Some days odd details stand out like a sore thumb, and the
one really odd detail in the last post was the £55,000 payment from Healthgear
Contracts to the YBF. Why odd? Well
looking at it there are several details that ratchet up its inherent
strangeness.
Firstly Healthgear contracts, and its successor companies
main business appears to be making " furniture, furnishings and hardware that is designed to be
unbreakable, anti-ligature and tamper-proof." for prisons, secure
units and mental hospitals, That is
shower curtains that you can't use to hang yourself. A rather remarkable coincidence for a group that funded a poster and advertising
campaign that had a main feature of Parliament in a noose. so far so
coincidental. and you'd consider that
this could either be entirely
legitimate, or it could be down to one of Blaneys mob faking the details as to
where the money has come from. and slipping in Healthgear as an inside
joke and a bit of a giggle for those in
the know.
The next odd detail
that stood out was the payments registered with the electoral commission, one
of £45,000 the other of £9,999, both in cash and both on consecutive days. Now leaving aside the total for the moment,
the second payment rather stands out, in cash it looks like an attempt to miss Mandatory
cash transfer reporting limits, which from a quick search of the internet you'd
assume to be £10,000. If you pay More than
the limit in, then you need all sorts of paperwork to suggest where the cash
has come from and you aren't part of some organised crime ring. Now the initial
£45,000 payment is also cash, and so suggests that it isn't just a joke on the
part of one of Blaneys minions, but that it actually has come from Healthgear
contracts, but the second payment makes
you think that healthgear is just being used as a collection point for
funds, but they are sourced somewhere else and somebody didn't quite get their
cash together on time. all very strange.
The next oddity is if
you look at the Electoral commissions Register
of unincorporated associations making political contributions over £25,000
there are 63 of these registered with the Electoral commission, groups like the Local Government Association
Labour Group, and the Carlton Club all of which
are fairly public spirited bodies, members clubs, Union social clubs,
that sort of thing all apart from one. Healthgear Contracts, which rather
stands out as something just not like all the others. It makes you wonder how
the Electoral Commission allowed this registration in this way. Aren't
Unincorporated associations legally described as non profit making
groups?
Healthgear Contracts appears to have changed post 2010 into
a group of attached companies under the same Management, one Mr Rodney Dummer
and a Mrs Jane Dummer. Of the four companies, three appear to be only just trading, with at most £50
in the bank. and the fourth appears to
be gradually working its way through its
cash reserves at a rate of about £20,000 a year. Hardly the sort of group that would have
£55,000 knocking around to throw away on a political campaign unconnected with
the business.
So where did the money come from? I've rung to ask but although I've been promised replies, nothing
has happened yet.
Another Chain of Coincidence
When the Liberal democrats first spotted a group of odd
people turning up in their constituencies delivering the leaflets paid for by
the Young Britons Foundation, and donated for by Healthgear Contracts, there was much discussion of whether
the unrecognised groups
delivering the printed work were agency staff, and cheap Immigrant workers
employed by them working for the Tory Party at that. however as with many other disagreements,
between the two parties, any attention to this vanished after the Coalition was formed. It wasn't in the
LibDems interest to suddenly point
out that the party that they shared
Government with had links to some extremely unsavoury practices just before the
election that had swept them into power.
An election later we find out via the Times that the people
delivering those leaflets appear to have been members of a group called the "PlymouthBrethren Christian Church"
further articles suggest the same as here
Many of the MPs who supported the Brethren’s cause had already received valuable help from the sect in marginal seat campaigns, however. Since 2009, Brethren members have been strongly encouraged to distribute political leaflets on behalf of mainly Tory MPs to thousands of homes across their constituencies. “When David Cameron was coming to power, the Brethren were suddenly told to leaflet as many areas as possible,” said one ex-member, who left in 2012. “They were told from the very top. There was a letter read out after one of the local meetings that we must help the Conservatives.”
Looking further, at
around this time the Plymouth Brethren
were involved in a Feud with the Charities Commission, it was reported that a massed letter writing
campaign took place to the charity commission, and to Mp's who then put further
pressure on the commission.
Now the minutes
of the Brethren Committee
discussing this appear to have been leaked and are available at http://wikipeebia.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/RC-Meeting-Notes.pdf
and here we have a strange
coincidence. Mentioned in the
middle of these minutes is the phrase "Rod
Dummer email is a warning." as the Plymouth Brethren have a doctrine of
separation, that would suggest that Rodney is a member
.
Rodney Dummer isn't a
common name, according to the Registry of Births Marriages and Deaths, there
were only one born since 1900, and there are no Roderick Dummers either, so what
are the links between Rodney Dummer and the Plymouth Brethren? could they be
the people who provided the cash that Rodney Dummer passed on to the YBF for use in their poster
and advertising campaign?
Why is this significant? well the Brethren, under their
former name the Exclusive Brethren got into trouble over a Poster campaign
trying to fix the election in New Zeeland back in 2005
The New Zeeland Herald said this at the time
Costly anti-Government leaflet drops throughout the country have been identified as the work of a conservative offshoot of the Brethren faith.The revelation is a surprise, as the Exclusive Brethren supposedly divorce themselves from worldly matters and do not normally vote.Exclusive Brethren socialise only with other Exclusive Brethren and eschew technology such as televisions, computers and cellphones.The anti-Green and anti-Labour leaflets printed by Business Printing Group in Onehunga are estimated to have cost between $30,000 and $40,000. New Zealand Post estimated distribution to major centres alone to cost between $55,000 and $60,000.The Green Party's own inquiries confirmed the identities of five people listed on the smear pamphlets as Exclusive Brethren.
This pamphlet campaign (similar to the YBF leaflet campaign eventually is thought to have lead to the resignation of the Leader of the NZ opposition. and all together the Brethren spent over $1.2 Million NZ on their election campaign. After the collapse of this campaign in New Zeeland, is it really so far fetched to think that the Church tries the same in the UK, only disguising its actions by using the YBF , Media Intelligence Partners and Rodney Dummer as cut outs to disguise their campaigning? It is all coincidence, but are there too many all pointing in the same direction for it to be just fantasy?
Have the YBF an apparent right wing entryist group trying to force the Conservative party down a right Libertarian line actually been taken advantage of by a group described as a religious cult?
Questions must be asked,
No comments:
Post a Comment