Employment

  • London is a growing power

    It’s believed by some that London is a relic of the past. It has cultural heritage. It has museums. It has old streets. It has charm. It has a look about it.

    However, it’s only its past.

    The fact is London is now a growing power. It’s increasing its influence in many parts of the world. It’s moving up, and spreading its wings.

    The future is bright for it.

    Its centres of business are multiplying in importance. Those who work in them are buoyant about their jobs. They have access to the rest of the world.

  • Win: Aldermaston security

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a security analyst on the staff lists of MOD teams with particular duties at the Atomic Weapons Establishment in Berkshire has been recovered.

    An AWE staff member recovered in Reading Station.

    Her role had been under intense strain. It’s due to huge changes in human movement patterns. It’s also part of a realignment. However, criminal activity held up her return to her role.

  • Exclusive: Parliament sex chat

    It’s believed concerns are being raised over sexualised language used by Parliament’s staff.

    It involves references to body parts and sex in use in place of normal terms in conversation.

    It’s also been reported by school leaders who are concerned it’s heard during school visits.

  • Revealed: MI5’s identity problem

    MI5 – standing for “Military Intelligence” – is known for its intense work. However, it’s not known for being intelligent in other ways. A hilarious example is staff.

    It’s usually the case Journalists for example are mistaken for spies. They’re approached for updates but can’t provide any.

    It sometimes turns nasty. There are stories of Journalist’s being harassed for contact. It lasts years and friends have to help out.

    In other cases teachers are falsely arrested for spying for States overseas. It’s not true but they get on with it anyway.

    The idea of knowing your own staff isn’t a settled issue in any MI5 office. It’s so bad in some places they’ve got to reorganise to remember who someone is.

  • Long Report: An enemy within

    These days are kind, but history is different. There are those frowned on now because they look materially different. The intelligence services are no exception. As knowledge of the rank and file is redacted, the truth is released to us.

    Troubling issues

    In our time facts are apparent beforehand. It’s true many recent MI5 staff are infamous. They drive people insane. I spoke to an Agent years ago. He claimed conduct he saw was “vile” to witness. It’s a strong word but it’s how he saw it.

    He said in his time Parliament was also “full” of it. He reported MP’s were often sexual harassers. “If they wanted, they’d tried to touch me”, he said. The “iPod Generation” has made the nation creak under its demands. Their minds are full of criticisms.

    It’s not social media. It’s cynical. It’s abrasive. Their laziness is a prime time accusation. Their aloofness is taken as confession in and of itself. It’s not secrecy at all. It’s a secretiveness due to a need to hide. It’s a survival instinct.

    Its main problem is deviancy. Many MI5 staff suffer the side effects of being near to those using sex to improve their IQ. It’s a malaise other people have to suffer with. It results out of inactivity and revenge States also take against malpractice.

    Troubling times

    MI5 is accused of having a negative effect. It’s malpractice. There are public meetings for it. An Army captain said to me, “It doesn’t end!” He’d been harassed. It was also part of his job to investigate. He hadn’t left his area of study in thirty years.

    There are places unsafe for public meetings. It’s hasn’t made it into Parliament for a debate. This excludes little critiques. Although there’s a culture of harassment in the UK, its deteriorating effects don’t seem that important.

    It’s not solved. There’s a sense of abandonment. It’s at the heart of many people’s complaints. It pervades the UK. It’s a fact much of the population is pushed under by it. It’s a rampant criminal activity by the trusted few.

    Falling out

    It needs to be corrected – before it’s too late. It may result in more trouble. MI5 desk staff are said to be “diabolical” at times. They are the enemy MI5 hate. Other staff take the opportunity to accuse their colleagues of misconduct. It follows media staff try it too.

    The Human Resources aspect fails to appear. No one is sacked and people quit their roles. According to another Agent, “Thames House is not all plain sailing. Someone is usually out to get you.” I found a staff member attacking hundreds of other staff, and a small group trying to steal their salaries.

    Below standards

    It’s proved senior leadership are incapable of leading. Many staff quit because of it. It’s cover blown by false sympathy. It’s reports of sensitive information being sent. It’s even said on-premises security guards try to harass and intimidate.

    The Director General’s role is to safeguarded normal activity. This is interpreted at times to mean keeping the rest safe. It leaves others to suffer. “It’s never solved by just one single leader” a female Analyst said, “and the rest just talk about it.”

    They had a Director that had been posted to surveil cults but he gave time look at MI5’s issues also. It’s believed staff had the same symptoms as abuse survivors of some of the UK’s worst cults. He said it made him feel upset.

    Security measures

    It’s due to a weak approach to life. It was shown by trained but inexperienced staff. A former security advisor to staff at Thames House said “in our terms, they’re weak people.” A senior figure predicted a war of attrition in its office network.

    A result is an effect in society. It creates a societal “ill” if people misuse their jobs. In fact, a security group said over half MI5’s core staff targeted other staff. Meanwhile, they didn’t deal with real threats anywhere.

    I researched it in London. The last Agent I spoke to said, “It’s indicative of all professional activity here.” She walked off to buy lunch after our conversation. It confirmed to me London is a tricky place to work at the best of times.

  • Revealed: MI5’s own circus

    It’s not hard to run a payroll department, but MI5 has proved it’s mission impossible. It started in Glasgow. The secretive unit stationed there decided to turn points into prizes. The problem is they used salaries to do it.

    This habit spread. Soon MOD staff were offered gifts instead of monthly payroll payments. It was supported by MI5 senior staff because it left money over for parties. The program lasted for years before it was shutdown.

  • Exclusive: “The Guardian” criminal

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a criminal suspect in threat errands for the UK-based “The Guardian” news group has been spotted.

    A criminal suspect

    He’s alleged to cause trouble in Reading. He’s targeted media professionals. It’s part of a plot to extract value from UK Journalism.

  • Long Report: The “rape” of Thames Water

    The story of Thames Water is a tale of mismanagement. Any antics of a staff member aside, the real concern is essentially over the performance of business-orientated people.

    The way companies are run is very different. The times are ahead of many people. The decisions are made collaboratively. There isn’t a sole source of authority for anyone.

    Hidden misgivings

    “There’s no potential for veto”, one executive told me. This senior member of staff left long before its troubles really kicked in. He believed the company – headed “to the rocks” – would be suggested for nationalisation.

    The worries were over more than just the decisions that were likely to be made. It was said troubles were starting in supply chains and some firms would suffer if they didn’t pay attention.

    The worsening

    He said Thames Water refused to mind warnings. The meetings were fractious. There were warnings of insults made. There were suggestions of rudeness. These were a precursor to many of his concerns.

    He resigned to safeguard his own career. His last comment to me was out of the blue. He called it a “rape” of a company. I think he meant it felt like an attack on his senses. He couldn’t make ends meet.

    The meetings didn’t take the turns he expected. He was expected to follow regardless. His business mindset suffered. The tidings of Thames Water show he was correct.

    The firm has got into huge debt and has struggled to find its way out. The collapse of offers show its troubles run deeper than previously believed.

    Sad times

    I met another former staff member in a hospital. He’d been admitted after a fight at work. He used to be employed by Thames Water. It was beset by poor employees in some of its locations.

    He operated a security system for the company. He fell victim to workplace abuse. He said other staff “volleyed” insults at him. They picked fault with his appearance. They made false accusations.

    His role meant it became serious. Eventually they turned on him. He was injured. They were later discovered to be Russian infiltrators. They were sent to sabotage systems in Thames Water. He was caught up in state warfare.

    Run of things

    It’s not just about water if it’s a prize commodity. It’s worst if suggestions of takeover are made. It draws interest that many companies struggle to handle.

    They can’t anticipate all the types of approach – or enquiry. A mystery is how Thames Water was beset so heavily by this sort of activity. It isn’t a normal situation.

    The staff may be errant but they haven’t got a potential to incite so much trouble. There must be more to it than that. It needs a curious eye to work out the miserable trouble it’s now in.

  • Revealed: MI5’s “Oxidisation” moment

    A theory that MI5 works well if it works in secrecy is tested if changes are made to its modus operandi. It happened most recently as University graduates became emboldened. They were an overly ambitious cohort. They wanted more, and wanted it with immediacy.

    As MI5 were asked to expand its recruitment process to end decades of inactivity, it made a mistake of taking on these “eager beavers”, as one said of it. The result was “Oxidisation”. Some of its core functions were corrupted, and led to unseen damage.

    Thames House turned into an office-based experience over the professional exercise it used to be. The existing staff carried on because the UK’s security depended on it. It made life significantly unsafe for Agents and staff.

  • Westminster Week: Getting the job done

    Monday

    It’s the day of the Government’s Immigration White Paper, a long-awaited if not over-hyped event for the failure to do it before. Yvette Cooper MP (Pontefract, Castleford, and Knottingley/Labour), our Home Secretary, is confident with her notes but there’s a feeling in the House it needs to go further.

    Jo White MP (Bassetlaw/Labour) is eager to “stop the reliance on imported workers from abroad”, although how it’s done to completion is not clear. It’s for Max Wilkinson MP (Cheltenham/Liberal Democrat) to say it’s not a time to bring up “divisive cultural issues”, such as the Prime Minister’s “island of strangers” quip.

    As the Border Security, Asylum, and Immigration Bill continues its way through Parliament, before Royal Assent, Jeremy Corbyn MP (Islington North/Independent) is a reliable witness to human rights.

    A Home Office Minister, Angela Eagle MP (Wallasey/Labour), supports his assertion, saying cases should be seen by “merit”, not calling people terrorists, or assuming the claim is fake.

    Wednesday

    The Prime Minister is keen to burnish his credentials as a new force in UK trade. Meanwhile, the official opposition brush it off, saying his recent tariff deal with the US is “tiny”.

  • World exclusive: UN dropout

    In a world exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a former UN strategist tasked with researching, and securing, the Internet has been spotted.

    He’s believed to have absconded from his role only to subsequently drop out. He was based at the UN building in New York City.

  • Exclusive: MI5 “Scam Text” recruitment

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, MI5 are sending scam text messages to UK citizens to speedily recruit to cover gaps in training and holes in performance.

    An example of a “scam” MI5 text

    It’s believed rogue Agents are using industry contacts to attempt waves of texts. They’re often received by the wrong recipients.

    The effort is illegal, but evasive Agents engage in attempts to stifle criticism. It’s believed media contacts are used to do it.

  • Revealed: “British ignorance is back”

    A young lady told me many years back of deeply disturbing events taking place in a BBC building in London. What she said shocked me, so I went in to see.

    I spent nearly three days undercover around junior staff. I felt, saw, and heard a whole lot. What I was told was true. It also wasn’t difficult to tell what the issue was.

    It became clear some staff needed to be sacked. They ruined meetings. They assaulted others. They damaged furniture. They also used contacts to follow out visitors.

    One said, “British ignorance is back”. It’s a disturbing confession to hear in a so-called ‘national treasure’. It’s a concern if people feel a British bulldog is a real thing.

  • The uncaring nature of public life

    The lack of ethics inside workplaces is a subject of protest complaint.

    They don’t care about people’s suffering. They don’t care about the environment. They don’t care about disabilities.

    The truth is fuck ups in Whitehall rarely care about anything at all.

    The layman’s answer is to care is not part of most jobs. The reality is most jobs produce carelessness.

    It matters of course if people are treated badly. In rare cases there are those that find themselves in court for not caring.

    The negative stats business of our day – the news press – is a strategist of this sort of discontent. It makes a meal out of those that show it.

    The alternative is lacking. The problem solvers stay at home. The rest of us make an industry out of it.