The Talking Clock is an opinion based, independently authored, small 'c' conservative, libertarian blog.

"The laws of England are the birthright of the people thereof; and all the kings and queens, who shall ascend the throne of this realm, ought to administer the government of the same according to the said laws; and all their officers and ministers ought to serve them respectively, according to the same."
Act of Settlement, 1700/01

"And I do declare that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state or potentate hath or ought to have any
jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm."

Bill of Rights, 1689
- an important and still exisiting part of OUR both written and unwritten English constitution

Friday, 3 December 2010

Liars, Cheats and Thieves: On Labour's day of shame, it's time to hold the rest of Parliament to account... especially over their treasonous lies.

A few months ago, when we were living under the worst of Labour's civil liberty hell, we might have cheered today's shaming of the party in the law courts... for partisan reasons.

Today, with their tyranny gone (but not forgotten), we are still cheering Labour's day of shame...

...but it's a day of shame for the whole of Westminster and most of them deserve every ounce of the shame, equally.

First up is expenses fiddling David Chaytor. We have to be careful what we say, because he is still before the courts.

However, the facts are that he has ADMITTED fiddling his expenses through the entering of a GUILTY plea at the Old Bailey.

So, let's put this in perspective. He has pleaded guilty - admitted - fiddling his expenses. Which means, put another way, that he has admitted thieving from the public purse. Stealing from you and me. That's what we're discussing.

But let's remember that this guilt plea followed an attempt to abuse the Bill of Rights 1689 - a constitutional WRITTEN document which the political class likes to pretend does not exist - to wrangle exemption from prosecution under Parliamentary privilege.

Some sense of guilt...


And then we have Phil Woolas.

Now, we can talk about this one a bit more, as the court case is over.

This is the Labour MP who put out a racially motivated election leaflet which made false claims about a political rival.

The leaflet was a hysterical and dangerously divisive pack of lies.

And after having the brass neck to appeal the original court decision - cheered on by a bunch of CURRENT Labour backbench cronies - the Appeal Court has chucked his appeal out and kicked him out of Parliament for his lies.

Now, try to spot the shame and remorse:

No shame. No remorse.

We're governed by the corrupt, by the treasonous and the shamelessly criminal.

But has the Woolas case set us a precedent?

What the court has said, in effect, is that the falsehoods in his election literature mean that he must forfeit his Westminster seat.

Good.

So, to what extent can we, the people, bring cases against the treasonous scumbagging hoard of liars who pollute the benches that Woolas has now vacated?

Yes, we're thinking of the attacks on our English constitution and yes, we're thinking of the Lisbon Treachery... but these are mere examples.

They ALL promised us a referendum. LIES. They promised choice over smoking. LIES.

And above all that, there's the treason.

How about a class action to bring the entire lot before a judge under the treason laws..?

And that's for starters...

In fact, I hereby publicly pledge £100 to the legal fund of whoever the first person is to get any existing or former cabinet member in the dock on the charge of treason.

We, the people are all talking about the treason.

Look at any mainstream media readers comments page.

So, we're all openly accusing the political class of treason.

Someone bring them to book... let's see one of them - the treasonous - in the dock at the Old Bailey.

With a trip to The Tower of London not far behind it.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

This blog seeks to uphold the right to free speech. However, comment moderation is used to prevent the posting of comments which could be considered libelous/offensive etc. We do not, however, guarantee to publish all comments and we reserve the right to refuse to approve any comment submitted at our discretion. Views expressed are those of the comment author and do not neccesarily reflect those of this blog.