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Friday, 25 November 2011

Uncivil service, self-serving service: Where are whistleblowers when you need them?

Daniel Hannan hones in on the essence of the Euro project and, just as he laid into Huhne's disastrous policies on QT last night, so he's not afraid to tell it as it is, while staying within "the rules".

He's right.

But if the civil service is at fault, perhaps we ought to go to war with the civil servants - personally.

Is there a register of 'interests' for these unelected people? And if so, are all junkets and freebies properly accounted for?

How many of the treaty negotiators (including the civil service) have EU pensions? Does Parliament require that these be declared as 'interests'? If not, why not?

And how many of these people have personally beneficial affiliations with the UN or other external bodies?

Let's have them in front of a select committee - or better still, a judge.

We need whistle-blowers to come forward and blast these quisling creeps out of their dark hiding places. They must surely leave trails of personal scandal wherever they go.

You might know one or two of them. Perhaps a neighbour, a fellow commuter, an office associate. I wonder what secrets these insects hide as they deliberately write regulations that steal our privacy and liberty while looting us.

Why protect their privacy when they steal ours? Why protect people live handsomely from our wallets but who do not have our best interests at heart?

Maybe you're a civil servant yourself and are uncomfortable with the treacherous behaviour and deeds you've witnessed in government.

All we need is a critical mass ...

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