Dear David/all.

I have never posted here before (but long been a lurker!), however this
thread on Brexit presents an opportunity to share a recent twitter thread
on Brexit, which I came to indirectly via social media. As far as I am
aware, the author of the following twitter posts is a well-known
whistle-blower, and now author and film-maker. I don't know any of his work
so am taking this info at face value.

The reason I post the following is that, as an explanation/interpretation
of the UK gov's Brexit-related activities and statements, as played out via
UK news media, it is the only account I have read which comes close to
'ringing true'. The narrative of the UK gov's 'incompetence' seems too
politically convenient to take at face value, and a united strategy of
feigning division and creating chaos as a smokescreen for power-grab stacks
up much more plausibly esp. in light of clear parallels along these lines
in the US. What I find to be strange is that the possibility of united and
disingenuous UK gov strategy and narrative has never been raised in the
press, as far as I have seen. As with many recent high profile political
events in the UK recently, perhaps the real concern is the role of a
supportive and compliant media across the board, in presenting what may be
an entirely and knowingly false narrative.

I would be interested in anyone's thoughts on the twitter posts below, in
relation to David Garcia's previous comment and what has already been
posted.

Here is the twitter commentary I am referring to -

https://twitter.com/J_amesp/status/1046828583484821504?s=19
@J_amesp

"Right, I really don't care whether people listen to this Brexit thread.
It's just here.

This is a sanitised briefing. It is rated as "high level of confidence" and
supported by OSINT, meaning it comes from multiple, reliable sources and is
supported by open source information.

Numerous sources have confirmed the British government is deliberately
aiming for a no deal Brexit outcome in order to take advantage of extended
powers available to them under the scenario - including civil contingencies
and so-called Henry VIII.

The Chequers plan is a ploy designed to engage the EU in distraction from
the desired British outcome and create a false narrative at home in the UK
that the EU are responsible.

Sources claim emergency legislation is being prepared for January next year
(2019) when the Withdrawal Act no deal deadlines pass - this would be 29/01
and the civil contingencies secretariat have been convened as per leaked
Hammond notes recently, adding credibility.

On Ireland: The British government hopes the EU will be forced to move
first and install a hard border in Ireland in order to avoid blame itself
for a situation it has created. Further sources claim the data harvested
during Repeal 8th will be used in some "unity" campaigns.

The British government has progressed trade talks with the US to the point
of potential emergency supply, moving substantially beyond informal
discussions - though the Trump administration should not be taken at its
word, a degree of reliance on this has been factored in UK side.

The government intends to create a tax haven on the EU's doorstep to
exploit financial service deregulation. This speaks for itself.

The British government aims to prevent France and other EU countries from
properly preparing for no deal by continuing to falsely engage in the
negotiations in bad faith, keeping the EU27 from moving from early stage
plans to contingency measures as long as possible.

The British government hopes this will create a ripple effect of impact so
it can later pursue a "Europe in chaos" narrative of disinformation and
exploit the situation. In short hoping to spread the load of no deal
impact, particularly into France due to geographical impact.

The British government hopes this collateral damage will add to planned
disruption around the EU election processes next spring and they will use
dissident relationships to further this - likely to include Orban.

The British are aware that contingency planning in France has not yet
reached operational unit level even in the GIGN because the general French
presumption is that the British government is genuinely engaged in good
faith, which they are not.

Ends."

Thanks,
Iain Findlay-Walsh


On Tue, Oct 16, 2018 at 9:24 AM David Garcia <
d.gar...@new-tactical-research.co.uk> wrote:

> The best lack all conviction, while the worst
> Are full of passionate intensity.
> (W.B. Yates.. The Second Coming)
>
> Its a critical juncture in a very very complex moment of a 4 dimensional
> chess that the UK pretends to be playing with an opponent, but is
> actually playing with itself (in every sense, including the vulgar sense
> of
> wanking our time away).
>
> Actually Kier Starmer -the Captain Sensible of the Brexit narrative- is
> incrementally (and with some skill) inching the Labour Party’s leadership
> towards a refferendum on the deal (I dislike the sterile populism of the
> ‘people’s vote' tag but it seems to have caught on).
>
> In yesterday’s tragic parliamentary performance May stood isolated
> and friendless trapped by her own cack-handed trail of bad decisions
> and contradictory ‘red lines’. Apart from the isolation of someone whose
> only
> piece on the chess board is the king which is being relentlessly pushed
> towards the innevitable one other thing stood out. Accross parliament MPs
> from all paties except the DUP were increasingly advocating the once
> unmentionable
> concept of a 'referndum on the deal’ (or ratification). MPs who have not
> taken that
> position before such Dominic Reeve argued for it. This fas has moved from
> a being a
> very faint possibility to a distinct option as one of the only ways to
> resolve political
> paralysis.
>
> This would be not so much a ‘people’s vote’ as the equivalent of the
> consent form
> the patient must sign before undergoing a highly risky piece of useless
> cosmetic
> surgery about to be perfomed of an ageing dowager suffering from severe
> delusions of grandure.
>
> David Garcia
>
>
> On 16 Oct 2018, at 07:35, Patrice Riemens <patr...@xs4all.nl> wrote:
>
> > On 2018-06-17 11:15, Patrice Riemens wrote:
> >> BonDi!
> >> In today's Guardian/Observer:
> >>
> https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jun/17/europe-losing-interest-brexit-soap-it-has-bigger-worries
> >> Cheers, p+2D!
> >
> >
> > That was then - but even earlier there was:
> >
> >
> https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/may/27/brexit-six-tests-eu-starmer-corbyn
> >
> > (referd to in to-day's Guardian, hence ...)
> >
> > I'm afraid that's going to be the scenario. A Labour party led by an
> Eurosceptic at heart too afraid to ruffle feathers f its brexiters voters
> (who mind well have changed their minds in the meantime), and going for the
> 'extend and pretend' scenario ...
> >
> > Brexit gonna be a disaster - and not only for UK, even if far worse
> there.
> >
> > Salvini appears to have backtracked on Riace deportations
> >
> > Cheers, no cheers, I dunno
> >
> > p+2D!
>
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