Showing posts with label David Bell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Bell. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2012

COMMON PURPOSE CABAL


Sir Evelyn de Rothschild

On 15 November 2012, there was a by-election in the UK, in Manchester Central.

In Manchester Central, the voter turnout was 18.16%.

A growing number of people know that elections are a waste of time, as the 'big decisions' are made by secretive cabals.

These cabals appear to have links to the security services and to Israel.

Sir David Bell who attended the University of Pennsylvania

Members of the board of directors of The Economist Group have included: Sir David Bell and Lynn Forester de Rothschild.

On 16 November 2012, the Daily Mail names some of the secret rulers in the UK.

Common Purpose is a 'spooky' charity that runs leadership courses.


The 'international communications agency' was founded and is owned by Alan Donnelly.

Donnelly lives with Peter Power, an ex-spokesman for and close associate of the former Business Secretary Lord Mandelson.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2233716/Dark-arts-links-Masters-Spin-.html#ixzz2CMo3F7vL


Jacob Rothschild and Peter Mandelson

Sir David Bell is on the panel of assessors assisting Lord Justice Leveson with his inquiry into press standards.

Sir David is a trustee of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, the group behind the BBC Newsnight report which failed to mention the names of any powerful child abusers.

Sir David heads an organisation called Common Purpose which sends public servants on ‘leadership’ courses.



Jean Charles de Menezes

Among senior police officers linked to Common Purpose is Cressida Dick, the police commander in charge of the operation that ended with the 2005 shooting of innocent Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes.

aangirfan: DICK IN CHARGE OF TERROR


Dick chose Deputy Assistant Commissioner Sue Akers to head the investigation into phone-hacking and payments to police and public officials at Murdoch's News International.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2233684/Disturbing-questions-Levesons-Key-adviser-Special-Investigation-central-figure-McAlpine-scandal-judicial-inquiry-press.html#ixzz2CMrvstv5



Blair and Savile, friends of Israel

Some people want the UK print media to be firmly controlled by Ofcom, the media regulatory body. 

Ofcom is largely staffed by friends of Tony Blair.

One of these is Ed Richards, who was senior policy adviser on the media to Tony Blair.

Other names to note include Baroness Helena Kennedy, linked to Common Purpose, and Robert Peston, BBC business editor and Common Purpose 'cheerleader'. 



Sir Bob Kerslake, head of the Home Civil Service, is a Common Purpose graduate.

Lord Patten, chairman of the BBC Trust, is linked to Common Purpose.

Jon Williams, the BBC's World News Editor, is a graduate of Common Purpose.

Professor Richard Sambrook, who was the BBC's Head of News and director of the World Service, is a fan of Common Purpose.


The secretive cabals try to keep us in the dark.

The Waterhouse Inquiry examined child abuse at children's homes in North Wales.

A former Deputy Director of the Bryn Alyn children's home, Des Frost, was not called as a witness, despite reporting abuse at the home to the police.

A year after the report was completed a former ITV Wales journalist had a private meeting with Sir Ronald in which he says he told him about Des Frost's claim.

"More and more instead of it being a conversation between the two of us, it was me telling him things and my impression is that he was stunned, shocked, by the Des Frost allegations. I got the impression he knew nothing about it." - FORMER ITV JOURNALIST PADDY FRENCH

Child abuse inquiry 'may not have heard key evidence'

Thursday, December 29, 2011

THE ECONOMIST ON RON PAUL

Doctor Ron Paul - Caleb O'Connor painting (Caleb O'Connor : Fine Artist.)

On 31 December 2011, The Economist, read by top people worldwide, mentions Ron Paul.

Among the Directors of The Economist are Sir David Bell, a trustee of Common Purpose, and Lynn Forester de Rothschild.

The Economist's opposition to Ron Paul suggests that Ron Paul must be one of the good guys?

Ron Paul and wife

According to The Economist (The Republicans Into Iowa):

"The best organised campaign, by all accounts, is that of Mr Paul...

"His unstinting advocacy of much smaller government and sounder money goes down well with local Republicans.

"His calls for an end to foreign entanglements and the legalisation of drugs are popular with the young.

Ron Paul

"At an event on the campus of the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, throngs of giddy students leap to their feet when he appears and drown out most of his rambling stump speech with rapturous applause...

"But his isolationist foreign policy makes many Republicans wary.

"It puts off evangelicals in particular, according to Steve Deace, a prominent Christian radio host, for fear that it might undermine Israel’s special place in God’s scheme."

According to The Economist, recent polls show Obama an average of two points ahead of Mitt Romney, eight points ahead Ron Paul and nine points ahead of Newt Gingrich.

Book signing

The columnist 'Lexington' has written about 'Ron Paul's big moment' (in The Economist)

According to Lexington:

Ron Paul, the 76-year-old libertarian from Texas, has "a worldview so wacky and a programme so radical that he was recently discounted as a no-hoper.

"Even if he wins in quirky Iowa, Ron Paul will never be America’s president.

"But .... a substantial number like a man who wants to abolish the Federal Reserve, introduce a new currency to compete with the dollar, eliminate five departments of the federal government within a year, pull out of the United Nations and close all America’s foreign bases, which he likens to 'an empire'...

"During the candidates' debates of 2011, Mr Paul won plaudits for integrity...

"Mr Paul insists on the rule of law and civil liberties and due process for all...

"Mr Paul has no great love for the Jewish state, even though this hurts him with the evangelical voters of Iowa.

"He opposed the Iraq war from the start and wants America to shun expensive foreign entanglements that make the rest of the world resent it...

Ron Paul

"Born in 1935, he remembers the tail-end of the Depression..."

He has "a preoccupation with the money supply and a lifelong conviction that governments must be prevented from debasing the currency.

"Not all of Mr Paul’s positions are unpopular. Like other conservatives, he defends the God-given right to keep and bear arms... He is pro-life, which he believes begins at conception. He champions home-schooling.

"But only he combines a general dislike of the overweening federal government with a particular, obsessive hatred of what he considers the corrupt system of money at its secret heart..."

He "has come to see the operations of the Fed - indeed the entire banking system, with its reliance on paper money no longer backed by gold - as a dangerous confidence trick.

"The Fed has 'ominous powers that Congress barely understands,' he says. 'Trillions of dollars can be created and injected into the economy with no obligation by the Fed to reveal who benefits.'

"Though ending the Fed would take time, this is his panacea: it would end dollar depreciation, remove America’s ability to fund endless wars and stop the growth of government...

"He has served a dozen terms in the House of Representatives, failing to find allies for his radical measures.

"He cannot expect actually to win the nomination, let alone become president.

"His real aim appears to be didactic: he wants the widest possible hearing for his ideas...

"Though the nomination may be out of his reach, he has dedicated supporters and the ability to raise lots of money through small donations.

"That could ... perhaps give him enough delegates to shape August’s nominating convention in Tampa.

"Or he could run as a third-party candidate.

"But that would help Barack Obama...

"It is true that in recent years Mr Paul has stuck to his core principles: sound money, small government, individual liberty and bringing the troops home...

"In the end, Mr Paul’s obsession with the Fed is an anti-government conspiracy theory.

"And in America, anti-government conspiracy theories attract a lot of wingnuts..."

Photo by Jason Bell - Official Website
 
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