Thursday, 24 October 2013

The Law Is Applied To Some But Not Others

The Director of Public Prosecutions has declared to the Vichy press that in certain cases he would not apply the 2010 Bribery Act. Dozens of journalists from newspapers that are read by working people have been arrested for paying for their information. Journalists from the managerial newspapers, it seems, are exempt, as their revelations are 'in the public interest'.
'In the public interest' is the phrase used to protect the interests of the powerful, of the vested interests of the bureaucracy.
The regulating of the press has come about since the Telegraph revealed the expenses scandal where nearly all the Members of Parliament  were routinely falsifying their expenses, something that would have you or I sacked on the spot for sure, and most likely arrested.
The same sort of stealing is routine in the civil service and in all government bodies. Yet it is not 'in the public interest' to prosecute.
The police has been politicised, so now they consider the race  and religion and the influence of an alleged victim before pursuing enquiries. With no ethos of public service, they will do nothing if they can. Their aim is not to apply the law but to keep the population quiescent.
For many years it was not 'in the public interest' to prosecute the Moslem rape gangs because it did not fit in with the official Narrative that immigrants are good and the indigenous working class is bad. So powerless young girls were drugged and raped by hundreds, if not thousands of Moslems, few of whom were ever brought to justice, with the connivence of the police and the social services.
In the meantime, aging celebrities from the free working class decade, the 1970s, are being put on trial, the police trawling for evidence, as the bureaucracy rewrites the Narrative of the past.
Ironically, while they are arresting journalists for paying for stories, the police are paying for accusations through criminal compensation schemes.
I met Jimmy Savile once and..................£££££

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