strawman2.htm
June 18, 2015 The UK child abuse scandals --
and a very disturbing video
See http://worldtraining.net/strawman.htm
Robin Ramsay's
quirky-but-important online magazine Lobster
has published a long, sensible and even-handed report by Tim Wilkinson on the
UK child abuse scandals. It's very much worth reading, even if it is in pdf form.
When I tried to
address this topic back in 2012, Google censored the post -- the only time such
a thing has happened in the history of this blog. My text was hidden only from
British readers. If you live in the United States, and if you go here, you will see my words; if you live in
the UK, you will see something else.
(British readers may
want to explore the wonderful world of proxy servers.)
Why the censorship?
I had quoted a published piece which leveled an
accusation against a close associate of Margaret Thatcher. I can't give the
man's name in this post, for fear that Google's
hatchet may strike again. Let us call him AMcA.
Wilkinson offers the name in full, and does not seem to think that he is
guilty.
Whenever the topic
of organized child abuse comes up, people inevitably make reference to the
"Satanic panic" of the 1980s. But there is no panic here. I have seen
no signs of public hysteria -- in fact, most members of the British public seem
uncomfortable with the topic.
Spiked, an
influential British website, dismisses all such allegations out of hand.
The Spiked orthodoxy
finds Ômoral panicsÕ, Ôconspiracy theoriesÕ and Ôanti-science attitudesÕ
wherever criticism of the rich and powerful is voiced. Most of the claque of regular Spiked contributors have no credentials
beyond the vicious circle of mutual support they provide one another, amplified
by an echo-chamber of proliferating think-tanks, publications and discussion
groups.
We see much the same
dynamic in this country, especially when "respectable" liberal
publications try to keep certain ideas off the list of permissible debate
topics. (For a good recent example, see our discussion of Jacob Siegel's piece in
The Daily Beast on Syria.)
Wilkinson brings up
the Kincora child abuse scandal, which was revealed
to the world, in large part, by a British Army whistleblower named Colin
Wallace. We have referenced both Wallace and Kincora
in previous posts.
Also Ôaround for
decadesÕ are the revelations of Colin Wallace, an impeccable witness who, at
very considerable cost to himself, brought to light sexual abuse in the Kincora boyÕs home in Northern Ireland, involving
politicians and protected by the Security Service. Thanks to Wallace, these
events received some limited exposure; but while no-one
seriously contests them, their implications are not discussed in polite
society. It appears that Knox Cunningham, aide to Conservative ex-PM Harold
Macmillan, was among a number of well-connected visitors to the home, and that
some children were trafficked as far afield as Brighton in the South of England
to be abused.
Other homes in
Northern Ireland, housing children under the age of 16, and other politicians
and senior Establishment figures have been implicated. Wallace has offered to
tell all if granted legal authority to do so. Both he and others state that
blackmail was part of the purpose of facilitating the abuse.
The Kincora scandal occurred during the Troubles, when a home
for orphaned boys fell into the clutches of a thoroughly evil individual named
William McGrath. He also ran a bizarre paramilitary organization -- a cult,
really -- called Tara. The allegation is that McGrath, under the direction of a
clique of MI5 agents, provided boys to powerful individuals in the British
establishment, who would then be susceptible to blackmail and manipulation.
This is a key issue:
it is clear that security services have been heavily involved in these events,
and it is equally clear that child sexual abuse is very useful to those who,
like them, are in the blackmail business.
One obvious example
is that of party whips. In 1995, Tim Fortescue,
recalling his career as Conservative MP and whip, reported that a member of his
party who faced Ôa scandal involving small boysÕ would ask the party whips to
help hush it up. As Fortescue put it, Ôwe would do
everything we can because..Éif we could get a chap out
of trouble then he will do as we ask forever more.Õ
Even the mysterious
death of David Kelly contains a link to this underworld. The official inquiry
into Kelly's death resulted in a number of documents being posted to the web,
including "a bizarre and cryptic document concerning child abuse, the
presence of which has never been officially explained or even mentioned."
A BBC executive suggested that this document was included to send a signal to
one of the investigators, who had a dark secret in his past. Well, that's one
way to make sure that an investigation comes to the "right"
conclusion!
Is "Papa Kills
Babies" a straw-man? If organized pedophilia is
real, and if it has been used to blackmail the political establishment, then a
cover-up becomes mandatory. One excellent diversion tactic was described by
none other than the man I have called AMcA, the
Thatcher aide. A long time ago, he wrote a book about Machiavelli
which contains this fascinating passage:
ÔFirst, create a
situation where you are wrongly accused. Then, at a convenient moment, arrange
for the false accusation to be shown to be false beyond all doubt. Those who
have made accusations against both the company and its management become
discredited. Further accusations will then be treated with great suspicion.Õ
Wilkinson calls this
the "straw-man" tactic.
In this light, let
us here take note of a very disturbing video which
appeared on YouTube earlier this year and quickly became the subject of
widespread controversy. "Papa Kills Babies"
features footage of a young boy and girl discussing abuse and murder at the
hands of a secretive cult. (The original uploader
would appear to be someone named Henry Curteis, about
whom I know nothing.)
Google removed this
film, just as it had censored my original post about AMcA.
Google also removed another video which
discussed "Papa Kills Babies." (The makers of this latter work have
accused Google of being "communists," which is a funny accusation to
hurl against a corporation.)
The original has
been re-uploaded here, although I do not expect to see it
stay in that place forever.
The obvious questions:
Is this video a hoax? If so, what kind of a hoax?
Most viewers will
see reasons to doubt the authenticity of this presentation. The kids are clearly
being coached. They parrot phrases that no child would use extemporaneously --
phrases that have obviously been drilled into them by others. ("Face our
urge"? Seriously?) The kids even repeat a famous line from Dune:
"Fear is the mind-killer."
The same two kids
star in a another video, which you can see here:
"I ate babies, and I feel really weak about it, really weak."
(At one point, the
little girl says that she has read Frank Herbert's Dune. I cannot
believe that someone so young could get more than a few pages into such a
book.)
I have to admit that
these videos seem ludicrous. If the videomakers
desired credibility, they should have offered full accounts of how these
interviews came to be, and why the children were taught to say phrases that are
clearly not of their own invention.
If these videos are fakes, they could prove useful to anyone who wants to see the current UK investigations into organized pedophilia laughed off the stage.