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John Pilger's fealty to the spook version of British domestic terrorism
#1
Keep your eye on the paragraph in bold - straight from the MI5 manual?

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info...e23523.htm

For Britons, The Party Game Is Over

By John Pilger

September 17, 2009

Quote:On the day Prime Minister Gordon Brown made his “major policy speech” on Afghanistan, repeating his surreal claim that if the British army did not fight Pashtun tribesmen over there, they would be over here, the stench of burnt flesh hung over the banks of the Kunduz River. Nato fighter planes had blown the poorest of the poor to bits. They were Afghan villagers who had rushed to siphon off fuel from two stalled tankers. Many were children with water buckets and cooking pots. “At least” 90 were killed, although Nato prefers not to count its civilian enemy. “It was a scene from hell,” said Mohammed Daud, a witness. “Hands, legs and body parts were scattered everywhere.” No parade for them along a Wiltshire high street.

I saw something similar in south-east Asia. An incendiary bomb had razed most of a thatched village, and bits of charred people were hanging on upended fishing nets. Those intact lay splayed and black, like large spiders. I have never believed you need witness such a hell to comprehend the crime. A standard-issue conscience is enough for all but the morally corrupt and powerful.

Fresh from another dysfunctional photo opportunity with troops in Afghanistan – a contrivance far from the impoverished suffering of that country – Brown “authorised” the Rambo-style rescue of Stephen Farrell, a journalist of British and Irish nationality, at the site of the Nato attack. It was a stunt that went wrong. A British soldier was killed and Farrell’s guide, Sultan Munadi, an Afghan journalist, was abandoned and killed. Munadi’s family now fully appreciates the different worth of British and Afghan lives.

During the 1914-18 slaughter, Prime Minister Lloyd George confided: “If people really knew [the truth], the war would be stopped tomorrow. But of course they don’t know and can’t know.” Have we not yet advanced over a century’s corpses to a point where the likes of Brown are denied their mendacious subterfuge? The Afghan war is a fraud. It began as an American vendetta for domestic consumption in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks, in which not a single Afghan was involved. The Taliban, who are Afghans, had no quarrel with the United States and were dealing secretly with the Clinton administration over a strategic pipeline. They offered to apprehend Osama Bin Laden and hand him over to a clerical court, but this was rejected.

The establishment of a permanent US/Nato presence in a resource-rich, strategic region is the principal reason for the war. The British are there because that is what Washington wants. Preventing the Taliban from storming our streets is reminiscent of President Lyndon B Johnson’s plaint: “We have to stop the communists over there [Vietnam] or we’ll soon be fighting them in California.”

There is one difference. By refusing to bring the troops home, Brown is likely to provoke an atrocity by young British Muslims who view the war as a western crusade; the recent Old Bailey trail made that clear. He has been told as much by British intelligence and security services. Brown’s own security adviser has said as much publicly. As with Tony Blair and the bombs of 7 July 2005, he will bear ultimate responsibility for bringing violence and grief to his own people.

More than MPs’ fake expenses, it is this corrupting and trivialising of life and death that mark a fitting end to the “modernised” Labour Party, the party of criminal war. Do the delegates preparing for the party’s annual rituals in Brighton comprehend this? It says enough that most Labour MPs never demanded a vote on Blair’s bloodshed in Iraq and gave him a standing ovation when he departed. One timid motion proposed by the “grass roots” at Brighton might be allowed. This concludes that “a majority of the public believe that the war [in Afghanistan] is unwinnable”. There is no suggestion that it is wrong, immoral and based on lies similar to those that led to the extinction of a million Iraqis, “an episode more deadly than the Rwandan genocide”, according to one scholarly estimate.

This is largely why the game of parliamentary politics is over for so many Britons, especially the young. In 2005, a bent system allowed Blair to win with fewer popular votes than the Tories in their electoral catastrophe of 1997. New Labour’s greatest achievement is the lowest turnouts since universal voting began. Today, voters watch Brown give billions of public money to casino banks while demanding nothing in return, having once hailed their practices as an inspiration “for the whole economy”. At the recent meeting of G20 leaders in London, Brown distinguished himself by opposing, and killing, a modest Franco-German proposal for a limit on bonuses and penalties for companies that broke it. The gap between rich and poor in Britain is now the widest since 1968.

New Labour’s causes and effect extend from the one in five young people denied employment, education and hope to the £12m that Blair coins in a year, “advising” the rich and lecturing to them at £157,000 a time.For the more extreme among Blair's and Brown's mentors and courtiers, such as the twice disgraced Peter Mandelson, this represents the most sought after achievement of all: the positioning of Labour to the right of the Tories, though it is probably correct to say the two main parties have converged, now competing feverishly with each other to threaten cuts in public services in order to pay for the bailing out of the banks and for the druglords of Kabul. There is no mention of cutting the billions to be spent on replacing Trident nuclear submarines designed for the defunct cold war.

The game is over. Corporatism and a reinvigorated militarism have finally appropriated parliamentary democracy, a historic shift. For those Afghan villagers blown to pieces in our name, one craven motion at Labour’s conference is too late. At the very least, the party’s “grass roots” might ask themselves why.

http://www.johnpilger.com
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#2
Paul

Difficult one that.

For my money the bold-faced paragraph is accurate, as is the spook refrain that it emulates. The difficulty is in what it does NOT say; which is that, in so far as such an atrocity is judged to be an event that would assist the Deep State agenda, by the arbiters of that agenda (namely the spook-masters themselves), any such atrocity will most certainly be provoked, organised, facilitated and generally made to happen, BY the spooks themselves.

If NOT so judged, then the likelihood that any group of 'Angry Young Muslims' will ever be able to seriously plan - let alone pull off - such an atrocity without being interdicted by the spooks en-route so to speak, is vanishingly small. As anyone with half a brain must know by now, the British Muslim community is so deeply penetrated and compromised by both US and UK spook 'assets', that thay can hardly pass wind without it registering somewhere in GCHQ, Thames House, Vauxhall Cross or Langley, let alone ORGANISE anything.

I still have great respect for Pilger. He probably knows all this on some level, but there's no way even he can say it without being drummed out of town. He would certainly kiss goodbye to his New Statesman column - for what that's worth - which I guess is not a lot - but then he too has bills to pay eh?
Peter Presland

".....there is something far worse than Nazism, and that is the hubris of the Anglo-American fraternities, whose routine is to incite indigenous monsters to war, and steer the pandemonium to further their imperial aims"
Guido Preparata. Preface to 'Conjuring Hitler'[size=12][size=12]
"Never believe anything until it has been officially denied"
Claud Cockburn

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#3
Peter Presland Wrote:Paul

Difficult one that.

For my money the bold-faced paragraph is accurate, as is the spook refrain that it emulates. The difficulty is in what it does NOT say; which is that, in so far as such an atrocity is judged to be an event that would assist the Deep State agenda, by the arbiters of that agenda (namely the spook-masters themselves), any such atrocity will most certainly be provoked, organised, facilitated and generally made to happen, BY the spooks themselves.

If NOT so judged, then the likelihood that any group of 'Angry Young Muslims' will ever be able to seriously plan - let alone pull off - such an atrocity without being interdicted by the spooks en-route so to speak, is vanishingly small. As anyone with half a brain must know by now, the British Muslim community is so deeply penetrated and compromised by both US and UK spook 'assets', that thay can hardly pass wind without it registering somewhere in GCHQ, Thames House, Vauxhall Cross or Langley, let alone ORGANISE anything.

I still have great respect for Pilger. He probably knows all this on some level, but there's no way even he can say it without being drummed out of town. He would certainly kiss goodbye to his New Statesman column - for what that's worth - which I guess is not a lot - but then he too has bills to pay eh?

Of mortgages and truth - now there's a topic! I suspect there's truth in that.

Alternatively, one can't help recalling the proverb - I forget the precise origin, Italian or Russian, I suspect - "A little truth makes the lie go down."
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#4
John Pilger also has a VERY well informed network of people keeping him posted. This may well include undercover agents of some sort, sometimes providing good info, sometimes bad. It is not always possible to distinguish the two. I rank Pilger in the top ten of honest investigative journalists and documentary film makers.

Carsten
The most relevant literature regarding what happened since September 11, 2001 is George Orwell's "1984".
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