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Operation Yewtree: A Three Million Pound Cover-Up?

Is anyone else concerned by the recent trend in British policing that involves hauling national celebrities into court on charges of sexual misconduct dating back forty or fifty years?

It all began with accusations against the late, admittedly weird and not particularly lamented disc jockey, Jimmy Savile. Savile, it seems, led a life of pedophilia and, if his myriad accusers are to be believed, indulged in prolific debauchery involving young children and the mentally retarded. There have even been suggestions of “satanic ritual abuse”. But, then, there would be, wouldn’t there. It’s another nice, juicy, story to beguile the British public and provide a talking point down the local pub over a pint or two. One leading proponent of this ‘satanic’ nonsense was Britain’s perennial lunatic, David Icke, who once declared himself the ‘Son of God’ after imbibing hallucinatory drugs with the Peruvian Indians.

Anyone who has studied history knows that satanic ritual abuse is pure fiction, but it’s a great phrase for inducing a moral panic among society. There have been a number of ‘moral panics’ throughout history, most of them having a religious origin, but the idea of ‘satanic ritual abuse’ evolved in America as late as the 1980s, eventually spreading around the world before subsiding in the 1990s. It’s been kept barely alive by Icke, and others of his ilk, as providing a bit of ‘spine-tingliness’ to the otherwise, less-than-juicy, newspaper reports from which they concoct their fanciful yarns.

As the Barrister Barbara Hewson remarked, rather controversially, on UKTV’s Channel 4 last year, when asked about accusations of Savile’s satanic ritual abuse:

Satanic ritual abuse doesn’t exist, it’s like alien abduction.”[1]

Moral panics have plagued the human race throughout history. Witch burning in 16th century Europe is a fine example, later came McCarthyism in America.

Today, pedophilia is one of our latest moral panics, egged on by an irresponsible news media and certain politicians.

Of course, unlike satanic ritual abuse, pedophilia does exist, though probably no more so than at any other time in history. Momentarily, it’s being whipped up in Britain to a point where, to many in that country, entertainers are fast becoming the latest minority to be persecuted unjustly.

There is something deeply disturbing about the whole business. Savile was lauded throughout his working life: the queen declared him a Knight of the realm; he received the OBE for his services to charity; he even was made a Knight Commander of the Pontifical Equestrian Order of Saint Gregory the Great (KCSG) by Pope John Paul II in 1990.

It wasn’t until after his death in 2011 that allegations of improper behavior began to pour out through the media. Many were probably authentic, although it’s possible that some of his accusers saw a nice little earner developing and jumped on the bandwagon. After all, Savile wasn’t around to confirm or deny, was he?

However, this article is not designed to defend Savile, or condemn him, but to consider why, behind it all, a serious flaw in British justice has been engineered: the apparent denial of any right of an accused to defend himself.

It also begs the question: why wasn’t Savile brought to justice while still alive? Accusations were made prior to his death, some as early as 1964. In his autobiography, Savile himself admits to ‘improper sexual conduct’, yet it appeared to pass unnoticed – certainly by the Metropolitan Police.

In October 2012, almost exactly one year following Savile’s death, the police began an investigation into his pedophile activities. They code-named it ‘Operation Yewtree’, for no other reason than the name was ‘next on the list’. Accusers poured out of the woodwork, but suddenly Savile was far from being the only star in the entertainment world who was in the ‘pervert’ business.

One after another, famous male names from British TV shows found themselves dragged through the court system, while accusatory women pointed fingers and recited tales of improper actions inflicted on their persons forty, or sometimes fifty, years ago.

It’s a point in favor of the British judicial system that the vast majority of the accused were able to walk away, cleared by a jury of twelve good persons and true. But, their lives were in tatters, their reputations in shreds, forever aware that many of their once-adoring fans were shaking heads and muttering, “There’s no smoke without fire, you know.” Meanwhile, their accusers kept their anonymity and walked away without rebuke -or jail for wasting police time.

There can be little doubt the order to investigate these cases came from on high. It’s unlikely so much police time and over three million pounds would be spent lightly, on the whim of some over-zealous chief constable.

The BBC (Savile co-hosted their flagship chart music program, “Top of the Pops,” for over forty years) has pledged to pay 33,000 British pounds to every ‘victim’ of sexual molestation who can provide some ‘evidence’ they were molested on BBC property. One can imagine a queue of elderly women brandishing dog-eared, signed photographs of Savile, or old entrance tickets to “Top Of The Pops” kept as mementos, all with lurid, heavily-embroidered, tales of stolen innocence while demanding their 33,000 pounds. A nice little nest egg for someone who would, today, be approaching retirement age.

This is not to suggest for a moment we should be lenient with child molesters, or those who indulge in criminal pedophilia, but when the accused persons are celebrities in the forefront of public gaze, and the accuser is demanding justice on a matter they’ve remained silent about for fifty years, it’s almost impossible to find any case proven, given that these type of offenses – if they occurred – are not usually committed in front of witnesses.

While the issue is emotive, English law has never accepted hearsay as admissible, and was always skeptical of circumstantial evidence alone. Any attempt to convict an individual on a “She said – he said” basis is open to enormous jury bias.

Operation Yewtree was set up to investigate the criminal activities of one James Wilson Vincent Savile, (deceased). Without a judicial hearing, the dead man has been tried and convicted by the police, in conjunction with the mass media.

The question remains as to why millions of pounds and thousands of hours of police time have been spent investigating a corpse that can never face prosecution.

The answer may never be known, but here is one possible explanation:

Between 1981 and 1985, [the MP Geoffrey] Dickens campaigned against a suspected paedophile ring he claimed to have uncovered that was connected to trading child pornography. In 1981, Dickens named the former British High Commissioner to Canada, Sir Peter Hayman, as a paedophile in the House of Commons, using parliamentary privilege so he could not get sued for slander. Dickens asked why he had not been jailed after the discovery on a bus of violent pornography.

In 1983, Dickens claimed there was a paedophile network involving “big, big names – people in positions of power, influence and responsibility” and threatened to name them in the Commons. The next year, he campaigned for the banning of Hayman’s Paedophile Information Exchange organisation. Dickens had a thirty-minute meeting with the Home Secretary, Leon Brittan, after giving him a dossier containing the child abuse allegations. Although Dickens said he was “encouraged” by the meeting, he later expressed concern that the PIE had not been banned.

On 29 November 1985, Dickens said in a speech to the Commons that paedophiles were “evil and dangerous” and that child pornography generated “vast sums”. He further claimed that: “The noose around my neck grew tighter after I named a former high-flying British diplomat on the Floor of the House. Honourable Members will understand that where big money is involved and as important names came into my possession so the threats began. First, I received threatening telephone calls followed by two burglaries at my London home. Then, more seriously, my name appeared on a multi-killer’s hit list”. Dickens’ son later said that about the time when the dossier was given to the Home Secretary, the MP’s London flat and constituency home were both broken into but nothing was taken, presumably in a search for documents…[2]

In October 2012, around the time police began Operation Yewtree, another investigation was opened under the codename Operation Fairbank (later Operation Fernbridge). It concerned pedophile ‘parties’ at the Elms Guest House in London in the 1970s and 80s. It’s alleged that guests at these parties included prominent members of the British Establishment, politicians, government members, and diplomats. Young boys were bused in from a local care home, plied with alcohol, and sexually abused.

Is it possible that the command from on high (the British Home Office?) to investigate the Savile perversions was a deliberate attempt to divert public attention away from Operation Fernbridge?

The dossier mentioned in the quote above, that Geoffrey Dickens gave to the then Home Secretary Leon Britten, is alleged to contain the names of those individuals involved in the pedophile ring responsible for arranging the ‘parties’ at the Elms Guest House. Leon Britten insists he passed the dossier on to the police, but it has since, conveniently, gone missing.

There will likely be many among the British Establishment who fervently hope it remains so.

[1] “Jimmy Savile satanic abuse claims as unlikely as ‘alien abduction’, says leading barrister” Daily Telegraph, July 8th 2013

[2] “Wikipedia, Geoffrey Dickens” [This material is also available from other sources]

The Good, The Bad, And Occasionally, The Ugly

To an immigrant, one noticeable aspect of American life is the commonly utilized phrase: “The good guys versus the bad guys”. It’s no longer just another mediocre plot-line in one of those Hollywood Western films, it crops up in the news media and on political chat shows with depressing regularity. Depressing, because Americans always portray themselves as ‘the good guys’.

Bad guy good guy

The recent escalation of conflict in Iraq is being viewed as ‘bad guys fighting bad guys’. Certainly in the US, and possibly elsewhere in the West, the attitude rules that ‘we good guys went to help them, but now we’ve left they’ve just reverted to being bad guys again’.

This is sad. Iraq has been in a state of semi-civil war since the West invaded in 2002. Not only were Iraqis fighting the US in the central areas, and the British in the south (who feel they’ve a god-given right to march into any part of the Middle East at will, simply because they were mandated the place by the League of Nations in 1919), but the enforced demise of Saddam Hussein created a political vacuum that opened the floodgates of Shia resentment, egged on by Shia clerics and others seeking political power, that’s produced violent skirmishes between Sunni and Shia for the last three years.

The West refuses to admit the present conflagration is a direct result of its illegal intervention in 2002. Tony Blair was quick (too quick?) to state that recent events would have occurred without the West’s invasion and its occupation of the country from 2002 to 2011:

“We have to liberate ourselves from the notion that ‘we’ have caused this. We haven’t. We can argue as to whether our policies at points have helped or not; and whether action or inaction is the best policy and there is a lot to be said on both sides. But the fundamental cause of the crisis lies within the region not outside it,” he wrote. Mr Blair added that it is a “bizarre reading of the cauldron that is the Middle East today, to claim that but for the removal of Saddam, we would not have a crisis”.[1]

Blair is wrong. But then, Blair has a vested interest in continuing to proclaim his innocence over the Iraq issue. A long awaited UK report into the Iraq War is soon to be published, and while it will undoubtedly be heavily whitewashed, Blair is unlikely to escape criticism.

Unfortunately, in the US no such report will ever be considered, least of all reach the light of public gaze. Here, wars are only ever fought by the ‘good guys’ in the US against the ‘bad guys’ everywhere else – anywhere there happens to be oil, or some other economic commodity necessary for maintaining the status of this self-appointed ‘superpower’.

Notable for their crawl out of the woodwork of late have been certain members of that unholy band of brethren once known as the Project for the New American Century. The utter failure of their nefarious plans to take-over the Middle East, beginning with Iraq, caused the PNAC to (officially) disband. They have not, however, been mowing their lawns and pruning their roses over the last few years. Cheney, Wolfowitz, Kristol, Rumsfeld, and others have been seen recently touring the right-wing media outlets, taking every opportunity to malign the present administration for its ‘lack of military muscle’, which is, according to them, entirely responsible for the situation in the Middle East today.

Hear no evil speak no evil see no evil

They are as wrong as Tony Blair. But then, war crimes perpetrators are always quick (too quick?) to defend the morality of their actions. Cheney was fast onto that old chestnut of: ‘…another 9/11 just waiting to happen, and next time accompanied by a mushroom cloud’.

Ah, yes, Mister Cheney, we all remember the mushroom cloud of 2001-2002, magically conjured from a fantasy smoking gun, though only in the dream-world of the Bush administration’s imagination.

American politicians never learn from their mistakes, partly because they never admit to making any. De-throning Saddam Hussein was the worst blunder they could have made in the Middle East. Countless thousands have paid with their lives, and will continue to do so, in Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Libya, and Afghanistan.

Saddam, Mubarak, Gaddafi, like Assad, ruled with an iron fist. When your enemies are religious fanatics bent on bringing the nation to its knees, is there any other way? Secular dictators have to be at least marginally preferred to Islamic fanatics whose idea of implementing Sharia law is to torture, rape, murder, and mutilate those who fail to abide by their twisted philosophies. It’s no accident of history that many Middle Eastern nations are controlled by powerful dictators or monarchs. For centuries it’s been the only method of maintaining peace and preventing religious rivalry from running amok.

The West has made yet another mistake by not learning from their last one. Supporting the rebels against Assad in Syria has allowed Islamic terrorists like ISIS free reign in that country, with the opportunity to recruit members (many British), purloin arms (mostly American), and become a formidable fighting force with every man happy to die for their misguided ideology.

Even now, the US media is still talking of a ‘possible diplomatic solution’, if only to say it seems unlikely. ‘Unlikely’ is perhaps the understatement of all understatements. ISIS has no diplomats among its leadership.

Had the West not invaded Iraq in 2002, Saddam Hussein would have kept his tight rein on Shia and Sunni extremists in his country, as he had done for nearly three decades. Despite a similar religious allegiance (Sunni), he would not tolerate al Qaida or any of its affiliates. The Arab Spring would likely never have occurred. Egypt would have remained a relatively safe environment for tourists, instead of the hotbed of turmoil and religious violence it is today, with its attendant economic problems; thousands of Syrians would still be alive and living comfortably in their homes; Libya would not be in the throes of violent conflict, and Iraq would not now be facing a terrible and bloody war, which will have devastating consequences for the whole region if ISIS manages to gain the upper hand.

But then, its just bad guys fighting bad guys, and the only question on the lips of most in the West is: should the good guys once again come riding to their rescue?

[1] “Tony Blair: Syria conflict is to blame for current Iraq crisis” Independent, June 24th 2014

CBS, NBC, ABC – Or, Sparrow News!

How the media loves to split this country in two. Take the case of Bowe Bergdahl, who’s recently exchanged his Taliban prison in Afghanistan for a US military prison (sorry, that should have read ‘hospital’) in Germany.

Deserter

It’s interesting to note Bergdahl was a lowly private first class when he disappeared from his platoon, apparently after just walking away from his base. He’s been twice promoted while held in captivity by the Taliban: once, to specialist, and then, to sergeant. (So far as we know, it was the US army that promoted him, in absentia, – not the Taliban!)[1]

The release of Bergdahl was agreed with the Talban on condition five detainees were freed from Guantanamo Bay in exchange. The US media has played up the idea these five are dangerous individuals who will return to the battlefield and fight against America. It’s probably true. No-one held without trial for years, and treated with gross inhumanity during that time, is going to thank their captors on the way out.

The idea that five mere human beings are going to make a huge difference to the Taliban’s grudge against the West in general, and America in particular, is beyond ludicrous. Yet it serves to divide this nation down the middle, with many viewing Bergdahl as a deserter who should have been left to rot, and others agreeing with the US president, who authorized the exchange without consultation with Congress. The corporate media is once again deploying its power to divide and conquer.

News recently of the tragic road accident that killed one man and put the comedian, Tracy Morgan into intensive care, has now revealed the driver of the Walmart truck that collided with their vehicle had not slept for twenty-four hours.

Trucking Money

Walmart say their driver was ‘operating well within federal regulations’. It is, perhaps, the type of irresponsible reaction one might expect from Walmart, but the sad fact is that the only legislation addressing the subject states that drivers can work a maximum seventy hours a week. This means a man or woman may drive fourteen hours a day, every day, for five days of the week. How many us could keep that up without having an eventual accident?

Showing, yet again, a reliable lack of consideration for the safety of US citizens, Congress last week moved to relax these already lax regulations following sustained lobbying from the truck industry. A 24/7 economy apparently requires truck drivers to work 24/7, and Congress is only too happy to oblige big corporations like Walmart.

Apparently, it’s gone unnoticed in Congress that Europe’s economy is also 24/7. It might seem amazing to certain US senators and representatives that European economies manage to operate despite truck drivers having to adhere to these rules:

Daily driving must not exceed 9 hours, although this may be extended to 10 hours twice a week.

Weekly driving must not exceed 56 hours.

Fortnightly driving must not exceed 90 hours in any two consecutive weeks.

Drivers must take breaks that total at least 45 minutes during or after a maximum of 4.5 hours of driving. The break can be split into two periods, one of at least 15 minutes followed by one of at least 30 minutes. You cannot split breaks into three periods of 15 minutes.

Drivers must normally take at least 11 consecutive hours of daily rest. This can be reduced by up to 2 hours on no more than three occasions between any two weekly rest periods…[2]

It’s amazing what Europe manages to achieve, that America finds quite impossible. In this instance – the saving of many lives.

In company with the US mainstream news media we’ll finish with a feel-good story, to warm our souls and revitalize the love each human being holds in his heart for his fellow man.

Are you feeling stressed, low, depressed or suicidal? Fear not, the folks at Los Angeles airport will be happy to help you. There you’ll find the soothing company of a ‘therapy dog’, complete with handler, to ease your cares away.

PUP Kai card

Yes, LAX is running a “Pets Unstressing Passengers” program (acronym: PUP – get it?) designed to put your stress to rest and allow you to fully enjoy the airport experience.[3]

What a truly wonderful idea! Though, there is perhaps one concern.

Given that the stress experienced by airport users is created almost entirely by the airlines and airports, and domestic animals can be equally affected, those ‘therapy’ dogs may just end up needing therapy themselves.

Tiddles

Who’ll be the first unfortunate traveler to get bitten?

[1] “Army Promotes Missing-Captured Soldier” US Dept of Defense, June 16th 2011

[2] “DRIVERS HOURS RULES FOR GOODS VEHICLES IN THE UK AND EUROPE” Warwickshire Police, UK.

[3] “Meet the PUPs of LAX” LAX Website

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