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| Why Sinn Fein should hang its head in shame over Scappaticci silence |
Adams, McGuinness, and Gerry Kelly - all faces which would demand respect among those still stupid enough to believe that they were solid Republicans.
And there was also Danny 'The Rat in a Hat' Morrison who is a bigger liar than even Gerry himself.
I remember McGuinness using the term, 'Dissident Journalists' at some point and thought, 'ah f*ck off, you're ripping the arse out of it now!'
But it was Morrison who went on to contradict their 2003 defence of Scappaticci in an 2016 interview with the Irish News in which he said that he, Scappaticci, had been stood down in 1990, under a cloud of suspicion, after 'the Sandy Lynch affair.'
If he had been stood down back in 1990 under a 'cloud of suspicion' why were they so forceful in their defence of him in 2003?
It's not that they had taken Scappaticci away to some remote cottage and given him the same treatment as his own victims before him.
This was, after all 1990, and the war was still four years away from the ceasefire. They had no problem doing it to Caroline Mooreland a few weeks before that ceasefire - in the full knowledge it was coming - and dumped her body at the side of the road.
In regards to Scappaticci the so called leadership of Adams, McGuinness, Gerry Kelly and their faithful lackey Danny Morrison have as many questions to answer as British Intelligence do.




You're most definitely right, Dixie; there are many questions to be answered. However, there are far too many powerful entities involved for that to happen.
ReplyDeleteTruth, as we all know, or at least we should know, is the first casualty of war. And likewise, we all know, or should know, where the spoils go.
The Brits and their Northern Free-Stater collaborators won hands down.
Republicans lost Dixie. In fact, I'd go as far as saying, Irish Republicanism in the form we subscribed to has become obliterated.
As the gaffer correctly stated and predicted, the GFA was the death of Irish Republicanism.
God is dead Dixie.
"But when Zarathustra was alone, he spoke thus to his heart: "Could it be possible! This old saint has not heard in his forest that God is dead!" '