Registered user login:

Truth and war mean nothing at the party conferences

John Pilger

Published 25 September 2008

The media turns the other way, or perverts the truth, while an increasingly imperialist United States, with Britain in tow, pursues its expansionist interests

Britain's political conference season of 2008 will be remembered as The Great Silence. Politicians have come and gone and their mouths have moved in front of large images of themselves, and they often wave at someone. There has been lots of news about each other. Adam Boulton, the political editor of Sky News, and billed as "the husband of Blair aide Anji Hunter", has published a book of gossip derived from his "unrivalled access to No 10". His revelation is that Tony Blair's mouthpiece told lies. The war criminal himself has been absent, but the former mouthpiece has been signing his own book of gossip, and waving. The club is celebrating itself, including all those, Labour and Tory, who gave the war criminal a standing ovation on his last day in parliament and who have yet to vote on, let alone condemn, Britain's part in the wanton human, social and physical destruction of an entire nation. Instead, there are happy debates such as, "Can hope win?" and, my favourite, "Can foreign policy be a Labour strength?" As Harold Pinter said of unmentionable crimes: "Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening, it wasn't happening. It didn't matter. It was of no interest."

The Guardian's economics editor, Larry Elliott, has written that the Prime Minister "resembles a tragic hero in a Hardy novel: an essentially good man brought down by one error of judgement". What is this one error of judgement? The bank-rolling of two murderous colonial adventures? No. The unprecedented growth of the British arms industry and the sale of weapons to the poorest countries? No. The replacement of manufacturing and public service by an arcane cult serving the ultra-rich? No. The Prime Minister's "folly" is "postponing the election last year". This is the March Hare Factor.

Following the US

Reality can be detected, however, by applying the Orwell Rule and inverting public pronouncements and headlines, such as "Aggressor Russia facing pariah status, US warns", thereby identifying the correct pariah; or by crossing the invisible boundaries that fix the boundaries of political and media discussion. "When truth is replaced by silence," said the Soviet dissident Yevgeny Yevtushenko, "the silence is a lie."

Understanding this silence is critical in a society in which news has become noise. Silence covers the truth that Britain's political parties have converged and now follow the single-ideology model of the United States. This is different from the political consensus of half a century ago that produced what was known as social democracy. Today's political union has no principled social democratic premises. Debate has become just another weasel word and principle, like the language of Chaucer, is bygone. That the poor and the state fund the rich is a given, along with the theft of public services, known as privatisation. This was spelt out by Margaret Thatcher but, more importantly, by new Labour's engineers. In The Blair Revolution: Can New Labour Deliver? Peter Mandelson and Roger Liddle declared Britain's new "economic strengths" to be its transnational corporations, the "aerospace" industry (weapons) and "the pre-eminence of the City of London". The rest was to be asset-stripped, including the peculiar British pursuit of selfless public service. Overlaying this was a new social authoritarianism guided by a hypocrisy based on "values". Mandelson and Liddle demanded "a tough discipline" and a "hardworking majority" and the "proper bringing-up [sic] of children". And in formally launching his Murdochracy, Blair used "moral" and "morality" 18 times in a speech he gave in Australia as a guest of Rupert Murdoch, who had recently found God.

A "think tank" called Demos exemplified this new order. A founder of Demos, Geoff Mulgan, himself rewarded with a job in one of Blair's "policy units", wrote a book called Connexity. "In much of the world today," he offered, "the most pressing problems on the public agenda are not poverty or material shortage . . . but rather the disorders of freedom: the troubles that result from having too many freedoms that are abused rather than constructively used." As if celebrating life in another solar system, he wrote: "For the first time ever, most of the world's most powerful nations do not want to conquer territory."

That reads, now as it ought to have read then, as dark parody in a world where more than 24,000 children die every day from the effects of poverty and at least a million people lie dead in just one territory conquered by the most powerful nations. However, it serves to remind us of the political "culture" that has so successfully fused traditional liberalism with the lunar branch of western political life and allowed our "too many freedoms" to be taken away as ruthlessly and anonymously as wedding parties in Afghanistan have been obliterated by our bombs.

The product of these organised delusions is rarely acknowledged. The current economic crisis, with its threat to jobs and savings and public services, is the direct consequence of a rampant militarism comparable, in large part, with that of the first half of the last century, when Europe's most advanced and cultured nation committed genocide. Since the 1990s, America's military budget has doubled. Like the national debt, it is currently the largest ever. The true figure is not known, because up to 40 per cent is classified "black" - it is hidden. Britain, with a weapons industry second only to the US, has also been militarised. The Iraq invasion has cost $5trn, at least. The 4,500 British troops in Basra almost never leave their base. They are there because the Americans demand it. On 19 September, Robert Gates, the American defence secretary, was in London demanding $20bn from allies like Britain so that the US invasion force in Afghanistan could be increased to 44,000. He said the British force would be increased. It was an order.

In the meantime, an American invasion of Pakistan is under way, secretly authorised by President Bush. The "change" candidate for president, Barack Obama, had already called for an invasion and more aircraft and bombs. The ironies are searing. A Pakistani religious school attacked by American drone missiles, killing 23 people, was set up in the 1980s with CIA backing. It was part of Operation Cyclone, in which the US armed and funded mujahedin groups that became al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The aim was to bring down the Soviet Union. This was achieved; it also brought down the Twin Towers.

War of the world

On 20 September the inevitable response to the latest invasion came with the bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad. For me, it is reminiscent of President Nixon's invasion of Cambodia in 1970, which was planned as a diversion from the coming defeat in Vietnam. The result was the rise to power of Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge. Today, with Taliban guerrillas closing on Kabul and Nato refusing to conduct serious negotiations, defeat in Afghanistan is also coming.

It is a war of the world. In Latin America, the Bush administration is fomenting incipient military coups in Venezuela, Bolivia, and possibly Paraguay, democracies whose governments have opposed Washington's historic rapacious intervention in its "backyard". Washington's "Plan Colombia" is the model for a mostly unreported assault on Mexico. This is the Merida Initiative, which will allow the United States to fund "the war on drugs and organised crime" in Mexico - a cover, as in Colombia, for militarising its closest neighbour and ensuring its "business stability".

Britain is tied to all these adventures - a British "School of the Americas" is to be built in Wales, where British soldiers will train killers from all corners of the American empire in the name of "global security".

In Latin America, the Bush government is fomenting incipient military coups in Venezuela, Bolivia and possibly Paraguay

None of this is as potentially dangerous, or more distorted in permitted public discussion, than the war on Russia. Two years ago, Stephen Cohen, professor of Russian Studies at New York University, wrote a landmark essay in the Nation which has now been reprinted in Britain.* He warns of "the gravest threats [posed] by the undeclared Cold War Washington has waged, under both parties, against post-communist Russia during the past 15 years". He describes a catastrophic "relentless winner-take-all of Russia's post-1991 weakness", with two-thirds of the population forced into poverty and life expectancy barely at 59. With most of us in the West unaware, Russia is being encircled by US and Nato bases and missiles in violation of a pledge by the United States not to expand Nato "one inch to the east". The result, writes Cohen, "is a US-built reverse iron curtain [and] a US denial that Russia has any legitimate national interests outside its own territory, even in ethnically akin former republics such as Ukraine, Belarus and Georgia. [There is even] a presumption that Russia does not have fully sovereignty within its own borders, as expressed by constant US interventions in Moscow's internal affairs since 1992 . . . the United States is attempting to acquire the nuclear responsibility it could not achieve during the Soviet era."

This danger has grown rapidly as the American media again presents US-Russian relations as "a duel to the death - perhaps literally". The liberal Washington Post, says Cohen, "reads like a bygone Pravda on the Potomac". The same is true in Britain, with the regurgitation of propaganda that Russia was wholly responsible for the war in the Caucasus and must therefore be a "pariah". Sarah Palin, who may end up US president, says she is ready to attack Russia. The steady beat of this drum has seen Moscow return to its old nuclear alerts. Remember the 1980s, writes Cohen, "when the world faced exceedingly grave Cold War perils, and Mikhail Gorbachev unexpectedly emerged to offer a heretical way out. Is there an American leader today ready to retrieve that missed opportunity?" It is an urgent question that must be asked all over the world by those of us still unafraid to break the lethal silence.

*Stephen Cohen's article, "The New American Cold War", is reprinted in full in the current issue of the Spokesman, published by the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation: http://www.spokesmanbooks.com

Post this article to

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • newsvine
  • Reddit

36 comments from readers

Ian Crause
25 September 2008 at 12:03

Where is this School of Terrorism in Wales to be built?

Because we will stop it.

BlairSupporter
25 September 2008 at 12:28

What rubbish from Pilger, as usual.

The "war criminal", has not been tried or found guilty of anything. And never will be. No-one but NO-ONE is a criminal until proved such, or doesn't this Left icon understand basic civil and human rights?

Blair's crime? Sharing his nationality with such low-life as Pilger.

tom Scarff
25 September 2008 at 13:14

All a load of Balls. Afghanistan needs a quarter of a million men to make any difference. Add about the same in Aid workers and things may improve in about 10 years. Meanwhile poor old UK is totally subservient to the US and if we do not toe the line our economic world will come to an end. Could be worse !

alexweir1949
25 September 2008 at 16:14

There is some truth in the above. In 2006 i invented a fraud proof voting system specially designed for third world countries. This system has been called dangerous by the uk and by china (i must be doing something right ). Until you come up against the full might of the international establishment it is impossible to imagine what makes it tick and how it works. Mr alex weir. Harare

writeon
25 September 2008 at 19:49

Unfortunately, and I wish he wasn't, Pilger is basically correct in his analysis of the road we in the 'freedom and peace-loving' West are embarcked on.

We are going to be envolved in perpetual war for the rest of our lives. These wars will be tarted-up in the lipstick of 'freedom' 'democracy' 'human rights' and 'anti-genocide', but in reality they'll be about securing acess to markets and vital raw materials, exspecially energy, oil and gas reserves.

One of the major 'threats' to US/Western interests has recently been identified as the rapid growth of population in the third world, especially the 'youth bulge'. The 'youth bulge' will be demanding jobs and a resonable standards of living, and because of their numbers they will be competing with us for consumption of raw materials.

It's important to understand that the 'war on terror' is merely an excuse, a tawdry justification for our 'crusade' to dominate and control the world, anyone who takes up arms to resist our crusade for freedom is automatically designated a 'terrorist' and can therefore be exterminated and wiped off the map.

The White West is ready to soak the world in blood in order to maintain our non-negotiable way of life/death for as long as possible, and at any cost in human lives, those we don't starve we'll simply slaughter in our bizarre, beserk and degenerate death-lust.

OrwellianUK
25 September 2008 at 21:08

To 'Blairsupporter'

John Pilger has been defending Human Rights for 40 years, and has a greater understanding of world affairs than you could dream to have.

Also, you will find that if you apply the principles of Nuremberg (the post war Nazi trials) to Iraq, it does indeed make Blair and Bush War Criminals. As does the U.N. Charter.

Furthermore, Kofi Annan declared the Iraq war illegal and in violation of International Law and the Charter.

Another point; John Pilger is not a leftist but a humanist and your attempt to turn this into an insult is facile. But obviously this is all wasted on you since you are clearly not even well informed enough to realise that Pilger is Australian and therefore does not share Nationality with Tony Bliar (spelling deliberate)

ikotubo
26 September 2008 at 01:58

You're a pretty naive man, Mr Pilger. In case you didn't know, Henry Kissinger is often portrayed by the global media as some sort of global elder statesman. His war crimes in Cambodia and unspeakable atrocities in Chile just "never happened," to borrow a phrase. And, if nemesis had not caught up with Ariel Sharon (remember that other cunning war criminal?), he'd still be portayed as a gallant soldier. In any event, his atrocious crimes against Palestinian children "never happened" too.

Dr. Frans B. Roos, PHD
26 September 2008 at 08:13

Interesting to read the negative comments about John Pilger which always makes me wonder how long the writers have been on planet earth. Nothing wrong with young people making comments but in doing so they should not make fools of themselves as many of them do because their comments are not based on the knowledge John Pilger has acquired in his more than a half century roaming the world. My own experience with John Pilger goes back to the Vietnam days sitting on the Continental Hotel terrace looking down Tudo Street discussing the ups and downs in South East Asia. That alone by now goes back 40+ years and John was roaming the world much longer than that.

I get a chuckle out of when persons show their lack of knowledge about John Pilger by calling him a Brit, not even knowing he is an Aussie. Another country I spend a few years of my live and understand John very well when he talks about his home country and its problems. Also people that call John Pilger a Commy show they do not have one iota of knowledge about the subject which takes reams of paper to explain.

Keep up the good work John

morphoso
26 September 2008 at 12:01

I can always trust John Pilger to make me feel even more powerless and the situation more hopeless than before. Which implies that as time goes by, John himself probably feels the same.

Great Work Mr. Pilger

If only there were more like you

Morph

Phil Linehan
26 September 2008 at 18:37

If you want to know what really happened between Blair, Bush, Cherie, Campbell, etc., before and during the first years of the Iraq war you might like to have a look at Plain Speaking - A Reporter´s Conversations with President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair´s Conversations with Wife Cherie

sweety
29 September 2008 at 02:33

We are going to be envolved in perpetual war for the rest of our lives. Thats right , Writeon, you have it right, this is what Bin Laden said many times. Why do you have difficulty coming to terms with this basic premise? Pilger with his beautiful cosmetic smile talks about the US. getting increasingly imperialistic. John me antipodean mate, you remind of the Byrds song, Eight miles High, after all your rhetoric surely the Yanks ran out of ceiling room decades ago!

Dade
29 September 2008 at 17:23

Phil Linehan at 18:37

Please where can one find this book you recommend?

Can you put a link in response to this comment?

Cybertiger
30 September 2008 at 13:35

Dade asked,

"Please where can one find this book you recommend?"

Amazon can arrange to get you Phil Linehan's book, published in May this year.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Plain-Speaking-Reporters-Conversatio...

Carl Jones
01 October 2008 at 20:02

This is Pilger at his best.

writeon; you are two faced.

The West is now led by nutters and the present financial meltdown will lead to serious conflict. Its a real shame that Pilger has to operate within the limits of MSM publication. Chomsky is the oppsite of Pilger and gets a free run.

For those who care to know, the is an axis against the NWO. Russia, China, India, Brazil, Venezuela, Iran and you might include NK. None of the countries trusts the NWO axis. I hope Putin sticks around, because I really do hope that someone stops this evil that is sweeping the West. The sham of democracy has become bored. It no longer serves the common man, if it ever did.

Globalization has stopped, the battle line are being drawn in the sand. Out of shame for what we have become, I hope we get kicked very hard, game on.LOL

BTW, how many of the above are directly linked to the NWO?lol

JC3
08 October 2008 at 09:36

Yeah this article looks all good to me. But the thing you always have to keep in mind with this Pilger character is that he is a Collingwood supporter. And when I say that he is a Collingwood supporter, what I mean by that is that I assume that he is one. So ... umm ... y'know. Yeah.

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=dvgZkm1xWPE

tallsandwich
09 October 2008 at 19:02

Pilger says: "The current economic crisis, with its threat to jobs and savings and public services, is the direct consequence of a rampant militarism"

- oh well glad we tidied that up then, I thought it was due to excessive unsecured lending, now I know better. What an idiot this guy is.

tallsandwich
09 October 2008 at 19:07

To the "PHD" (oh we are soooo impressed with your qualification - NOT)

You don't need to know Pilger is an Aussie to know he spouts and rants disconnected drivel. If he could only package his stuff better it might be more widely accepted and he would achieve his aim of greater awareness of these issues.

tallsandwich
09 October 2008 at 19:16

To Orwellian, you said:

"John Pilger is not a leftist but a humanist"

John Pilger is just plain anti American, I wish he would apply in more equal measure his same criticisms more often to say China and Russia etc, but no, it's the anti american bandwaggon he likes the best and he's the driver. It's a shame that the good points he makes are lost on most people who see him as lacking balance.

gnuneo
10 October 2008 at 01:38

Great words John, yet again. You are one of the few who point out the Emperor's lack of apparel, would that there were more of you, this would be a saner, safer and more civilised world.

Tim_West
10 October 2008 at 12:00

Pilger may be "unbalanced" in his approach to reporting and have anti-West bias, but this is for very good reason.

This is because everything else we read in the press is so inherently bias towards the West. We need far more outlets like John, reporters who are prepared to tell the inconvenient truths about our involvement in illegal wars and the American imperial reach around the globe, shattering our misconceptions that "we" are always the good, the righteous and the moral crusaders of this world.

The press is so far from the traditional Western image we have of our broadsheets: canterkous and ubiquitous in their search for the truth. In fact, because of corporate bottom line pressures for these papers and a complex filter system, they merely represent establishment mouthpieces. I defy anyone to read Noam Chomsky's "Manufacturing Consent" and medialens' authors' book, "Guardians of Power" and still tell me otherwise. This is a point John often makes, but he has to frame it in the way he does to try and make people sit up and listen.

The debate about political discourse in the media is far too often not rational, but burdened with cumbersome preconceptions of "right" and "left". This dichotomy is incredibly unhelpful and leads to the term "liberal" being meant somehow degrogatorily.

I agree wholeheartedly with OrwellianUK, John is not a leftist but a humanist. Far too often simple human compassion is mistaken for a primitive and outmoded left-stereotype.

JC3
10 October 2008 at 15:18

tallsandwich?

Would you describe yourself as pro-American?

Please respond.

gnuneo
11 October 2008 at 03:32

"Pilger may be "unbalanced" in his approach to reporting and have anti-West bias, but this is for very good reason."

actually, i would say he is very pro-West, in that he demands that we live up to the Ideals of Western Culture, rather than just pay lip-service and do the opposite, as our 'Leaders' are wont to do if left unaccountable. This is not an "anti-West bias", it is an anti-hypocrisy bias.

"Far too often simple human compassion is mistaken for a primitive and outmoded left-stereotype."

Indeed. I would be very interested to learn when Fascism became the 'normal' state of mind for political dialogue.

tallsandwich
11 October 2008 at 16:05

To JC3

No, it may seem queer to you but I am not pro-American but beleive that people would be more aware of American faults in the world if there was not just a choice between the tycoon controlled media and a few ranting anti-americans to choose from (Pilger is one of these and no better than the mainsteam media for this reason). Why can't Pilger be more rational and balanced and unbiased when it comes to the USA, then he would have mroe impact.

Tim West - I sympathise that when you are up against the dirty mainstream media you need to hit hard to make an impact, but if Pilger is the Journo-God that you guys make him out to be, and his objective is to expose stuff and bring it to the attention of a wider audience, then why produce stuff like on this page that is just food for his blindly followng anti-american disciples and no use to anyone else?

JC3
14 October 2008 at 15:24

The United States of America is the most disgusting nation on this planet. That is a fact. There is only one 'nation' worse and I cannot think of a word to describe it. Anyone who disagrees with me is wrong. Here's a quote that a great man once wrote on his blog:

There are some ideas that could only appeal to an intellectual because the rest of us would not be so f**king stupid.

gnuneo
14 October 2008 at 22:19

the United State also brought us some of the greatest philosophy and wisdom of the 20th century - i can name Robert Pirsig, Robert Anton Wilson, Frank Herbert, Richard Bach, Philip K Dick, Kim Stanley Robinson off the top of my head, and add considerably to that list given time.

The United States also ended a murderous Imperial war by its own rulers - how many European nations can claim that? Certainly we Britons can't.

The People of the United States did not elect G W Bush, in either election - they were not so stupid as to fall for his religious/elitist garbage, but the American Media (which means therefore its owners) decided not to inform the People, breaking their sworn duty as the media of a Democracy. We in Britain elected B'Liar, and do not seem to particularly mind that the choice in our essentially two-party State did not allow us to vote anti-war.

americans are the victims of the world's most efficient propaganda machine (Hollywood), yet still have enough gumption and belief in basic morality to organise, to march, to demonstrate - to argue they are still people with a choice, to highlight their devotion to the TRUE principles of the Founding Fathers and the US Constitution - radical concepts still today, and incredibly Evolutionary in their day, that they managed to put in place.

yes, it is also a Nation with some disgusting elements, but do not ignore the Good that goes with it.

"There are some ideas that could only appeal to an intellectual because the rest of us would not be so f**king stupid."

brilliant words!!! Who wrote them? :D

JC3
17 October 2008 at 10:26

I am sick and tired of people bringing up the 'good' that goes with the U.S. of effin America. Of course no nation [or person] is 100% disgusting or good [actually, there is one. But that's another story altogether] but it's 'good' has been promoted [almost entirely by themselves so maybe they are 100% disgusting] that it is about bloody time we forgot about it.

Philosophy and wisdom hey. Well, I'll take a dumbass peacelover over that any day of the week.

JC3
17 October 2008 at 12:14

Oh, sorry gnuneo, that quote you liked is found on this blog:

jimmykrongold.wordpress.com

There's all sorts of interesting stuff there, actually. It can be a bit confronting at times but stick with it. It's worthwhile.

ps. Oh, and he's a funny bugger too, that's for sure.

gnuneo
24 October 2008 at 00:01

JC3: Any culture that can produce even just these two videos i can respect. You will find much criticism from me towards the USA, but i am not blinded to the Quality they produce also.

System of a Down - Boom!

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=K7yAO-QCSWA

Eminem - Mosh

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=VOLMVQa0KD8

gnuneo
24 October 2008 at 00:01

ps - thanks for the link. :)

JC3
24 October 2008 at 12:29

gnuneo I think you will find that those two videos are made by people who are more "anti-American" than me. You can't help where your born, pal. And can 'respect' 300 million people simply because 2 of 'em actually managed to produce something worthwhile then you have got a really really ... umm ... dunno. Weird.

JC3
24 October 2008 at 12:30

Oh, and you're welcome.

gnuneo
24 October 2008 at 14:04

JC3: they are not "anti-american" in the absolute slightest! They are both putting forward core American values, and doing so very strongly. The only ones who would call them "anti-americans" are those poor deluded fools who watch FauxNews and think that a fundamentalist Christian Fascist Govt is what the US needs, and anyone who criticises the US Govt is a 'traitor'.

poppycock, and i'm surprised you fell into that!

btw, do you know how few cultures around the world allow such radical messages in mainstream pop/rock media? Do you think Turkey allows it? Russia? China? The mere fact that such messages can be made and distributed with little fear of political/criminal repercussions is worthy of respect right there. Do not discard an entire culture because a small part of it has gone OTT.

there has always been a strong counter-culture movement in the US, and it doesn't get the media attention overseas that it deserves.

gnuneo
26 October 2008 at 16:35

natually however, no matter how good the Yanks, get, we are always better. Watch:

V for Vendetta Speech

http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=chqi8m4CEEY

JC3
31 October 2008 at 14:13

Yeah alright gnuneo you got me. I couldn't be bothered watching those two vids that you recommended. This is the last time I am going to try and bloody well explain myself to you.

I hate America.

But I always treat people I meet personally as an individual.

Okay??

JC3
31 October 2008 at 16:37

I'm gonna assume that those 'core values' that you talk about, gnuneo, were something like freedom / respect for others / love / democracy / etc / etc.

Hence a question:

Since when are those 'American' values?? Aren't they universal?

See, that is just typical of those Yanks. They make out like those values [which no reasonable person could dispute as being worthwhile] were invented by themselves. AND THAT THEY PUT THOSE VALUES INTO PRACTICE BETTER THAN ANYONE ELSE!!!

Ever come across a Jesuit, gnuneo?

JC3
31 October 2008 at 16:40

And, on the whole, it is fair to say that a typical Yank is soft. If they weren't then they would have taken to the streets to try and get rid of their 'president'. But they didn't did they. So it's fair to say that the typical Yank either agrees with Bush [criminal], disagrees with Bush but couldn't be bothered doing anything about it [criminal], or just couldn't be arsed either way [disgusting and criminal].

Post your comment

Please note: you will need to login or register before your comment is displayed on the website

You may enter up to 2000 characters (about 300-350 words)

Characters left:

We want to encourage people to comment on our content and to exchange views with other readers and hope this will be done on a courteous basis. However, if you encounter posts which are offensive please let us know by emailing comments@newstatesman.co.uk and we will take swift action where necessary.

About the writer

John Pilger

John Pilger, renowned investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, is one of only two to have twice won British journalism's top award; his documentaries have won academy awards in both the UK and the US. In a New Statesman survey of the 50 heroes of our time, Pilger came fourth behind Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela. "John Pilger," wrote Harold Pinter, "unearths, with steely attention facts, the filthy truth. I salute him."

Read More

Vote!

Should Darling have been bolder with the 45% tax rate?