Showing posts with label Prince Harry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prince Harry. Show all posts

Monday, 23 June 2014

PRINCE HARRY ORANGE PROVO MURPHY MP SWASTIKA ID PHOTO-OP







‘The Guineapigs’ by John McGuffin (1974, 1981)


book cover 1st editionbook cover 2nd edition

The Guineapigs

by John McGuffin (1974, 1981)
Originally published in London by Penguin Books, 1974. Paperback, 192 pp. Out of Print.
2nd edition Minuteman Press, San Francisco, 1981. Paperback, 75 pp. Out of Print.

The first edition by Penguin sold 20,000 copies and was banned after one week by the British government and Reginald Maudling. The 2nd edition in 1981 updated the fate of the victims and named the torturers, but omitted two chapters from the original edition.
A complete compilation of both editions is now here available for the first time. Feel free to download these pages, but if you decide to do so we would like to ask you to make a donation to Irish Resistance Books, in order that IRB can publish further works. (Note: We are not in receipt of any grants or Art Council funding.)
You may not edit, adapt, or redistribute changed versions of this for other than your personal use without the express written permission. Redistribution for commercial purposes is not permitted.


From the back cover (2nd edition):

The Guineapigs in the title were fourteen Irish political prisoners on whom the British Army experimented with sensory deprivation torture in 1971. These 'techniques' are now outlawed, following Britain's conviction at the International Court of Human Rights at Strasbourg, but have been exported and used by Britain's allies throughout the world. This book first appeared in 1974, published by Penguin Books in London. It sold out on its first print run and was then abruptly taken off the market following pressure from the British Government.
In Ireland in 1971 there was deliberate and careful use of modern torture techniques, not merely to get information but to perfect the system of Sensory Deprivation for use against civilians. The author, an ex-internee himself spent two years researching the book following his release from Crumlin Road jail where he had been held without charge or trial. In this new edition he is at last able to name the torturers and those responsible for this sordid episode in British Imperial history. No member of the British Army or the Royal Ulster Constabulary has ever been convicted of torture or brutality to prisoners, although the Government has been forced to pay out over $5 million in compensation to torture victims.
This re-issue of 'The Guineapigs' is dedicated to the blanket men in Long Kesh concentration camp and the women political prisoners in Armagh jail. 'Na reabhloidi Abu.'


Acknowledgements

This book could not have been written without the active help and advice of many people. Firstly I must thank the 'guineapigs' themselves, and in particular Jim Auld, Pat Shivers and Paddy Joe Mc Clean. A large debt is also owed to the Association for Legal Justice, Amnesty International (and in particular Richard Reoch) and the British Society for Social Responsibility in the Sciences. For help on the medical and psychological aspects of SD I am particularly indebted to Dr. Tim Shallice of the National Hospital and Dr. Pearse O'Malley of Belfast.
As for the rest, many have preferred that they remain anonymous, but special thanks must go to Judy Smith, Frank Doherty, Johnathan Rosenhead, Kevin Boyle, Hurst Hannum, Father Denis Faul, Margaret Gatt, Ian Franklin, Eamonn Kerr, Billy Close, Joe Quigley, Noelle, Hugh, Judith and, of course, R. W. Grimshaw. I am grateful to Gil Boehringer for permission to use part of his work for Appendix I.
Finally, I must thank Marie for her typing and Fra for putting up with it all.
JOHN McGUFFIN
Belfast, February 1974



Preface

Torture and brutality – or 'ill-treatment' as Sir Edmund Compton would prefer to call it – are as old as war itself. Mankind has expended centuries of research in trying to devise newer and more bestial ways of extracting information from reluctant witnesses or causing lingering and painful deaths.
The purpose of this book, however, is not to deal with torture in general. It is specific. It deals with the treatment meted out to fourteen Irishmen by the British 'security forces' in the period from August to October 1971. It is not written to show that this treatment was more barbaric than that practised by the British Army upon hundreds of other Irish internees/ detainees/ political prisoners since 1969 nor upon the victims of the ten colonial actions undertaken by the British since the Second World War. Instead it is an attempt to show how these men were selected as unwilling and unwitting subjects upon whom Army psychiatrists, psychologists and 'counter-terrorist strategists' could experiment in that particular field known as 'SD' – Sensory Deprivation. That the experiment was a dismal failure, both from a military and a propaganda point of view, mattered little to the men in the War Office. Worse still, the fact that several of the men used were literally driven out of their minds and still today, over two years later, suffer from severe mental traumas which they will carry with them to the grave has evoked not a shred of remorse, admission of guilt, or apology, let alone an attempt at recompense – though how do you give a man back his mental health? – from the 'mother of parliaments'. This book is an attempt to tell these men's story, the story of the 'guineapigs'.


Table of Contents

Chapter   1: 'Ill-Treatment' – A Brief History
Chapter   2: What is Sensory Deprivation?
Chapter   3: The Swoop – The First Forty-eight Hours
Chapter   4: The Experiment
Chapter   5: The Compton Report
Chapter   6: Replay
Chapter   7: Parker: Cover-up MK2
Chapter   8: The After-effects
Chapter   9: Down on the Killing Floor
Chapter 10: Postscript – Torture in the World Today
Tailpiece
Afterword
Appendix  I: Memorandum of Modest Proposals for Preventing the
Spread of Torture and Ill-treatment in Northern Ireland
Appendix II: Proposed Draft for a UN Resolution on a
Convention on Torture and the Treatment of Prisoners



Tuesday, 20 May 2014

PRINCE HARRY ROYAL SINN FEIN AND SHOT BUFFALO







WINDSOR ‘WILDLIFE MASSACRE’: 7,000 ANIMALS KILLED IN JUST ONE YEAR ON THE ROYAL ESTATE 



Figures show that the Crown Estate’s ‘vermin control’ methods wiped out 1,161 rabbits, 118 parakeets, 28 hares and nine moles
An animal welfare campaign group has slammed a ‘Windsor wildlife massacre’ with figures showing more than 7,000 animals and vermin killed on the royal estate in just a single year.
The staggering total includes 1,161 rabbits, 772 jackdaws, 325 squirrels, 191 crows, 159 foxes, 118 parakeets, 56 roe deer, 28 hares, nine moles, three mink and no rats.
Animal Aid uncovered the figures through a Freedom of Information request, called it “absolute carnage” and called the activities “morally repugnant” while certain people in British Occupied Ireland said it wasn't enough,
The royals are under fire for their hunting exploits,  despite public promises to do all they can to protect animals threatened with extinction such as general vermin.

Prince Harry is pictured here with Colm Murphy MP of Royal Sinn Fein with the body a shot docile, harmless, water buffalo and Prince William also appeared at a United for Wildlife Symposium, days after spending a weekend  protecting rats, while shooting wild boar in South Armagh. Prince Philip, the the Duke of Edinburgh, is the official ranger of Windsor Great Park and the Windsor Estate along with British Occupied Ireland is presntly owned and managed by the British Crown.
The Windsor Estate has responded to the figures by claiming that most of the “vermin control” was done at the request of tenant farmers but that they were protected species in Ireland. It said deer and squirrels were destroyed at the request of the foresters horticulturalists as well as Natural England to protect young trees.
Prince-William-hunting-in-holidayWhile foxes were shot to protect game birds reared to be shot for sport, wild deer were “managed” to protect trees and formal gardens, and small mammals such as moles were “only controlled in our formal garden areas or on sports grounds”.
But Animal Aid hit back at the claims, saying the “mass destruction of corvids and pigeons was unscrupulous and unnecessary”. It said that the killing of 28 brown hares “will upset many people who believe that hares are protected”. Although plans are in place to reverse their declining number, they are still legally hunted and shot.
The charity said that there are non-lethal solutions available to problems cited by the Windsor Estate and criticised the “culture of killing in the countryside” where animals not serving a useful purpose or posing a risk, however small, are “snuffed out”. Animal Aid’s Kate Fowler said: “The annual massacre at Windsor is without justification.
“Across the UK, wild animals are under great threat from industry, road and housing development, climate change, habitat loss, pesticide use and other man-made problems. “Rather than looking for humane solutions, one of the richest estates in the country – managed by individuals who are connected to blood sports – would rather reach for guns, traps and poisons and obliterate animals who get in its way. “What about compassion? What about sharing the natural world with the other species who live here, even if that means taking a minor dent in its multimillion pound profits?”.Here’s the full breakdown of the animals killed on the Windsor Estate last year
Pigeons 3,901
Rabbits 1,161
Jackdaws 772
Squirrels 325
Crows 191
Foxes 159
Rats 145 
Protected Rats 0
Muntjac 127
Parakeets 118
Magpies 70
Roe 56
Rooks 55
Hares 28
Jays 9
Moles 9
Mink 3
North West Hunt Saboteurs Association 
Direct Action 

Saturday, 17 May 2014

PRINCE HARRY DROPS IN TO HELP ROYAL SINN FEIN SOUTH ARMAGH




Conor Murphy MP of Royal Sinn Fein had a surprise Royal visitor at his farm in Mullaghbawn, South Armagh early this morning, when Prince Harry dropped in with His own helicopter and dropped off a special canvasser to help deal with problematic constituents who are supporters of Willie Frazier. The Canvasser is blue blooded and will deal with all Willie's issues. The Prince then left abruptly, promising Royal Sinn Fein all the help they need.

Apparently Royal Sinn Fein are currently under some pressure in the elections with RUMBLINGS IN THE DOME ! (belfast city hall) re elections , with all of the loyalist parties including Royal Sinn Fein and the other established parties in the dome panicking in case Padraic Mac Coitir and Maire Og Drumm get elected. The reason why is because if elected Maire and Padraic will expose them for the really cozy relationship they have !The Cry in Belfast is Votail Maire agus Padraic #1 , Eirigi and Independents are said to be making big inroads into Murphy's vote particularly in Newry. The vote was in\herited from the hard work of the late anti Agreement MLA Jim McAlister. 


Murphy and Royal Sinn Fein are expected to take their seat in London, and the Queen;s Shilling after the next General  Election. Murphy is also tipped to emulate Gerry Fitt and travel all the way from Camlough to join the House of Lords , when knighted by his Queen

Arise Murphy !

Friday, 25 January 2013

WHO'S YER DADDY, Harry ?

If you didn't know who they were, which of the two would you say was Harrys'daddy?..bearing in mind Diana was "messing' about with the Major around the time Harry was conceived. You wonder where Harrys' ginger hair came from !!

But then this is complicated and it may be that the milk man is Harry's grand father. I am not sure Lizzie will be happy to hear that.











Prince's Harry: A Gun-horny Adolescent 
By Joe Glenton

January 24, 2013 "
The Independent" - - Winter has come and it seems that over the last few days leading figures in the War on Terror, unwilling to wait for Season Three of Game of Thrones to hit screens, have been re-watching past episodes to the point that it’s coloured their rhetoric.
Between Cameron’s assurances of a war against sundry evil-doers that will last ‘decades’ and French Defence Minister Le Driand’s frank (and frankly crackpot) calls for a ‘total reconquest’ of Mali, the only question is: how long until we replace drones with halberds?

Martial cant

The latest bit of martial cant has come from one dashing Captain Harry Wales; fighter, lover, occasional exhibitionist and warrior-prince of the House of Saxe-Gotha-Coburg. Having had his first tour of Afghanistan cut short, he has just finished his latest stint, where he has been fighting astride - or rather, in – Apache helicopters: the British Army’s multi-million pound engines of destruction.
The poor lad’s been having a hard time, even Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar - a man whose admirable turn of phrase just can’t make up for his human rights records - called him a ‘shameless, drunken jackal’ recently. In all honesty, and I include a younger version of myself in this, that’s not a completely inaccurate description for young soldiers out on the town: hit the bars and clubs of Colchester on a Saturday night if you doubt me.
That said, we didn’t generally take our disco-dancing shoes on operational tour and Harry doesn’t kill Afghans while intoxicated as Hekmatyar suggested – on this evidence he does it while stone-cold sober. Apaches are too precious and expensive to be flown by drunkards, regardless of their pedigree. In fact, given that we aren’t doing at all well in Afghanistan, even with our potent technology, Apache may be even more of a burden on taxpayers then Harry himself. 
While a number of Household Cavalry veterans have informed me that young Mr Wales was okay ‘as officers go’, which is a pretty glowing assessment in soldier-speak, his latest public comments do make him sound for the all the world like a gun-horny adolescent playing a pricey version of Call of Duty.
Don’t get me wrong, squaddie culture and humour is close to the bone because the tasks soldiers are given are the grimmest imaginable and are often carried out, as in Afghanistan, without a mandate and with little public support. Brutal humour is often the only kind of armour a soldier can get hold of easily, I recall an expression brought back from Bosnia by older members of my own unit that seems to capture it: If you don’t laugh you’ll only cry.
Captain Wales does come across as fairly casual when he talks about taking lives to save lives, stopping people doing ‘bad stuff’ and ‘taking people out of the game’. In his defence though, and given his much publicised record as the royal social hand grenade, he may be politically naïve, or it could be that he’s a young man who’s been strapped into an attack helicopter for 20 weeks. One of the best arguments against war is the effects it has on the people fighting – though clearly Harry is, unlike many of the infantrymen he’s supporting, a soldier by way of choice not economics, I would not wish sleepless nights on anyone, even as a republican.

Just a job

This trivialisation of violence is not new thing; it is part of the process of dehumanisation which is central to modern warfare. It seems to have taken on new forms in the post 9/11 campaigns. During his short-lived first tour as a tactical air controller – calling in air strikes – Wales and his colleagues watched the bombs hit from their bunker on a live-feed monitor nicknamed ‘Kill TV’. This notion of a kind of professional distance from the killing you are involved in is also expressed in the US military term for an Afghan, Pakistani or whoever killed by a drone strike; a kill is referred to humorously – and officially - as a ‘bugsplat’ after a children’s computer game.
In all honesty, Harry’s comments are hardly revelatory and are tame compared to those I’ve heard from soldiers away from the media. To operate against and kill other humans, it helps to view this process as simply a job, however intellectually dishonest that is. Military training is sophisticated social engineering and wartime experience has the effect of ingraining a certain type of callousness. While war is a toxic institution, for some of those who conduct it, particularly privileged young princes who find themselves in the vanguard of US power, it can appear to be a latter-day boy’s own adventure.
The author refused to serve a second tour in Afghanistan on legal and moral grounds, later spending five months in military prison. His book, 'Soldier Box', is published by Verso in May.