Lobster Issue 17 (1988) £££
Maurice Tugwell/Centre For Conflict Studies More on the good Mr Tugwell and the Centre for Conflict Studies mentioned in issue 16. An article in the Canadian magazine New Maritimes (June 1986) describes CCS as ‘on the edge of the campus of the University of New Brunswick … the Centre staff is not, however University faculty, … Read more
Lobster Issue 41 (Summer 2001) £££
Responsibilities, old boy The Big Breach Richard Tomlinson Cutting Edge, Edinburgh, 2000, £9.99 I found it hard to ‘see’ this because so much of its contents have been published in the media. There have been some changes – names altered – since the newspaper versions; and I am told that the original hardback version … Read more
Lobster Issue 55 (Summer 2008) £££
<http://artificialtelepathy.blogspot.com/> is a good introduction to the subject of mind control technologies and psychotronics as seen by some of the victims of what they call the ‘electronic concentration camp’. On the first couple of screens there is a list of the symptoms reported by the victims – or if you are sceptical, the ‘victims’ – … Read more
Lobster Issue 46 (Winter 2003) £££
Roy Madron and John Jopling Dartington (UK): Green Books, 2003, £8.00 The authors are eco-doomsters who believe the planet is on the verge of catrastrophe. I am also at heart though not in practice a deep green, for what it’s worth, and have been since the first ‘eco-politics’ wave of the 1969-71 … Read more
Lobster Issue 28 (December 1994) £££
Britannia’s Burden: the Political Evolution of Modern Britain 1951-1990 Bernard Porter Edward Arnold, London, 1994. Bernard Porter’s latest is a Marxist text-book. However it is Marxism with a difference. There is no happy ending nor even the promise of one. The argument is serious and absorbing. It does not observe the normal conventions of blandness … Read more
Lobster Issue 7 (1985) £££
The Shadow Warriors Bradley F. Smith (Andre Deutsch, London 1983) The network of close personal connections established in O.S.S. (the fore-runner of the CIA) “helped bridge some of the widest gaps in American society and could be called upon in cases of need long after the war ended. For example, when in 1964 former British … Read more
Lobster Issue 36 (Winter 1998/9) £££
edited by Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones and Christopher Andrew Frank Cass, London/Portland, Oregon, 1997, £15.00 pb There are two kinds of books about the CIA: there are those like William Blum’s, advertised in this issue, which see the CIA simply as part of the US post-war empire, the sharp end of imperial enforcement, somewhere between the … Read more
Lobster Issue 51 (Summer 2006) £££
Ed. Jon Melissen London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005, h/b, £50.00 Just after World War 1, a group of the liberal-left in Britain began campaigning against orthodox – i.e. secret – diplomacy. It had caused the mind-bogglingly stupid carnage of World War 1, they argued, and had to go. This was the Union for Democratic Control … Read more
Lobster Issue 31 (June 1996) £££
Paul Bruce Blake Publishing, London 1995, £15.99 The pseudonymous author claims to have been a member of a clandestine 4-man SAS squad which assassinated a couple of dozen alleged IRA members in the 1971-3 period in Northern Ireland. The author’s taped and transcribed memories are intercut with sections from an uncredited ghost writer – apparently … Read more
Lobster Issue 13 (1987) £££
The Craft – a history of English Freemasonry John Hamill (Guild Publishing, London 1986) The author is the librarian and curator of the United Grand Lodge of England. The book is 191 pages and contains 23 black and white illustrations, appendices containing the historical record of the Grand Masters of England, the structure of the … Read more