While the legendarily foul mouthed Paul Dacre and his
obedient hackery at the Daily Mail continue
to trawl through every recent instance of convicted paedophiles so they can
add them to the charge sheet against three senior Labour Party figures, the
temptation for other media outlets to jump on the lefty-bashing bandwagon has
proved irresistible – especially at the Maily
Telegraph.
Saying sorry is difficult for all kinds of people ((c) Steve Bell 2014)
Here, Christopher “No”
Hope is the lead name on the by-line of a particularly
well-crafted but extremely nasty piece titled “New evidence casts doubt on Harriet Harman's defence over paedophile
links” with the sub-heading “Claims
Miss Harman has nothing to apologise for over involvement of civil rights
organisation she used to work for with a paedophile rights campaign are thrown
into doubt by new internal documents obtained by The Telegraph”.
The “doubt” is
sown purely through a guilt-by-association approach, together with crafting a
form of words deliberately designed to con readers, as will be shown later in
the post. Hope sets great store in the National Council for Civil Liberties
(NCCL) only having 12 staff in the late 1970s. Thus they all knew one another.
“Documents dated from
1978 and 1979 disclose Nettie Pollard - the NCCL’s Gay and Lesbian Officer -
sat on the group’s 14-strong gay rights committee with Tom O’Carroll, PIE's
chairman who was later jailed for child porn offences” readers are told.
Then we find that Harriet Harman once wrote Ms Pollard a note. Yes, it’s a
truly lame attempt to prove guilt by association.
This is reinforced by a rambling analysis of Ms Pollard’s
assertion that “NCCL should oppose the
Protection of Children Bill”. But Ms Harman – referred to by the anally
retentive Telegraph hacks as “Miss” – was opposed to this view and
backed the legislation. So the smear rests on that form of words.
Ready? Here it comes: “The
archive also contained a handwritten note from Miss Harman to Miss Pollard
dating from the late 1970s, as well as a copy of PIE’s constitution – dating
from March 1975 – detailing the aims of the group including a pledge ‘to
campaign, as members see fit, for the legal and social acceptance of paedophile
love’”. Read quickly, that might sound like Ms Harman is somehow connected
to the aims of the Paedophile Information Exchange (PIE).
But all it shows is that her handwritten note to Ms Pollard was
found in the same archive as a copy of PIE’s constitution. That is the Telegraph’s grounds for asserting that
Ms Harman’s claims are “thrown into doubt”.
And, of course, they were all working in the same office, and so they must all
have been at it. Nudge-nudge, wink-wink, a nod’s as good as a wink to a blind
bat, and all that.
Christopher Hope put his name to that? What a truly desperate individual he is.
You seem to have conveniently omitted that Harman allowed Blair to turn the UK into a police state.
ReplyDeleteHope springs eternal crap?
ReplyDeleteMust be getting close to election time again.
@1
ReplyDeleteSome comments are allowed, even when the sentiment expressed therein is beyond Barking.
What was actually happening at the NCCL in the 1970s: http://peezedtee.blogspot.co.uk/2014/02/nccl-harman-hewitt-pie-and-1970s.html
ReplyDeleteDesperate was the first word that sprung to my mind too. Well, apart from 'disgusting.'
ReplyDelete