Jack Black
28-06-2008, 08:35 PM
On 28 June 2008, The Daily Express reported thus:
Gordon Brown yesterday was labelled a 'loser' by members of his own party as his future was questioned following a humiliating by-election defeat. Labour was beaten into fifth place in Henley behind the far-right British National Party...
Labour MPs and supporters questioned whether Mr Brown should stay in the job at all... MP Ronnie Campbell said:
It’s a bad day when the BNP can beat Labour... I don’t like to back losers and he’s a loser...
MP Paul Farrelly, a long-time Brown supporter, said:
Gordon came in promising a new style of Government. What we’re seeing is Labour alienating people progressively'... We can’t have hectoring from Whitehall, finger-wagging at schools... People are fed up with it.
Ex-senior Labour MP Tam Dalyell... said:
It is perceived that there are some young, rather arrogant, inexperienced, bumptious ministers in the Cabinet, and people don’t care for them very much. Let me say who I mean:
Ed Balls, James Purnell, Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper. People think it is a very unimpressive, on-the-make Cabinet.
Don't forget Tony Blair, Tam, the Big Daddy of all "young, arrogant, inexperienced, bumptious ministers" who "people don’t care for very much".
Tam Dalyell, who was the Father of the House of Commons until he retired in 2005, has a habit of telling the truths the establishment didn't want told.
On 18 March 2003, the day of the great debate in parliament, I sent a couple of e-mails to Glenda Jackson and George Galloway, two of the most anti-war MPs, which contained information that I thought might undermine the shiny-eyed zealot and those that were spoiling for a fight.
I also tried to pass this stuff on to Mr Dalyell, to my mind the most honourable man in parliament, but, unfortunately, he had no e-mail facility.
However, I got a surprise that night. The phone rang. It was Tam Dalyell.
As a consequence of our little chat, I promised to post a written copy of the information that I had at my disposal to his home address. I asked Mr. Dalyell a simple question before I hung up and he gave me a simple answer.
My question was:
How many Kurds, do you believe were killed at Halabja?
He replied:
About 400.
Whenever Halabja was mentioned by the British and American warmongers, they always categorically pronounced that the number of people killed was 5,000.
I knew this to be a lie and Mr. Dalyell confirmed it for me during our brief conversation.
I sent him a much larger document than the one I had sent to Glenda Jackson and George Galloway. In total, I provided him with 80 foolscap pages of damning information. This was forwarded to him about ten days after he phoned me. However, I never heard from him again and the information that I sent to Galloway and Jackson was not used in that final debate on Iraq.
I e-mailed the same information to a good many journalists, specifically, to those whose newspapers seemed to be making an effort to stop the war in Iraq before it began.
None ever replied.
Interestingly, however, a few months later, Tam Dalyell suggested that several members of Chairman Blair’s entourage were a part of a "Jewish Cabal", intent on stoking up the fires of war.
He first made these opinions known in the US magazine, Vanity Fair.
He echoed his accusations on Radio 4's World at One programme, saying that the government of the US was:
… being unduly influenced by a cabal of Jewish advisers… There is far too much Jewish influence in the United States.
He went on to describe some of the "neoconservatives" who comprise the enormously influential advisory body, JINSA:
The Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs - I was thinking of Wolfowitz, Deputy Defence Minister Perle, Bolton, Assistant Secretary of State, Feith, Adelman, Abrams and Fleischer. Those people drive this policy…
I am worried about my country being led up the garden path on a Likudnik (Ariel) Sharon agenda... Straw, Mandelson & Co. are leading a tremendous drive to sort out the Middle East.
Mr. Dalyell also said that he had:
… picked out one person about whom I am extremely concerned, and I have to be blunt about it. That is Lord Levy… I believe his influence has been very important on the Prime Minister and has led to what I see as this awful war and the sack of Baghdad.
Actually, though the fathers of both Mandelson and Straw were Jews, their mothers were not, and so, technically speaking, they are not Jewish. However, the way they act and the company they keep adequately demonstrates where their sympathies truly lie.
So, I guess it is possible that Tam Dalyell didn’t just chuck my 80-page "dossier" into the bin when he discovered its "anti-Semitic" thrust.
The document that I emailed to Jackson and Galloway may be found here:
I Am An Englishman (http://www.iamanenglishman.com/page.php?iCategoryId=88&iParentId=87)
The 80-page "dossier", that I sent to Tam Dalyell, in all its scruffy, unaltered entirety, may be found here:
I Am An Englishman (http://www.iamanenglishman.com/page.php?iCategoryId=92&iParentId=87)
Here are some of the things that Mr Dalyell had to say about his own leader:
On 7 June 2002, 10 months before Gulf War II began, The Telegraph reported thus:
Tam Dalyell, the veteran Labour MP, last night said Tony Blair was a worse leader than Margaret Thatcher and consigned him to last place when he ranked the eight Prime Ministers he had known in his parliamentary career… Even Michael Foot was rated a more effective leader by Mr Dalyell, despite presiding over Labour's disastrous election defeat in 1983.
Mr Dalyell condemned Mr Blair's ‘presidential’ style… The MP for Linlithgow said Mr Wilson, Mr Callaghan, John Smith, Hugh Gaitskell, Mr Foot and Neil Kinnock were all better leaders.
On 27 March 2003, The Guardian featured an interview with Tam Dalyell, in which he said:
My constituency Labour party has just voted to recommend that Tony Blair reconsider his position as party leader… I agree with this motion. I also believe that… he should be branded as a war criminal and sent to The Hague.
On 18 January 2004, The Sunday Telegraph told us this:
Mr Dalyell confided to me that he had changed his opinion of Mr Blair. ‘He is not the worst,’ said Mr Dalyell last week.
‘HE IS BY FAR THE WORST.’
Mr Dalyell, 71, announced last week that he would retire at the next election after more than 40 years at Westminster.
Mr Blair, perhaps thankful that his adversary was quitting, led the tributes to him.
‘Fiercely independent, Tam's persistence in pursuing causes close to his heart is legendary,’ Mr Blair told the House. The kind remarks by the Prime Minister cut little ice with the member for Linlithgow who, as the longest-serving MP, is also Father of the House…
‘Tony should go,’ he declared. ‘And he should take his friend Lord Falconer with him’."
Suffice it to say, when the time comes for the traitors to be boiled, there is one politician who will be allowed to stir the pot as opposed to occupying it.
Gordon Brown yesterday was labelled a 'loser' by members of his own party as his future was questioned following a humiliating by-election defeat. Labour was beaten into fifth place in Henley behind the far-right British National Party...
Labour MPs and supporters questioned whether Mr Brown should stay in the job at all... MP Ronnie Campbell said:
It’s a bad day when the BNP can beat Labour... I don’t like to back losers and he’s a loser...
MP Paul Farrelly, a long-time Brown supporter, said:
Gordon came in promising a new style of Government. What we’re seeing is Labour alienating people progressively'... We can’t have hectoring from Whitehall, finger-wagging at schools... People are fed up with it.
Ex-senior Labour MP Tam Dalyell... said:
It is perceived that there are some young, rather arrogant, inexperienced, bumptious ministers in the Cabinet, and people don’t care for them very much. Let me say who I mean:
Ed Balls, James Purnell, Andy Burnham, Yvette Cooper. People think it is a very unimpressive, on-the-make Cabinet.
Don't forget Tony Blair, Tam, the Big Daddy of all "young, arrogant, inexperienced, bumptious ministers" who "people don’t care for very much".
Tam Dalyell, who was the Father of the House of Commons until he retired in 2005, has a habit of telling the truths the establishment didn't want told.
On 18 March 2003, the day of the great debate in parliament, I sent a couple of e-mails to Glenda Jackson and George Galloway, two of the most anti-war MPs, which contained information that I thought might undermine the shiny-eyed zealot and those that were spoiling for a fight.
I also tried to pass this stuff on to Mr Dalyell, to my mind the most honourable man in parliament, but, unfortunately, he had no e-mail facility.
However, I got a surprise that night. The phone rang. It was Tam Dalyell.
As a consequence of our little chat, I promised to post a written copy of the information that I had at my disposal to his home address. I asked Mr. Dalyell a simple question before I hung up and he gave me a simple answer.
My question was:
How many Kurds, do you believe were killed at Halabja?
He replied:
About 400.
Whenever Halabja was mentioned by the British and American warmongers, they always categorically pronounced that the number of people killed was 5,000.
I knew this to be a lie and Mr. Dalyell confirmed it for me during our brief conversation.
I sent him a much larger document than the one I had sent to Glenda Jackson and George Galloway. In total, I provided him with 80 foolscap pages of damning information. This was forwarded to him about ten days after he phoned me. However, I never heard from him again and the information that I sent to Galloway and Jackson was not used in that final debate on Iraq.
I e-mailed the same information to a good many journalists, specifically, to those whose newspapers seemed to be making an effort to stop the war in Iraq before it began.
None ever replied.
Interestingly, however, a few months later, Tam Dalyell suggested that several members of Chairman Blair’s entourage were a part of a "Jewish Cabal", intent on stoking up the fires of war.
He first made these opinions known in the US magazine, Vanity Fair.
He echoed his accusations on Radio 4's World at One programme, saying that the government of the US was:
… being unduly influenced by a cabal of Jewish advisers… There is far too much Jewish influence in the United States.
He went on to describe some of the "neoconservatives" who comprise the enormously influential advisory body, JINSA:
The Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs - I was thinking of Wolfowitz, Deputy Defence Minister Perle, Bolton, Assistant Secretary of State, Feith, Adelman, Abrams and Fleischer. Those people drive this policy…
I am worried about my country being led up the garden path on a Likudnik (Ariel) Sharon agenda... Straw, Mandelson & Co. are leading a tremendous drive to sort out the Middle East.
Mr. Dalyell also said that he had:
… picked out one person about whom I am extremely concerned, and I have to be blunt about it. That is Lord Levy… I believe his influence has been very important on the Prime Minister and has led to what I see as this awful war and the sack of Baghdad.
Actually, though the fathers of both Mandelson and Straw were Jews, their mothers were not, and so, technically speaking, they are not Jewish. However, the way they act and the company they keep adequately demonstrates where their sympathies truly lie.
So, I guess it is possible that Tam Dalyell didn’t just chuck my 80-page "dossier" into the bin when he discovered its "anti-Semitic" thrust.
The document that I emailed to Jackson and Galloway may be found here:
I Am An Englishman (http://www.iamanenglishman.com/page.php?iCategoryId=88&iParentId=87)
The 80-page "dossier", that I sent to Tam Dalyell, in all its scruffy, unaltered entirety, may be found here:
I Am An Englishman (http://www.iamanenglishman.com/page.php?iCategoryId=92&iParentId=87)
Here are some of the things that Mr Dalyell had to say about his own leader:
On 7 June 2002, 10 months before Gulf War II began, The Telegraph reported thus:
Tam Dalyell, the veteran Labour MP, last night said Tony Blair was a worse leader than Margaret Thatcher and consigned him to last place when he ranked the eight Prime Ministers he had known in his parliamentary career… Even Michael Foot was rated a more effective leader by Mr Dalyell, despite presiding over Labour's disastrous election defeat in 1983.
Mr Dalyell condemned Mr Blair's ‘presidential’ style… The MP for Linlithgow said Mr Wilson, Mr Callaghan, John Smith, Hugh Gaitskell, Mr Foot and Neil Kinnock were all better leaders.
On 27 March 2003, The Guardian featured an interview with Tam Dalyell, in which he said:
My constituency Labour party has just voted to recommend that Tony Blair reconsider his position as party leader… I agree with this motion. I also believe that… he should be branded as a war criminal and sent to The Hague.
On 18 January 2004, The Sunday Telegraph told us this:
Mr Dalyell confided to me that he had changed his opinion of Mr Blair. ‘He is not the worst,’ said Mr Dalyell last week.
‘HE IS BY FAR THE WORST.’
Mr Dalyell, 71, announced last week that he would retire at the next election after more than 40 years at Westminster.
Mr Blair, perhaps thankful that his adversary was quitting, led the tributes to him.
‘Fiercely independent, Tam's persistence in pursuing causes close to his heart is legendary,’ Mr Blair told the House. The kind remarks by the Prime Minister cut little ice with the member for Linlithgow who, as the longest-serving MP, is also Father of the House…
‘Tony should go,’ he declared. ‘And he should take his friend Lord Falconer with him’."
Suffice it to say, when the time comes for the traitors to be boiled, there is one politician who will be allowed to stir the pot as opposed to occupying it.