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� October 15, 2006 - MORE UNOFFICIAL NARRATIVE: Introduction
just started, but to give you a taster
I don't believe there are evil people or evil countries, but there are
undoubtedly evil thoughts and deeds. They come when we are tired, lazy,
threatened or angry - rather like the shooting of that innocent
Brazilian man. Everybody has a measure of right on their side and a
measure of wrong.
The philosopher Hannah Arendt concluded that
evil lay in the refusal to think. One of the things evil cannot face
contemplating is variety. It prefers monolithic simplicity. Reality
outstrips simplicity through a constant flowering of unexpected lives.
Evil thoughts and deeds cannot prevail against it.[source]
The first post in the MORE UNOFFICIAL NARRATIVE: Deeper and Darker.
We are building on the OFFICIAL NARRATIVE which pursues the theory that Jean Charles de Menezes - shot dead by police, special forces or some intelligence agency - was killed not because he was a suspected terrorist but because he was a suspected socialist. The theory we are investigating is that de Menezes was mistaken for the political activist known as 'deep' and that his killing was intended as a political assasination but unfortunately they killed the wrong innocent person i.e. they had mistakenly identified de Menezes as deep and de Menezes received all those dummies that were intended for deep.
deep accepted that he could be targeted in such a way. He was a political activist giving Blair & Co a serious kicking in the NNTP newsgroups. Blair had just lost a hundred seats in the 2005 General Election. There was a strong anti-Blair campaign deuring the election and deep had campaigned vigorously against Blair and the Labour party. It is likely that at least some of those lost seats were thanks to deep. In turn, it is likely that Tony Blair's departure has been hastened by his weaker position.
It is not only during the election campaign that deep had made enemies. deep had been active in the NNTP newsgroups from October or November 2002 - before the invasion of Iraq. He argued strongly against the war and crucially went for Blair himself. deep made the mistake of seeking advice from an alleged anti-Blair and anti-war MP. "Lay off Blair" he said. Bastard.
Like the Jerusalem Post articles, there is at least one hidden message in Ian Blair's Dimbleby lecture.
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