Tony Benn MP commented after the passage of the
Third Reading that
‘it
was a coup d’etat by a political class who did not believe in
popular sovereignty’.
Actually, it was worse than that .\It was
the start of a coup d’etat by installments’ by a
corrupted political class initially led by two operatives-Edward
Heath and Geoffrey
Rippon,
both
of whom were recruited
German
agents
(like
Lenin, Rasputin and Lavrentii Beria
in the Soviet context, before them) who signed the
UK
Accession Treaty in exchange for corrupt payments.
Both lied to the British people; and the authors specifically
identified one of
Geoffrey
Rippon’s worst lies,
associated with the alienation of Britain’s fishing waters, the
richest in the world. Here it is worth citing the whole of the
authors’ relevant paragraph:
‘Desperate to hide how much had been
conceded[over
fisheries],
Geoffrey Rippon…said:
‘I
must emphasise that these are not just transitional arrangements
[in the relevant context, allegedly beneficial to the British
fisheries-Ed.]
which
automatically lapse at the end of a fixed period’. This claim
drew fierce challenge from Dennis Healey and Peter Shore [later
Lord Shore –further details on EDP bulletin board]
both of whom suspected he was lying.
What
neither had yet seen was the wording of the UK Accession Treaty,
which MP’s would not be allowed to examine until
after
the treaty was signed a month later. Only when this became
available [and
Heath and Rippon had accepted their bribes-Ed.]
was it clear that Rippon had told a blatant lie’. [Booker and
North, op.cit., page 155]
International
Currency Review
October
10-2005
Notes
and References:
‘Obituary
of Sir Edward Heath, the Prime Minister who took Britain into
the EEC and presided over constant turmoil at home’,
1.
The Daily Telegraph,
18th July 2005.
This was probably the rudest obituary of a
prominent UK statesman ever to have appeared in print. Even so,
it omitted any reference to Heath’s recruitment by German (Nazi)
intelligence. However , there are many [coded] references in
this obituary,
not least
the three telling words:
‘He never married’, which observers accurately
interpret as meaning that he was homosexual, and therefore an
obvious recruitment/blackmail target.
2. The Daily Telegraph,
24th July 2005,
Christopher Booker (Column),
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