Tuesday, 31 January 2012

RACING POST TUESDAY JANUARY 31st 2012 HOW TO FIND WINNERS WEEK-LONG SERIES



RACING POST TUESDAY JANUARY 31st 2012
RACING POST WEEK MONDAY JANUARY 30th TO SUNDAY FEBRUARY 5th 2012


 TODAY'S CARDS Taunton. Folkestone. Southwell.
http://www.racingpost.com/horses2/cards/home.sd


HOW TO FIND WINNERS
 A MUST-READ WEEK-LONG SERIES STARTED YESTERDAY.

PUNTERS CHAMPION BEN HUTTON ON 'HOW I TACKLE' A RACE

Did you spot this yesterday? When BEN HUTTON kicked off this week-long series of Punter Champions' on how to find a good value bet.

 
HOW TO FIND WINNERS DAY TWO
A MUST-READ WEEK-LONG SERIES
TODAY PUNTERS CHAMPION RICHARD BIRCH REVEALS HIS BETTING STRATEGY  
AS TO HOW HE TAKES JOCKEYSHIP INTO ACCOUNT

KEEP YOUR REFERENCE FILE INFO UP TO DATE DAILY
 WITH THIS KEY INFO.


" GUYON BANNED AFTER STRIKING JOCKEY IN HONG KONG"
"TOP French rider MAXIME GUYON'S second stint in Hong Kong has come to an abrupt end after the jockey was handed a nine-day ban for striking another rider with his whip during a race."

INACURATE BLOODHORSE ILLITERATE STEWARDING AROUND THE WORLD MANIFEST HERE.

LICENSED RIDERS to resort to hitting other riders shows without any shadow of doubt how seriously wrong the sports regulation rules and regulated stewarding have become in a dangerous sport where every bloodhorse literate care needs to be taken in the first place. 

IF it is  deemed accountable to hit horses under bloodhorse illiterate rules,  which seem to be the case world wide, then surely it is deemed accountable for bloodhorse literate riders to hit other bloodhorse literate riders, whilst being forced into attempting to ride to bloodhorse illiterate rules in any and all seriously dangerous situations, in life and death situations that can and often do occur in races, without warning.


MAXIME GUYON IS NOT A WHIP JOCKEY, HE IS A HIGHLY SKILLED BLOODHORSE LITERATE CREATIVE ARTIST .






Sunday, 29 January 2012

RACING POST MONDAY JANUARY 30th 2012 HURRICANE FLY DAZZLES IN IRISH CHAMPION HURDLE



RACING POST MONDAY JANUARY 30th 2012
RACING POST WEEK MONDAY JANUARY 30th 2012 TO SUNDAY FEBRUARY 5th 2012


 
TODAY'S CARDS Plumpton. Ayr. Wolverhampton.

HURRICANE FLY, SCORES AT LEOPARDSTOWN EIRE YESTERDAY 
FOR THE WILLIE MULLINS TEAM


TONY O'HEHIR brings us exciting news from Leopardstown as the FLY lights up gloom in the 2.30 BHP Insurance Irish Champion Hurdle (Grade 1) (2m) (8 Hurdles) with a majestic display, winning by six and a half lengths from OSCARS WELL, yet another clue toward  the British Champion Hurdle to be run in March at the Cheltenham Festival, handled and presented by GAIL CARLISLE for the Willie Mullins Team. 

5 ran, tracked leaders in 3rd, smooth headway to challenge after 2 out, led early straight and soon asserted, stretched clear run-in, easily.
Shades of PERSIAN WAR ....?  Shades of ISTABRAQ ......?

PERSIAN WAR 1963 -19
http://www.famousracehorses.co.uk/persianwar.htm
 
http://www.pedigreequery.com/persian+war2

http://www.famousracehorses.co.uk/hunt.htm

by Tony Ward
PERSIAN WAR "Broken teeth, knocked unconscious, severe illness, fractured femur, leg injury, endless campaigns, inconsiderate owner - the courageous story of Persian War - winner of three Champion Hurdles.

"Persian War, by Persian Gulf out of the Chanteur II mare, Warning, started his racing life on the flat. He was trained by Dick Hern and carried the colours of his breeder Jakie Astor in his first two seasons, when he won two small staying races in the autumn of his three year old days.
.........




The old horse's last race that season was the Scottish Champion Hurdle, where he was unplaced and clearly on the downgrade. Any caring owner would surely retired him at that point. But Alper changed his home again, sending him to Dennis Rayson's little yard at Exning, outside Newmarket. It was for Rayson, that we won his last and 18th race, the Latecomers Hurdle at Stratford in June 1972 a race worth £374. It was heartbreaking to see the old champion reduced to beating nonentities. His last race was back at Cheltenham when he finished second last in the Broadway Hurdle in January.
The crunch with Rayson came shortly afterwards. Alper hit on the bright idea of schooling the old horse over fences. Rayson refused and Persian War was sent to Jack Gibson near Cheltenham. Mercifully, perhaps, Persian War hurt a leg shortly afterwards, not seriously, but enough to keep him out of training for the rest of that season. He did come back enough to go back into work and was even being prepared for another tilt at the Festival, the County Hurdle being the nominated race, but bruised a leg on the eve of it and at last Alper announced the champions retirement.


"Eventually, Alper was talked out of such plans and Persian War went to his final home, with former Royal jockey Harry Carr at the Genesis Green Stud at Wickham Brook, just outside Newmarket. He lived there for ten happy and at last, dignified years. Finally his old legs began to go and he found it difficult to get up and down. He was peacefully put down before the winter began.

In his seven year jumping career he had no fewer than six trainers. He was the ultimate champion and had he been in the ownership of a more knowledgeable racing man, could have achieved even greater heights.

ISTABRAQ 2010 - trained by Aiden O'Brien Team.
Watch the give and take  of CHARLIE SWAN partnering ISTABRAQ riding this horse on the bridle circling at the start. The balance, the timing the in tune partnership between horse and rider can be seen  here at its brilliant best. Like an elastic thread  kept at just the right tension between horse and rider, not dictated by any regulators.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVB6_HvBv8U

RACING POST TEAM SUNDAY JANUARY 29th 2012 CHELTENHAM FESTIVAL TRIALS


RACING POST TEAM SUNDAY JANUARY 29th 2012



JOIN UP LINK
TODAY'S CARDS Leopardstown. Ffos Las. Sedgefield.


JON LEES "WALSH SET TO APPEAL AGAINST 'HARSH' BAN

RUBY WALSH yesterday signalled he was likely to appeal against a three-day suspension that rules him out of the Betfair Super Saturday fixture at Newbury in two weeks' time and puts in jeopardy his participation in the following day's Hennessy Gold Cup day at Leopardstown.


"Walsh felt harshly dealt with after being found guilty of careless riding on PEARL SWAN, who finished a short head in front of GRUMETI in the JCB Triumph Hurdle Trial.


"Paul Nicholls' stable jockey reported that he had not infringed the careless riding rules since at least 2006, but the Cheltenham officials believed that he did here and deemed that PEARL SWAN had improved his placing by drifting right and interfering with his rival.


"Walsh said: "I  think I have to appeal. I haven't been suspended for careless riding for along time. The interference was minimal. There was only a short head in it so they reversed the verdict. I feel three days is very harsh.


"I have to go home and have a look at it. My gut instinct is telling me I'll have to appeal. I haven't  looked into deferring it. I just think it's wrong that three days is your starting point."


"The days of the ban, February 11, 12, and 13, will prevent Walsh riding  CJB Triumph Hurdle winner ZARKANDAR, the hot favourite for the £152,500 Betfair Hurdle, formally the
Totesport Trophy, and HOLD FAST in the Grade 2  Game Spirit Chase, but he could apply to have the second day deferred as the following day's Leapordstown card features  Grade 1 racing."

END




J MARGARET CLARKE TURFCALL

THE BRITISH HORSERACING AUTHORITY'S ATTITUDE 

The Rip Off Britain Culture, a Sick and False Society.


CHELTENHAM (28.02.2012) 12.55 JCB Triumph Hurdle Trial
Stewards Inquiry.

Shocking Conflict of Interests within the present Rules of British Horseracing and how these present rules are being read by bloodhorse illiterate steward stewarding. Creating division and maximum confusion, and bad feeling.

RUBY WALSH attempted manoeuvres to win this race looked bad, it was a very close finish. A finish as this would have been far more exciting and acceptable to watch if it had been a hands and heals finish, the fact that Ruby Walsh used his whip harshly and frequently, this may well have been the cause of  PEARL SWAN running off a straight course, taking the ground of GRUMETI

Taking the easy option quick fix to go for the whip, with perhaps scant regard for the effect on the horse being hit and the other competitors close up.  Do we really want to have a day out at the races to watch horses ridden until they collapse from exhaustion, soured of racing ever after?


Taking a closer look at horseracing as a whole, it is noted there are many different sections that need to function properly for horseracing to reach its true potential, to move on, in the right direction without bloodhorse illiterate interference. We do have a big problem here make no mistake about that.

Licensed riders need to take on board the fact that unsightly whipping, flogging the living daylights out of a horse to force the horse past the winning post by fair means or foul makes a shocking impression on people.


If this bad practice continues on British horseracing will fail. To watch horses suffering horrendous falls,  laying out dying on the track, to read in the daily papers of riders off after heavy or awkward falls seriously injured, almost an every day occurence, one surely realises there is something going seriously wrong here.

The 2012 Cheltenham Festival and the Aintree Grand National look like sitting ducks at present for a repeat performance of last year.

Perhaps the only thing to do in the present pradicament is to ban the use of the whip from three fences out, all riders to use hands and heals only. Everyone needs to understand this especially the punters.



 



Friday, 27 January 2012

RACING POST SATURDAY JANUARY 28th 2012 C4 THE MORNING LINE

RACING POST SATURDAY JANUARY 28th 2012
RACING POST WEEK MONDAY 23rd TO SUNDAY JANUARY 29th 2012

TOM SCUDAMORE GUEST STAR ON THE MORNING LINE 7.55am to 8.55am today and every Saturday. Don't miss it. Your live window into the world of horseracing.
http://turfcallmorningline.blogspot.com/2012/01/c4-morning-line-saturday-january-28th.html
Tom has rides at Cheltenham this afternoon, follow him and see how he gets on. Note who he rides for trainers and owners.
Tom Scudamore (born 22 May 1982) is a third-generation British flat and steeplechase jockey. He is the son of eight-time champion jockey Peter Scudamore; his grandfather Michael won the Grand National on Oxo in 1959.[1]
Background

Scudamore grew up in the tiny village of Condicote, Gloucestershire, which is deep in the heart of British jump racing. He has been riding since the age of two.[2] Scudamore was educated at Cheltenham College Junior School, and then Cheltenham College. Although Tom began riding as a jockey whilst still at Cheltenham College, there was always an educational back-up; he obtained two A-levels while maintaining a busy training schedule.

RACING POST FRIDAY JANUARY 27th 2012 DAVID ASHFORTH WHY ASCOT'S NEW DRESS CODE SHOULD NEVER HAVE BEEN INTRODUCED.


RACING POST FRIDAY JANUARY 27th 2012
RACING POST WEEK MONDAY JANUARY 23rd TO SUNDAY JANUARY 29th 2012
TODAY'S CARDS Huntingdon. Fontwell Park. Lingfield Park. Wolverhampton.
Dundalk. Jebel Ali.
http://www.racingpost.com/horses2/cards/home.sd


A DAFT ERROR OF JUDGEMENT AND ONE RESONATE OF A PAST SOCIETY
DAVID ASHFORTH Laments Ascot's new dress code and fears the negative impact it may have on the sport.

"ITS not just the orange spot fiasco, it's Ascot's new dress code itself that is an error of judgement and broadcasts a message damaging to racing. I don't know whether to laugh or cry - cry mainly.

"Royal Ascot is different. Although I'm not in favour of banning men wearing jackets and ties from the Grandstand enclosure (they will now have to wear suits to be allowed to pay £50 for admission,  I accept that, as Ascot's website points out, "Royal Ascot is a unique, stand alone event in the sporting and social calendar and dressing accordingly is part of the experience".

"Ascot's other meetings are different, and winter jumps meetings are different again. The picture of a young man being 'spotted' in a telling one . Look at trhe smart jacket, trousers and scarf. Yet Ascot doesn't want him in its Premier enclosure, nor anyone else similarly smartly dressed.

"It is satisfying that a young man looking like thsat, perhaps new to racing, has no place in the enclosure offering the best views and facilities. Is it mad? What on earth is wrong with him? No wonder he seemed bemused.

"He doesn't look like a trouble maker, he isn't wearing jeans (although smart ones would be acceptable), he isn't clutching a case of beer, and presumably he's paid £28. His offence, what makes him unwanted, is that, if you lifted up his winter scarf, you would not find a tie.

"It is daft, and damagingly daft, and Ascot should deal with the damage, not just by apologising and issuing refunds but by changing the dress code.

"Critics are told that the new code is what the regular customers want, and Ascot is a customer-responsive racecourse. According to Charles Barnett, the code was tailormade at the request of existing customers and was an attempt to 'establish some standards'.

"I don't know what kind of survey Ascot carried out, who was asked what questions, but if you ask people who habitually choose to wear jackets and ties for their opinion on a dress code requiring men to wear jackets and ties, it's no surprise if they like the idea. A more appropriate question for those regular premier enclosure customers would have been, will you continue to come racing if the current dress code remains unchanged? It's a safe prediction that the answer would have been an overwhelming yes.

"Ascot, and racing, has secured those customers and, until Saturday, it also had the man in the photograph and others like him who dressed smartly for the occasion but chose not to wear a tie. Now it doesn't want them any more, nor potential racegoers who might also prefer not to wear a tie. I wonder if Ascot conducted a survey to investigate their views.

"There have been some good letters on the subject, including one from Gemma Ospedale, who called for 'some sense of proportionality regarding what is required for a midwinter jumps meeting", having questioned the effect of such dress codes on racing's "efforts to widen the appeal of racing to newcomers," Orpendale reported her husband's dislike of being forced to wear a jacket and tie to a leisure event when he has had to wear the same combination every day to work, "He wants to wear casual clothes, as one does at the weekend. There is nothing wrong with sweaters, jackets and smart jeans." I agree.

"TOO ADD further insult, Ascot's premier enclosure customers aren't even allowed to decide for themselves when they are uncomfortably hot and want to take their jackets off. No "there will be an announcement on the day allowing jackets to be removed, should  the weather be hot". It is horribly patronising, condescending and alienating.

"In the last 20 years, Ascot has made credible strides towards establishing  a reputation as a customer-friendly racecourse, and one open to new ideas, but its new dress code shouts a different attitude, one resonant of a past society. For the good of racing, as well as Ascot. It needs to change its code."





HOWARD WRIGHT BITTAR'S COMMENTS ON FAILING LEVY MISS REAL POINT

"NEW BHA chief executive Paul Bittar appears to have devoured the organisation's press releases from the past two years as part of his essential backround reading on what has happened since he last worked in Britain.



"Whatever the main topic, BHA official communications have rarely missed an opportunity to refer to falling levy income as the root cause of today's supposed evils. Bittar kick- started the sequence under fresh management even while commenting on this week's triumphant story about last year's racecourse attendances.  



"As a measure of the sport's popularity it is excellent news," he conceded in a written statement, before racing before reaching for the bittar pill. "However .... it underlines how the current system is failing British racing when attendances brake new records yet the levy income continues to decline."



"Does it? Yes, there are two points of fact in Bittar's observation - attendances have broken recent records and levy income continues to decline (at least over the last couple of years) -but they are separate  points which do not hang together to bear out his contention that the levy 'is failing British racing .'



"If anything, far from establishing a logical association of ideas, moulding racecourse attendances and levy income into the same thought process papers over the cracks of a theory bordering on misconception, , which is easily explained but it rarely acknowledged by those leaders in racing who close their eyes to what is really happening in the big world outside the sport.



"Bittar, who has previously acknowledged betting's contribution, was partly right in describing racecourse attendance as a measure of racing's popularity, but he did not go far enough. He should have said it is a measure of racing's popularity as a spectator sport, where all manner of internal influences come into play.



"On the other hand, levy income is a measure of horseracing's popularity as a betting medium, where external forces have come into play a bigger role and the sport is loosing out.



"Following the boom that resulted from switching from bookmakers'  turnover to gross profits as the basis for collecting levy, the impact of offshore operators and exchanges has influenced the mechanics of and returns from the levy, but the flight of punters to other products has been more crucial in lowering the rate of return to horseracing.



"Maybe it does not suit arguments about money leaking through loopholes, but if someone with some clout doesn't quickly admit that encouraging  more people to bet on the sport is the top priority, the trickle could become an overwhelming flood."                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          

Thursday, 26 January 2012

RACING POST THURSDAY JANUARY 26th 2012


RACING POST THURSDAY JANUARY 26th 2012
RACING POST WEEK MONDAY 23rd TO SUNDAY JANUARY 29th 2012


TODAY'S CARDS Gowran Park. Warwick. Newcastle. Kempton Park. Meydan.
http://www.racingpost.com/horses2/cards/home.sd


BBC BREAKFAST this morning  Sian Williams introduces us to Nick Clegg the Prime Minister, they talk through the possibility of a £10,000.00 tax exemption limit. 
JMC Turfcall comment Shouldn't this be a £20,000.00 tax exemption limit at the very least?  Pay back time for the greedy banks.

SIAN WILLIAMS
Sian has been a BBC journalist for nearly 25 years and has presented Breakfast for almost a decade - making her the show's longest ever serving presenter.
 
The other question Sian asks Nick is how long will it take government to make this change, or indeed any change at all  .................? ..............

JMC Turfcall  
How many years will it take government to do anything about this sinister predicament at all? 
By the time government actually manage to get around to take any steps in this direction at all, how many people will have lost their home, their livelihood, and possibly there lives even by then  ....... when ever then is  supposed to be?
                                                                                                                        


RP SPECIAL REPORT ON ITALIAN RACING IN CRISIS p6
NICHOLAS GODFREY reports on the desperate plight of Italian racing and asks leading figures what needs to happen to prevent the industry from disappearing altogether.
FRANKIE DETTORI "I feel for my family, for my friends, for the industry ...

JMC TURFCALL COMMENT
The Italian government, the Indian government,  same as the British government are only

interested in the huge revenue they can take out of racing. The same bloodhorse illiteracy

within governments that blight British horseracing ongoing over the last 5 decades have

 no idea of the creative skill and art that Frankie has gifted to horseracing around the

 world within his lifetime span to date. All taken for granted by bloodhorse illiterate governments big time.


No matter how hard people may work, every single one needs a day off to refresh now and then. Clearly governments couldn't care less about people or animals having a day off. Although they make sure they have plenty of days off themselves.

The standard that horseracing countries have achieved today,  have not happened overnight
by accident, they have been carefully built up over decades by highly skilled top bloodhorse literate achievers as FRANKIE DETTORI. Governments need to attend to their responsibilities toward the people who have voted them into office. At present this is not the case. Governments all around the world badly out of tune with the every day life, times and needs of the people who have voted them into office, the people that they are there to serve.


BRUCE MILLINGTON " Ascot may not be only course to count cost.
"If you want to watch jump racing at Ascot from the best possible vantage point (without having the good fortune or the wealth to be in a private box) you need to be in the Premier Enclosure.
 
 "That means you need to wear a jacket, shirt and tie. I don't think that is remotely necessary and I don't think it's the direction in which one of the world's most prestigious racecourses should be heading.
 
"It doesn't matter what I think. The public will decide whether it likes the new dress code. And if it doesn't Ascot will have to suffer the (probably minimal) financial consequences of falling attendances.
 
"What concerns me, though, is the shabby way the courses management treated some of its customers on Saturday will have done racing's wider image  no good at all and it may well transpire that Ascot is not the only venue that has to end up counting the cost."  
 
IN TOMORROW'S RACING POST
  GET STUCK IN -  "JAMES PYMAN on why it's a great time to dabble in the Cheltenham Festival novice hurdle anti-post markets" 

  DAVID ASHFORTH with an impassioned plea to Ascot to change its new dress code. It is horribly patronising, condescending  and alienating ... I don't know whether to laugh or cry - cry mainly." 

SPEIAL REPORT on why jockeys are happy to puff away.
 
"AND ON SATURDAY BOOKIES BRACED FOR ANOTHER BASHING  "Mighty PRICEWISE is out to cane the layers for the fourth Saturday running. Don't miss
his priceless advice at Cheltenham, Leopardstown and Doncaster."

THE RACING POST - BE IN THE KNOW


TURFCALL HORSERACING A UNIQUE AND REMARKABLE SPORT

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

RACING POST WEDNESDAY JANUARY 25th 2012 THE ROOT OF THE PROBLEM FACING RACING IN INDIA


RACING POST WEDNESDAY JANUARY 25th 2012
RACING POST WEEK MONDAY JANUARY 23rd TO SUNDAY JANUARY 29th 2012


TODAY'S CARDS Musselburgh. Hereford. Lingfield Park. Kempton Park. Limerick.

 IN THE FINAL PART OF  LEE MOTTERSHEAD'S SERIES HORSERACING IN INDIA

LEE looks at the problems surrounding racing in India and how the authorities are tackling them.
 £20m BET ON A RACE  ALMOST ALL ILLEGALLY





LEE "So many people here live below the poverty line, so it doesn't gel with the common man when he sees someone looking after and feeding horses."
 
"THE SEVENTH race in Mumbia last Thursday was a low-grade sprint handicap. It attracted 15 horses of the most moderate ability and was of minimal interest to the racing purist. Despite all that, it attracted estimated betting turnover of £20 million. Almost all of that was bet illegally - and therein lies one of the biggest problems for Indian  racing.
 
"Cyrus Poonawalla, one of India's most successful businessmen and a long time leading figure in the country's racing and bloodstock industries, believes the government needs to do something about it. Yet the problems facing the sport in India relate not just to government but also to cultural attitudes that cause many citizens to frown upon the financial transactions completed on Mahalaxmi racecourse. Moreover, while betting in Mumbai is only legally permitted if carried out on the track or in one of the city's five licensed betting shops, they are far from the only venues where bets are struck.

"Many in India believe gambling is distasteful - and falling attendances suggest that number is not decreasing - but many others cannot get enough of it." 
END


Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (Gujarati: મોહનદાસ કરમચંદ ગાંધી; Hindi: मोहनदास करमचंद गांधी, pronounced: [moːˈɦənd̪aːs kəˈrəmtʃənd̪ ˈɡaːnd̪ʱi] ( listen). 2 October 1869[1] – 30 January 1948) was the pre-eminent political and ideological leader of India during the Indian independence movement. Pioneering the use of non-violent resistance to tyranny through mass civil disobedience, a tool to fight for civil rights and freedom that he called satyagraha.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohandas_Karamchand_Gandhi 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/gandhi_mohandas.shtml 


Make you feel my love () Bryan Ferry & Carla Bruni (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYC5iwqWj1s  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8u4lTuMBaOs&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4WVyanm14EI&feature=related

Mother Teresa (26 August 1910 – 5 September 1997), born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu[1] (pronounced [aɡˈnɛs ˈɡɔndʒa bɔjaˈdʒiu]), was a Roman Catholic nun of Albanian[2][3] ethnicity and Indian citizenship,[4] who founded the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta, India, in 1950. For over 45 years, she ministered to the poor, sick, orphaned, and dying, while guiding the Missionaries of Charity's expansion, first throughout India and then in other countries.



Mother Teresa's work in Calcutta her compassion to those she found dying in the gutters of Calcutta. This is not the fault of horseracing, it is the fault of ongoing failures within government.

JMC TURFCALL COMMENT
Many in Britain also believe gambling is distasteful -  further and worst of all  some believe that anyone who has anything to do with horseracing is a crook, to condemn  people unjustly as  crooks, when they are nothing of the sort.

It could be said that the vast majority of people worldwide view horses, dogs, cats etc, to have no human rights at all. No animal it appears has any humane rights whatsoever to a healthy happy life. That the vast majority of people all around the world believe that an animal has no human rights at all, any animal has no right to food, to drink to shelter and a warm bed,  this defies all belief; where are the governments who allow this? 
 
This is the view taken by the vast majority of all people in all countries world wide. It could be said that the RSPCA in Britain have failed the animal kingdom miserably over decades, blighted by an ever present dictate of personnel at the top within government who have failed to allow the RSPCA the power they need to put a stop to all types of cruelty. British government carry wrong attitudes within uncaring beaurocratic systems.