Monday, January 05, 2009

What Israel thinks of Catholics and Christians


Bible Belters, take note. Post Vatican II Catholics, take note. This is what Israel thinks of, and does to, your co-religionists in Palestine.

Pull away the veil from over your eyes. We've heard umpteen stories about the persecution of Jews over the past two thousand years. But we hear little, if anything, about the vile, racist and fundamentally pagan ideology and belief system at work behind various Jewish enterprises throughout history - from the Crucifixion, the activities of the Sanhedrin, to Communism, to the state of "Israel".

Above is a picture of a Catholic child from Gaza, 14 year old Christine Turok, lying in a coffin after being killed in Israel's latest fit of Talmudic hatred - one of many innocent children, women and men, Christian and Muslim, slaughtered by the drive to consolidate Eretz Yisrael.

I know that in the United States, from where we attract many readers, there are white, European Christians and Catholics who wholly support Israel in the belief that they are God's "Chosen People" - a theological fallacy which has crept even into the Catholic Church after the Second Vatican Council.

Theology and the Crucifixion aside, let's reason for one second: would "God's Chosen People" perpetrate, or collectively support the perpetration of, such an orgy of genocide and destruction as we are witnessing in Gaza? Would "God's Chosen People" hinder a Catholic Archbishop from celebrating pre-Christmas Masses in Gaza, before murdering members of his congregation from the air with impunity?

Christians across the world need to take a serious look at the history of their faith and realise who exactly has been out to undermine and exploit them for 2,000 years. Not Hamas, not the Al Aqsa Martyrs, and most certainly, not this beautiful young child who lost her life. Do Hamas have the ear (or some might say, the neck) of the world's strongest [sic] superpower? Are Hamas sitting on several hundred nuclear weapons? Do the co-religionists of Hamas and Hezbollah have access to the vast chasms of money which make up the international banking system?

They most certainly don't. When you understand this fact, badly aiming homemade rockets don't seem much of a problem at all. In fact, it dwarfs the Biblical David in his battle against Goliath.

I do not care for the paid-up "Zionist" Christians, who are for the most part "conservative" capitalists who want their share of the filthy lucre, and need a scapegoat - the Arab, usually - from which to generate an atmosphere of eternal threat, under which their profits will be secured. These people are lost, and among them rank idiots like George W. Bush, Tony Blair and, to a certain extent (wait and see), Barack Obama.

Who I do care for is well-meaning Catholics and Christians who have been misled by their peers and even the clergy. Quit your sycophantic ass-kissing to the Zionists. They care about your money, and your mouth, but nothing else. You are to them, as the Zionist Jew Henry Kissinger once described American soldiers, "dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy".

Instead, channel your energy towards helping your co-religionists in Gaza, and their neighbours and friends, be they Christian or Muslim. I call on Catholics everywhere to recite a decade of the Rosary for the repose of the soul of the child pictured above, and to pray another earnestly for the victory of the Palestinian people over these demonic Christ-killers masquerading as the Chosen People of God. [Picture: Uruknet.info]

Sunday, January 04, 2009

The Zionist State must be destroyed

It's as simple as that - the Zionist entity known as Israel must be destroyed. If Germany can be split in two as the spoils of war; if Iraq can be invaded and its president hanged based on trumped-up evidence in kangaroo courts; and if Serbia can be dismembered at the point of a gun, then surely, Israel must be allowed to die.

The latest on Al Jazeera is that the IDF is, "accidentally" of course, killing doctors at hospitals inside Gaza in what appears to be the latest tactic in a campaign of genocide, all in the name of an attempt to destroy Hamas, the elected authorities within Gaza.

This is a rampage of Soviet purge-like proportions, which has received tacit approval from Western governments, and although criticised by word of mouth by our own crowd in Iveagh House, it's time we stopped associating ourselves in any way with this murder-state - diplomatically, culturally, economically.

This video below demonstrates the true horror of what's happening in Gaza right now. Israel has made a point of repeating the "never again" mantra since 1945, and yet we see murder, chaos and genocide carried out in their own ininimitable fashion.

I would appreciate if all bloggers out there, in Ireland and beyond, would post this video as evidence of this barbarity, fuelled by the fervour of a collection of Jewish racists swimming in lucre and straddling a collection of nuclear bombs, primed to ignite the Middle East at a time of their choosing.

Banned by the Judeophiles and censors at YouTube, this video must spread.

To Hell with Israel, and all her collaborator friends!

The following video contains material of a violent, graphic nature. Viewer discretion is advised.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Fianna Fáil moves north...

... with a whimper.


Fianna Fáil has established a unit of the party in south Armagh, it was announced today.

The Fianna Fáil forum in Crossmaglen is the first non-university group launched with links to the party in the North.

Its inaugural meeting this week was addressed by Justice Minister Dermot Ahern, parliamentary party chairman Seamus Kirk and party secretary general Sean Dorgan.
It's a bit pointless when the Ulster Unionists have thrown in their lot with the Tories in London. Who have they left to mop up only the moribund SDLP?

It seems a bit like rats running from a sinking ship, although you'd imagine they'd have gone south, where it's warmer...

Source

The shape of things to come

My recent post on the riots in Greek has prompted a lot of reaction around the world. Checking my SiteMeter, I've noticed that the post is being discussed on some prominent news and analysis sites, but the one thing that caught my eye was the number of people using Google to search for the real reasons behind the riots.

Now, these people are being fed two main "facts", aka reasons acceptable to the mainstream media. The first is that the source of the riots was the shooting of a fifteen year old boy, while second is that the radical left is largely responsible for the trouble on the streets.

While the second statement is largely true, looking at how people are Googling for the latest news about the riots suggests that people are not buying the official media line, i.e. that the tragic death of a Greek teenager is the one and only reason for the riots.

People are Googling things like, "What are the reasons for the Greek riots", "What's behind the Greek riots", or "What's the real reason for the riots in Athens". Their queries are landing them on this, and I'm sure other blogs, which are questioning the media and the Greek government's official line on the crisis.

Writing off "Daddy's boys"/anarchist youths as the source of the violence is a convenient way for Europe's political establishment to debunk any notion that this may be about more than anger over trigger happy police. The riots in Greece could be the shape of things to come, and may become the norm in every country, once the scale of our economic crisis becomes clear, not to mention the breadth of the global banking scandal, and - something very relevant to Greece last weekend - the power of the immigration machine.

As culpable pawns of the now doomed high finance and globalisation racketeers, Europe's political elites fear that people may get angry, lashing out to regain their countries from the claws of usurers and speculators. They will naturally seek to downplay any of the coming uprisings as the work of the controlled loons on the left, or as something temporary which will pass with another election.

It may be anarchists. It may not last (for that reason), and it may not be a popular revolt. Who cares? The fact that banks are burning, and politicians are squirming, will be enough right now. It certainly makes me happy to turn on the rot box (aka the television) once in a while.

This is why many of our visitors have reached this blog through Google, searching for the "real reasons" behind what's happening in Greece. It's almost as if they're thirsting for proof that something is moving in Europe, and that the people are rising up to rescue their respective nations from the bureaucrats and the gangster capitalists.

Addendum: Hat-tip to Future Shock for this one, a CCTV video which cites a long-term dissatisfaction with Greek's political élite over corruption, poverty and rising unemployment as reasons for the riots.



Then there's this video, which shows the extent of protest which the Greek authorities have to deal with. Can all of these people really be lunatic anarchists?

Monday, December 08, 2008

What are the Greek riots really about?

We've been told that the ongoing riots in Greece were prosecuted by anarchists as a reaction to the Greek police's shooting of a 15 year old boy on Saturday.

But is this really what lies behind such an outpouring of civil unrest? Is the official reason for the rioting just a cover to paper over some real problems facing the Greek government? Take a look at the common thread in all of these reports:

Associated Press: Burning barricades stretched across streets in the capital Athens. And as night fell, gangs again torched stores and smashed bank branches in the city center, and clashes broke out in the streets near Parliament.... Violence often breaks out between riot police and anarchists during demonstrations in Greece. Anarchist groups are also blamed for late-night firebombings of targets such as banks and diplomatic vehicles.

Xinhua: Fires were burnt in the center of Athens and hundreds of people were wandering through the streets, some attacking banks, businesses and vehicles.

Reuters: Protesters angry at the boy's shooting late on Saturday clashed with police and rampaged through Athens, destroying banks, shops and torching cars. There was no official estimate of the damage, expected to come to millions of euros.

Torching banks? Clashes near Parliament? Attacking diplomatic vehicles? Yesterday, I heard that ten banks had been attacked, and it seems strange that all of this is happening solely over last Saturday's shooting. Indeed, it is a perfect pretext for the Greek authorities and the media - not to mention their counterparts over here - who fear that their cosy relationship with the international clique of banking criminals may result in them hanging from shiny lamp-posts from Washington to Dublin to Sydney.

The funny thing is that the recent headlines in Greece are similar to those in Ireland:

All of Greece's major Greek lenders will participate in the government's bank support plan aimed at ensuring the continued flow of credit to the economy, the country's finance minister said on Thursday.

"It was confirmed that all large banks will participate in the plan fully," Finance Minister George Alogoskoufis told reporters after a meeting with major bank CEOs and the central banker.

Can they pick up City Channel in Gdansk?

Compare this:

The Broadcasting Commission of Ireland has signed a contract with City Channel Easter Europe for a new digital TV channel targeting Eastern European viewers in the Dublin area.

City 7, which is to be available on the UPC digital platform starting in the New Year, plans to offer niche programming as a major part of its output.

The station is to transmit programmes in areas such as health, music, motoring and lifestyle.

With this:

Up to 1,300 Polish immigrants are leaving Ireland for good every week, according to a survey published today by the recruitment agency CPL.

The company says around one-third of the estimated 200,000 Polish people in Ireland plan to return to their homeland over the coming year and another 13% over the next two years.

It says many are leaving due to the recession and are being lured home by the improving Polish economy.

The Irish Bulletin is now taking bets on how long the entire City Channel operation will last, seeing as they've poured a considerable amount of resources into what is a disappearing market.

And what's with this word lured? This is the second time I've seen the media use this sinister sounding term to describe the natural return of eastern European migrants to their home countries, albeit generated by supposed prosperity in Poland and the Czech Republic. Why don't they talk about how they were lured to Ireland in the first place, by FÁS offices in Warsaw, or fawned over at the arrivals terminal by overpaid multi-cult groups?

Addendum: On the same subject, the quote of the week has to go to the London Times' Gabrielle Monaghan:

THEY helped to transform Ireland into a booming multicultural society, but now thousands of Polish workers are returning home, lured back by European Union-funded infrastructure projects and preparations for the 2012 European football championships.

What "booming multicultural society" is that? We were told that immigration was indispensible for maintaining the boom times, and yet we are sinking into depression. And if that "booming society" were multi-cultural, why are the Poles going home, while the rest retreat into their Government-sponsored ghettos in Dublin?

Perhaps Ms. Monaghan was playing a word game with us. "Booming" is an apt word, if you appreciate how things are exploding into mayhem.

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Ireland's next step? Ladies and gents, watch and learn

Icelanders welcome December by storming the Central Bank building in Reykjavik, an event which, not surprisingly, received very little (if any) media coverage in Ireland and the rest of Europe. Iceland is somewhat of a "God's waiting room" when it comes to nationalist political mobilisation, so hopefully these events will lead to something substantial in this small Nordic state, now that its party system appears to be dying in the wake of its main sponsor: the financial system.

Icelanders were gathering on the 90th anniversary of national autonomy to call for the ousting of bankers and politicians they blame for the country's economic collapse. Weekly demonstrations against the government draw several thousand people in a country of 320,000. The global credit crunch brought down the tiny country's three main banks in October. Since then businesses have failed, unemployment has risen, prices have shot up and the value of the country's currency, the krona, has plummeted.

Barnes Review: Irish special

The November/December 2008 edition of The Barnes Review is a unique Christmas present if you're Irish.

Headlining this edition of the nationalist journal is Michael Collins Piper's study of British plans for ethnic cleansing in Ulster, as recently as 1972; Arthur Kemp's appraisal of the Irish fight for freedom; and John Tiffany's treatment of Robert Emmet (including his "gallows speech").

The latter contributor also features a study of Dick Dowling, the Irish-born Confederate American Civil War hero who pulled off one of the most amazing defeats of the Yankee invaders during the entire war.

The latest issue of The Barnes Review may be ordered at the
publication's website, so make sure you get your hands on a copy as a worthwhile addition to your bookshelf.

Russian analyst: U.S. will collapse with secession, civil war in 2009


This piece of wisdom is brought to you by the people who codded the oligarchs, brought the U.S./British machine screeching to a halt in Ukraine and Georgia, and most importantly, those who would discredit the idea of a unipolar world...

Monday, December 01, 2008

So is Minister Hanafin anti-immigration?

And if so, how many others are?

I almost missed this one. An absolute gem of a quote from Kevin Myers in a recent edition of the Sunday Independent, in response to Social and Family Affairs Minister Mary Hanafin's (left) use of the "r-word" in a public debate about immigration. Pay attention to the last two paragraphs:

But, inough of INOU and back to Mary! Listen, my girl, you've a lot on your plate at the moment, and I don't want to heap it any higher, so listen very closely.

During that same launch, you said that Leo Varadkar's remarks about giving foreigners the air fare home, since those words could not apply to EU nationals, must therefore only apply to Africans, and were therefore racist. (Poor Leo was so savaged by such liberal attack-dog idiocy, that, understandably, he says he no longer wants to be "embroiled" in any further discussion on immigration).

Me, I'm used to the mob. So, allow me step up to the crease here, to make just four points. The first, Mary, is that the ministerial weight upon your shoulders is clearly addling your wits, because we have immigrants from all over the world, not just Africa and the EU. The second is that we are already giving foreign nationals free passage home: also called deportation. Thirdly, please, do not ever, ever use the r-word when the subject of immigration comes up. It is a cowardly, cheap sixth-form debating-society stunt.

It doesn't make you look good, merely a smug, simpering bully. The fourth and final point is this.

You and I had an off-the-record conversation about immigration before we appeared on Sam Smyth's radio show on Today FM recently. OTR means my lips are sealed. But the OTR convention simply does not hold if a politician takes a diametrically opposite stand in public to one that is expressed in a private conversation with a journalist.

On this occasion, and on the grounds that your presence in the studio meant you weren't able to start Sunday as enjoyably as you might otherwise have done, I'll give you the benefit of my silence: but never again. Or I'll come back to haunt you.

What say you to that, Minister Hanafin?

What exactly did you say to Myers about immigration which was so diametrically opposed to your public outburst of political correctness? And how many of your colleagues are paying lip service to the PC brigade to satisfy certain agendas, while having completely different views about immigration in private?

And more to the point, when will you and they put the good of the country and the Irish people ahead of your job security, or winning popularity contests in affluent Dublin 4?

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Picture of the week


Hat-tip to Joe for this one (who, I hear, has been shut down by YouTube once again). Last week, around 500 Czech men girded their loins for a clash with a community of Romany gypsies. Apparently, these Czechs have had it up to their necks with the Roma, who are notorious for their involvement in varying levels of criminality in eastern Europe for decades.

Despite the fact they're comfortably ensconced in places like the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania and Moldova, the Roma always manage to end up begging on the streets of towns and villages in Ireland. And with their declarations of "poverty" in mind, how they manage to make the lengthy and expensive trip to Ireland is beyond me.

Anyway, while this has inevitably been portrayed as a racist stampede by the European media (albeit one, predictably, stopped by the Czech police), I see it as the inescapable outcome of Establishment-driven state racism against an ethnic majority, laid bare in global recessionary times.

The world is a wonderfully diverse place made up of different ethnic groups, some of whom, for one reason or another, piss each other off. Such is the relationship between the Irish and the English; the Poles and the Russians, Iraqis and Iranians, and in this case, the Czechs and the Roma - relationships which won't improve without a miracle, and especially not at the behest of the social laboratories in Brussels.

Employers - departure of immigrants 'catastrophic'

That's the verdict of Danny McCoy, director of policy with IBEC, as quoted in an article by Brendan Keenan in today's Sunday Independent.

If ever anyone wanted an indication as to why IBEC spent so much money convincing working people like you and I to vote yes to Lisbon, it's this - to maintain the supply of cheap labour, so they can undercut, exploit and make the Irish worker unemployable in his own country, for the sake of their own profits.

Fógra: On a similar topic, congratulations to the Limerick Comhairle Ceantar of Republican Sinn Féin, and the party's Smith O’Brien/Colbert Cumann in West Limerick and the Thomas Allen Cumann in Meath, who put forward some very brave and telling motions at the recent RSF Ard Fheis:

55. That this Ard-Fheis condemns the EU-sponsored policy which is leading to the destruction of the Irish family farm - Smith O’Brien/Colbert Cumann, West Limerick

69. That Sinn Féin Poblachtach objects to the payment of children’s allowance to children resident outside Ireland - Thomas Allen Cumann, Meath

70. In this period of economic uncertainty RSF should insist on the employment of native workers in preference to migrant workers to insure that we do not return to the mass emigration of our Irish youth - Limerick Comhairle Ceantair

71. That this Ard-Fheis condemns all Irish employers who discriminate against Irish workers in the present economic crisis - Smith O’Brien/Colbert Cumann, West Limerick

72. That this Ard-Fheis supports Irish business and industry in preference to multinationals - Smith O’Brien/Colbert Cumann, West Limerick

Also tabled were two motions from the Liam Mellowes Cumann in Dublin, a pleasant surprise:

50. That this Ard-Fheis calls on young people not to emigrate, but to stay at home and campaign and work for a better Ireland. A campaign to be run for this purpose - Liam Mellows Cumann, Baile Átha Cliath

53. That the Republican movement show solidarity with those groups setting up buy Irish and buy local produce campaigns, also campaigns to show how overdependence on imported products has been bad for the economy - Liam Mellows Cumann, Baile Átha Cliath

Remarkably, all of these motions were carried by the membership. A sign of the times for RSF, and a positive move forward for Republicanism? God willing.