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This is the neeewwwwws!

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Actimel is a pile of shite

Ad banned over yoghurt health claim

The advertising watchdog has banned an Actimel TV advert that claimed its yoghurt supported children's natural defences.
The Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) decided the advert was in breach of the rules because evidence provided by Danone did not uphold claims that the drinking yoghurt could help normal, healthy school-aged youngsters protect against common childhood illnesses.
The advert showed a bottle of the Danone product jumping over a skipping rope and featured the sound of children playing in the background. A voice-over stated "kids love Actimel and it's good for them too".
The ad then featured the sound of children cheering and the voice-over went on to state: "Actimel. Scientifically proven to help support your kids' defences."
The advert ended with the words "scientifically proven" stamped on the screen. Danone said 23 people in a study group of 6,000 across different age ranges had shown health benefits after drinking Actimel Eight of these studies were carried out on children up to 16-years-old.
The company submitted evidence from some of the studies to the ASA, two of which were carried out on hospitalised children in India who were suffering from acute diarrhoea or receiving medication for gastritis-related illnesses. The ASA decided these could not be applied to healthy children.
Two other trials, one in 1999 and one in 2000, examined the effect of Actimel on children aged between 10 and 18 months. The ASA found that the improvement of diarrhoea in the children was not significant enough to support the claims and that the mean age of the children (six months in 1999 and 15.5 months in 2000) was too young to apply to school-age children.
No health benefit was found in relation to asthmatic children and a reduction in the number of children with diarrhoea and allergic rhinitis was too small compared to the control group to prove Actimel was the cause of the improvement, the watchdog said. It also decided studies using children in day care centres in Russia and America found too small a reduction in common infectious diseases (CIDs) when drinking Actimel than when not.
In both studies children were also taking double the 100g recommended daily serving of the yoghurt drink.
The ASA concluded the ad must be banned as it broke rules for being misleading, rules relating to evidence and accuracy in food advertising. A spokesman for Danone said the company was "very disappointed" at the ASA's ruling.


the reason i'm posting this is that only 23 out of 6000 people that they tested actimel on reported health benefits, and actimel thought this was proof that it works? fuck sake! i always knew those things were a load of pish & this basically proves it.
 
They're a load of crap. The thing is people often do drink an actimel every day and feel better, but this is only because they've seen the advert and in their mind think that it is having a beneficial effect, hence they feel more positive and therefore healthier in their perception.
 
22 October 2009
‘Bubbles’ being made in Dundee, claims councillor
A Fife councillor has issued a warning over the dangers of a recreational drug he believes is being manufactured in Dundee.
St Andrews councillor Bill Sangster said today he wanted to alert young people and their parents to the potential dangers of the drug, which has appeared on the scene in Fife.
He said, “This drug is being sold cheaply and it is innocently called ‘Bubbles’. It sells for around £4 a time and is portrayed as a legal drug.

“However, I have been made aware that this information is untrue. It is illegal, harmful and can become addictive.”

Bubbles, according to information given to Councillor Sangster, are being produced in Dundee for distribution throughout Tayside and into Fife.

According to the Levenmouth-based Drug and Alcohol Project Ltd., the mixture in the capsules is produced in varying colours to signify its composition and strength, although cocaine is believed to be the main ingredient.

Capsules are broken and the contents are snorted, placed on to the eyeball, or swallowed by the user, who experiences an immediate high described as mix between ecstasy and LSD.

Councillor Sangster said he understood that it is being hailed as the new craze amongst the student fraternity within Dundee and is being widely abused, in particular by teenagers.

Recent enforcement action in Tayside has resulted in the recovery of two Bubble capsules which were examined via fast track analysis and identified as being 0.191 grams of mephedrone (4-methylmethcathinone), which it not a controlled substance.

Further recoveries are also being fast tracked through the analysis process, but are still pending.

Councillor Sangster, who is also chairman of the St Andrews and District Safety Panel, added, “I would also ask parents and others to be vigilant and if suspicious contact the Fife Constabulary drugs hotline.

“The more help the police get the quicker they can deal with it.”

Fife police spokesman Detective Chief Inspector Graham Seath, head of Fife’s drug squad, said, “We are aware of a developing pattern concerning this type of drug, but its relatively recent emergence makes any assessment of user numbers difficult to gauge.

“There is a strong possibility that constituents used in the manufacture of this drug may be illegal and come under the realms of current drug legislation.”

http://www.eveningtelegraph.co.uk/output/2009/10/22/story13989346t0.shtm
 
Nasa play McFly hit to astronauts

Nasa play McFly hit to astronauts


Boyband McFly's hit single Star Girl has been played out to astronauts orbiting Earth, after fans called for it to be broadcast.

Nasa agreed to play the group's 2006 song to the spacecraft crew members after being bombarded by McFly fans on micro-blogging site Twitter.

The space agency offered 35 people the chance to talk live to the astronauts, but fans wanted the song instead.

Band member Danny Jones said on Twitter it was a "dream come true".

In a later tweet to Nasa, he said: "Thank you for playing our song in space it's definatly [sic] one if the coolest things that's happened since being in the band... Amazing."

The song, which went to number one in the UK charts in November 2006, includes lyrics: "I was afraid when you kissed me/on your intergalactic Frisbee."

Dr David Whitehouse, a space scientist and author told BBC radio 5 live he thought the play out had been been great publicity for Nasa and the band.

"I thought this was a way, not only to get in touch between astronauts and ordinary people, but to get down with the kids.

"Considering the average age on the space station is 46, I wouldn't have thought many of them have heard of McFly before.

"They do play a lot of music in general in the space station, they wake people up with music but it tends to be more 70s rock and country music."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8320100.stm

poor bastard astronauts:o
 
Armed police officers placed on routine foot patrol for first time

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukn...ed-on-routine-foot-patrol-for-first-time.html

Police officers armed with submachine guns are to be deployed on routine patrol of Britain's streets for the first time.

armedPolice_1507659c.jpg


By Matthew Moore
Published: 1:43PM BST 22 Oct 2009

A hand-picked team from CO19, the Metropolitan Police's elite firearms unit, will walk the beat in gun crime hotspots where armed gangs have turned entire estates into "no go" zones.

Local politicians and anti-gun campaigners have reacted with anger at the news that the officers will carry Heckler & Koch MP5 submachine guns – capable of firing up to 800 rounds-per-minute – and Glock semi-automatic pistols.

CO19 currently provides armed support in volatile situations like sieges and terrorist attacks, with its officers on constant call in vehicles around London.

But this is the first time that armed officers will be sent on permanent foot patrol anywhere in the country outside Northern Ireland.

"Historically, CO19 was only called out when someone rang up to report a gun crime," said Inspector Derek Carroll, head of the new unit.

"But a lot of streets in London have young people in postcode gangs, aged 14 and upwards, and a lot of communities feel that they are controlling areas of estates.

"We are looking at gangs that have access to firearms and will be robust in dealing with them and disrupting and deterring them."

The team of 18 constables, led by an inspector and two sergeants, will begin their patrols of Brixton, Haringey and Tottenham on Nov 9, following successful trial schemes.

The officers – some on motorbikes – will carrying out weapon "sweeps" of their neighbourhoods in an effort to deter gang members from carrying guns, and are also intended to be a reassuring presence for residents.

"My view is that just because you carry a gun, it should not affect the way you police," Inspector Carroll added. "We chat to people and they love it."

Unlike their counterparts in the United States, British police officers do not routinely carry guns, although armed patrols are frequently deployed in the aftermath of shootings and to guard potential terrorist targets.

In October 2000 armed officers on the beat were temporarily introduced in Nottingham after a string of drug-related deaths.

Jennette Arnold, a Labour London Assembly member for northeast London constituency, said that the patrols threatened to tear up the contract between the community and the police.

"No one asked us or the people I represent if this was acceptable and when they do I shall tell them it isn't. It isn't acceptable to throw away the principle of policing by consent," she said.

Gill Marshall-Andrews, chairwoman of the Gun Control Network campaign group, described the routine arming of officers as a "very retrograde step" and warned that it could lead to higher levels of gun crime.

"This is likely to raise the stakes and encourage more criminals, especially young criminals, to arm themselves," she said.

"Gun crime in this country is very low by international standards and that's largely because there aren't many guns about. Arming police officers sends out all the wrong messages."

The Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers, has long campaigned against attempts to arm a larger section of the force, but said it had no objection to the new scheme.

Simon Reed, vice-chairman of the national federation, said that although majority of his members did not wish be to armed, forces must be free to respond to particular threats.

"The ethos will always be that the British police are unarmed, but we need officers to be able to use firearms when appropriate," he said. "My feeling is that the current balance is just about right."

The Home Office declined to comment, saying that the operational use of firearms was a matter for local forces.

Officers from CO19, formerly known as SO19, have been involved in a number of high-profile incidents in the capital, including the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes at Stockwell station in 2005.

Gun-related crime is on the increase in London with 1,736 gun crimes reported in London between April and September this year – up 17 per cent on 2008.

The problem of turf violence between drugs gangs was highlighted earlier this month with a spate of shootings in north London linked to two Turkish gangs, the Tottenham Boys and the Bombacilar.
 
The officers – some on motorbikes – will carrying out weapon "sweeps" of their neighbourhoods in an effort to deter gang members from carrying guns, and are also intended to be a reassuring presence for residents.

Well I don't know about you guys but I find few things are as reassuring as piggies with submachine guns on the beat :\
 

haha, that story is so fucking ridiculous.

He said, “This drug is being sold cheaply and it is innocently called ‘Bubbles’. It sells for around £4 a time and is portrayed as a legal drug.
“However, I have been made aware that this information is untrue. It is illegal, harmful and can become addictive.”
According to the Levenmouth-based Drug and Alcohol Project Ltd., the mixture in the capsules is produced in varying colours to signify its composition and strength, although cocaine is believed to be the main ingredient.
Recent enforcement action in Tayside has resulted in the recovery of two Bubble capsules which were examined via fast track analysis and identified as being 0.191 grams of mephedrone (4-methylmethcathinone), which it not a controlled substance.

i'm gonna get a job as a reporter, i'm pretty good at spouting complete shite that makes no sense at all

i particularly like this bit
Capsules are broken and the contents are snorted, placed on to the eyeball, or swallowed by the user, who experiences an immediate high described as mix between ecstasy and LSD.
8o

it seems like that story is about 3 or 4 different contradictory news reports badly pieced together by someone who's been taking too much mephedrone - mugabe did you write that yoursel? ;)
 
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Oh and another interesting Groaniad article, although not particularly new news...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2009/oct/23/lsd-ecstacy-health-benefits

"One, at the University of California in Berkeley, was the first research into LSD to get approval from regulators and ethics bodies since the 1970s," she said. Those in the study are the first to be allowed to take LSD legally in decades as part of research into whether it aids creativity. "LSD is a potentially very valuable substance for human health and happiness."

The other is a Swiss trial in which the drug is give alongside psychotherapy to people who have a terminal condition to help them cope with the profound anxiety brought on by impending death. "If you handle LSD with care, it isn't any more dangerous than other therapies," said Dr Peter Gasser, the psychiatrist leading the trial.
 
Cocaine haul washes up on beach

A multi-million pound haul of what is thought to be cocaine has been found washed ashore on the Sussex coast.

Police said about 20kg (44lb) of drugs were found in a rucksack on the water's edge at Frenchman's Bay, Rye.

The substance is still being analysed at a forensic laboratory in London, Det Insp Ian Williams said.

But he said if the substance was confirmed as cocaine, the haul would be worth £1.2m in wholesale value, and about £6m in street value terms.

A local man spotted the rucksack while walking his dog on Saturday morning.

It is thought the bag washed ashore overnight.

Mr Williams said: "We are glad to have removed such a large quantity of what appear to be drugs from the streets of the UK.

"There have been no other reports of such finds or evidence of attempted importations in the area recently, but we are keen to hear from anyone who has seen any suspicious activity along the stretch of the coast near Rye in recent days."

He said there was no evidence to suggest where in the UK the drugs may have been destined.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/sussex/8330278.stm

that man is a fool!
 
Dealers jailed after 'Wire' sting

Members of a multi-million pound Scots drugs gang have been jailed after being caught in a police surveillance sting similar to the TV series, "The Wire".

The High Court in Glasgow heard how officers were able to interpret coded conversations after bugging a car and house belonging to one of the suspects.

Brian McCulloch, Steven Caddis, Stephen George Jamieson and Gary Caddis pleaded guilty to supplying illegal drugs.

They were jailed for 10, six, eight and five years respectively.

The court heard how police initially received intelligence that Jamieson and several others were involved in "high-level criminality".

The surveillance operation against the men began in December 2007 after officers were unable to gather sufficient evidence to justify prosecutions.

Authority was granted for covert listening devices to be inserted in Jamieson's house in Paisley and his BMW X5 car.

These allowed police to hear coded conversations between Jamieson, Steven Caddis and Gary Caddis involving the purchase, processing and supply of millions of pounds worth of drugs.

When Jamieson sold the car to McCulloch, this allowed police to widen the scope of their investigation.

Expert drugs officers were used to decode the language used by the men.

The court was told how words such as "ticket", "corner" and "Lido" were used to refer to a gram and quarter kilo of cocaine, and the cutting agent Lignocaine.

During the surveillance, police raided properties in Glasgow, Paisley and Clydebank, recovering drugs with a street value of £9m, along with firearms and almost half-a-million pounds in cash.

You (McCulloch) were one of the principals in an organisation running a scheme for large amounts of cocaine
Lord Pentland

Materials to supply drugs, including a hydraulic press to compact cocaine, were also recovered.

The operation continued until all four were arrested on the morning of 4 October 2008.

Jamieson, 26, McCulloch, 39, and Steven Caddis, 30, all from Paisley, Renfrewshire, and Gary Caddis, 28, from Cardonald, Glasgow, later admitted dealing in cocaine.

Jamieson also admitted money laundering by using money obtained by crime to buy three watches worth £10,315.

McCulloch also admitted being involved in the supply of amphetamine and ecstasy between December 2007 and March 2008.

'Principal organiser'

Passing sentence, judge Lord Pentland praised the efforts of Strathclyde Police for its role in apprehending the four men as part of a wider serious crime drive - Operation Lockdown.

"To the police officers involved I offer the appreciation of the court for the skill and diligence with which the operation was conducted," he said.

"A great deal of work has also been performed by the procurator fiscal's office and Crown Office."

Sentencing the gang, Lord Pentland told McCulloch: "You were one of the principals in an organisation running a scheme for large amounts of cocaine."
Firearms
Operation Lockdown also recovered a number of firearms

He told McCulloch, who had run a building company before entering the drug trade, that he had misused his business acumen.

Lord Pentland told Jamieson that his motivation in the enterprise was financial gain.

Det Sup Colin Field, from Strathclyde Police, who led the operation, said: "These men, who sat at the top of an organised crime group, believed themselves to be above the law - today's sentence proves how very wrong they were.

"This operation has demonstrated that whether you are the king pin, the courier or the person who allows their house to be used for storing drugs or guns for those masterminding an organised crime group, you will all be held responsible."

Property searches during Operation Lockdown recovered drugs and drug-related materials with a street value of £8.8m and £445,000 in cash.

Officers also seized two MAC 10 machine guns, three sawn off shotguns, four shotguns, 11 rifles, eight handguns and 3,400 rounds of ammunition.

Seven cars - including a Porsche and Lexus - were also recovered along with eight top of the range watches.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/8329979.stm
 
Not sure if that was posted or not:

Ketamine 'could be re-examined'

The classification of ketamine - which has become increasingly popular with clubbers - could be upgraded "at some point", the Home Office has said.

Government adviser Professor David Nutt said the drug, designed as a horse anaesthetic, could be doing "permanent damage" to some users' bladders.

The Home Office said it intended to review whether ketamine should remain at class C.

This puts it in the "least dangerous" category of illegal drug.

Upgrading ketamine's classification could increase the maximum sentence for possession from two years to at least five years.

The drug was linked to the deaths of 23 people between 1993 and 2006. Most had accidents after taking it.

'Spasms and pain'

There have been concerns it is growing in popularity on the UK club scene and it was made illegal in January 2006, after a surge in the number of people using it.

Prof Nutt, an expert in addiction based at Bristol University, told the Commons home affairs committee: "We are seeing a consistent increase in use and we are seeing a very worrying effect in terms of bladder spasms and bladder pain.

"There is concern that it is causing permanent bladder damage."

He told the MPs he had heard that many young people were turning to ketamine as a recreational drug because the street strengths of ecstasy and cocaine had declined.

On a possible review of the law, Prof Nutt added: "Class C may be the wrong class."

Substances listed in this category by the Home Office are considered the "least dangerous illegal drugs".

Possession of class B drugs, such as cannabis and amphetamines, carries a maximum sentence of five years in jail, while for class C drugs it is two years.

The penalty for being caught with the most dangerous - class A - drugs, such as heroin or cocaine, is seven years.

A spokesman for the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, which is part of the Home Office, told the BBC: "Part of the remit of the ACMD is to look at the harms of drugs within the Misuse of Drugs Act.

"We recommended that ketamine be categorized as a class C drug four years ago and we intend to review this at some point in the future as more evidence is becoming available on the long-term harms of the drug."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8328312.stm
 
This and the "coma in a bottle" comment in the latest "GBL death" story have me concerned the BBC is turning into the Daily HateFail :|

Also, does anyone give much of a fuck about which class a drug is? Unless you're selling the stuff it makes all of no difference really.

I agree. The classes are just scare tactics for the ignorant.
 
Government drugs adviser resigns

An adviser to the government has resigned over the home secretary's sacking of his chief drugs adviser, Prof David Nutt

Dr Les King quit the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, saying Home Secretary Alan Johnson had denied Prof Nutt's "freedom of expression".

Prof Nutt was sacked after saying cannabis is less harmful than alcohol or nicotine.

He said the drug had been upgraded to Class B against scientific evidence.

The move had been for political reasons and "on the whim of the prime minister", Prof Nutt claimed.

After being sacked via e-mail by Mr Johnson, Prof Nutt predicted there would be resignations from the government advisory body that he headed.

Dr King was appointed on 3 April 2008 and wrote a book on the Misuse of Drugs Act in 2003. He was previously head of the Drugs Intelligence Unit in the Forensic Science Service.

Dr King said there was a "very strong feeling" among the council's members.

"I'm not going to say just how many I think might resign but there is an extremely angry feeling among most council members.

"Amongst the scientists, I think a number will resign. It doesn't need the whole council to resign for the thing to stop working."

Prof Nutt has told the BBC that the council's position is "untenable".

He said: "I think the position of scientists on the council's untenable, because I cannot see how Alan Johnson, given what he's just said, which clearly indicates he doesn't understand how scientists think, how scientists on council could continue to work with him."

Speaking to Sky News on Sunday, Mr Johnson said he thought his ex-chief drugs adviser was "wrong" on cannabis - but sacked him for "crossing a line" into politics.

Mr Johnson had earlier said he hoped there would not be resignations, adding: "This was not about Prof Nutt's views, which I respect though I don't agree with them."

He said: "What you cannot have is a chief adviser at the same time stepping into the political field and campaigning against government decisions. You can do one or the other. You can't do both."

Mr Johnson said that Prof Nutt had "crossed the line between offering advice and then campaigning against the government on political decisions".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/8336635.stm
 
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