Whilst the story
is covered extensively in the Sunday press, along with analysis and thought
provoking questions, The UK TV media has effectively buried the news of the arrest,
and the ensuing political pressure, for perverting the course of justice, of Ruth Turner, a high ranking aide at
No.10 in the ongoing investigation into the Cash for Peerages scandal.

 

In what resembled
a Soviet style Party written agenda, with the scripting for the days news being
written by the government press office, the important news of the day was buried
in a mass of non-news.

 

The BBC has by far been the worst offender, not
running the story at all on its
BBC1 news programme or the BBC News24, instead giving us non-stories, has now
lost its place as an unbias reporter of news that is part of its charter.
 

The break-up of
the Home Office – a non-story because this has specifically been rejected by
the Prime Minister 2 weeks ago in a reply to David Cameron in the House of
Commons.  It also shows the Home Secretary as a loser, a man who cannot
cope. We expect that this story will be reversed after a reasonable time,

Other top BBC stories are The Duck who survived after
being shot and put in a freezer, and an anti Royal story, and the bones on
display of a whale that died in the
Thames a year ago.  

Sky News whilst
not letting its reporters mention it on screen, does at least have it running
on their top story bar, but still refuse to talk about it.  They are also
running the non-stories to make up air time.

It is quite
obvious by this time that the Labour spin machine has been working overtime
during the night to ensure that this story gets no air-time, which also means
that their efforts to evade the course of justice have now moved behind the
scenes, and out of the public gaze. 
 

We also wonder
whether they have used their powers illegally by invoking D-Notices on the
media to protect a party machine.

It is clear that
this government now believe this country to be a one party state, where the
media and the police can be ‘directed’ at will, with different standards to be
applied to party members and workers.  

So used are they
to doing what they want, how they want, when they want that the contempt for
the rule of law when applied to themselves is apparent to all. 

We await with
anticipation the next episode from ‘Yates of the Yard’, one which we hope will
give us all a clue as to the extent of the corruption within government and in
particular inside No.10. 

 

Item
5 below was clearly in operation today, and the world knows it.

 

The modus operandi of any fledgling
authoritarian state is;

  1. Create a fear, real or contrived.
  2. Engineer events to give credence to that fear.
  3. Find a portion of the population to blame for
    that fear.
  4. Enact laws to ‘protect’ the majority.
  5. Neuter the press.
  6. Further engineered events, keep up the scare
    propaganda.
  7. Save the majority by containing, then detaining
    the target group.
  8. Introduction of emergency powers and the
    suspension of political and judicial process.
  9. Look for other groups to blame.
  10. Total control 

 

 

Tony Blair has refused to lead the debate
on
Iraq.  A shameful position to take
in light of the number of British troops who have laid down their lives on the
basis of his policy.

 

The debate on Iraq is
to take place on Wednesday afternoon, but Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett,
rather than Tony Blair, is expected to lead it.

 

Should by Wednesday he still refuse to
stand before the House and explain himself and his policies, we call upon the
leaders of the opposition to lay before the house a motion of no confidence,
and remove this man who is increasingly showing a lack of backbone, morals and
respect for the laws of this land.

Should the Government loose the debate, then the opposition should call for a General Election.

 


Tony Blair has refused to lead the debate
on
Iraq.  A shameful position to take
in light of the number of British troops who have laid down their lives on the
basis of his policy.

 

The debate on Iraq is
to take place on Wednesday afternoon, but Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett,
rather than Tony Blair, is expected to lead it.

 

Should by Wednesday he still refuse to
stand before the House and explain himself and his policies, we call upon the
leaders of the opposition to lay before the house a motion of no confidence,
and remove this man who is increasingly showing a lack of backbone, morals and
respect for the laws of this land.

Should the Government loose the debate, then the opposition should call for a General Election.

 


Another story
that apparently is not being covered by the
BBC (for whatever reason) is the news as
published in Al
Jazeera
that
Iran is to conduct 3 days of missile tests. 

Could it be that
the
BBC has been given a D-Notice, so that the US
and
UK governments can claim that these tests were mistaken
as ‘an attack’ by
Iran.

Al Jazeera says Iran has
announced three days of military tests and its president says no number of
UN resolutions will change the country’s stance on nuclear development.  

Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad said on Sunday: “The UN resolution was born dead and even if
they adopt 10 more of such resolutions it will not affect
Iran's economy and
policies.”
Iran's military manoeuvres come
days after the
US announced that it would
deploy a second aircraft carrier, the USS Stennis, to the Gulf.

An
unnamed Iranian military commander said: “The manoeuvre is aimed at
evaluating defensive and fighting capabilities of the missiles.”

The timing is also
suspect, following close on the heals of US Defence Secretary Robert Gates
arriving in
Basra on a previously unannounced visit for talks with the US and coalition commanders in Iraq.

 

 

Another story
that apparently is not being covered by the
BBC (for whatever reason) is the news as
published in Al
Jazeera
that
Iran is to conduct 3 days of missile tests. 

Could it be that
the
BBC has been given a D-Notice, so that the US
and
UK governments can claim that these tests were mistaken
as ‘an attack’ by
Iran.

Al Jazeera says Iran has
announced three days of military tests and its president says no number of
UN resolutions will change the country’s stance on nuclear development.  

Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad said on Sunday: “The UN resolution was born dead and even if
they adopt 10 more of such resolutions it will not affect
Iran's economy and
policies.”
Iran's military manoeuvres come
days after the
US announced that it would
deploy a second aircraft carrier, the USS Stennis, to the Gulf.

An
unnamed Iranian military commander said: “The manoeuvre is aimed at
evaluating defensive and fighting capabilities of the missiles.”

The timing is also
suspect, following close on the heals of US Defence Secretary Robert Gates
arriving in
Basra on a previously unannounced visit for talks with the US and coalition commanders in Iraq.