516 results found.
... appeared on the Steamshovel Web site: a splendid jumble of conspiracy theories, research, debate and polemics packed together in a vast range of typefaces. Lots of photographs. All the usual suspects are here: Bracken, Keith, Thomas, Constantine, Martin - and a lot of names unfamiliar to me. Material ranges from Jack Kerouac to mind control and the quality ranges from the poor (though there isn't much of that) to the seriously good. To give a flavour of all this, the first few pieces in volume 1 are: editor Thomas defending a UFO researcher called Sean Morton; a set of comments on the 'fusion paranoia' concept; a review of Bob ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 14 - 01 Jun 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue41/lob41-39.htm
222. Spooks [Lobster #41 (Summer 2001)]
... : 'My advice at the minute is that it seems to be widely in the public domain and therefore can be published. ' (Liam Clarke, 'MoD gags press after army suspect is named on net', Sunday Times 11 February. ) Having either been given access to Cryptome's logfiles or hacked into them, the MoD then changed its mind and, quoting the spurious 233 figure, declared this not widely in the public domain, and threatened the newspapers with an injunction if they published the name. To date no newspapers have done so. The Glasgow Herald (12 February) commented that having been given an apparent OK by the D-notice Committee Secretary) the MoD ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 13 - 01 Jun 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue41/lob41-22.htm
... Nadir had been shot. It was this day's events that led Nadir's supporters to claim that he had been the victim of a plot. He compared himself to a wounded whale surrounded by circling sharks. The Politicisation of Polly Peck 'Certain values in life are higher than commerce, profits or personal benefits. The issue of northern Cyprus in my mind should be valued that high' - Ail Nadir. (4 ) From 1987 onwards, Polly Peck became increasingly a political entity, as well as a commercial one: in the end, perhaps its political identity became paramount, overwhelming purely commercial considerations. As early as 1985, when overcoming earlier suspicions voiced by some financial journalists about ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 13 - 01 Jun 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue41/lob41-13.htm
224. Sources [Lobster #42 (Winter 2001/2)]
... with when word emerged from the former Soviet Union that the whole thing had a been a Soviet psychological operation. But now a black American, Dr. Boyd Graves, has uncovered a hitherto secret, massive US government research programme into viruses, some of which sound awfully like AIDS to this non-scientist. www.boydgraves.com Mind Control Forum Thebest source for first-hand accounts of alleged experiences of the new mind control technology is Mind Control Forum which has moved and is now at: Whistleblower's Switchboard, www.angelfire.com/extreme/harassment/index.html EM Warfare trial?What appears to be evidence of an electromagnetic attack (mistake? field ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 39 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-41.htm
225. Feedback [Lobster #42 (Winter 2001/2)]
... though St. Antony's, Oxford is known as Foreign Office territory); or why the centres at Hull and Kings College, London miss out on the acclaim. To be fair, this was not the book's subject, anyway. But reference to Lancaster, which I attended as a mature student from 1969-72, put me in mind of the rumours one heard about the politics department there, the postgrad. students who went off for wargaming at Aberystwyth, and the controversy aroused by proposals for an outside-funded strategic studies centre. The vice chancellor, Charles F. Carter, being a Quaker, reputedly did not like the idea, and at a Board of ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 25 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-42.htm
... that Arabi's movement would lead Egypt into darkness and bring ruin to western interests there - not just the lives and money of the Anglo-French community but the Suez Canal, which safeguarded the route to India. It was at this point that Britain's Liberal government decided on intervention. It hoped for French support, which would, in Gladstone's mind at least have helped to preserve some element of international respectability about the enterprise - but none was forthcoming. So a unilateral British invasion occurred. Arabi's forces were overwhelmed at Tel-el-Kebir, he was exiled to Madagascar, and a British Protectorate (Egypt remained nominally part of the Ottoman Empire) installed. The idea of ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 24 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-27.htm
... David met Stella Dr. David Turner Dr David Turner went to former MI5 Director-General Stella Rimington's book-signing at Hatchard's, Piccadilly, on 18 September 2001, where the following exchange took place. Turner (presenting book for signing after queuing briefly behind several people, including a woman wearing an Anarchist badge) 'Hello. Do you mind a lengthy inscription? ' Rimington (smiling, flanked by several suited goons and book shop staff) 'That depends what it is. If it's a long one, I'll put my glasses on. ' Turner: 'Can you put 'To David Turner -- from a spook to a subversive? ' [Rimington begins writing.] 'And ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 15 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-32.htm
... firm line between conspiracy theory and parapolitics. According to the 'Louie, Louie' theory of rock music, however deep and abstruse rock musicians may appear now, you can be sure that they started by banging out three chords and yelling something meaningless. Similarly, I'd be willing to bet that most of today's parapolitics researchers began by having their minds blown by some scruffy and intellectually disreputable conspiracy theory. (I know I did.) The worst part of the 'conspiracy theory'/parapolitics' split is that the line is drawn in the wrong place - it doesn't even correspond to a split between good and bad conspiracy theory. There is good and interesting crop circle research out ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 15 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-36b.htm
... instead they have taken all the previous stories and strung them together to make a damning indictment of the CIA. All your favourite stories are in here, from Gary Webb's breakthrough piece chronicling the links between the CIA; the Contras and the crack cocaine explosion in Los Angeles; through the CIA's use of psychedelics, ex-Nazi scientists and mind control, into the murky worlds of Indo-China; and then, via a chapter on Afghanistan, back to the United States and the cocaine connections to Arkansas and ex-prez Clinton. As the title implies, the role of the American press in suppressing (or selectively reporting) this story is also told. Each chapter ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 14 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-36a.htm
... Le Carre was a spy! ETA are bad! Star Wars hack Donald Rumsford has 'vast political experience' and his credibility is 'sky high! ' FBI spy Robert Hanssen was bad! (But no info about his specific badness, and no mention of the tunnel the Americans dug under the Russian embassy, or vice versa). Never mind! Bin Laden bad! The longer articles similarly crash on the rocks of recycled press reports. 'Peru is a nation not usually associated with spy dramas' begins an article about Fujimori and Montesinos. Since when? Peru has been the imperial centre of South America since the Incas; its state spying and social control networks are legendary. ...
Terms matched: 1 - Score: 14 - 01 Dec 2001 - URL: http://www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/online/issue42/lob42-39b.htm