctors who believe that relying on the triad alone is no longer enough. Although her view is gathering momentum worldwide, it has ignited an increasingly toxic argument between doctors, lawyers and police. "I think the police are so put-out that they are trying to ban me from court. It’s why I would like Justice Secretary Kenneth Clarke to set up an inquiry into the methods police have used to deter expert witne sses who challenge old mainstream beliefs," said Squier.
Angela Levin. Mail on Sunday
Related Links:
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'Shaken Baby Syndrome' Probe Urges Injustice Cases Review
Chris Bentley, Attorney General, Government of Ontario
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Shaken Baby Syndrome Controversy Turns Toxic
BBC File on 4
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More USA Doctors Questioning 'Shaken-Baby Syndrome'
NPR
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Shaken Baby Syndrome Story & Metropolitan Police Witness Interference
Lisa Blakemore Brown, Psychologist
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Metropolitan Police Accused Of Trying To Campaign Against Shaken Baby Witnesses
Andrew Hosken, BBC Radio 4 Today Programme
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The Consensus Report
Family Law Reform

2.
Are Vaccines Obsolete?

Many question the benefits.
Autism and vaccines, a surprising connection. The article in the Journal of Immunotoxicology is entitled 'Theoretical aspects of autism: Causes--A review.' The author is Helen Ratajczak, surprisingly herself a former senior scientist at a pharmaceutical firm. Ratajczak did what nobody else apparently has bothered to do: she reviewed the body of published science since autism was first described in 1943. Not just one theory suggested by research such as the role of MMR shots, or the mercury preservative thimerosal; but all of them. Ratajczak's article states, in part, that "Documented causes of autism include genetic mutations and/or deletions, viral infections, and encephalitis [brain damage] following vaccination [emphasis added]. Therefore, autism is the result of genetic defects and/or inflammation of the brain." ... A number of independent scientists have said they've been subjected to orchest rated campaigns to discredit them when their research exposed vaccine safety issues, especially if it veered into the topic of autism. With vaccines proven to cause damage, deaths and more diseases; with the assumed science behind vaccines actually contradicting the basics of biology; with vaccines being promoted and forced on populations primarily by financial interests and political corruption; what is left of vaccines medically? Given studies over 75 years to back up IV vitamin C cures of the very infectious diseases for which vaccines have been promoted, the logic becomes inescapable - vaccines are medically obsolete.
P Daniels, Salem News
Related Links:
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Theoretical aspects of autism: Causes—A review
Helen V. Ratajczak, Journal of Immunotoxicology, 2011; 8(1): 68–79
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Stunning Vaccination Graphs – The Awful Stats In Action
Raymond Obomsawin Ph.D

3.
Vaccine ingredients: a list

Dr Meryl Nass, MD
There was a lot of interest in my discussion of the benefit of knowing the ingredients in vaccines. There was further interest in what these ingredients are. I have therefore annotated a CDC-derived ingredient list for vaccines by highlighting those ingredients derived from animals or humans, and circling in red those ingredients obtained from a human fetal cell line, MRC-5, derived from lung fibroblasts. Click on the above link for the lists. One Click Note: These lists are an important part of education. Your eyes will be considerably opened. Please network these lists widely in the best interests of yourselves and your children.
Dr Meryl Nass, MD

4.
WikiLeaks' Assange Calls Facebook 'Most Appalling Spying Machine Ever'

WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange has made a lot of
enemies and you can now add Facebook to that list

In a recent interview with Russia Today, Assange said "Facebook in particular is the most appalling spying machine that has ever been invented. Here we have the world's most comprehensive database about people, their relationships, their names, their addresses, their locations, their communications with each other, their relatives, all sitting within the United States, all accessible to U.S. intelligence," the whistle-blowing site's editor continued. Assange asserted that he believes many major U.S.-based tech companies are actively helping the government spy on people. "Facebook, Google, Yahoo, all these major U.S. organizations have built-in interfaces for U.S. intelligence," Assange said. "It's not a matter of serving a subpoena. They have an interface that they have developed for us intelligence to use. Now is it the case that Facebook is actually run by US intelligence? No it's not like that. It's s imply that U.S. intelligence is able to bring to bear legal and political pressure to them and it's costly for them to hand out records one by one so they have automated the process. Everyone should understand that when they add their friends to Facebook they are doing free work for United States intelligence agencies in building this database for them."
Leslie Horn, PC MAG

5.
Are you a UK 'domestic extremist'? How to ask if you are on police databases

A snapshot of protester Matt Salusbury taken secretly by the Met police
Have you been on a protest recently? Have you attended a political meeting, or stopped by at a rally? Even if you have done nothing unlawful, there is a possibility police have listed you on a database of so-called "domestic extremists". All that is needed to find out what information is being held about you in police intelligence files is to follow our step-by-step guide and send this simple letter. This is through a relatively powerful piece of legislation, the Data Protection Act. Any member of the public can submit a request under this act asking for copies of the entries stored about themselves on the police's databases of political activists. The act gives the public the right to see personal data held on them by police forces, and any other state organisation such as local councils, schools and Whitehall departments.
Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, The Guardian

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