ILLEGAL IRAQ WAR 2003
Jean B LynchBook: "France in Focus: Immigration Policies, Foreign Policy & US Relations"
COMMENT
Why are the Belgians backing the US? Whatever happened to 'neutral' little Belgium? Belgium needs some street rioting ... LOL "Belgian Congo is often cited as one of the most brutal and exploitative colonial regimes in modern history" (Study.com). Belgum maintained x3 colonies: Belgian Congo (DR Congo), Ruanda-Urundi & some portion of China. Of the Belgian empire, about 98% was just one colony: the Congo. Considered as personal property of King Leopold II. Belgian colonisation supported by Western countries as Belgium was seen as a 'useful buffer' between colonial powers in Africa [wikipedia]. Congo yielded: ivory, rubber. Belgium appears to have had extensive attempts to colonise (or uninitiated plans to colonise) various locations across Africa, South America, Central America, Caribbbean, North America, Asia, Oceania and even in Europe. All this colonialism and capitalism primarily benefits the capitalist elites, while the European masses get ripped off ... and flooded with invaders from capitalist colonial outposts. Not much of a deal for the European working class. |
TOKYO MASTER BANNER
MINISTRY OF TOKYO
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July 17, 2016
Brief History - Illegal Iraq War 2003
BATACLAN MASSACRE - France Suppressed Torture-Mutilation by Jihadists Info | Germany Raiding Germans & Suppressing Invader Rape by the Thousands
FRANCE SUPPRESSES
TORTURE MUTILATION BATACLAN MASSACRE GERMANY SUPPRESSES RAPES IN THE THOUSANDS WHILE CRUSHING FREEDOM OF SPEECH WITH RAIDS, & OTHER PUNITIVE STATE FORCE MEASURES
"THE BIGGEST GENOCIDE IN HUMAN HISTORY"
THE DARK AGES
THOUSANDS OF GERMAN WOMEN RAPED BY THIRD WORLD INVADERS The filth that is the German authorities, who have implemented a program of invasion and rape of German women (and cover-up thereof), are meanwhile conducting nationwide raids on the HOSTAGE GERMAN PEOPLE, to ensure the CAPITALIST GESTAPO program of destruction of Germany and of Europe continues unchallenged.
Of course they're not ...
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July 16, 2016
UK Plod Can Make Up 'Hate Crimes'
Surprise, Plebs!
YET ANOTHER 'Hate Crime' in UK EXTRACTS British police force classifies wolf whistles, unwanted sexual advances as hate crimes
Link | RT News
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French Twitter Censorship
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Turkish Coup - Turkish Parliament Bombed
Turkish Parliament Bombed
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July 15, 2016
Hot Gossip
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Police State Britain - Raid & Prison for Twitter Troll
Watch the corporate media give its blessing and encouragement to hefty imprisonment and public vilification of a native British internet troll. Meanwhile, actual crimes (ie crimes in the physical realm, not acts leading to hurt feelings or moral outrage) committed by those in protected groups (and groups prone to violently riot) are handled with kid gloves by the media, that often shuts down public comments — entirely.
More 'Blasphemy' Charges ...
CHECK OUT THE HEADLINE
"Vile Twitter troll who called young Celtic supporter 'disabled piece of s***' banned from football" 16:01, 6 Jan 2016
Yes, More 'Blasphemy' Charges ...
First the offensive t-shirt guy was thrown out of a pub. Then his photo was taken and posted on Twitter. Then he was mobbed by a Twitter 'campaign' of what amounts to mob abuse. Then he was arrested for his 'offensive' behaviour, using broadly written, ridiculous laws that infringe upon individual liberty.
The Blasphemous T-Shirt
Worcester man arrested on suspicion of public order offence Once again, this is beyond absurd. The guy is wearing a t-shirt with a message people don't LIKE. He was asked to leave the pub by the landlord, which is fair enough if it is going to be a security problem on premises. That should have been the end of it. Observation: it looks like the dead have become yet another Western victim group. At this rate, the West is going to run out of 'victims'. So that's two lots of incursions on civil liberties in the 'enlightened' and ostensibly 'secular' West, based on things that do not exist: (1) 'god' (yet religion is granted special protections and privileges) and (2) the dead. Wonder where that places my recent criticism of Boris Johnson (re The Spectator's Liverpool offending article)? LOL ... this is getting complicated. I still thing he's horrible for trying to dismiss a city's grief for a captive that had recently been barbarically slaughtered in Iraq (especially, as I believe the basis for that attempt to dismiss is political). The Spectator opens with a statement that is true in general of Western media influenced and manipulated society, in which there is an institutionally and otherwise entrenched victimhood (and accompanying state incursions on liberties) promoting agenda and propaganda: " ... mawkish sentimentality of a society that has become hooked on grief and likes to wallow in a sense of vicarious victimhood..." [2004] But then the article unfairly attempts to single out the Liverpudlians in an attempt to dismiss the mourning for the Liverpudlian captive murdered in Iraq, so as to push what I guess is the (1) 'kissing up' and (2) suppression establishment two-step political move. Actually, that's the standard move. But 2004 would have been a special time for the British political establishment and their media mouthpieces: a time of making sure that illegal British military presence in Iraq continued undisrupted by public opinion (at British capitalist investment, by taxpayer slavery, of £9.24 billion). So that would have been the agenda of the BRITISH CORPORATE PRESS, acting in the interests of an elite that is ripping off, enslaving, dispossessing and deliberately victimising the common man. Yet it is the politicians and media that have endorsed this culture of victimhood promotion and of political suppression, that's reached an absurd and institutionalised point, while members of their rank (such as The Spectator) have the audacity to seek to twist that around for immediate political ends, in an attempt to gain political advantage over the very people that are victims of the ideology of divestment and suppression that was promoted by them in the first place. Stepping back from the 2004 article, I think The Spectator definitely has a point in general terms about society (not related to the murder in Iraq) and that maybe it would be better to resist that mentality and the effects of that ideology in society, as it leads to nothing but political impotence, suppression and divestment of rights of European working classes.
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