21-08-2016, 01:01 PM
I suppose it's worth mentioning that in the UK, the Gladio network developed with the British Resistance Organization (BRO) that, in turn, also grew out of the WWII Auxillary Units that were under the command of General Colin Gubbins, latterly of one of the MI's, either 5 or 6 (can't remember which now).
I found about this during a visit to Parham Airfield in Suffolk (this was circa middle late 1990's) close to where I used to holiday every year, where there is a museum for the BRO. Having arrived on an impulse on a Saturday for a visit, I met the pucker English retiree who was in overall charge of the Parham Airfield Museum (HERE) who had seen my car coming and stopped to tell me it was closed. After a brief chat he relented and instructed (and I do mean "instructed") an underling to take me for a trip around both the 390th Bombardment Group museum and the SRO museum.
The guy who took me around was wary but chatty and opened up after awhile, by revealing that he was part of a six man stay behind unit during WWII. He said he was given sealed orders only to be opened in the even that the Nazis invaded. But he opened them anyway and found he had been ordered to shoot dead the Chief of Police in Suffolk. He later revealed that the guy in charge of the museum who had given him the order to show me around was formerly a senior officer of MI5. What became evident was that the whole thing was still being run on an almost military basis.
I found about this during a visit to Parham Airfield in Suffolk (this was circa middle late 1990's) close to where I used to holiday every year, where there is a museum for the BRO. Having arrived on an impulse on a Saturday for a visit, I met the pucker English retiree who was in overall charge of the Parham Airfield Museum (HERE) who had seen my car coming and stopped to tell me it was closed. After a brief chat he relented and instructed (and I do mean "instructed") an underling to take me for a trip around both the 390th Bombardment Group museum and the SRO museum.
The guy who took me around was wary but chatty and opened up after awhile, by revealing that he was part of a six man stay behind unit during WWII. He said he was given sealed orders only to be opened in the even that the Nazis invaded. But he opened them anyway and found he had been ordered to shoot dead the Chief of Police in Suffolk. He later revealed that the guy in charge of the museum who had given him the order to show me around was formerly a senior officer of MI5. What became evident was that the whole thing was still being run on an almost military basis.
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14
