haste. Slowly the brain is loses control of its senses. The virus takes hold of the bodiesmajor nerve centers, the brain is left operable but ineffective. The signals and messages itreceives are false affecting its interpretation. After a few blunders the politicians wouldawaken and realize that something was dreadfully wrong their sensory receptors. Amassive purge of the bureaucracy would be required. Not knowing which sections wereinfected the cabinet would quickly gather all those in would know as trustworthy(PMO,ministers personal staff) and formulate a plan. Aware that all it connections to the outsideworld were infected and that fast and powerful legislation is required. A hastily thrown together bill would appear on the floor of the House of Commonswithin weeks. It would be put on the cabinet agenda personally by the Prime minister asto control the involvement of the PCO; which the cabinet would view with distrust. Itwould be voted once and rushed through a committee assembled of only the most trustedMPs. It would come out strong and fast and head right through the third vote without aproblem in sight. However the possibility of Hals involvement in the bill cannot beoverlooked at this point. The bill would come to the point of implementation. The senateconsists of many committees that could easily fall prey to Hals influence. Those incharge of implementing the legislation, could be none other than the bureaucrats. Slowlybut surely it could be softened piece by piece until a skeleton of what was originallyintended.This may sound far fetched but many bills that have been whisked throughparliament are strategically altered at the last minute to either promote a bills failure orremove its teeth. The most recent example of this are the tobacco advertising bills thatwere manipulated due to outside influence during the mid 90s3 and the continuing battleover the regulations for MPsOver the past two decades, six different code...