Sunday 26 August 2012

a Swedish trap, set with wronged white women


[this is the part of Tosca where Callas gives the knock-out one-two]
No white folk want to see "their women" defiled, and
if Assange were black or Muslim (the Dodi Theory),
he'd already be dead.

But, I digress. If you're not a conspiracy person,
and I am not, you need to be convinced that,
because of who Assange is, he is being politically
assassinated. If you need to be convinced,
then take it from a British diplomat, who
is well-versed in that kind of politics, but who
had enough morals to reject his orders. That
caused him to be fired and politically assassinated.

His conspiracy: Russia Today (America's best reporting)
US war on whistleblowers must end - Assange (VIDEO)
Published: 19 August, 2012, 17:21
Edited: 20 August, 2012, 05:31
Julian Assange made his first public appearance in two months, ever since he took refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London.
Addressing the hundreds of people gathered outside the embassy, Assange thanked them for their support, claiming it was their resolve and presence that stopped British police storming the building.
"On Wednesday night, after a threat was sent to this embassy and police descended on this building, you came out in the middle of the night to watch over it, and you brought the worlds eyes with you. Inside this embassy after dark I could hear teams of police swarming up into the building through the internal fire escape," Assange said.
‘Assange case part of long history of whistleblower-smearing’
Political activist Craig Murray, a former British Ambassador whose publications implicated the CIA and MI6 in using evidence obtained through torture, noted that the allegations that Assange was involved in a sexual assault are part of a long list of dubious charges brought against other whistleblowers.
“Unfortunately, there’s a long history of whistleblowers being smeared and charged with crimes unrelated to their whistleblowing, because, obviously, it’s quite difficult for states to convict people for telling the truth about state misdemeanors,” he told RT. “So what you do is you frame them with other charges, very often sexual charges because that destroys the person’s reputation.”
Murray pointed to the fact that he was charged with extorting sexual favors in exchange for visas during his tenure as ambassador to Uzbekistan shortly after he blew the whistle on torture.
“And I am by no means the only one. Janis Karpinsky, who blew the whistle on Donald Rumsfeld’s sanctioning of torture at Abu Ghraib, was charged with shoplifting, for example.