Thursday, 24 December 2015

WHO RUNS THE UK?


world jewish congress.

In December 2015, David Cameron attended a 'Christmas party' at London's Sexy Fish restaurant, where a glass of red wine can cost £105, and where the 'decor' cost 15 million pounds.

David Cameron's mother is descended from Emile Levita, a German Jewish financier.

The 'Christmas party' was hosted by Cameron's former special adviser Steve Hilton (Steve Hircsák).

Steve Hilton (Steve Hircsák) is married to Rachel Whetstone, former aide to former Conservative leader Michael Howard (Michael Hecht), and former executive at Google.



Attending the 'Christmas party' were:

Benjamin Wegg-Prosser, who is reportedly Jewish, and who runs Peter Mandelson's spooky international consultancy firm Global Counsel.

Tim Allan, former deputy to Tony Blair's friend Alastair Campbell.

Camilla Cavendish, head of David Cameron's policy unit, married to Morgan Stanley's Huw van Steenis.

Ian Katz, of BBC2 Newsnight, and his wife Justine Roberts who runs Mumsnet.

dailymail

A surprisingly large number of the people named above are from families who were Jewish immigrants to the UK.


Murdoch and The Big Lie.

Meanwhile, there has been a 'Christmas party' at the London flat of the staunchly Zionist Rupert Murdoch.

In attendance were David Cameron and half the Conservative Party cabinet.

Cameron, Osborne and Murdoch back together at mogul's Christmas knees-up.


MADAME CLAUDE AND OTHERS.

23 comments:

  1. 'WHO RUNS THE UK?'

    What a really horrible bunch of really horrible people.

    Murderers and mass murderers. Total selfish gits. Serial liars. Crooks. Perverts without a shred of decency. Snakes. Kiddy fiddlers. Racketeers. Gangsters. Double crossers. Insider dealers. Parasites. Shady arms dealers involved with drug snuggling via the City of London. 'You grease my palm I'll grease yours'. Wars r' Us. Chicken hawks where more wars means more profits for the city gents. Vipers. A shower of shit.

    That's them, the ruling class. A bunch of right nasty bastards!

    Just think, a quarter of the voters think the world of them and many will fight to the death for them? Wankers!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. After Double crossers... you could have added cross dressers.

      Delete
    2. Child Abuse as Sex Magick & Sexual Research: Aleister Crowley & Alfred Kinsey (Occult Yorkshire 14)

      https://auticulture.wordpress.com/2015/12/25/child-abuse-as-sex-magick-sexual-research-aleister-crowley-alfred-kinsey-occult-yorkshire-14/

      Delete
  2. Who runs the UK? Same entity who runs USA and basically the whole world: ISISraHELL

    ReplyDelete
  3. https://www.rt.com/news/326902-germany-fake-documentary-ukraine/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=aplication_chrome&utm_campaign=chrome

    ReplyDelete
  4. https://www.rt.com/news/326879-cold-war-nuclear-list/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=aplication_chrome&utm_campaign=chrome

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yids doin xmas?? Do they have ANY shame...?? Erm.., no. I do remember stacey solomon hockin 'chicken & pork' in an xmas iceland advert..... all about the fuckin coin (co-in). Merry chrimbo Aang XX

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  6. A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    "It is because they face danger that we have peace" - but do they?

    In his latest Christmas message David Cameron appropriates 'Jesus Christ - the Prince of Peace' to justify bombing Syria.

    What theory does he and 'others'use to justiy the VIP Peadophile Rings?

    www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-35170590

    www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/.../david-camerons-christian-christmas-...

    www.dailymail.co.uk/...PM-invokes-Jesus-Prince-Peace-Xmas-message-Cameron

    Interesting article below on PTSD and homeless ex-service personnel.

    But PTSD symptoms can effect anyone - this also includes individuals who have suffered at the hands of child exploitation.

    Following article copywrite to Mack (RG)

    THE THOUGHTS OF A FALKLANDS WAR VETERAN

    A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROS

    This week, Falklands war veterns commemorate their victory 25 years ago. About 300 men who came home will be missing from the parades. They have killed themselves. Many more are battling suicide, and veterans of Irag and Afghanistan are swelling their ranks.

    This is their story - and they're angry

    MICHAEL BILTON

    Connecting a vacuum-cleaner hose to his car.

    IAN CUBBOLD, 60

    Switched on the engine, took sleeping tablets and lay down to inhale the lethal exhaust fumes and die at his home near Yeovil, Somerset, in 1993.

    COLIN DEARY, 31

    There were no such preperations made by Colin. He simply picked up a knife and stabbed himself to death at his home in Sunderland in 1994.

    MARK CROWN, 39

    Died in June 1995. He handcuffed one hand to his car steering wheel, doused himself with petrol and set himself ablaze. He left a wife and two children.

    JIM LAKER, 37

    In September, 1997 when he launched himself off a roof ofl a building in Aldershot.

    STEPHEN RAWLINS,

    A Guardsman aged 38, hanged himself at his father's home in South Wales on Remembrance Day, 2000.





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  7. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    MARTIN HARBERT, 44

    Hanged himself, leaving three children, in May 2001.

    CHARLES BRUCE, 46

    Threw himself out of a plane without a parachute in January, 2002.

    JOHN HUNT, 39

    Took an overdose of pills in June, 2002, at his home in Calne, Wiltshire.

    GODFREY WILLIAMS, 40

    That same year (2002) Godfrey died in Llandeilo, South Wales, after stabbing himself in the heart with a bayonet.

    They were policemen, teachers, lorry drivers and care workers or simply unemployed.

    But they had one thing in common. They were all Falklands War Veterans, they had all suffered post-traumatic disorders, and they were all failed by the system.

    It's hardly surprising that some soldiers and sailors who lexperience the full horrors of war fail to readjust to civilian life.

    Haunted by their experiences, terrorised by flashbacks, they develop psychiatric disorders and, in spite of the support of family and friends, succumb to suicide.

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  8. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    What is surprising is that these nine men represent a roll call that shames Britain.

    A total of 255 British Servicemen died during the conflict. But around 300 veterans - the equivalent of half a batalion of fighting men - have died by their own hand since the Argentine surrender to the British Task Force on June 14, 1982, in Port Stanley.

    This week marks the 25th anniversary. Up and down the country there will be celebrations, parades and reunions to mark the event. It is likely that every ex- serviceman who served knows of a comrade who will not be among the parade participants.

    The services of Remembrance will pay homage to those who lost their lives during the war - but who will pay homage to those who lost their lives during the peace?

    Those, and their families, consigned by their untreated, unrecognised and largely ignored cries for help to depression, alcoholism and suicide.

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  9. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    And the forgotton army of the post-war Falklands dead raises the errible spectre of suicide, violence, addiction and family break-up for many thousands more in the decades to come. As servicemen who have returned from the Gulf war, the Balkans, Iraq and Afghanistan develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), they find themselves lost in the no-man's-land of civilian life and the creaking healthcare system.

    Amazingly nobody knows the precise number of Falklands veterans' suicides.

    Not the government, the Ministry of Defence, the army, navy, RAF or even the individual regiment themselves.

    The figure assessed by the South Atlantic Medl Association (SAMA), which represents the veterans, is roughly 300.

    Unofficially, some statisticians, citing Gulf war studies, believe this figure may not be wide of the mark.

    Argentina's veterans believe 460 of their men have dies by their own hand.

    There are no official British figures because no government has bothered to commission a study or keep a tally of what happened to the Falklands veterans, despite warnings from psychiatrists and military doctors that thousands of men were suffering fromPTSD in the aftermath of the war.

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  10. Cont... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    Servicemen with symptoms of traumatic stress got help - if they asked for it. Most did not.

    Overwhelmingly, Falklands veterans with PTSD were too ashamed or in denial. Many involved in the hand-to-hand fighting in 1982 suffered extreme symptoms, often descending into drug and alcohol dependency. Because they went undiadnosed, many went untreated. Their ives became chaotic and some saw suicide as a way out. A study by a medical officer in the Parachute Reiment in 1987 showed that 50% of a sample of group of paras who fought in the Falklands were suffering PTSD symptoms, including 22% who had the full condition.

    They might have been better off coming home from the Napoleonic wars 200 years ago. Military hospitals at Catterick Woolwich, Wroughton, Plymouth and Portsmouth have closed under Ministry of Defence (MOD) streamlining.

    They had all built up hugh expertise over the years, dealing with servicesmen's health problems including PTSD.

    The Royal Navy hospital at Haslar in Portsmouth's naval bas finally closed only this spring - after 250 years of healthcare. It opened in the 1750s, providing respite for "navy lunatics" - sailors and marines damaged in the line of duty. The patients were given extra comforts. Instead of the regulation 14lb of horsehair stuffed into bedding they had 21lb of horsehair, to provide for sound sleep.

    The "naval lunatic" was regarded as someone who had simply lost their reason, either through disease, grief or acciden, a latter-day diagnosis of what we call PTSD.

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  11. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    These patients differed from hopeless cases who were described as "idiotic". In the 1980s and 90s, Haslar - under Surgeon Commander Morgan O'Connell - treated hundreds of Falklands veterans suffering from psychological damage.

    Crucial to recovery in Britain's military hospitals was the very culture in which people were treated. Everyone - patients and staff - understood what these soldiers, sailors and airmen had been through.

    In place of service hospitals and clinics, the government presumed that NHS could up hugh expertise over the years, dealing with servicemen's health problems including PTSD.

    In place of service hospitals and clinics, the government presumed the NHS could carry the burden - paradoxically, the MoD continued closing Britain's military hospitals while sending more and more troops to fight overseas in Bosnia, Sierra Leone, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, the greater number of soldiers, sailors and airmen deployed since the Korean war.

    When serving personnel fall mill, the MoD pays for private clinics. But ex-servicemen have to rely on GPs and outpatients departments at NHS hospitals that are under-resourced, inexperienced in the specialist treatment required, and haunting memories of death and horror.

    Many cash-strapped primary care trusts refuse to pay for private treatment of these conditions at psychiatric clinics. The Falklands veterans compete for NHS care with people still in the military. Both serving members of the armed forces and ex-servicemen have been refused private medical insurance cover for PTSD.

    Now an even biger catastroph looms. Late-onset PTSD often occurs 10 to 12 years after a traumatic event. Major General Robin Short, a retired head of army medical services, says an express train is waiting to hit the NHS buffers when ex-servicemen from Iraq and Afghanistan develop late-onset PTSD.

    More than 2,000 soldiers returning from Iraq have already been officially diagnosed with PTSD. More are returning from Afghanistan. Research has shown that former soldiers and sailors are reluctant to seek help from Gps in case they are sectioned under the Mental Health Act, when they admit to suicidal thoughts.

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  12. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    They frequently refuse to be treated in psychiatric hospitals with civilians, where the NHS staff have little or no understanding of the traumas of war. When you hear their stories, you begin to understand why.

    In Bolton, Lancashire, two former paratroopers are reminiscing. Jim Meredith, 51, and Les Standish, 46, first met nearly 30 years ago when they were posted to Ulster. The two men fought in the same company together at Goose Green. Meredidth refused medication forl years. Now he is using antipsychotic drugs to save his long-term relationship. He confirms that veterans have a phobia about being thought mentally ill. They say they have an illness caused by the war.

    "You meet me and Les face-to-face and there are two different kinds of people. We are very sociable but there are two people inside us. A nice guy who will shake your hand and say, It's my round', 'I'll get you a pint', 'I'll push your car and help start it for you'. But inside is the other psyhopathic bastard who will go for you and rip your f***ing head off. Pardon my French, but that's the way we are.

    "Some of the stuff we've done you would not believe. They did some terrible things on the Falklands. If you join the Parachute Regiment, you crave war. You crave a battle. You crave to use your weapon in anger, you are given knive, hand grenades. We are not trained to shoot at targets. We were trained to shoot people. You cannot begin to imagine the depths of it".

    Lately, Jim Meredith has been helping his friend recover from a relapse of complex PTSD. Standish had been sleeping in his car, afraid he might become violent, "exploding" as he experienced flashbacks he thought were long forgotten. He had been in a road-rage incident and lost it. This year, in the lead-up to the 25th anniversary of the war, he had been dredging up dark thoughts, drinking heavily.

    Les Standish's most urgent desire is to repair his second marriage and be a father once more to his two stepchildren. A thoughtful, artiulate man, he loves his family and is desperate to succeed.

    Agreeing a few months ago to co-operate with the research for this article, he was outwardly buoyant and confident. But as the 25th anniversary neared, more ex-soldiers were calling him, some traumatised by their own memories. Within weeks, Standish was also in despair. He was having nighmares, waking up screaming.

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  13. Cont....A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    He had been taught to write down his dreams on paper. "I get little white flashes that simulate bullets coming through my head and then I remember everything and Ijust relive it over and over again".

    His marriage to Rachel, who trains guide dogs for the blind, had crumbled and he was clearly desperate and frightened. He blamed himself. He had, he said, been in denial about his behaviour at home. He had become selfish and inconsiderate towards his wife, too much of a disciplinarian towards his stepchildren, treating them like they were in the army. He was drinking at home to block out his thoughts - typical behaviour.

    Eventually Rachel could take no more. Les took off in alarm. Nor a while he lived in his car until Jim Meredith took him in. Yhen eh made a desperate three-hour journey to re-visit an elderly psychiatrist in Anglesey, who he says saved his life almost 13 years ago. The story of Les Standish's journey over the past 25 years is remarkable. It does not, however, make comfortable reading.


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  14. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    May, 1982, Goose Green. In a conflict that had seemed unimaginable just two months earlier, 2nd Battalion, the Parachute Regiment (2 Para), was going into action. This was the real thing. Standish, 21, a lance orporal, had been on his honeymoon in Torremolinos, Spain, when he was summoned back to his barracks at Aldershot. Seven weeks later, 8,000 miles from home, 2 Para were freezing their backsides off, dug in overlooking Falkland Sound where they watched Royal Navy ships bombed and strafed by Argentine jets. Then his section leader got trench foot and Standish found himself in charge of eight men, about to storm a series of enemy trenches.

    "Nothing can prepare you for what actually happened. We would throw in grenades, jump in the trench and kill the enemy. In the trench it was him or me. I did that. Then we move on to the next one. The arenaline takes over. Now, I see the fear in the Argentine faces that I killed. They were trying to kill us but we were elite forces in a battle with conscripts aged 18 or 19. They did not have a cat in hells chance.

    Bang, bang and away you go. "There was a young boy who knew he was going to die when I shot him. He was not pointing his weapon, but he had it in his hand and potentially he could have shot me. When you get into contact with someone you can see that face just go white, their eyes wide open, and he just knew he was going to die.

    You had no time to reflect on what you had done. "In Goose Green itself, later, I thought, 'F***, yeah, he did not point that weapon at me.' Did I have to kill him? Then I pulled myself together and thought, 'No, it was either him or me.' I brushed it away. It's a brutal process. You do it without thinking. The thinking comes afterwards. I killed nine people. One Argentine I had to kill with a bayonet on my rifle. I stabbed him several times. It troubles me to this day."

    The battle lasted for more than 36 hours. In the early morning light his section was caught in open ground with the rest of their platoon. Pinned down and exposed, fusilades of enemy machinegun fire zinged aroundthem. They withdrew, but as they did so, one soldier was shot through the leg and fell wounded. Standish went back under fire and dragged the soldier to safety. For this he later received the Military Meda for galllantry.

    But they were running out of bullets. A fallen para ahead of them had a belt of ammunition, so Standish tasked one of his best mates, Stephen Illingsworth, to move forward dto retrieve it. Within seconds Illingsworth was shot dead through the neck by a sniper. It broke his neck and severed his jugular vein. This is another of Standish's haunting memories.

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  15. Cont....A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    However, the most traumatic event he experienced happened not on the battlefield, but later, once Goose Green had fallen.

    "When they surrendered, the Argentine prisoners got put in the sheep pens in the middle of the settlement. They had booby-trapped their own field guns. My job was to take an Argentine soldier and make the guns safe, so that we could use them if the need arose. When the Argentinian went to make the guns safe, the incendiary device blew up and in doing so blew the flesh and muscles off his legs, from the waist down. His bones wereintact, his feet were still there. But you can imagine that from his waist up he was fine, from his waist down he was just bones.

    Because it was an incendiary, all his veins had fused so he was not bleeding. He was just kicking his bones up and down. The flesh from his legs went all over me and anotherArgentine prisoner nearby. We had both been standing about 10 or 15 ft apart from each other when the explosion happened.

    He was there with all this gunk of human flesh and muscle all over him, and I was there with all this stuff over me and we had this Argentine soldier kicking his legs and asking for his mother. So we picked him up and took him to our aid post.

    "I will never forget it. It was a big wooden table, because that is all we had, and all you could hear were his bones, his legs, banging on the table, tapping on the wood as he shouted for his mother. We tried to get a line in him to give him fluids. We could'nt find his veins because his veins had retracted. So we had to get our medical officer, Steven Hughes, to cut his wrists, - it is called a cut down - and we got a line in his wrist and pumped a load od fluid into him. And I will never forget it..." And with this Standish makes a loud rhythmic tappping noise with his knuckles on the table in front of him. Tap. Tap. Tap. Tap. Tap.

    "You could hear his leg banging on the table like that crying for his mum, his bones exposed. There was not much flesh on them at all. You can imagine a skeleton, skeleton legs and from the waist up a normal body. And we just watched him die on the table. We just couldn't do anything. I was 21 years old."

    More fierce fighting lay ahead. 2 Para joined the Battle of Wireless Ridge, overlooking Port Stanley, a few weeks later in the dying hours of the war. Soon they were homeward bound. Standish had eight weeks'leave with his new bridge before his battalion was posted to Belize for six months.

    Four years later he was out of the army. He wanted to spend time with his newborn son. He says this was when his problems started. Back in Bolton he joined dthe prison service, became a PE teacher and ran the heavy-duty cell-removals squad inside Stangeways jail in Manchester. By his own admission he was a very hard amn. He seemed to settle down, until the Strangeways prison riot, when 1,000 inmates broke out of their cells. Prison officers feared for their lives as they were attacked with scaffolding poles. Some took refuge inside the cells. Standish's flashbacks of what happened at Goose Green started a year or so later.

    His first marriage fell apart under the strain. He felt responsible for Stephen Illingsworth death on the battlefield, he saw the face of a young soldier and he re-visited the trauma of the Argentine PoW.

    Standish gave up his job at Stangeways. What happended next took him to rock bottom. His wife and children needed money, so Standish, with connections in the Bolton underworld, joined the illegal circuit of bare-knuckle fighters who travel around Britain, betting on themselves at ad hoc venues in warehouses, empty factories and barns.

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    Replies
    1. The other day I was watching a documentary on the Japanese army in WWII. One of the soldiers said it was always reported that dying Japanese soldiers said how glad they were to be dying for the Emperor. He said it was a lie, that the soldiers normally died calling out to their mothers. He said that he had heard American soldiers who were dying, and they did the same.

      The politicians who promote these wars for the benefit of financiers and businessmen and for secret political ends should all be treated as war criminals.

      Delete
  16. Cont....A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    A couple of hundred gamblers would turn up at the fights. He fought 19 times, won 17, drew one and got badly hammered in one. It was vicious, exhausting, brtal stuff, as rough as it can get; blood and broken noses. There was no throwing in the towel. Last man standing was the winner. He walked away with a wad of cash. He was also a collector for a local drug dealer. Standish never sold or handled drugs, nor did he use them. He says he merely collected the money after the dea;s were done. "It was a matter of putting bread on the table," he says. "My wife and children needed money, I had to apy the bills. I was like an aggressive bailiff. I did have to get hard with a few people, 'throat' them up against the wall and say, 'Look, you have got to pay, and you have got to pay now.'"

    He hit his own brick wall in the autunm of 1993 when he was arrested for conspiracy to supply drugs. Because he had been aprison officer at Stangeways, he could not be held on remand in jail. Instead he as kept in solitary confinement in a police station in Bolton. On learning of hisgallantry medal in the Falklands, some police officers took pity on him. They got him a television for his cell and regularly brought in takeaway curries.

    Standish went into survival mode. He worked out a fitness regime for his small cell, pacing, moving, squatting, completing circuit after circuit of this tiny space. He did 2,000 press-ups and pull-ups a day. But left alone for hoursto think, the flashbacks to the Falklands became more and more frequent.

    Standish began to plan his suicide. It took him eight weeksto make a rope in secret. Before is sheets were changed, he would tear a small strip from one end where there was a narrow fold. He hid the strip and then threw the sheet into a bag for collection. He gradually plaited the dozens of tiny strips together, thick enough, strong enough to hang himself. He planned to die at Christmas, after mearly three months of solitary confinement.

    What stopped him was a visit by his ex-wife on Christmas Eve. She brought their two young children with her, the first time he had seen them in months. Some weeks later, Standish's sister Rita made contact with 2 Para's medical officer, Dt Steven Hughes, who remembered her brother well, because the two had been in the aid post at Goose Green trying to save the life of the Argentine prisoner.

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  17. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    Hughes visited Standish at the police station, accompanied by a psychiatrist called Dr Dafydd Jones, who ran a clinic for ex-servicemen called Ty Gwyn in Llanudno, North Wales. This was a turning point. Standish says that Dr Jones saved his life - a sentiment offered to this day by countless numbers of ex-servicemen who have come under his care.

    Sentenced to three years at his trial, Standish was allowed by the Home Office to serve his sentence at Denbigh Hospital in North Wales, where Jones was the consultant psychiatrist. Standish was then taken as a day patient to Ty Gwyn, where he underwent a prolonged treatment. The clinic itself had a dozen or so veterans who could not get treatment elsewhere.

    Here, Standish came to terms with his demons and learnt coping mechanism throulgh cognitive behavioural therapy. Some of the greatest help came from the veterans gave each other. Ty Gwyn stands on the outskirts of Llandudno and had always struggled for funding. Eventually Jones, who had set up a series of one-day "clinics" around Britain to help ex-servicemen suffering from PTSD, found he was fighting a losing battle to keep Ty Gwyn open. Primary Care Trusts would no longer fund patients at the clinic.

    The building has now been sold and is being re-developed as flats.

    Standish finished his sentence, picked himself up and began helpig other veterans in trouble with complex PTSD. He got a job in a security company working nights and now has a day job with an environmental cleaning company, clearing asbestos sites. He and his wife, Rachel are planning a reconciliation.

    In 2003 he returned to the Falklands by himself and revisited the exact spot where his friend Stephen Illingworth died after being sent to retrieve ammunition. He says he can live with this now. It helped to walk the battlefield and take in the enormity of what they had done.

    A bigger turning point had come a year earlier. An Argentine conscript called Alejandro Videla, who had fought at Goose Green, contacted a British ex-serviceman's website. "Most of my mates told him to piss off, but I thought this was unfair. I struck up a correspondence with him."

    They chatted about their lives and families for months. Eventually Standish raised money to bring Alejandro Vdela to England, in November 2002. Standish took him home to Bolton and they attended a remembrance service together at a local war memorial.

    It was only when they began chatting in person that the two men made an astoubnding discovery. "He was defending their left flank at Goose Green, and I was attacking our right flank. We realised that we must have been shooting at each other.

    "Then something really scary happened. Alejandro began talking about this incident when it was over, when one of his friends was injured by an exploding booby trap. he had been covered with the flesh of this man, just like me, and had seen it all. He was standing a few feet away from me, when the explosion happened.

    Neither of us could believe it, meeting like that, after alll those years." They had both had the same nightmare.

    Major-General Julian Thompson, who commanded 3 Commando Brigade in the Falklands, is critical of veterans' treatment: "The defence procurement minister encapsulated the government's attitude towards the armed services when he said, 'I do not understand dthe rationale behind the calls for a dedicated military hospital.' This ignorance extends to Falklands veterans who suffer from PTSD. They fought for us and are ignored, or consigned to NHS hospitals among people who do not comprehend what they experienced or what they suffer. Not just Falklands veterans; a soldier wounded in Iraq was told to take off hi uniform in an NHS hospital because it might 'offend people'. Truly, 'making mock of uniforms that guard you while you sleep'.

    Do we deserve to be guarded any more?"



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  18. Cont.... A LAND UNFIT FOR HEROES

    The shocking truth is that PTSD is not just a potential ldeath sentence for hundreds of ex-servicemen, but also a blilght on their families.

    Since 2003, some 130,000 British men and women have served in Afghanistan and Iraq. Experts say that untreatedPTSD cases are a time bomb ticking away in society at large - read it here login.thetimes.co.uk/?go

    24/7 got those demons in my head
    Asleep or awake its all the same
    I'm not feeling sorry for myself
    Not looking for someone to blame

    Surely death will give me peace?
    Or am I already there?
    Walking this earth with PTSD
    Next to the man without a care
    I' jealous of his happy life
    Nice house and steady job
    Big Brother soccer and down the pub
    His sanity has not been robbed
    Until the day he takes the piss
    One look one thoughtless remark

    He's put me back on the battlefield
    To him a silly lark

    I should have stayed at home that day
    With the demons in my head
    Instead I wnet into your world
    I'm sorry you've ended up dead

    Copyright - Mack (RG) The Thoughts of a Falklands War Veteran

    If it was possible to send all the MP's who voted YES in the bombing of Syria vote a Christmas message I would lkie it to be this thought prevoking article.

    How would they act if they were in the same situations or if it was any of their sons or daughters?

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  19. They have the money.With money they bribed Judas, so what's new? Only a divine intervention can unseat them.And it's not about any one race, but one worship of the god Satan.

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  20. I HAVE POSTED THIS BEFORE,BUT HERE GOES ONCE AGAIN;
    Sorry to put this in capitals,& yes ,I am shouting,
    YOUR COUNTRY OF BRITAIN IS RUN BY THE CITY OF LONDON WHICH IS AN INDEPENDENT CITY-STATE & HAS BEEN SINCE THE AUTUMN OF 1066.THE SO-CALLED BRITISH GOVERNMENT THAT YOU ALL TURN UP & VOTE FOR HAS NO TRUE CONTROL OVER THE CITY !.
    In brief,William the Conquerors army was melting away,he needed money to keep at least some of his

    mercenaries by his side,so he had to make a deal as he had no chance against the City's walls.
    I.E.,no siege equipment.So he had to "cut a deal" as the Yanks would say.
    The City would be independent - but not too obviously so - & he would be guaranteed his money supply - &

    kings always need money.
    Thus no Domesday book for the City because it was never his to tax.
    THAT'S WHO RUNS BRITAIN.GOT IT?.

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