Sunday, 15 April 2012

 Heath's administration

Hi All,



Apologies for any duplication.



This is the next step in our treason reporting campaign. I shall be sending this to all the police forces in England and Scotland and the Police Federation.
May I suggest that you too use this as it is or modified to suit yourself and, at the very least. email it to your local police force, preferably to as many as possible. 

xxxxxxxx J



Dear Chief Constable,
In recent weeks you would have received allegations of treason, along with the evidence, regarding the Edward Heath Government and specifically against David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Tony Blair.
To add to the evidence that Heath committed treason I uncovered this traitorous admission by him in a BBC programme:
Peter Sissons to Edward Traitor Heath:
"The single currency, a United States of Europe, was all that in your mind when you took Britain in?"
Edward Heath: "Of course, yes."
(BBC's Question Time on 1 November, 1990.)
This he said having denied it to Parliament and the public when in Government.

I now wish to add the following surviving members of the Heath administration to the above three politicians. 
Geoffrey Howe who was Heath's Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister and Douglas Hurd who was Heath's political secretary. Although Hurd was not part of Heath's Cabinet his complicity in the treason is well documented in his own words below.

The following extracts were taken from Douglas Hurd's biography ‘Douglas Hurd: Memoirs
p212
…For nearly four years I worked as the Prime Minister’s political secretary…
…I looked after what Ted did as leader of the Conservative Party. 

p213
…With the encouragement of the civil servants, I found that my purely party role extended naturally into the whole area of the Prime Minister's communication with Parliament and the public.

…I learned not to talk too much. From these sessions I gathered much inside knowledge of the workings of the govern ment machine.
p220
…He knew that he had a further struggle ahead to secure the consent of the House of Commons, but the winning round of President Pompidou was probably the greatest personal feat of his premiership.

p221
…Things had by then begun to look up. A massive campaign to persuade public opinion about the EEC was launched in early July. One diary entry from that time gives an idea of how my life was composed

p222
…The Europe campaign of public persuasion went well, but it had been decided not to attempt the crucial test in the House of Commons until the autumn. Politicians began to discuss whether the Government should allow Conservative MPs a free vote on the issue, with no request for support from the whips.

p223
…At the end of January 1972 Ted began to reap the benefit. I went with him to Strasbourg to receive his award from the Council of Europe.

…At one of these, at the gilded British Embassy in the rue Ducale, Ted conferred the Companionship of Honour on Jean Monnet.*
*Jean Monet is regarded as being the 'father' of a federated Europe.
I respectfully submit the above to be added to the already mounting evidence of a traitorous conspiracy by Governments to violate the constitution of this country.
xxxxxxxxxx J L