The Waterguard was the name given to a division of HM Customs and Excise responsible for the control of vessels, aircraft, vehicles and persons arriving into and departing from the United Kingdom. This included crew members and passengers, as well as persons travelling on foot. Waterguard officers were responsible for applying the allowances provided for in law and for collection of customs and excise revenue on the excess. The officers were also responsible for the enforcement of the prohibitions and restrictions, including controlled drugs and plant and animal health. It officially ceased to exist in 1972, with the reorganization of HM Customs and Excise.
Formed in 1809 as the "Preventive Waterguard" (also known as the Preventative Boat Service) to combat smuggling, the Waterguard was the sea-based arm of revenue enforcement and complemented the "riding officers" who patrolled the shore. The Waterguard was initially based in Watch Houses around the coast, and boat crews patrolled the coast in cutters each night. It was under Admiralty control from 1816 to 1822, when it and riding officers were amalgamated under the control of the Board of Customs. The Waterguard was absorbed into the Customs and Excise department in 1909.
Clinic despair
Burning flesh and venomous blades
Blood and sperm
Forced to create a deep void of darkness
Blind as a cancer
Negation of life through a solar murder
Red blood fire
The ruins will turn into rotten sand
You got no choice
Suffer, murder
Murder
Murder
Useless victims of time
Devoured by god's creation
As a symbol of nothing
Human nature failure
We created our main enemy
We created our pain and death
We created our destroyer
I deny the Creator
And he smell of his creation
I got no choice
Suffer, murder
Murder
Murder
The last spin
The circle is closed
Erase god through total self-destruction