" "Tell the girls I love them very much and I love you. I have to get off the 'phone. I am going to ring Bob and beg in my knees for Bob to let me see my babies." He sounded desperate.
Throughout the three years of fighting Bob GELDOF, he would repeatedly say
"Don't forget I'm above the law."
This sort of behaviour intimidated us because he truly believes he is above the law and has acquired substantial influence and power since Live Aid."
The Geldof Murders from Spike EP on Vimeo.
Throughout the three years of fighting Bob GELDOF, he would repeatedly say
"Don't forget I'm above the law."
This sort of behaviour intimidated us because he truly believes he is above the law and has acquired substantial influence and power since Live Aid."
The Geldof Murders from Spike EP on Vimeo.
"Michael wanted to see us all. He didn't sound like he had much more than a drink. After I had been told Michael was dead, I rang Bob and said, "What did you say to Michael?" He said, "It was only a two minute 'phone call." I said, "Are you happy he is dead?" He said "Of course not." In his sarcastic voice he said "I'm distraught." When he said that he gave a little laugh. I said "Michael is dead. The girls think of him as their father." I ended the call.
Michael couldn't fight GELDOF. Michael was a very sensitive and caring man, and GELDOF is evil. "
Paula Yates,
New South Wales Police Voluntary Witness Statement,
26 November 1997
Interview with Bob Geldof November 23rd 1997 - The Day Michael Hutchence Died from Spike EP on Vimeo.
"In 1997, we made a documentary on the 30th anniversary of the Georgia Straight newspaper, "The Last Streetfighter".*
This is the uncut interview we did with Bob Geldof KBE for the doc.
The interview happened the day after Michael Hutchence of INXS killed himself. Bob was very gracious to continue with our plans to do the interview in his home."
* - Suspected British Intelligence Front - See Below:
Bob Geldof is not a professional musician - he is a hack music journalist who acquired a backing band.
Okay- so The Georgia Strait was never profitable, always in legal trouble, constantly clashing with the Vancouver city authorities and struggled every single week to pay it's staff....
Geldof traveled to Canada (with his girlfriend, he claims), with the intention of becoming a Gold Miner. (yes, really - he claims he was working in an abattoir in Dublin one month, then in Canada on the promise of being a Gold Miner the next month).
This is despite his having attended the Dublin equivalent of Eton College - and the Queen only ennobles confirmed, avowed loyalists.
Somehow he ended up as a writer for a non-profitable, environmentally conscious "underground" (but nothing of the kind) newspaper...
Britain’s Pacific War Against the United States in the Age of the Anglo-American ‘Special Relationship’
Against Oligarchy
Webster G. Tarpley, Ph.D.
"During the 1964 interrogation of Anthony Blunt, the fourth of the Cambridge triple agents to become known to the public, Blunt is reported to have revealed that the Canadian Herbert Norman, another Cambridge undergraduate of the 1930′s, had been recruited by the KGB. Norman had died, allegedly through suicide, in 1957.
Norman had been a member of Gen. MacArthur’s staff in Tokyo and had attracted the suspicions of Gen. Willoughby, MacArthur’s intelligence chief. Norman was a close associate of Sir Lester Pearson, at that time the Canadian External Affairs Minister and later to become the Canadian Prime Minister.
James Barros has asserted in his book No Sense of Evil that Norman, while serving in Tokyo in 1950, played a role in encouraging Moscow, Beijing, and Pyongyang to launch the invasion of South Korea.
Norman had been a member of Gen. MacArthur’s staff in Tokyo and had attracted the suspicions of Gen. Willoughby, MacArthur’s intelligence chief. Norman was a close associate of Sir Lester Pearson, at that time the Canadian External Affairs Minister and later to become the Canadian Prime Minister.
James Barros has asserted in his book No Sense of Evil that Norman, while serving in Tokyo in 1950, played a role in encouraging Moscow, Beijing, and Pyongyang to launch the invasion of South Korea.
Barros writes: “In this context we must scrutinize Pearson’s trip to Tokyo in February 1950. During that visit General MacArthur explained to him and to Norman Washington’s policy in Asia and that its defense perimeter in the region did not include Korea, as it was not vital to America’s security.
MacArthur’s comments were in line with Dean Acheson’s speech a month earlier when he told the National Press Club that America’s defense perimeter In Asia ran from the Aleutian Islands to Japan and from there to the Ryukyu and Philippine Islands….
Acheson’s public comments could not have gone unnoticed in Moscow. Keeping in mind MacArthur’s military role in Asia, his February remarks to Norman and to Pearson, the foreign secretary of a friendly and allied country, would have stimulated Moscow to favor a possibly low-risk North Korean invasion of South Korea.
In other words, in addition to other information available to Moscow, MacArthur’s comments, if conveyed to the Soviets by Norman – which might have been done – could have led to the assumption that such a scenario would evoke no American response.”
MacArthur’s comments were in line with Dean Acheson’s speech a month earlier when he told the National Press Club that America’s defense perimeter In Asia ran from the Aleutian Islands to Japan and from there to the Ryukyu and Philippine Islands….
Acheson’s public comments could not have gone unnoticed in Moscow. Keeping in mind MacArthur’s military role in Asia, his February remarks to Norman and to Pearson, the foreign secretary of a friendly and allied country, would have stimulated Moscow to favor a possibly low-risk North Korean invasion of South Korea.
In other words, in addition to other information available to Moscow, MacArthur’s comments, if conveyed to the Soviets by Norman – which might have been done – could have led to the assumption that such a scenario would evoke no American response.”
[Barros, pp. 137-8]
Pearson was one of the most important British Empire political operatives during the postwar decades. In reviewing Pearson’s role in protecting the career of Norman, Barros reviews evidence compiled by the US Senate Internal Security Subcommittee and speculates that “one might even dare to think the unthinkable — that Pearson was Moscow’s ultimate mole.” [Barros, p. 169] Some years earlier the Canadian Prime Minister MacKenzie King had officially stated that Canada had been used as a base for espionage activity against the US."
James Barros, No Sense of Evil: Espionage,
The Case of Herbert Norman
(Canada: Deneau, 1986).
"War Plan Red"
London's Canada-based Spy Network within the United States was incredibly extensive from 1940 onwards - and continued afterwards.
Originally set up by Sir William Stepehenson (The Man Called Intrepid), the extent of their criminal destabilisation knew no bounds - from fixing the selection of the Vice President of the United State in the 1944 Election, to the assassination of President Franklin Roosevelt.
And the Irregulars (as they were known) used writers and artists as cover professions....
Originally set up by Sir William Stepehenson (The Man Called Intrepid), the extent of their criminal destabilisation knew no bounds - from fixing the selection of the Vice President of the United State in the 1944 Election, to the assassination of President Franklin Roosevelt.
And the Irregulars (as they were known) used writers and artists as cover professions....
The Devious Bachelor
By JACOB HEILBRUNN
Published: October 17, 2008
Roald Dahl is famous for his mischievous children’s stories. But as Jennet Conant reports in “The Irregulars,” he was also a British spy. Conant, who has written popular accounts of the secret development of radar and the atomic bomb, shows that Dahl, a former R.A.F. hero, parachuted himself into Washington blue-blood circles in 1942 and used his embassy post to begin spying on Britain’s closest and most important ally.Like his chums Noël Coward and Ian Fleming, both of whom also assisted British intelligence during the war, Dahl was firmly in the tradition of the amateur gentleman-spy, and in Washington he soon acquired a taste for a lavish lifestyle that he never lost. To the end of his life, Conant writes, Dahl demanded that his publisher dispatch a Rolls-Royce to collect manuscripts from his home. In Washington, where the grand parties and salons depicted in the Henry Adams novel “Democracy” lingered on, Dahl’s combat record, good looks and charm made him a prize social catch.
Dahl’s entry into Washington high-life was immeasurably smoothed by the avuncular Texas newspaper magnate and oil tycoon Charles Edward Marsh, who had moved to the capital to aid the New Deal. Marsh, who lived in a 19th-century mansion in Dupont Circle, introduced Dahl to his friends. Soon, Dahl was hobnobbing with Eleanor Roosevelt during weekends at Hyde Park, where he also met the president, allowing him to become, Conant expansively concludes, “a back-channel conduit of information” to Churchill.
In 1943 a crafty Canadian industrialist and associate of Winston Churchill, William Stephenson, tapped Dahl to join his spy network, British Security Coordination. Stephenson’s original mandate had been to help push America into World War II. After Pearl Harbor, he was assigned to keep tabs on America’s postwar plans and to counter any lingering isolationist sentiments. Despite America’s entry into the war, a number of conservative newspapers and socialites remained rabid Roosevelt haters and loathed the British Empire. Many of them lived in Washington; according to Conant, “with the playgrounds of Europe closed to tourists, moneyed society was forced to stay home, and Washington was brimming with wealthy dowagers and their bored, unmarried daughters.” What the journalist Joseph Alsop later called the “WASP ascendancy” ruled Washington social life.
Dahl befriended the publisher of the reactionary Washington Times-Herald, Eleanor (Cissie) Patterson, whom Roosevelt had denounced as a social “parasite” more interested in giving tea parties than in aiding the war effort. There was also the hostess Evalyn Walsh McLean, whose son-in-law, Senator Robert Rice Reynolds of North Carolina, had initially blamed the Pearl Harbor attack on the British who, Conant writes, now “monitored his every move.”
McLean, who never received her guests without the 45 1/2 carat Hope diamond dangling from her neck, made Dahl a regular at the glamorous Sunday night dinners she presided over in her Massachusetts Avenue manor house, which featured dance orchestras, previews of first-run movies and a hundred or more guests per gathering. According to Conant, “all Dahl had to do was keep up a cheerful front and eavesdrop his way through the yawning Sunday breakfasts, hunt breakfasts, luncheons, teas, tea dances, innumerable drinks parties, banquets and not infrequent balls.”
Certainly Dahl, as Conant shows, was not slow in compiling a remarkable record in wooing heiresses and dowagers. Conant numbers among his conquests the beautiful congresswoman Clare Boothe Luce and the even more stunning Standard Oil heiress Millicent Rogers, who had eloped to Paris at age 19 with one Count Ludwig Salm von Hoogstraten and, after her divorce, lived in an 18th-century manor in Virginia that was, we learn from Conant, stuffed with a trove of Empire and Biedermeier furniture. Indeed, “inspired by her eclectic finds, from the group of antique clocks to a cluster of superb drawings by Watteau, Fragonard and Boucher,” Conant says, “Dahl vowed that as soon as he had enough put away, he would begin buying paintings for a modest collection of his own.”
Years later, Conant writes, Ian Fleming, about to publish his first James Bond novel, “Casino Royale,” would irk Dahl by having an affair with Rogers in Fleming’s Jamaican retreat, Goldeneye.
How much does all this have to do with the Second World War? Dahl's stream of gossipy reports about the doings of the Washington glitterati were nectar for London, which was terrified the Roosevelt administration would turn hostile after the war ended. Every government, then and now, is always keen to learn the inside dope. But what Conant never makes quite clear is whether Dahl ever supplied any information of real consequence.
Conant herself is so entranced by the glistening details she has managed to excavate from oblivion that she never provides a coherent narrative. It's a pity such a diligent researcher and gifted writer has produced a mere trifle so conspicuously lacking the verve and panache of Dahl himself.
"All they that love not tobacco and boys are fools."
Remark attributed to Marlowe from the testimony of Richard Baines,
a government informer, 1593.
"Paedophiles can boldly and courageously affirm what they choose ... I am also a theologian and as a theologian, I believe it is God's will that there be closeness and intimacy, unity of flesh, between people ... paedophiles can make the assertion that the pursuit of intimacy and love is what they choose. With boldness, they can say, 'I believe this is in fact part of God's will.'"
Ralph Underwager, 'expert' witness for the defense in scores of child abuse cases and former vocal member of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, in an interview in Paidika (a pro-pedophilia publication), conducted in June 1991
'The Pedophocracy' is term coined by David McGowan. It is the title of his book on the subject of pedophilia as an Elite habit and one of the main tools of control of the visible ruling elites, by those not so visible.
Of all human vices and perversions, pedophilia is probably judged the most shameful and outrageous in the public mind. It thus has vast potential as a source of control.
This is a deeply disturbing subject. In similar fashion to the proposition that elements of the State use terrorist false-flag attacks against their own populations to further their agendas, the public at large simply cannot accept that the very worst depravities of child sexual abuse could be systematically cultivated and used by those same elements as a calculated and deliberate means of Machiavellian control. Many people simply do not want to be told such things - which renders them all too readily reassured by the odd sacrificial minnow. Outrage is thus indulged for a while before relapse into the consensus trance of everyday routine, where fear of strangers and the dark are relegated to the subconscious and the odd bad dream.
To be enlisted to the 'Pedophocracy Novitiate' so-to-speak is a temptation difficult for the psychopathic personality type that aspires to power to decline. To become a 1st degree member is to sell one's soul - and there are probably thirty-odd higher degrees each capable of 'making an offer that cannot be refused' by their 'juniors'. Standard military discipline simply cannot hold a candle to it; Special Forces/SIS-type skills and disciplines clearly make extensive use of the victims of it.
There is a large body of information available on the internet for those with the stomach for it. The deeper the investigation, the greater the unpleasant realisation that the phenomenon is so fundamentally ingrained in Western Establishment power structures that to pursue the truths of the matter is as potentially dangerous as it is stomach churning.
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