23-10-2009, 12:02 PM
[quote=Paul Rigby]
[quote]
2) The ostensible primary object is, of course, a Tory restoration after a decade+ of neo-con rule.
Agreed Paul. But I think this was inevitable anyway as the so called democratic arrangement amounts to swings and roundabouts between two political parties, which makes the political landscape easier for the elite to manage.
3) The greater purpose is to end any prospect of left-wing government for good, just as in France.
Tsch tsch. There hasn't been a left-wing government since Wilson was tossed out of power (whoops! "resigned"). And no chance of ever having one again either.
4) The intervention of the Tory Generals in an attempt to distance the British Army from the ersatz fascist British National Pary - the so-called battle of the uniformed war crims and Mosley's heirs - appears an integral component in the above.
I don't think the BNP ever was going to have any political clout in the UK to achieve anything anyway. I seem to remember that they were once secretly funded (or otherwise supported) by the intelligence services? Anyway, it all smacks to me as a cunning campaign of deflection or similar --- firstly, elevate the BNP to greater public awareness and then smash them down.
[/quote]
[quote]
2) The ostensible primary object is, of course, a Tory restoration after a decade+ of neo-con rule.
Agreed Paul. But I think this was inevitable anyway as the so called democratic arrangement amounts to swings and roundabouts between two political parties, which makes the political landscape easier for the elite to manage.
3) The greater purpose is to end any prospect of left-wing government for good, just as in France.
Tsch tsch. There hasn't been a left-wing government since Wilson was tossed out of power (whoops! "resigned"). And no chance of ever having one again either.
4) The intervention of the Tory Generals in an attempt to distance the British Army from the ersatz fascist British National Pary - the so-called battle of the uniformed war crims and Mosley's heirs - appears an integral component in the above.
I don't think the BNP ever was going to have any political clout in the UK to achieve anything anyway. I seem to remember that they were once secretly funded (or otherwise supported) by the intelligence services? Anyway, it all smacks to me as a cunning campaign of deflection or similar --- firstly, elevate the BNP to greater public awareness and then smash them down.
[/quote]
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