Nordwave Great Britian

Jan 31

HUMBERSIDE Police are calling on protesters at LOR to remain “peaceful.”

It is believed at least 60 police officers – including some mounted on horses – are currently monitoring the situation at the North Killingholme site.

Superintendent operations for North Lincolnshire, Steve Graham, said: “Humberside Police are in attendance at the Lindsay Oil Refinery, North Killinghome, in response to a peaceful protest.

“At this moment in time there are about 800 peaceful protesters at the site.

“Police resources will be in attendance at the site as well as the surrounding area throughout the day.

“I would reassure our local communities that our main aim is to ensure the safety of both local businesses and public as well as those taking part in the protest in order to minimise disruption and to keep traffic flowing.

“I would appeal to those involved in this demonstration to remain peaceful. Whilst respecting the right of demonstration we will, however, consider any offences that may occur.”

http://www.thisisgrimsby.co.uk/news/REFINERY-WALKOUT-Police-mounted-horses-monitoring-protest/article-654499-detail/article.html

Jan 31

A man who admitted raping a woman and attacking two others in Belfast within the space of 48 hours, has been sentenced to 18 years in prison.

Ryan Subryan, who is 25 and originally from Guyana, carried out the attacks in June 2007.

Mr Justice Hart said the evidence suggested Subryan may remain a serious danger to women in the future.

However, he said as there were no previous sexual offences on his record, he was not imposing a life sentence.

The judge told Belfast Crown Court he had made this decision “not without some hesitation”.

He said as the defendant was in this country unlawfully when the offences were committed he was recommending that he be deported upon his release from custody.

The trial was told that in the first incident, Subryan forced a Polish woman into his car and held her against her will as she walked home from a city centre bar towards the Lisburn Road on 28 June.

Subryan told her to get in his car as it was unsafe walking on her own before bundling her into the passenger seat.

Threats

Whilst in the vehicle he produced a gun and held it to her head, telling her he was going to kill her.

She was held in the car against her will for about 20 minutes but she managed to escape and ran into a nearby alleyway where she rang her boyfriend.

The following evening, on 29 June, the second of Subryan’s victims was in the Skye nightclub with her friend when she met the accused.

At some point, she realised she had lost her phone and Subryan offered to help her look for it. He rang the number then told the woman a “bogus story” about someone at another nightclub having her mobile.

Subryan offered to drive her to the other venue to retrieve the phone, but he instead drove to the docklands where he indecently assaulted the woman and tried to have sex with her in the early hours of 30 June.

A Crown prosecutor said that Subryan “threatened that if she didn’t have sex, he would put a gun to her head and shoot her”.

‘Distressed’

She got out of the car in a “distressed state” and the alarm was raised when she met a couple coming from the Odyssey Arena, one of whom heard her say “he tried to rape me”.

About 30 minutes later, a woman was walking home from a birthday party when a black man approached her in the Albert Bridge area and told her she was beautiful.

She was subsequently knocked out on the street and when she came round, she realised she had been raped.

Subryan was linked to the rape by DNA evidence.

When the father-of-two was arrested he initially denied all the charges put to him but later pleaded guilty to two counts of threats to kill, kidnapping, assault with intent to rape, indecent assault, rape and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/7861418.stm

Jan 31
Hamas should be part of the Middle East peace process, Tony Blair, envoy to the region of the international “quartet” of powers, said in comments published on Friday. 
 
 “I do think it is important that we find a way of bringing Hamas into this process, but it can only be done if Hamas are prepared to do it on the right terms,” Blair said in an interview with the Times, published on its website.

 

“If you do this in the wrong way it can destabilise the very people in Palestine who have been working all through for the moderate cause.”

 

In Gaza, Hamas official Mushir al-Masri said Blair’s comments were proof that the West was acknowledging that Hamas could not be dismissed, although he added that the envoy’s demands were unacceptable to the Islamist group.

 

“Blair’s statement … repeated the same obstacles set by the West: to reject the recognition of Palestinian democracy, to impose the siege, to provide cover for the Zionist enemy’s crimes against our people and to refuse to deal with the legitimate government and parliament,” Masri said.

 

He added that Hamas was a strong and popular political entity and that Blair’s repeat of “the same old ideas” would solve nothing.

 

Hamas won a 2006 election but Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas sacked its government led by Ismail Haniyeh after a few months because it refused to honour agreements signed by the previous government, recognise Israel and renounce violence.

 

Hamas wrested control of the Gaza Strip from Abbas’s Fatah faction in 2007 which largely holds sway in the West Bank.

With a shaky ceasefire in place after the war in Gaza, efforts are under way to restart negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. 

http://uk.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUKTRE50U1L420090131?pageNumber=2&virtualBrandChannel=0

Jan 31

January 30th is 76th anniversary of the Birth National Socialist Germany and marks the beginning of 12 years of the Glorious Third Reich.

On January 30, 1933 our Founder Adolf Hitler was appointed chancellor while much of the legislative body, the Reichstag, was made up of elected National Socialists.

Germany, like the rest of the world at that time, was suffering terribly due to the world economic Depression as well as the unjust burden of the Treaty of Versailles.

The Communists were a strong political force backed by the Soviet Union. Before the Nazis were on the scene it looked like Germany would fall to Communism. Thank God for Adolf Hitler and the Nazis!

They saved Germany from Communist terror while at the same time putting the capitalists in line. It wasn’t long until National Socialist Germany was out of the Depression and enjoying a thriving economy while the rest of the world continued to suffer under Judeo-capitalism and Judeo-Communism!

 Instead of lines of unemployed workers, National Socialist Germany actually had a shortage of workers!  In addition workers had the more rights in National Socialist such as the first to have paid holiday and Overtime paid at a premium rate.

Nordwave, following the same principles as National Socialist Germany used, will bring about the same positive results wherever it gains the power to do so.

As Adolf Hitler said, National Socialist principles will never change but the tactics used to gain power will. In Germany in the 1920s and 1930s it was possible to win power through elections. In Britain today that is virtually impossible for any pro-White organization.

However, with the current economic Depression we’re just now entering into, the life span of the Jewish Occupied Government is getting nearer and nearer to collapse.

Jan 31

http://link.brightcove.com/services/link/bcpid4267205001/bctid9049140001

IDF Destroys Gaza Zoo & Slaughters  it’s Animals

Jan 31

 

TEHRAN (Reuters) – Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad launched a new verbal attack on Israel on Tuesday in a message to a Tehran university conference called “Holocaust, the West’s sacred lie,” Iranian media reported.

 

Ahmadinejad caused outrage in the West and Israel for saying in 2005 the state of Israel should be wiped off the map and for a Tehran conference in 2006 that sought to cast doubt on the Holocaust, in which 6 million Jews were killed by the Nazis.

 

The Islamic Republic does not recognise Israel’s right to exist and refers to it as the “Zionist regime”. It has condemned the Jewish state’s recent attacks in Gaza, which Ahmadinejad has described as “genocide”.

 

At Tuesday’s conference he said in a message read out by the government spokesman that “the illegitimate Zionist regime is one of the consequences of the Holocaust,” state broadcaster IRIB reported on its website.

 

“Breaking the lock on the Holocaust box and opening it is tantamount to cutting the Zionist regime’s life jugular and the bulk of the (Zionist) philosophy would collapse,” said his message to the conference at Sharif Technical University.

 

Iranian media did not give details on who organised the conference or who attended it.

 

Ahmadinejad, who often rails against Israel and the West, said the subject of the Holocaust had been used to expand the international influence of the United States and Britain after World War Two, IRIB reported.

 

He said “power-seeking networks introduced themselves as defenders of a number of victims and issued an order that the survivors … must receive blood money, part of which was the establishment of the Zionist regime on Palestinian territory.”

 

Last September, Israeli President Shimon Peres called Ahmadinejad a danger and a disgrace at the United Nations, after the Iranian president blamed “Zionist murderers” for everything from the Wall Street crisis to Russia’s invasion of Georgia.

http://in.reuters.com/article/email/idINIndia-37688220090127?pageNumber=1&virtualBrandChannel=0

Jan 28

Thousands of people have taken part in events to mark the 250th anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns, Scotland’s national bard.

The celebrations were led by First Minister Alex Salmond.

It also marked the launch of a year-long programme of events which the Scottish Government hopes will raise the country’s profile.

A procession took place in Dumfries and there were further events which took place in Alloway, Burns’ birthplace.

Sunday’s events began with Mr Salmond attending a church service in Alloway, while Culture Minister Linda Fabiani and the Duke of Buccleuch took part in another commemorative event in Dumfries.

Mr Salmond later attended a wreath-laying ceremony at a statue of Burns in Ayr and then went on to the Dumfries lantern procession attended by thousands.

The 250th anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns has been celebrated on a global scale and as it should be – with dancing, singing, laughter and of course the odd dram

Alex Salmond
First Minister

The first minister quoted from the poem on BBC Scotland’s The Politics Show – a quotation which ended with the phrase “the man of independent mind looks and laughs at all that”.

A number of events and exhibitions took place at various locations in Ayrshire, Dumfries and Galloway, Glasgow and Edinburgh.

The day also marked the start of the “Homecoming 2009″ celebrations which will see more than 300 events being held across the Scotland until St Andrew’s Day at the end of November.

The Scottish Government is asking “affinity” Scots around the world to return home and join the celebrations with 100,000 tourists expected and a £40m boost to the economy.

‘Flying start’

Mr Salmond said: “Homecoming Scotland could not have got off to a better start with tens of thousands of people taking part in sell out events across Scotland, and around the globe.
“The 250th anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns has been celebrated on a global scale and as it should be – with dancing, singing, laughter and of course the odd dram.

“I have no doubt that if he were here today, Robert Burns would make every effort to attend every single one of the 300 events we have planned across Scotland this year.
“And he would be delighted to see his year of birthday celebrations off to such a flying start.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/7849882.stm

Jan 26

Forget, alas, all the usual stuff about fairness, balance and freedom of independent thought. Merely follow Editor and Publisher magazine’s own accounting for the first eight media days of Gaza warfare.

Coverage: “Largely one-sided, with little editorialising or commentary arguing against broader Israeli actions.” And: “Most notably, the New York Times produced exactly one editorial, not a single commentary by any of its columnists and only two op-eds (one already published elsewhere).”

Ground invasion? The Times never addressed its wisdom or unwisdom before the tanks rolled forward. A Washington Post editorial, after the event, thought invading “risky“.

In general, with the New York Post, the Daily News and all the usual suspects cheerleading away, there was no balance, no fairness and precious little you could call independent thought. Tel Aviv seemed to bark orders: the US media just wagged its tail.

And on the ninth day, only a column by Bill Kristol added marginally to a dismal record.

It was only when that school had taken a pounding that “pitfalls” in Israeli diplomatic strategy began to depress Steven Erlanger.

Britain, by contrast, does a bit better than that. The Telegraph is strongly pro-Israel, the Independent (with Robert Fisk) strongly pro-Palestinian: papers like the Guardian – see Jonathan Freedland or Ian Black – strive to understand the issues and push them forward. There is a range of commentary and opinion that at least puts history and complexity into the mix.

You don’t need to agree, but you can at least join in. Why, when it should be leading and questioning, when its voice could really change minds and politics, is American mainstream journalism so timid? Why doesn’t even an Israeli ban on letting its reporters into Gaza – foreign journalists too “unethical, biased and unprofessional” for an on-the-spot job according to Israel’s news centre organisers – raise the Times or Washington Post to a simulation of fury?

Any other country in the world (Iran, Russia, Syria) would get dumped on from a great adjectival height. But no … steady she still goes. Maybe 9/11 has made explanation difficult. Maybe no one can be bothered to examine an Arab case that’s split, squabbling and often difficult to follow. Maybe the mantra of “Israel, Our Ally” simply trumps thought. Maybe – at a difficult financial time – disapproval is perceived to carry too much of a price. Maybe readers just need to be told what they think already.

Whatever, it doesn’t matter … except that, of course, it does matter. It matters because Israel (see its new aid corridors) does listen when the din is loud enough. It matters because the press has a duty, imperfectly executed. It matters because democratic government depends on good information – and here, this time round, seekers after any broader truth (longer than a fortnight ago, that is) would do better to log on to Israeli news websites and read papers like Ha’aretz that make the great grey Times seem craven.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/jan/07/gaza-america-media

Jan 26

Rochus Misch: At the time of the plot Misch was an Oberscharfuhrer in the SS and worked as a bodyguard, courier and telephone operator for Hitler.

Rochus Misch, 91, who still lives in Berlin was at Hitler’s side from 1940 to 1945 and was with the Fuhrer in his bunker in the last days of his life.

Screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie interviewed him as part of research for the film Valkyrie.

But Cruise told the Los Angeles Times: “I didn’t want to meet him. Evil is still evil, I don’t care how old you are.”

In the film Cruise plays Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg, who led a failed plot to assassinate Hitler in 1944.

At the time of the plot Misch was an Oberscharfuhrer in the SS and worked as a bodyguard, courier and telephone operator for Hitler.

He travelled with Hitler from bunker to bunker during the Second World War.

On January 16, 1945, following the German defeat in the Battle of the Bulge he moved with Hitler into the Fuhrerbunker in Berlin, where he handled all direct communications with the outside world.

He saw Hitler’s body after his suicide and then fled the bunker before being captured by the Red Army.

He was released in 1954 and has lived in Berlin ever since. He is the last survivor of the Fuhrerbunker.

Misch told The Sun: “Hitler was my Fuhrer like everyone else’s and I was in awe of him.

“I knew Stauffenberg. He killed comrades. It’s the worst thing a soldier can do. It was not the actions of an officer.”

http://http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/4313433/Tom-Cruise-refused-to-meet-Hitlers-former-bodyguard-during-making-of-Valkyrie.html

Jan 25