Regular readers will note that I planned to expose Pete Townsend as a fully-paid up voyeur of the most vile sexual torture of children in Indonesia. This torture was in many cases perpetrated by their parents and family members. Individuals to whom the children gave their unconditional love. What a sick bastard you are Townsend. When you die I’ll go out of my way to stamp on your grave. Townsend hired an expensive QC and created a lie that he was engaging in research for a book on child abuse. We’re still awaiting your first draft, deviant! I invite readers to copy and paste this paragraph and write to Townsend at The Wick, Upper Richmond Upon Thames, Surrey. Beating off on the torture of children is unconscionable.
I approach every article with the investigative rigour that one might expect from an award-winning social media commentator. This rigorous research revealed much more than I bargained for.
I have discovered a sinister masonic society and its role in the cover-up of the Dunblane massacre. An article written by The Sunday Herald’s Home Affairs correspondent Neil McKay, which was published on 19 January 2003, under the heading “Child Porn Arrests Too Slow” caused such a stir in the upper echelons of the Edinburgh and Westminster establishment that every trace of it was expunged from the internet.
Edinburgh’s Speculative Society Lodge includes George Robertson on its members’ roster. Tony Blair, who sold peerages for hard cash and privileges in the private sector that would later enable him to amass a £200m fortune, anointed Robertson as Baron of Port Ellen on 24th August 1999. Blair’s elevation of Robertson to The House of Lords was a mere three years after the Dunblane massacre.
Blair was fully aware of McKay’s article and the implications for Robertson. Blair was briefed by his aide Phillip Lyon that The Sunday Times had obtained an FBI list of Labour MPs who had used their credit cards to pay for internet child pornography. Blair responded by invoking a draconian D-list on the spurious grounds of national security. Was he protecting Robertson, at that time the NATO general secretary, from the fallout in regard to the Dunblane massacre. Did Blair use this information to impress upon Robertson that he required NATO’s support to prosecute his illegal war in Iraq?
In 2004, the UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan asserted that as regime change was the prime aim of the Iraq War, it was illegal. John Prescott, who was also elevated to the House of Lords, agrees with Annan’s analysis. Did Blair buy silence with ermine?
Blair’s D-list news blackout failed to stop the arrest of Lyon. Blair’s closest confidante was a practising paedophile. Police found thousands of images of children performing sexual acts on Lyon’s electronic media. Had this scandal not been swept under the carpet one might have averted the unnecessary slaughter of Iraqi civilians by Blair, who should be tried in The Hague for war crimes.
Phillip Lyon was found guilty of using his home computer to collect more than 1,000 images of children – some of whom were toddlers subjected to “disgusting” sexual acts. He was discovered by chance when an IT consultant came to repair another clerk’s computer at the Commons and opened a file showing “something terribly wrong” London’s Southwark Crown Court was told.
Riel Karmy-Jones, prosecuting, told the jury that Lyon’s pursuit of child pornography had a much wider scope than the twelve specimen charges that resulted in his conviction. When arrested, Lyon allegedly likened his problem to that of a drug addict:
“It is like a drug – you try one and you want to try something harder and it has a snowball effect.”
George Robertson, who lives in Dunblane, sent his eldest son to Hamilton’s scout club. He responded to insidious rumours and went to Dunblane High School where their meetings took place. “I didn’t like what I saw,” he said. “There were lots of little boys there all stripped to the waist and Tom Hamilton and his cohorts all swaggering around. It was like something out of the Hitler Youth. I took Malcolm away”.
However it did not stop Robertson acting as a referee for Hamilton’s shotgun applications. Robertson threatened to sue McKay and The Herald for libel, but had he done so he would have been exposed. It was a hollow gesture on his part, a last faux hurrah, before he disappeared from public life. However his legacy apropos Dunblane should not be forgotten.
On 13 March 1996, Thomas Hamilton, a former Boy Scout leader walked into Dunblane Primary School armed with two 9 mm pistols and two .357 Magnum revolvers. He killed sixteen small children and a teacher. The subsequent police investigation revealed that Hamilton had loaded the magazines for his Browning with an alternating combination of fully metal-jacketed and hollow point ammunition. Hamilton owned an arsenal of six hand guns and several assault rifles. How Hamilton acquired this specialist ammunition has never been disclosed. What is known is that Hamilton was initially refused a license, but when Robertson threw his political weight around, the clock began ticking on one of the most heinous outrages in living memory.
The Judge who conducted the inquiry into the atrocity, during which two teachers claimed to have seen another mysterious man “guiding” Hamilton onto the premises, was Lord Cullen. Cullen, also a member of the Freemasonic Speculative Society and an associate of Labour “Scottish Mafia” figures such as Lord Robertson, Tony Blair, John Reid and Gordon Brown, was accused by leading journalists and emergency service personnel of having effected a cover-up.
A former Grand Master of Scottish Freemasonry, Lord Burton asserted that:
“Cullen’s inquiry suppressed crucial information to protect high-profile legal figures. These high-profile legal figures were members of The Speculative Society.”
Lord Burton continued by stating:
“I have learned of an apparent connection between prominent members of the legal establishment involved in the inquiry, and the secretive Speculative Society. The society was formed in Edinburgh University through Masonic connections so I accept that there might be a link by that route.”
Members of the Speculative Society were reported to have included Lord Cullen and a number of other judges, sheriffs and advocates.
Burton ended his statement with:
“I tried repeatedly to raise concerns about the Cullen inquiry during my time in the Lords, and I was bullied and threatened by powerful peers loyal to the Conservative Government of the day, who warned me of dire consequences if I continued to embarrass them.”
Malcolm Rifkind’s friend and his then Chairman of his constituency party at Edinburgh Pentlands, Robert Bell, sold guns and ammunition to Thomas Hamilton only a few weeks before the Dunblane massacre. Rifkind was a member of The Speculative Society.
Another school in Dunblane, where Hamilton was found creeping round dormitories at night, is now the subject of a live investigation by Police Scotland. The probe represents a major development in a 25 year campaign for justice by a retired teacher who risked his career to expose the alleged abuse.
Glenn Harrison was a housemaster at Queen Victoria School in Dunblane when he began to suspect that pupils were being preyed upon. He claims that boys were often taken away for unofficial overnight trips with dignitaries, while sexual abuse and bullying in the dormitories was ignored.
Some youngsters appeared badly traumatised, yet when he tried to speak to them or discuss his fears with fellow teachers he was told that certain aspects of school life must remain “secret.”
In December 1991, Harrison made a report to Central Scotland Police. Officers responded by breaking down the door to his flat and seizing his journal, computer files and other paperwork.
Mr Harrison, who had already handed in his notice at the school, was then escorted from the school premises and interviewed by detectives.He moved to the Shetlands and resumed his career as a teacher, although he continued to campaign for a proper investigation into his allegations.
After police concluded there was “no cause for further action on their part“, the only inquiry that was carried out emanated from the Scottish Schools Inspectorate.
Twenty-five years later, details of the case were passed to the Scottish Government’s historic child abuse inquiry and Mr Harrison made another official statement to police in Lerwick. He has also been pursuing a complaint with the Police Investigations and Review Commissioner (PIRC), which concluded that officers could have done more to look into his allegations.
However sources have indicated that it is part of the wider probe into historic abuse allegations in Scotland, involving more than 45 institutions and 110 suspects – 37 of whom are “persons of public prominence“.
Was Lord Cullen keen to put a lid on the Dunblane massacre to deter others from taking a look at the serious allegations that were emerging at the Queen Victoria School? Was he protecting fellow members of The Speculative Society?
Many of those suspects are now deceased, including the former Solicitor General Sir Nicholas Fairbairn, flamboyant QC Robert Henderson and ex-Bay City Rollers manager Tam Paton.
Mr Harrison stated:
“Why would there be such a panic to get me out of the school when I was to leave officially three days later after working six months notice? Why break down the door of my home when there was a spare key in the porter’s lodge hardly 100 metres away? The confidential files were very important because they contained a whole 20 months record of letters of complaints to the school management, social services and child protection agencies and more than all else daily records of complaints of boys, incidents, dates and times which led me to have deep suspicions that boys were being abused emotionally, physically and sexually, not just while I was there but decades before.”
The school, which has Prince Philip as its patron and has links to other royals including the Duke of York, is funded by the Ministry of Defence for the children of Scottish armed forces personnel.
Harrison wrote to parents warning of the dangers in 1991. It led to him being ousted from the school.
In 1999, an international investigation of child pornographers and paedophiles run by Britain’s National Criminal Intelligence Service, code named Operation Ore, resulted in 7,250 suspects being identified in the United Kingdom alone. Some 1850 people were criminally charged in the case and there were 1451 convictions. Almost 500 people were interviewed “under caution” by police, meaning they were suspects. Some 900 individuals remain under investigation. In early 2003, British police began to close in on some top suspects in the Operation Ore investigation, including senior members of Blair’s government.
Blair cited the impending war in Iraq as a reason for issuing a D-Notice. Police also discovered links between British Labour government paedophile suspects and the trafficking of children for purposes of prostitution from Belgium and Portugal including young boys from the Casa Pia orphanage in Portugal.
In the United States, Operation Ore’s counterpart was Operation Avalanche. However, U.S. authorities only charged 100 people out of 35,000 investigated. The international paedophile investigation began when Dallas police and the US Postal Inspection Service raided the offices of Landslide Productions of Fort Worth, Texas and confiscated records on thousands of people around the world who were child pornography customers of the firm.
Large sections of the police report into the Dunblane were banned from the public domain under a 100-year secrecy order. Lord Cullen, an establishment insider, also omitted and censored references to documents in his final report. Parents and teachers were advised to concentrate their efforts on a campaign to outlaw handguns instead of focusing on how the mentally unstable Freemason, already known by the police to be a suspected paedophile, had obtained a firearms licence for six handguns.
Did George Robertson write a glowing character reference, and personally see to it that Hamilton’s license application was successful, when he knew the grounds for the original refusal were because he was suspected of procuring boys for sexual services?
The following is a rogue’s gallery of cross-party paedophiles:
1. Tory Party General election candidate, Michael Powell – Convicted and jailed for 3 years for downloading hardcore child porn.
2.Tory Party Councillor (Wickbar/Bristol) Roger Talboys – Convicted and jailed for 6 years for multiple sex attacks on children
3. Tory Party MP (Billericay) Harvey Proctor – Stood trial for sex offences of a sado-masochistic nature against teenage boys, and was forced to resign.
4. Tory Party Councillor ( Stratford-upon-Avon ) Christopher Pilkington – Convicted of downloading hardcore child porn on his PC. Placed on sex offenders register and forced to resign.
5.Tory Party councillor ( Coventry ), Peter Stidworthy – Charged with the indecent assault of a 15-year old boy.
6. Tory Party Mayor ( North Tyneside ), Chris Morgan – Forced to resign after being arrested twice in 2 weeks, for indecent assault on a 15-year old girl, and for suspicion of downloading child porn.
7. Tory Party Liaison Manager on the London Assembly, Douglas Campbell, who’s job includes running the Tory GLA website – Arrested for allegedly downloading child porn. He is currently suspended while the Police investigation continues.
8. Tory Party Councillor (Folkestone – in Leader, Michael Howard’s constituency), Robert Richdale – 41 year history of crime, involving 30 convictions and 5 prison sentences. Richdales enormous criminal record, which covers 10 pages of A4 paper, includes convictions for assault, theft, causing death by dangerous driving, forgery, drugs offences, possession of an offensive weapon, and sex attacks against underage schoolgirls. The Tory Party election campaign literature described Richdale as “a family man” who had a “compassionate personality”.
9. Labour Councillor (Newton Aycliffe) Martin Locklyn – Convicted and jailed for 15 years for sexually abusing three 14-year-old boys.
10.Labour Councillor (North Lincolnshire) David Spooner – Convicted and jailed for 1 year for masturbating in front of 2 young boys.
11.Labour Mayor (Westhoughton/Lancashire) Nicholas Green – Convicted and jailed for 10 years for 3 rapes and 13 counts of indecent assault against little girls between the age of 6 and 10.
He raped one woman on her wedding day.
12. Prominent Labour Party activist Mark Tann (who has met Tony & Cherie at Party functions) received a 15-year sentence for raping a 4-year old girl on 2 separate occasions.
13. Lib-Dem Council candidate (Tower Hamlets), Justin Sillman- Convicted and jailed for two years for the sexual abuse of young boys.
14. Lib-Dem Councillor and Mayoral Candidate (Sheffield), Francis Butler- prosecuted for the indecent assault of a young boy.
15. Lib-Dem Councillor (Stockport) Neil Derbyshire – Sexually assaulted a 16 year old boy in public toilet. He was caught with a plastic bag containing lubricant, plastic surgical gloves, a condom and underpants.
16. Lib-Dem Councillor (Preston) Bill Chadwick – charged with making an indecent photograph of a child, INCITEMENT TO RAPE ( on an interactive child porn forum), INCITEMENT TO MURDER ( The torture of children often resulted in their death, to order, by credit card). He was also convicted of incitement to kidnap and torture.
Tony Blair conspired to conceal the activities of Labour Party activist and serial child-molester Mark Trotter, who died from AIDS before he could be convicted.
According to media reports, the names of 2 former Labour Cabinet Ministers said to be `Household names’ appear on the `Operation Ore ` list of subscribers to hard-core child pornography.
So who are they Mr Blair?
Neil Mackay sensationally reported that senior members of Tony Blair’s government were being investigated for paedophilia and the “enjoyment” of child-sex pornography:
“The Sunday Herald has also had confirmed by a very senior source in British intelligence that at least one high-profile former Labour Cabinet minister is among Operation Ore suspects. The Sunday Herald has been given the politician’s name but, for legal reasons, can not identify the person.”
The name of Gordon Brown, who took an active interest in the McCann cover-up, is often conflated with rumours that he was fingered by the security officer. Brown was flagged as a security risk by American and Israeli intelligence services.
There are still unconfirmed rumours that another senior Labour politician is among the suspects. The intelligence officer said that a ‘rolling’ Cabinet committee had been set up to work out how to deal with the potentially ruinous fall-out for both Tony Blair and the government if arrests occurred.
One method of silencing dissidents in China and Russia is to have them declared mentally ill prior to their incarceration in a secure sanatorium. The unlawful sectioning of George Farquhar by the Royal Edinburgh Hospital on the basis that he accused Cullen on his Website of a Masonic cover-up of paedophiles in Scotland’s high society has led to calls for the removal of Dr Crichton from the medical register and the removal from the bench of Sheriff Lothian.
The same abuse of power and of the corruption of the psychiatric process by Carstairs State Hospital to silence Mr Arnold McCardle calls for similar penalties against the psychiatrists and judges involved in the McCardle case. Carstairs also has another paedophile friendly “doctor” who is being investigated for using the title “doctor”.
Demands have already been made to the Scottish Executive to investigate the influence of the Speculative Society. It was formed in 1764 as an off-shoot of the Masons and has counted Sir Walter Scott, Robert Louis Stevenson and Hugh McDiarmid among its most celebrated members.
The Spec, as it is known, is described by its members as a debating club. They meet in candlelit vaults below Edinburgh University’s Old College in the winter. Prospective members are normally approached while still studying at the university. Its membership – which was secret until a year ago – reads like a Who’s Who of the rich and powerful in Scotland.
Campaigners were determined to reveal the membership amid concerns, many expressed by senior lawyers who are not members, of the disproportionate influence the Spec is said to wield. One legal figure who has long been suspicious of the Spec said:
” Members laugh off the suspicions and say it’s just a debating club. But, given that the members are picked as undergrads and almost without exception go on to reach the pinnacle of their careers, you have to think either that those making the selection are very astute at spotting potential, or that membership gives you a big leg up in life. I know which option I favour.”