Re: How much power do the Nazi's have
- From: lisabartal@xxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2009 05:53:21 -0700 (PDT)
On Apr 16, 9:19 am, MM <kylix...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 23:40:38 +0100, "Steve Walker"
<spam-t...@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
lisabar...@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
b) as it all stems from Ore, there is a D notice on issues
related. I have had the press in my home who have read
my 3 foot tall bundle. They would love to report it
but face imprisonment if they do.
This statement seems extraordinary and/or delusional....
Advisory DA Notices apply to matters of national security. They are not
mandatory upon publishers and editors, and no criminal penalty is attached
to non-compliance (unless prosecuted separately under OSA etc). This is
plainly stated athttp://www.dnotice.org.uk/faqs.htm. PC Pro and other
publications have written extensively, and often critically, about Ore
without anyone being dragged off to the Tower of London.
With that in mind, what evidence do you have that a DA Notice has been
'issued' for Operation Ore, or that anyone who writes about it will be sent
to jail?
I, too, found that claim (of a D Notice) quite extraordinary.
MM- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
January 29, 2003
Blackout in Britain
Alleged Pedophiles Helm Blair's War Room
by MIKE JAMES
A child-sex scandal that threatened to destroy Tony Blair's government
last week has been mysteriously squashed and wiped off the front pages
of British newspapers. Operation Ore, the United Kingdom's most
thorough and comprehensive police investigation of crimes against
children, seems to have uncovered more than is politically acceptable
at the highest reaches of the British elite. In the 19th of January
edition of The Sunday Herald, Neil Mackay sensationally reported that
senior members of Tony Blair's government were being investigated for
paedophilia and the "enjoyment" of child-sex pornography:
"The Sunday Herald has also had confirmed by a very senior source in
British intelligence that at least one high-profile former Labour
Cabinet minister is among Operation Ore suspects. The Sunday Herald
has been given the politician's name but, for legal reasons, can not
identify the person.
There are still unconfirmed rumours that another senior Labour
politician is among the suspects. The intelligence officer said that a
'rolling' Cabinet committee had been set up to work out how to deal
with the potentially ruinous fall-out for both Tony Blair and the
government if arrests occur."
The allegations are the most serious yet levelled at an administration
that prides itself on the inclusion in its ranks of a high quota of
controversial and flamboyant homosexual men, and whose First Lady,
Cherie Blair, has come under the spotlight for her indulgence in pagan
rituals that resemble Freemasonic rites. Unconfirmed information also
suggests that the term "former Labour Cabinet minister" is misleading
and that the investigation has identified a surprisingly large number
of alleged paedophiles at the highest level of British government,
including one very senior cabinet minister.
The Blair government has responded by imposing a comprehensive
blackout on the story, effectively removing it from the domain of
public discussion. Attempts on the part of this journalist to
establish why the British media has not followed up on the revelations
have met with a wall of silence. Editors and journalists of The Times,
The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, The Independent, The Sunday Times,
The Observer, The Sunday Telegraph, The Daily Mail, The Daily Express,
The Mirror, The Sun, the BBC, Independent Television News and even The
Sunday Herald have refused to discuss the matter.
Speaking from London, freelance journalist Bob Kearley told me:
"Whether or not a D-Notice has been issued is not clear. But based on
some of the feedback I've been getting it's apparent that editors and
media owners have voluntarily agreed not to cover the story at this
time. Operation Ore is still being reported, but not in regard to
government ministers, and it's taking up very few column inches on the
third or fourth page. Don't forget that the intelligence services are
involved here, and Blair is anxious to ensure that the scandal does
not rock the boat at a time when the country is about to go to war."
"You can imagine the effect this would have on the morale of troops
who are about to commit in Iraq. In fact morale is reportedly quite
low anyway, with service personnel throwing their vaccines into the
sea en route to the battlefront and knowing how unpopular the war is
with the British people. And a lot of squaddies I've met think there's
something weird going on between Bush and Blair. If you're then told
that the executive responsible for the conduct of the war is staffed
by child-molesters ... well, then Saddam suddenly looks like the sort
of bloke with whom you can share a few tins [beer]."
References:
<http://www.sundayherald.com/30813> <http://www.sundayherald.com/
29876> <http://politics.guardian.co.uk/cherie/story/0>,
12713,857416 ,<00.html>
http://www.gaiaguys.net/OperationOre.htm
and
'April 5, 2007 -- While British Prime Minister Tony Blair is under
criminal suspicion in the "honors-for-cash" scandal that has rocked
his Labor government, we have been told that there is an even more
explosive scandal that Blair, up to now, has managed to hide behind
the draconian British policy of issuing "D-Notices," government orders
that prohibit the British media from reporting on certain "national
security" cases.
'In 1999, an international investigation of child pornographers and
pedophiles run by Britain's National Criminal Intelligence Service,
code named Operation Ore, resulted in 7,250 suspects being identified
in the United Kingdom alone. Some 1850 people were criminally charged
in the case and there were 1451 convictions. Almost 500 people were
interviewed "under caution" by police, meaning they were suspects.
Some 900 individuals remain under investigation. In early 2003,
British police began to close in on some top suspects in the Operation
Ore investigation, including senior members of Blair's government.
However, Blair issued a D-Notice, resulting in a gag order on the
press from publishing any details of the investigation. Blair cited
the impending war in Iraq as a reason for the D-Notice. Police also
discovered links between British Labor government pedophile suspects
and the trafficking of children for purposes of prostitution from
Belgium and Portugal (including young boys from the Casa Pia orphanage
in Portugal).' (Wayne Madsen Report article).
http://www.disinfo.com/site/displayarticle19075.html
AND
http://www.propagandamatrix.com/alleged_pedophiles.html
Alleged Pedophiles at Helm of Britain's War Machine, Massive Cover-Up
Mike James
A child-sex scandal that threatened to destroy Tony Blair's government
last week has been mysteriously squashed and wiped off the front pages
of British newspapers.
Operation Ore, the United Kingdom's most thorough and comprehensive
police investigation of crimes against children, seems to have
uncovered more than is politically acceptable at the highest reaches
of the British elite.
In the 19th of January edition of The Sunday Herald, Neil Mackay
sensationally reported that senior members of Tony Blair's government
were being investigated for paedophilia and the "enjoyment" of child-
sex pornography:
"The Sunday Herald has also had confirmed by a very senior source in
British intelligence that at least one high-profile former Labour
Cabinet minister is among Operation Ore suspects. The Sunday Herald
has been given the politician's name but, for legal reasons, can not
identify the person.
There are still unconfirmed rumours that another senior Labour
politician is among the suspects. The intelligence officer said that a
'rolling' Cabinet committee had been set up to work out how to deal
with the potentially ruinous fall-out for both Tony Blair and the
government if
arrests occur."
The allegations are the most serious yet levelled at an administration
that prides itself on the inclusion in its ranks of a high quota of
controversial and flamboyant homosexual men, and whose First Lady,
Cherie Blair, has come under the spotlight for her indulgence in pagan
rituals that resemble Freemasonic rites. Unconfirmed information also
suggests that the term "former Labour Cabinet minister" is misleading
and that the investigation has identified a surprisingly large number
of alleged paedophiles at the highest level of British government,
including one very senior cabinet minister (known to Propaganda
Matrix.com).
The Blair government has responded by imposing a comprehensive
blackout on the story, effectively removing it from the domain of
public discussion. Attempts on the part of this journalist to
establish why the British media has not followed up on the revelations
have met with a wall of silence. Editors and journalists of The Times,
The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, The Independent, The Sunday Times,
The Observer, The Sunday Telegraph, The Daily Mail, The Daily Express,
The Mirror, The Sun, the BBC, Independent Television News and even The
Sunday Herald have refused to discuss the matter.
Speaking from London, freelance journalist Bob Kearley told me:
"Whether or not a D-Notice has been issued is not clear. But based on
some of the feedback I've been getting it's apparent that editors and
media owners have voluntarily agreed not to cover the story at this
time. Operation Ore is still being reported, but not in regard to
government ministers, and it's taking up very few column inches on the
third or fourth page. Don't forget that the intelligence services are
involved here, and Blair is anxious to ensure that the scandal does
not rock the boat at a time when the country is about to go to war."
"You can imagine the effect this would have on the morale of troops
who are about to commit in Iraq. In fact morale is reportedly quite
low anyway, with service personnel throwing their vaccines into the
sea en route to the battlefront and knowing how unpopular the war is
with the British people. And a lot of squaddies I've met think there's
something weird going on between Bush and Blair. If you're then told
that the executive responsible for the conduct of the war is staffed
by child-molesters ... well, then Saddam suddenly looks like the sort
of bloke with
whom you can share a few tins [beer]."
[In an E mail to Paul Joseph Watson, Mike James identified his sources
as "people I knew in London who used to work for the Treasury
department throughout the 1980s, one being a private secretary at a
senior level....my sources will definitely refuse to support my claims
- both are doing extremely well financially and career-wise."]
References:
http://www.sundayherald.com/30813
http://www.sundayherald.com/29876
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/cherie/s ... 16,00.html
.
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