Thursday 10 March 2011

Our American Allies, on the same side?

For the past forty years I have been reminding people of the duplicity and deviousness of Sinn Fein and their IRA murderers. Financed to a great extent by the likes of Gaddafi in Libya and Noraid in North America, it makes intelligent people question the purpose of Blair and his associates collaboration and intimate, incestuous relationship with what the World now calls terrorism and terrorist.

Ireland has been cleansed of Prodestants in the South and is gradually being victimised out of the North, a Province always called Ulster, where more VC herald from than the rest of the UK. For their loyalty and sacrifice we got Blair and his devious relationship with the IRA terror gangsters, McGuinness and Adams. Now Adams is the chief architect of unification through the fiscal measures of a corrupt and inept Dublin government. And you expect the people on the terraces of Ibrox not to understand what has happened a few miles across the water with their ancient kith and kin?

Amplify’d from www.nytimes.com

For Lawmaker Examining Terror, a Pro-I.R.A. Past

“We must pledge ourselves to support those brave men and women who this very moment are carrying forth the struggle against British imperialism in the streets of Belfast and Derry,” Mr. King told a pro-I.R.A. rally on Long Island, where he was serving as Nassau County comptroller, in 1982. Three years later he declared, “If civilians are killed in an attack on a military installation, it is certainly regrettable, but I will not morally blame the I.R.A. for it.”

As Mr. King, a Republican, rose as a Long Island politician in the 1980s, benefiting from strong Irish-American support, the I.R.A. was carrying out a bloody campaign of bombing and sniping, targeting the British Army, Protestant paramilitaries and sometimes pubs and other civilian gathering spots. His statements, along with his close ties to key figures in the military and political wings of the I.R.A., drew the attention of British and American authorities.

A judge in Belfast threw him out of an I.R.A. murder trial, calling him an “obvious collaborator,” said Ed Moloney, an Irish journalist and author of “A Secret History of the I.R.A.” In 1984, Mr. King complained that the Secret Service had investigated him as a “security risk,” Mr. Moloney said.

Read more at www.nytimes.com

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