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Image   Review of Jewish interest   Peter Hain: Political trials in Britain

Part of the anti-white racist movement with the intention of destroying Britain, June 28, 2010

Subtitled 'From the Past to the Present Day'—but this isn't true. If you're expecting a wide survey of state power, this isn't it. And probably Hain didn't write this book: there's a statement 'research assistance by Phil Kelly' who appears to be in the NUJ. There's a Times Lit Supp blurb: 'A well-documented argument that discretionary power is exercised by the police, prosecuting authorities, magistrates and judges as weapons to intimidate ... those who "threaten the social and political status quo"'. It's virtually all concerned with post-war material.

-Hain supposedly had South African parents who were anti-Apartheid activists. They were made 'banned persons' in 1966 'fled' to London. Probably they were the familiar pattern of Jews, though this is unstated. He was 'President of young liberals' one imagines with family or Jewish money. In 1977 he was in Labour and founded the 'anti-Nazi League' possibly an MI5 thing. He won a by-election victory in 1991 in Neath, in Wales, presumably, as with most of Wales then, a solid 'Labour' seat. This of course post-dates this book, as does New Labour (1997-2010). He fell into some disgrace over secret funding for his failed campaign to lead 'Labour'. A South African multi-millionaire and another diamond millionaire—both Jews—were involved. Hain has never criticised South African violence under its real or puppet black leaders.

-The book's bibliography is almost exclusively rather crank 'left wing' stuff, including phoney quangoes—'Runnymede Trust', 'Institute of Race Relations'; and the Guardian, Pluto Press, E P Thompson, Ralph Miliband, Patricia Hewitt. The 'Society of Black Lawyers' gets a mention.

A typical passage on Northern Ireland assumes habeas corpus etc should apply even in near-war situations. He talks of 'torture' in a deliberately misleading way. There's no consideration of danger to witnesses. It seems a truly extraordinary failure to face the situation. In fact, it isn't—there's a deliberate agenda—Hain is just another type misleading called 'communist'. As might be expected he frequently uses 'racist' and 'fascist'.

There's quite a bit of material—civil servants, police organisations like ACPO, what was then the Director of Public Prosecutions, Attorney General, Judges, Magistrates, Jury Vetting, Conspiracy law, Unions, Official Secrets, and a whole chapter on 'racism', a black 'underclass', and so on. And Chapter 13 nominally on political trials.

This book is interesting as representing documentation of part of the entire process of subversion which includes anti-white racist laws, the establishment of vast phoney think-tanks, the EU-related communist-style practices. Remember the 'Soviet Union' still had nine year to run when this book was published.