click for thisisUll.com Home page.. click for thisisUll.com Forum... click for thisisUll.com Live Events...
  Sponsored Links


  Sponsored Links


  thisistheworld.com


  Friends


  Contributors Guide


Economist Style Guide.
Economist Style Guide.

  Contributors Guide

Learn to speak 'ULL

Reviews, Humber Mouth 2006
Friday 30th June - Galloway Trucking in Hull (3/8)
By Martin J Deane
George Galloway Photographs by Ben Gurevitch
(1/8), (2/8), (3/8), (4/8), (5/8), (6/8), (7/8), (8/8).

Every single Member of Parliament jointly and severally shares in that crime.
Our leaders are either too stupid or too venal for believing all these lies. And that they repeated these lies ad nauseam in order to send the men and women of the British armed forces to kill or be killed, is pretty contemptible

And Tony Blair who leads them all. I realized early on that you only knew he was lying when his lips moved!
We are now led by a man who wears makeup! This is the Labour Party today! You know, growing up as a Scottish catholic, that's not the place I thought I'd end up! And they voted for this war on Iraq. Hundreds of them! Every single one of those Members of Parliament jointly and severally shares in that crime.
John Prescott
Nowadays, many of them sidle up to me in the House of commons and say I wish we'd listened to you at the time. Here in Hull, you are served by two cabinet ministers. Take John Prescott. I respected him once - his early years campaigning on the ferries. I respected him until the FBU, the Fire Brigades Union. Every name was thrown at the firemen. After 85 years of loyal service they were crushed by the machinery of the state.
They were campaigning for £8 an hour. John Prescott would not plunge into a darkened cocktail cabinet for £8 an hour.

Alan Johnson
And you also have Alan Johnson. The media are building him up - a ball and chain around Gordon Brown's neck, just in case he tries to revive the odd socialist ideal.
This reminds me about another moment of madness! You may remember another Labour MP who had his own Moment of Madness. Ron Davies. This is interesting because I know what happened! I live near Clapham Common. I take my dog for a walk by there. When I let him off his lead he dashed into an area of trees. I followed him and quickly noticed that the area was heaving with homosexual activity. This scared me. After all I'm Scottish! I put on my gruffest voice and shouted Gordon and a timid voice off to the right said I'm over here.
None of them has lost their jobs
Tony Blair was very clever: he didn't decide to rake us to war on Iraq by himself, instead he let all the MPs vote on it. And vote for it they did. There was John Prescott and Alan Johnson and 100s of MPs and the lies they told - over and over again. Every reason given turns out to be a lie. Yet not one of them has lost their job!!

Forced to perform sex acts
Some have lost their jobs. David Kelly lost his life. Andrew Gilligan of the BBC, Greg Dyke who stood by him, Piers Morgan who published artist's rendition of atrocities - never disproved to be happening to Iraqi prisoners.
Now we know about the torture of Abu Ghraib - Muslim men, stripped , tortured, forced to perform sex acts on each other. Having trained, vicious dogs set upon them, hung up , with wires attached to them... beaten, killed.

Like in the ancient Chinese story, Bush and Blair have dropped a great stone on their feet. The Iraqi resistance have fought the American military machine to a standstill across the country. This anti-Americanism has become the most powerful force in the world. It has fanned the flames of hatred. There was no Al Qa'eda in Iraq before Bush and Blair invaded. Now there's hundreds. Nor was there religious fundamentalism. Saddam was a secular leader. Now Iraq is within the grip of the clerics. This hatred is spreading throughout the Islamic world.

Continued...Next Page (4/8)

Reviews, Books - Down By The River Where The Dead Men Go by George P. Pelecanos Reviewed by Steve Rudd
As the novel title must suggest, this is a crime thriller... and one of the highest order. I first heard of the author in Pelecanos through him heaping praise on the 'action-thriller' writing of Steve Hamilton. Like with Hamilton's work, Pelecanos weaves an engrossing story around a series of hugely believable and genuinely exciting set-pieces. Interestingly, many authors Read more...

Reviews, Books - Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller
Reviewed By Steve Rudd
You can get something out of a book, even a bad book. First published in France in 1934, this extraordinary piece of writing never saw the light of day in the United States and the wider world at large until after 1961, following a mighty legal battle that resulted in the book finally being published elsewhere. Human beings make a strange fauna and flora...More than anything Read more...

Reviews, Books - Less Than Zero by Bret Easton Ellis Reviewed By Steve Rudd
Bret's work, it seems, is either loved or truly loathed. Almost all of his past novels have been as controversial and as feared by some people as hell itself, especially as Bret focuses on taboo subjects with intense abandon. His best known book is the huge-selling American Psycho masterpiece, yet his other work is most definitely worth reading too - if you like that kind of thing. Alright, Less Than Zero isn't half Read more...

Reviews, Books - The Hunting Wind by Steve Hamilton Reviewed By Steve Rudd
This is the fourth thriller of Steve's that I've devoured with a heady, stance-steady vengeance. He really does reside in the top drawer of American-based thriller writers, living in New York but writing about the state in which he was raised… the often cold and bleak Northern state of Michigan, near to the border with Canada. The previous three novels that I've read of his Read more...

Reviews, Books - Fury by Salman Rushdie
Reviewed By Steve Rudd
I must live until I die. Perhaps best known for his hugely controversial book The Satanic Verses, Indian writer Salman Rushdie is one of the most famous writers in the world, which is understandable when his writing is so utterly extraordinary in timbre. Mysteries drive us all. We only glimpse their veiled faces, but their power pushes us onward, Read more...

Reviews, Books - The Nineties by John Robb
Reviewed By Steve Rudd
If you remember the Nineties... you were there! This incredible book, written by the singer for punk rock 'n' roll band Goldblade in John Robb, truly is a breathtaking overview of an exhilarating decade. And it isn't just music that is covered, as the always-opinionated Robb proffers his honest opinions about anything and everything that had a Read more...

Reviews, Books - Lost Souls by Michael Collins
Reviewed By Steve Rudd
We only live once. I don't think we ever really confront that until it's too late. Understandably shortlisted for the Booker Prize, Lost Souls is not your average mystery-thriller novel, with this engrossing 'whodunnit' focusing on a small-town cop trying to get to the bottom of the mysterious death of a three-year-old girl. The prime suspect is the local football star, Read more...

Reviews, Theatre - Sep 20 - 25th - The School for Scandal by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Northern Broadsides Company at Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough by Patrick Henry
The scandal school of the title locates itself in tea-parties gathering mostly at the home of Lady Sneerwell, who has a voracious addiction to gossip amid the Darjeeling and cream cakes passed around her close acquaintances equally hooked on rumour-peddling. Suspectedly, no-one has any friends in this circle or in upper-class society at Read more...

Reviews, Books - Harry Potter Series by Mark Petherbridge
In my opinion, the Harry Potter books are fantastic, whether it's read to escape into the intriguing, yet marvellously complex world or to read in third person about a boy whose life is a series of amazing adventures, in a secret yet in-your-face wizarding world. According to recent studies (the source being Newsround) these books have Read more...

Reviews, Books - Travels With Charley by John Steinbeck
Reviewed By Steve Rudd
People don't take trips - trips take people. It's almost impossible, in this day and age, to not have heard of John Steinbeck. First and foremost, his Of Mice And Men short story is the staple part of almost every school curriculum, while his Grapes of Wrath novel is equally as well-known. Steinbeck was born and raised in the Salinas area of California, Read more...

Reviews, Books - Fiesta by Ernest Hemingway
Reviewed by Steve Rudd
No, I wasn't naïve enough to be fooled into thinking that this exquisite novel from the legendary Hemingway was an in-depth car manual designed to accompany the latest Ford creation. Far from it, in fact, for this story follows a bunch of friends who travel from Paris to Spain, and to the town of Pamplona in particular to witness the bull-running and -fighting events of the infamous Read more...

Reviews, Theatre - June 6-11th - The Comedy of Errors by William Shakespeare and Sweet William by Alan Plater. Northern Broadsides Company at Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough by Patrick Henry
These two works played in a week of repertory constitute essentially company productions, without star actors nor prominent leading characters, giving all-round strength to the enterprise, but also some weaknesses. It is absorbing to watch how the actors from the classic comedy are deployed in the cast of the new Plater piece. Read more...

Reviews, Books - Swan Song by Robert Edric Reviewed By Nick Quantrill
Swan Song is the third and final part of Robert Edric's cycle trilogy. Although Edric does not describe himself as crime-fiction writer per-se, he skilfully demonstrates the strength of the genre. Although crime-fiction is generally criticised for not being literary enough, Edric uses it as a vehicle with which to explore contemporary society. Read more...

  What's Happening?
Search          
  Chill Out
  About Us
  
  More...

Legal Disclaimer   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Advertise Here     Top of Page.
The opinions expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the positions of www.thisisUll.com.
  Webmaster Comments?   © 2003 to 2008 www.thisisUll.com, All Rights Reserved.