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Boycott Tesco - run by far right control freaks
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Doos
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 8:12 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

sr4470 wrote:
As it stands, I cant even afford the plane tickets right now Rolling Eyes


Easyjet are doing deals, but do remember, since the baby milk bombs scare (booga booga!) if you buy a one way ticket with cash you'll be marked as a terrorist and asked lots of awkward questions.

Oh, silly me! Not being able to anonymously buy one way plane tickets is just ANOTHER COINCIDENCE!!!!
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 8:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Doos wrote:
Oh and I'll throw this one into the conspiracy pot whilst it's bubbling away nicely.....

we already have a ready made, contiguous, country-wide system of electromagnetic frequency receivers/antennas linked to a central collecting point. They're called mobile phone masts.

Makes you think, doesn't it?
You can run baby, but you can't hide.... la la la.


You don't have to run, but you CAN hide.
By a quirk of luck, chips are remarkably easy to fry - any static source will usually do it.
Detecting them may be the hardest part, but not that hard.
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 8:44 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Using cash won't help: "Hitachi has been working with the European Central Bank on the idea of putting RFID chips into Euro banknotes. This would eliminate the anonymity of cash by making it trackable"

"Levi Strauss & Co. is violating a call for a moratorium on item-level RFID by spychipping its clothing. What's more, the company is refusing to disclose the location of its U.S. test"

a) who's out on the streets breaking a curfew
b) who's not at work when they ought to be and where they are


Again I am lost - putting a tracker in money has no practical usage unless you deliberately plant that money on a specific target. So I pull money out of a hole in the wall and is linked to me - this is the only way it would work. Then I buy petrol on the way home and some shopping, the money then changes hands - the logistics are simply enormous to comprehend and if you were that interested in someone's movement you'd simply follow them.

As for clothing with trackers, this is fine if you are actually wearing those clothes when the curfew check is made. As a younger man I was lucky to have access to my favourite shirts or trousers, my siblings were always borrowing things.

Attempting to make sense of so many signals and people and trackers would be the most incredible task and terribly flawed.

Besides this, once it became common knowledge that this was being used, Halfords would be selling a scanner to check your body in a week just like we have anti-speed camera radar fitted in your car.

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 10:09 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

another possible future scenario could be that after a economic collapse engineered by the nwo anyone hoarding food stocks could be easily traced and food confiscated.

re this subject, old folks who lived during ww2 understand the importance of food hoarding. My grandparents all had pantrys where there was always loads of tinned & dried stuff. I tried to suggest this to my dad and he thought I was off my rocker. Of course all his food is located in the freezer (he lives on processed food) and should we have a scenario above and the electrics get cut off he will have approximately 2-3 days worth of food before it spoils. Me? I always have large bags of lentils, pulses, rices and other various other foodstuffs. I reckon I could last at least a month on what I have in my cupboards easily.

I think I might start decanting them into non chipped & barcoded containers tho' just to be on the safe side Wink

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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 10:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Me? I always have large bags of lentils, pulses, rices and other various other foodstuffs. I reckon I could last at least a month on what I have in my cupboards easily.


I don't know what would smell worse, the rotting corpse of a relative or you farting every few seconds?

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Doos
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 8:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

hello telecasterisation. I agree that the logistics of tracking a 10 Euro note is a nightmare, today. Indeed, it is the apparent uselessness of the technology that concerns me. Banknotes already have a unique number. RFID chip technology is not cheap, the European Bank and various corporations are spending a considerable amount in R&D. Why? I find it sinister because I have not an ounce of trust in govt/corporations etc. RFID does not strike me as benign. If anyone has any ideas as to how a chipped banknote would be useful the financial institutions I would love to hear.
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 9:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

chek wrote:
By a quirk of luck, chips are remarkably easy to fry - any static source will usually do it.
Detecting them may be the hardest part, but not that hard.


Microwave oven is pretty foolproof but the downside is that you may well set your Levi's on fire....
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Doos
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 27, 2006 9:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

iro wrote:
..big mistake - i told her i had no desire to scan and bag my own shopping, if i wanted a job in tesco's id expect paid for it. She wasn't impressed and refused to open another human checkout - to which i said, 'ok then, you scan the food and ill bag it' ... and she called over 2 lackies to do it for me.

every time ive been back theres a manned checkout at night now.. looks like the public dont like this technotronic * at all. Tesco make criminal profits.


Respect iro. These computerised checkouts are thin end of wedge and so obviously a way to cut back on staff. Terry Leary, Chief Exe of Tesco, ascribes Tesco's "phenomenal success" under his leadership to his policy of 'listening to the customer', see: -

http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/?lid=253

Your devilisly brave late night move made a difference so let's see if Mr Leary listens to us when we tell him how we feel about RFID.
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 8:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Doos wrote:
sr4470 wrote:
As it stands, I cant even afford the plane tickets right now Rolling Eyes


Easyjet are doing deals, but do remember, since the baby milk bombs scare (booga booga!) if you buy a one way ticket with cash you'll be marked as a terrorist and asked lots of awkward questions.

Oh, silly me! Not being able to anonymously buy one way plane tickets is just ANOTHER COINCIDENCE!!!!


Soon there'll be internal visas..wouldnt put it past this criminal elite

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Last edited by sr4470 on Thu Sep 28, 2006 9:39 am; edited 1 time in total
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 9:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

telecasterisation wrote:
Quote:
Me? I always have large bags of lentils, pulses, rices and other various other foodstuffs. I reckon I could last at least a month on what I have in my cupboards easily.


I don't know what would smell worse, the rotting corpse of a relative or you farting every few seconds?


hehe - nice one tele Smile

to counter act farting you need to add a really stinky herb called hing/asafoetida. frying in oil for a few secs along with other spices removes hings nasty smell, gives a slightly nutty taste and alleviates wind. Wink

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PostPosted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 12:06 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Following the start of this thread and the subsequent flow of the debate, I emailed Tesco to ask them what the score is?

I just received the following:


Thank you for your email.

I was sorry to learn that you're concerned about the usage of RFID chips in our stores.

I've made some enquiries and found the following reply.

We do not use RFID in our stores at present. We did run a trial with Gillette in 2 stores for a short time.

In the future we have plans to use RFID chips to track stock within our supply chain. RFID chips will be attached to pallets of stock and will allow us to track our stock through our warehouses and into our stores. This will eliminate the need for paper based systems to track stock movements.

Please note that there are no plans at present to use these chips on individual products.

I trust this information will help to put your mind at rest and thank you for contacting Tesco.

If you have any further queries please do not hesitate to contact us at customer.service@tesco.co.uk

Kind Regards

Charlotte Wilson
Tesco Customer Service

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iro
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PostPosted: Thu Sep 28, 2006 12:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Doos wrote:
iro wrote:
..big mistake - i told her i had no desire to scan and bag my own shopping, if i wanted a job in tesco's id expect paid for it. She wasn't impressed and refused to open another human checkout - to which i said, 'ok then, you scan the food and ill bag it' ... and she called over 2 lackies to do it for me.

every time ive been back theres a manned checkout at night now.. looks like the public dont like this technotronic * at all. Tesco make criminal profits.


Respect iro. These computerised checkouts are thin end of wedge and so obviously a way to cut back on staff. Terry Leary, Chief Exe of Tesco, ascribes Tesco's "phenomenal success" under his leadership to his policy of 'listening to the customer', see: -

http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/?lid=253

Your devilisly brave late night move made a difference so let's see if Mr Leary listens to us when we tell him how we feel about RFID.


somehow i doubt it - but we can only do our best. corp's never listen to customers when theyre spending their wonga - if they get a slowdown in profits then they will recheck their policies
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PostPosted: Wed May 14, 2008 11:03 pm    Post subject: Tesco is run by far right control freaks Reply with quote

Tesco steps up war of words with 'Guardian' - Attempts by The Guardian to apologise in its libel battle with Tesco have backfired, with the supermarket's lawyers branding follow-up articles on the company's tax structures as "false, misleading, unfair, disingenuous and downright dishonest".
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/tesco-steps-up-war-of- words-with-guardian-827089.html



Bad News from Tesco - The superstores are on the verge of cornering the news market, with disastrous implications for democracy
http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2005/05/17/bad-news-from-tesco/

Tesco sues a second Thai journalist for libel - Tesco in Thailand is suing a second columnist from a Bangkok business newspaper for £1.6m in libel damages. The global retailer, trading as Tesco Lotus, claims the business gossip writer for Bangkok Business News damaged the company's reputation when she said the company did not "love" Thailand.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/apr/18/tesco.medialaw

Tesco stocks up on inside knowledge of shoppers' lives - Tesco is quietly building a profile of you, along with every individual in the country - a map of personality, travel habits, shopping preferences and even how charitable and eco-friendly you are. A subsidiary of the supermarket chain has set up a database, called Crucible, that is collating detailed information on every household in the UK, whether they choose to shop at the retailer or not.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2005/sep/20/freedomofinformation.su permarkets

On Merseyside a Grandmother was faced with plans to demolish her home to make way for, amongst other things, a new Tesco. In a wonderful retaliation this lady applied for planning permission to demolish the mansion belonging to Tesco chief executive Sir Terry Leahy.
http://chrisblogs.cafebabel.com/en/post/2008/04/23/The-Village-Green-P reservation-Society

Friends of the Earth - Every little helps - Tesco

Link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGoWKVA87ro

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PostPosted: Fri May 16, 2008 9:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Someone has taken up the baton today where the Office of Fair Traiding and Monopoly & Mergers Commission gave up.

.....A 42-year-old man from Gloucester was arrested at the Tesco store on suspicion of causing criminal damage and remains in police custody. One man is thought to be behind both incidents.

Police do not believe the substance poses a risk to public safety but the shops have been sealed off while Environmental Health officers carry out inspections.
Staff are waiting in canteens of both stores, which are shut, and witness statements have been taken from several customers who saw the discharge of the liquid.....
http://www.metro.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=148096

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PostPosted: Fri May 16, 2008 9:59 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Two Gloucestershire Supermarkets became prisons today....

Quote:
.......Suzanne Hughes is one of the customers currently stuck inside the Morrisons store.
Speaking to Thisisgloucestershire at 2.10pm, she said: "I was shopping at around 12.30pm when we were told that the police were closing the shop, and that we would have to wait inside the store to let them interview us.
"I was told that a member of staff that a man had been walking up the aisles, trailing a strong aroma of ammonia wherever he went.
"Management were informed, they told the police, and that was when the decision to seal the shop off was taken.
"The police are now beginning to take statements, but I think we may be here for a while longer yet."
Anybody with any information is asked to call police on 0845 090 1234 or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 quoting incident 189 of May 16.
The incident is ongoing with both stores still closed, and updates will appear here as soon as more information becomes available.
Morrisons is not expected to open until 8am tomorrow.
For more on this story don't miss The Citizen on Saturday.

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PostPosted: Fri May 23, 2008 1:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

More evidence that Tesco is a neo-Nazi outfit

We'll be able to sign up for ID cards at Tesco
London Telegraph / 12-05-2008
Almost unnoticed last week, the Government announced it had shaved another £1 billion off the cost of its proposed identity card scheme.
It did so by deciding to let the "open market" capture citizens' biometrics, effectively outsourcing the cost of enrolling people on to the ID database. You could end up getting your fingerprints taken at a supermarket, rather than at a passport office as originally proposed.
Almost imperceptibly, the security architecture originally built around the ID card project has been dismantled.
When it was proposed in 2002, the intention was to establish a bespoke database. David Blunkett, then Home Secretary, said: "We've got to build a clean identity database from scratch. We can't use the National Insurance numbers, as there are 20 million more National Insurance numbers than there are people in the country."
But this idea was abandoned. Instead, biometrics will be stored on an existing system in the Home Office used for asylum seekers, biographical information will be held on a National Insurance database in the Department for Work and Pensions and a third database at the Identity and Passport Service (IPS) will hold administrative details related to the issue and use of the ID cards.
It was also envisaged that everyone would have to give an iris print, which is the most secure biometric with a far lower chance of false readings than fingerprints. Last year, however, the Identity and Passport Agency said it would proceed only with fingerprints, which are far cheaper to capture.
Still, at least these fingerprints would be taken in the secure and official environs of a government passport office, one of 70 being set up for this purpose. But when it became clear that far more than 70 offices would be needed to enrol 60 million people on to a database, and it would be costly, this changed as well. Hence the announcement that private contractors will be asked to bid for the work.
Does any of this sound secure to you? It seems to defeat the purpose of the whole exercise, which is to protect identities, capture terrorists, bear down on benefit fraud and stop illegal immigration. But of course none of these will be ameliorated by the possession of an ID card, which nobody will be required to carry with them.
As one perplexed campaigner said after the publication of the new costings: "The Government now appears to have junked the primary pretext for the scheme. So what is it for?"
The answer has nothing to do with security, any more than the presence of CCTV cameras everywhere has anything to do with stopping crime, as even senior police officers now concede. It is about political control. The state wants to know where you are, and those who run it have always believed it has a right to know, but have usually been beaten back by Parliament.
Information technology has provided the wherewithal for these details to be captured, so the Government has seized its chance. The problem for us, though, is that it expects to be given the information without guaranteeing its security.
The only thing that would make this bargain remotely worthwhile is the certainty that our details will be secure, and a promise that we will not be mistaken for someone else. After all, it is the law-abiding citizen accused of being an illegal immigrant or an armed robber who stands to lose most.
So what is the ID scheme for? A few years ago the Treasury was developing the Citizen Information Project (CIP) - an attempt to "improve services by increasing the sharing of basic citizen information (contact details such as name, address and date of birth) across central and local government."
This envisaged establishing a population register, initially using the passport, DVLA and National Insurance databases to access and centralise personal information. The population database would be updated as births, deaths and changes of address were registered, and people came to live in the UK. The CIP was abandoned in 2003 when the ID scheme took over.
A valedictory report on the project said: "The National Identity Register proposed as part of the Home Office Identity Cards Programme will deliver many of the CIP benefits... by effectively acting as the UK adult population register."
Shorn of much of its security paraphernalia, that is what the ID scheme now is. It will fulfil an aim of British public policy since the 16th century. The Tudors wanted to set up a population register, and another failed attempt was made in 1753, when it was proposed to take an annual local count of population, and a record of all marriages, births and deaths. The idea was never pursued and Britain instead moved to a census as a way of counting the population.
But the population register concept was picked up in countries like Sweden, where everyone has a unique personal number (UPN) allocated at birth. For instance, 454010-1488 is a woman born on April 10, 1945 with the individual number 148 (an even number denotes a woman) and an anti-fraud check digit 8. All administrative records relating to this person carry the UPN from birth until death.
Politically, it seems peculiar that the Government did not define this whole exercise in the context of a population register from the start, rather than as the imposition of an identity card with all the attendant civil liberties connotations.
It would have sounded less sinister than an ID database and would have been far cheaper. A feasibility study for the CIP estimated it would cost £13 million to develop a register, £240 million to implement it and £25 million a year to run.
Given the gradual removal of the security walls around the proposed ID database, it is clear that this scheme has nothing to do with protecting our identities. It is about setting up a glorified population register to keep track of us.
Those who think the Government will scrap the ID cards are mistaken, since its main purpose is to establish a population database. This is also why it will eventually be compulsory to join in. You should start working out your UPN now.
http://www.underthecarpet.co.uk/Pages/NewsArticle.php?num=4478

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PostPosted: Mon Jul 28, 2008 9:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Privatising your entire life - Tesco takes on High Street banks

Tesco prepares for push into retail banking

By Elizabeth Rigby

Published: July 28 2008 20:13 | Last updated: July 28 2008 20:13
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8829196c-5cd8-11dd-8d38-000077b07658.html

Having conquered Britain’s grocery market, Tesco is now planning a push into retail banking after sealing a £950m deal to buy out Royal Bank of Scotland from their finance joint venture.

Britain’s biggest supermarket chain said it was planning to become a full-service bank. It plans to put “branches” into its larger Tesco Extra stores and will be adding current accounts to its small roster of insurance, credit cards and personal loan products.

It said the retailing services division – which is made up of Tesco.com, Tesco Telecoms and Tesco Personal Finance – could be making £1bn of profits within a decade, against £400m today. The target underscores the scale of the ambition given that Tesco’s group profit stood at £2.8bn in the year to the end of February.

Andrew Higginson, Tesco’s finance and strategy director, will become chief executive of retailing services. He said he would extend financial services and products overseas in the coming two years and added that Tesco’s more established markets – Hungary, Thailand and Korea – were the obvious place to start.

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PostPosted: Tue Jan 26, 2010 11:00 pm    Post subject: Tescos Spying On You Reply with quote

Tescos Spying On You

We all knew it but today i received an email from Tescos encouraging me to use online shopping and just to make it easy for me they listed a lot of things i had recently purchased at the store. Good job the wife didnt open the email and wonder who the size 10 lingerie was for. I jest. Laughing

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 22, 2010 7:30 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

How Tesco get planning permission in Exeter

Mayor has forced to resign from regeneration body in row over plans for a new Tesco store.
http://www.thisisexeter.co.uk/news/Seaton-mayor-Tesco-letter-row/artic le-1853263-detail/article.html
.........Councillor Semple was elected on the back of her anti-development stance in 2007 and now feels it is her duty to raise the objections of campaigners. She wrote a letter to Tesco, questioning the wisdom of the firm spending £50 million to date on developing a store in a town of 7,000.......

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scubadiver
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 22, 2010 7:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://www.verylittlehelps.com/
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PostPosted: Tue Feb 23, 2010 5:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

http://www.tescopoly.org/

"Every little hurts"

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PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2010 2:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Beginning of the end of Tesco in Bristol

Link

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v6mOsR7wiUU

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