Friday, January 15, 2021

Scotland, a Country Crying for Justice and Salvation; The Alex Salmond case goes deep into whether Scotland has integrity as a Nation, the pillars of justice in Scotland are now so compromised that there can be no trust in SNP Leader Nicola Sturgeon, her SNP Government, and no trust in the integrity of the Scottish Civil Service, we have a Scottish government that acts maliciously against the people who they see as a threat to their position and power, the word to describe them is corrupt










Dear All

At some time in your life, you will experience an injustice done to you, either deliberately or accidentally. Whether deliberately or accidentally, you feel a tremendous sense of loss, anger  and injustice both physically and mentally. I have a few in my time, which is why you are reading this blog, it got started because I suffered one. In the case of my injustice, it was the University of Glasgow closing ranks to protect liars and abusers. If I had been rich, I would have got justice because simply I would have been able to sue Glasgow University and expose what they had done to me in a court of law. I never got my day in court, and I never got justice, this is a reality for many poor people in Scotland. In the case of Alex Salmond, his rights were abused by the Scottish Government, then the same Government led by Nicola Sturgeon closed ranks to cover up their behaviour and protect those who had abused his human rights. Salmond experienced what happened to me, but he was rich and able to use the Courts, in the both attempts to destroy him. Salmond found out the hard way, that so called decent people in positions of power were open minded to abuse their power.

Many people now are coming to the conclusion that there was a plot against Alex Salmond to destroy his reputation, his career and to ultimately put him in jail for the rest of his life. His crime was that his return to political office would endanger some people's position and status. If you had a fundamental belief in the pillars of justice that hold up Scottish society, your belief has now been shredded. No one in their right mind can trust the Scottish Government, The Crown Prosecution Service or the elected politicians serving as Ministers in the SNP Government. Trust in the two leaders, Nicola Sturgeon and John Swinney has gone, trust in the Permanent Sec, Leslie Evans has gone, trust in Sturgeon's husband, Peter Murrell has gone, trust in the officials who said one thing and when found out the evidence wasn't true, trust in them has gone.

Although a lot are focused on seeing SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon resign, others need to be removed as well not just from elected public office but also from public life. To stop at Sturgeon resigning would be a major injustice, everyone who had any role must be removed. Integrity of government is at stake here.The SNP under Nicola Sturgeon have smashed integrity in public life, because more and more people know about the cover up, the lies, the attempt to jail an innocent man. The identity of the Alphabet women remains a secret by order of the Court, but these women are closely connected to Nicola Sturgeon. Sturgeon wasn't standing up for some minor female public officials. The feeling now across the political spectrum is articulated by people like Robin McAlpine as such that there was a 'coordinated plan of action created by a powerful group of people, developed and executed in secret but using public resources'. McAlpine further states that the plan had the 'sole purpose of forcing a perceived opponent out of public life in Scotland'. His view is shared by many people, when Sturgeon signed off on a code of conduct to allow complaints about former ministers, she must have known as a trained lawyer, this was wrong and open to abuse.

When the 'in house' plan to destroy Alex Salmond by the Scottish Government failed, they hadn't reckoned on what would happen in a judicial review, they panicked. Having failed, the new urgency was to cover up what they had done, because the plan was at risk of collapsing and exposing all those who were involved and what their exact role in perpetrating it. To protect their power and position became their number one priority which is why they instigated what was said to be a wide-ranging cover up. They must have thought destroying Alex Salmond would be so simple, just get him into a rigged hearing, find him guilty, destroy his reputation. If they had achieved their objective, then Nicola Sturgeon would have been safe from any attempt by Salmond to return to public life. Alex Salmond wouldn't have been so completely destroyed politically he could never be able to stand as a candidate under the SNP banner. If Salmond had returned, several people would stand to lose out, up to and including their lucrative jobs, they had no guarantee their positions would be safe.

So, from a rigged hearing, matters progressed to a criminal level, the second bite at the Cherry. Having lost the civil case, they escalated to get the criminal trial going, a mere stitch up which they regarded as routine because they held the levers of power now became an intention to seek to jail Salmond. Salmond jailed would have welded shut any investigation into the cover up. Everyone would be then be safe and secure, but when the jury returned their verdict, Alex Salmond walked from court as a free man. People who operate the levers of power in Scotland had committed the greatest ever abuse of power to attempt to arbitrarily to remove someone’s liberty. As others pointed out, this wasn't the usual “rough and tumble” of politics, it was something deeply sinister. It was the type of thing used in Stalin's Russia and Hitler's Germany, where a civil service allegedly neutral had been corrupted to its core and acted for the benefit of certain members of a political party.

There is a wider issue here for all Scots, Salmond is the lightening rod, he is just the trigger which led to the cascade, just like Peter Cadder was the lightening rod which forced the Scottish Government into making the Crown Prosecution Service restore human rights taken away by them and police. Cadder was someone whose case  caught my interest about 10 years ago, the Scottish Government fought 'tooth and nail' to deny suspects the automatic right of access to a lawyer. As I said back then in 2010, Peter Cadder has made the biggest legal breakthrough in Scotland in 30 years.

http://glasgowunihumanrights.blogspot.com/2010/10/peoples-champion-peter-cadder-no-law.html

The Scottish Nationalist Party don't do justice, they don't respect rights and they don't respect the purity that must be upheld by governance. Fairness, Equality and Human Rights aren't deeply held beliefs, they are convenient hooks to use to advance their political agenda. In 2010, Alex Salmond led the SNP Government, perhaps he should appointed better Ministers, and perhaps he should have taken more interest in detail. In part, he is to blame for his own misfortune because the integrity of government and organisations were allowed to slip on his watch. It should have been drilled into the backs of people's heads that when it comes to justice, not only will it be done, respected, but it will also be seen to be done. The SNP chipped away at government turning it into their own little monster and attack dog. Bring in and keeping poisonous people in positions of power who lacked integrity and could be used as the SNP saw fit.

In the case of Salmond, details are so important, which is why I recommend a visit to read the coverage on the Wings over Scotland website, neither of us are fans of each other, but we both share two things in common, we believe in justice strongly and we each think the other is a wanker! Wings is getting access to some very interesting material which you can read, and for ease he has highlighted relevant parts so you can home in on and ponder. As I said previously, I was in the SNP, and I met Salmond many times at elections, he would say hi nd chat to me in quiet periods, when the allegations surfaced, I didn't he would be found guilty, and I wasn't inclined to believe the witnesses, and as the public record shows, neither was a jury. I am staunch anti SNP now, but I believe in all the Nolan principles of conduct in public life, and stitching someone up is totally wrong even if they are your political enemy. There is a duty on all of us, people in Scotland to demand our government and public bodies aren't corrupt and always act in good faith. My view for a long time is that the SNP are unfit to be the Government of Scotland, they are corrupt every aspect of government and its various arms and they are spreading their poison downwards and into every organisation in Scotland that they can.

In an article on Wings, Robin McAlpine says he is of the 'decided view that people in a position of power in Scotland misused that power in a manner which is not acceptable'. In reading his article, he makes strong opinions that, the 'complaints procedure was created and designed to target a specific individual'. He also concludes that 'in a position of power, you should never create laws or procedures for a purpose related to the pursuit of an individual; it represents a gross misuse of those powers'. The bit which will interest many and rightly so is that was as he terms “grooming” of complainants against the same individual", and recently we know find out that witnesses from the Scottish Government got 'coaching' before they gave evidence to the Holyrood Committee investigating the Scottish Government processes, its generic name is the Alex Salmond Inquiry. Witnesses against Alex Salmond being allegedly 'groomed' and those questioned by the inquiry getting 'coaching' before they give evidence. Generally people who tell the truth don't need 'coaching', so what do they need coaching on, they are senior figures in the Scottish Government, educated to degree level as a minimum. Who is the company that gave the 'coaching'? Why is their name being kept secret from the public?

The phrase use by many online about what has happened to Alex Salmond is, 'Oh what a tangle web, we weave when we first practice to deceive'.

Salmond is the first injustice ever to happen in Scotland, there have been hundreds, prior to the Cadder Case, how many people were denied our rights because of bad politicians and bad civil servants, and yes, the term to use is 'bad people'. Strip them of their wealth and position and what are you left with, wretched people who commit evil with no conscience, no sense of guilt, people who have turned from the light. There are certain things you can't buy in life, class and integrity, these are things which you must choose, even if the path is difficult.  

Corinthians 10:31 says, 'So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God'.

Did all those who attempted to imprison Alex Salmond do so for the glory of God? Do they think the end justifies the means? Do they consider themselves good people, people of value and people of worth? Do they think because they are people of relative wealth, that status put them above the law, and above decency? Position, money and power gave these people status, and like the lawyer who steals their clients' money, they are unworthy of a position of trust. Those officials who took part in the stitch up of Alex Salmond and the cover up which is now happened have no place in the governance of Scotland, and making judgments that affect its people.

Robin McAlpine wrote something which is staggering about the Alex Salmond Affair. He said:

"At this point we have moved into the territory of the kind of behaviour we seldom see in western Europe. Certainly, seeking to jail someone for political expediency is something I did not believe I would see in Scotland in my lifetime".

For a long time, I blogged on SNP stupidity and corruption, I was attacked, abused and mocked for it. I was the first to say that the Scottish National Party is a 'rat ship'. I also pointed out that sooner or later that the 'rats' would turn on each other. The reason is that these SNP people have no loyalty, no integrity, they are small minded corrupt little people who do not believe in public service. They talk about how it is an 'honour' when elected at the podium, but they don't believe it, they don't believe in honour, it's a buzzword to tick a box that they are 'humble'. Why are so many 'humble' people elected to public office in the SNP not speaking out about what has happened to Alex Salmond?

Where is their integrity?

The civil service in Scotland has been corrupted, there needs to be an intervention from the UK Govt, there needs to be a judge led inquiry, and I think the conclusion must be that we need a suspension of SNP control of the Scottish Government. Such a measure has never happened before, but due to the enormity of the problem created by the SNP, suspension is a viable option. One thing is certain, the SNP cannot roll back what has happened, this is something that SNP leader cannot fix, everyone cannot go back to be at least in the public eye 'pals'. Too much damage has been done here, Alex Salmond like Peter Cadder has done Scotland a great service because each in their own way has shown us a great injustice which I maintain cannot be fixed without outside intervention. No one, no party has the right to abuse power as the Scottish National Party has done in Government. No party has the right to use the processes of government for political expediency to attempt to destroy an individual innocent of no crime.

Finally, there two quotes from Plato, that I want to leave you with:

"When there is crime in society, there is no justice" and "No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth."

Many believe in Scotland that a crime has been committed against Alex Salmond, and as we have seen by the amount of smearing against him by the SNP and their allies, he is truly hated. Telling the truth however is never a wrong thing, righting an injustice is always the right thing to do. One thing for certain, I don't think that protestations of what happened weren't maliciously would cut much ice with Scots, especially if this were to subsequently move forward in any way as a possible criminal trial. Already people are saying 'the repeated failure to produce documents even in the face of a Court Warrant appears to be, on the face of it, contempt of court'. I can certainly go along with that concept because the more you read about this, the more it stinks to high heaven.

Yours sincerely

George Laird                                                                                                                        The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University

42 comments:

  1. It will all come out in the wash.
    An old Scottish saying.
    You can full all the people some off the time but not all the time.

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    1. It shoul read

      You can FOOL all of the people some OF the time but not all of the time. I've highlighted, in capitals, the mistakes.

      Delete
  2. My reading of the situation is that the full legal advice hasn't been issued; only a heavily redacted version has been issued. Am I right in saying that it has been accepted by the Inquiry nonetheless? I thought that they were going to have a vote of no-confidence in Swinney if the full legal advice was not issued?

    Also, the Courts requested the issue of documents by the Scottish Government to clarify their case and they refused to do that. Is that not a contempt of court?

    Many SNP supporters (of which I am not one) have no faith in Linda Fabiani to treat Salmond fairly. Salmond's lawyers tonight issued a letter to Fabiani complaining about the Inquiry's treatment of Salmond and complaining that they were leaking information to the press. Salmond gave this letter to the press and The Daily Telegraph ran a story on it an hour ago.

    So, for me, it looks like Salmond is pissed-off with the Inquiry. Feels it is run by amateurs and sand-dancers and is going nowhere. Murrell and Evans attend but don't get a hard time there. It's part of the Holyrood fandango. The Holyrood farce. We talk but we do nothing. Alex will conduct this using the lawyers and the press.

    As far as I know, SNP supporters are willing to crowd-fund again to support him.

    Another thing that bothers me is the role of the Lord Advocate. He is coaching the civil-servant witnesses and in any other government in Europe, that is not allowed. The law nees to be completely separate from government.

    Anyway, the main point here is that The Daily Telegraph are running with this now. The Scottish press would never do that. Set the English press on Sturgeon and watch how she reacts to that.

    Like you, I believe that the malfeasance runs so deep that Holyrood should be closed for a while. Education, police and the health service can be given time to recover under professional management. Throw tools like Jeane Freeman and Angela Constance under the proverbial bus.

    The big loser at the end of all of this will be the Scottish legal profession. Once world class - now total shite.

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  3. This proves to me, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that the SNP Holyrood government, the SNP party itself, is a total write off. Salmond is an arsehole, but that doesn't mean he should've been deprived of justice. It is disgusting what Sturgeon and the party did, and appalled though I am I can't say I'm surprised after they tried to smear you, George. Cat's out of the bag, they're unfit to run a train set, you now have to be in denial to not see that.

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  4. Fantastic article. I sincerely hope justice will be served here and this fabricated stitchup ends up in the Criminal Court. It is an outrage that this party is still in power.

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  5. I noticed the civil-service union were quick to come-out in support of Leslie Evans. A few months ago they were saying that they had more complaints from members about bullying at Holyrood than they had from all of the other assemblies/parliaments (including Westminster) combined.

    It always looked to me as though Leslie Evans was awarded an extended contract and better money by Sturgeon a year ago in order for her to take the heat for this Inquiry. The daft bitch is duly doing that.

    They are still trying to bankrupt Alex Salmond. We all know that but, to them, it still seems a good idea. The government of Scotland has gone very badly wrong when it is run by people who thank like that.

    By the way, Lindsay Hilsum on Channel 4 did an article last night on the election in Uganda. There, the government has shut-down the internet during the election period so that abuses cannot be recorded and reported. How long before that happens here?

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  6. I don't know if you are aware, but Salmond's lawyers Levy and McRae sent a letter to Fabiani a few hours ago. That's a warning shot across her bows.

    'Salmond is trying to help you....kindly don't treat him like shit'.

    Expect to hear a lot less press releases and pompous crap in future from her.

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  7. Perthshire tool number-one is Pete Wishart; Perthshire tool number-two is John Swinney. Why the folk of Perthshire continue to elect these tubes is a source of wonder, isn't it.

    Anyway, tool number-two has spent the past three days on Twitter bemoaning the price of fish and the complexities of the post-Brexit deal for fisherman.

    Tool number-two was never one to allow the political agenda to be set by the proletariat. He will do what he likes, when he likes.

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  8. Another thing McAlpine talked about in his letter were the similarities between this case and Watergate.

    Prior to Watergate, Nixon's approval ratings were nearly 80%, so far higher than Sturgeon's have ever been.

    After Watergate, they dropped to near zero. Once the people feel they have been lied to, they walk away and never come back.

    It makes you wonder if Sturgeon will ever again stand on a platform at an SNP conference in front of the adoring masses ever again......I somehow doubt it.

    A footnote....at the end of Watergate, there was a purge of rotten US gov officials; almost 40No served prison time as a result.

    How many in Scotland would serve prison time if the law was applied properly? Would James Wolffe be serving prison time?

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  9. Without the promise of independence the SNP are dead and independence is further away now than I can ever remember.

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  10. Another line from McAlpine's letter: 'You cannot build a new democracy on rotten foundations'. His point was that the SNP's desperation to get rid of Salmond and straighten-out the Scottish legal profession and civil-service, which have had to be corrupted to achieve that, and we'll just do that later, isn't tenable. It isn't going to work and Scots won't accept it.

    McAlpine probably thought that it was a harmless analogy to make. Ironically, it is an excellent analogy to make at the moment.

    George....you may know something about this.....I think you do.

    Anyway, may we be about to see an intervention by the Secretary of State for Scotland? If we are then it is welcome of course, but long overdue.

    We need some trust chiseled into the fabric of Holyrood. That will not be easy and it will equally not be done by Fabiani and Baillie. Westminster is required very, very badly at the moment.

    This all makes the Westminster expenses scandal (remember that) seem like very small potatoes. Attempting to fit-up and jail political opponents is the stuff one would expect to read about happening in Congo or Sudan......not in Scotland.

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  11. This is a fabulous opportunity for Scottish Labour if they move quickly and elect the best, most electable, leader they can.

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  12. Mark Rutte, Dutch Prime Minister, on his Government’s resignation:

    “The rule of law must protect its citizens from an all-powerful government and here that’s gone terribly wrong.”

    Alex Salmond removed the Lord Advocate from the government payroll to try and depoliticize the legal profession. Nicola Sturgeon brought him back in again when she became leader.

    It all looks thoroughly rotten, doesn't it. There's an allegation that this fit-up started to be discussed (with James Wolffe) back in 2016. If so, then we should be looking at serious jail time for him in the not too distant future for him.

    Other European leaders must be looking-on at this in shock.

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  13. The Secretary of State for Scotland is in charge of the devolution settlement, which means he is in charge of all that goes-on in Scotland.

    1. I think we need a fundamental overhaul of our legal profession and that includes punishments for those who have transgressed and let-down the public.

    2. I think we need a good clear-out of Victoria Quay. All supporters of John Swinney need to be removed and charge those guilty of crimes.

    3. A Written warning on acceptable conduct to be issued to Linda Fabiani re her unacceptable handling of this case.

    I'm hoping the press run with this. Maybe they're just giving it time.

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  14. Aye.....and there might be another Breach of the Ministerial Code investigation underway. Top-secret of course. Nothing to do with John Swinney (it never is). He's dumped it on the doorstep of one of Holyrood's platoon of arrogant and dim-witted Ministers. That doesn't narrow it down much, I know.

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  15. I notice The Sun is speculating on a change of leadership for the SNP and suggesting it could come soon. The replacement for the grotesque Sturgeon that they are suggesting are either Robertson or Cherry.

    Cherry would be swopping Perthshire tool number-one (Wishart) for Perthshire tool number-two (Swinney).

    Also, Gordon Brown is being speculated as a rather unlikely candidate for Holyrood Labour leader. Personally speaking, that would suit me very well. He would audit that bottomless pit of money 'Scottish Futures Trust' for a kick-off.

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  16. It's worth reading Craig Murray's blog on this affair. He's another chap who has been charged and is due to appear in Court soon on bogus charges, thanks to Peter Murrell and the Crown Office.



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  17. I think Sturgeon has trapped herself, simply because she is a narcissist and a control freak.

    Now that is under real threat, she doesn't know how to deal with it. Her throwaway comment about Salmond with all the implications was appalling.

    Scotland's legal system, like it's education system, was once respected. Now both of them have been fucked by a home grown party. Why the fuck would the EU want anything to do with this shower?



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  18. Linda Fabian's stupid letter to Alex Salmond warning him to respect the Inquiry was answered by Salmond's excellent lawyer Levy and McRae.

    Fabiani's letter was issued to the press before it was issued to Alex Salmond which, for me, means she should go as impartial Chair of this increasingly disreputable Inquiry team.

    Is it true Angels Constance was on the Inquiry team? Then she was promoted (somehow) to once again be the UK's dumbest Government Minister.

    Levy and McRae cost serious money to employ and when they send a 3-page letter on your behalf, that costs serious money too. That's all part of the Holyrood plan of course. To run Alex Salmond out of money....to bankrupt him.

    Fabiani's letters are written by herself with the tacit approval of the Lord Advocate and so all at Holyrood are protected and free from incurring personal cost.

    Why no letter to Peter Murrell.....why no letter to the St. Trinian sister Leslie Evans?

    We are a far very from the mechanisms of fair law for all and transparent Government here, aren't we?

    I think Holyrood has to be closed for a period. Let's get this disgraceful mess sorted-out professionally.

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  19. What we have going-on in Scotland just now, the distrust of all at Holyrood and our legal profession, means that this has to be investigated by an external authority.

    The Secretary of State is in charge of the devolution settlement; he can and I'm sure is involved now.

    If we were in the US just now, then serious jail time for the Murrells, the Lord Advocate, Lesley Evans and John Swinney would be in full view.

    We're not in the US, but Scottish parliamentarians, civil-servants and lawyers must work under the rule of law.

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  20. 'The National' are promising a 'task force' for independence. I was reading elsewhere that the last task force which was successful was the UK task force to take back the Falkland Islands. That was led by Margaret Thatcher, who never blinked. We are led by a skanky wee urchin fae Dreghorn who blinks every second. The omens are thus not good.

    Now would be a great time for Scottish Labour to get themselves sorted-out, as they have done in England. If Jackie Baillie is the best they have to offer in the meantime, the omens are not good for Labour either.

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  21. In Scotland, a plot has been hatched by the present government, in collusion with the police, judiciary and civil-service, to bankrupt and imprison someone they viewed as a political opponent.

    There's a government inquiry going-on just now, but it's a whitewash.

    For how much longer do you think this will remain off the pages of the newspapers?

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  22. Presumably Kier Starmer will be up to date with developments. He was some kind of Human Rights Lawyer, wasn't he?

    If he cannot use this to rid us of Sturgeon and her coterie of publicly-paid crooks then Labour do not deserve a resurgence in Scotland.

    I see the SNP have wheeled-out their intelligentcia this morning. I saw a glimpse of Keith Brown this morning in The Scotsman. All we need now are Ivan McKee, Angela Constance and a few other SNP Ministers and Kier Starmer will be outmaneuvered and outthought by the real big-hitters that have been lurking in the shadows of Holyrood for years doing nothing.

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  23. Ain't no sunshine 'till she's gone.

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  24. Edinburgh Sick Kids Hospital is a balls-up on a par with the Calmac ferries which remain rusting by the quayside at Fergusons in Port Glasgow.

    This hospital should have opened a year and a half ago; it couldn't open because it was designed to inferior design standards.

    Lothian NHS have nevertheless paid £28m to the consortium who funded the project. £28m for a hospital which cannot be used.

    Another example of the criminal incompetence of all at Holyrood. Why is this not questioned by anyone at Holyrood; by Monica Lennon, for example?

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  25. Watch-out for the wee MSP fae Aberdeen, Kevin Stewart. He may be in the news in the coming weeks. He's Nicola's go-to man for creative deals with private companies.

    It's about time he was questioned publicly. That's what's supposed to be done, isn't it? We don't let these wee fixers hide in the shaddows.

    This is Scotland; the land of the enlightenment. Isn't it?

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  26. George - The Scottish civil-service use English lawyers too. The last one I was aware of was a large company based in Newcastle with a very Scottish sounding name.

    The reasons for that I think are two-fold:

    1. It maintains secrecy.
    2. Scottish lawyers can get it wrong in their desire to please the Scottish civil-service. One Scottish lawyer will not rat on another Scottish lawyer; they used to and it is on that basis that the law works, but not any longer. Hence, you go to an English lawyer. You have to have money to do that of course, but Scotgov have plenty of that.

    I'll say one thing for Salmond, he tried hard to split-up law and politics. For example, he removed the Lord Advocate from the table of Holyrood Ministers. The first thing Sturgeon did when coming to power was to bring him back again.

    You will find that no other country in Europe works the way we do with lawyers being told to do things by Murrell, Swinney, Sturgeon and Evans. There is a good reason for that which we can see play-out here.

    Wolffe is nothing but a human shield and his continuing presence is killing the reputation of the legal profession stone dead.

    The lawyers, I'm afraid, need to be fucked here because they are being paid £300/hour for racketeering on a par with anything you will find in The Godfather, and they know it.

    As you say, suspend Holyrood and send-in the investigators and the auditors. Will it ever re-open? It depends what they will find of course and if it is left to Fabiani and Baillie they will find nothing, but I wouldn't be surprised if the public reaction to ALL at Holyrood was so negative that it would never re-open.

    Scotland badly needs a new Art School. Maybe that would be a better use for Holyrood.

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  27. I've read this 4 or 5 times now and it amounts to an excellent summary. A complex subject, simply explained so that anyone can understand it. Well done.

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  28. I notice that Monica Lennon has thrown her Gucci hat into the ring. If she wins, Labour are fucked. She's a died in the wool product of Holyrood. Talks but doesn't know what she is talking about; that doesn't matter at Holyrood. Does absolutely nothing....and I mean nothing.

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  29. Dear Anon

    "I've read this 4 or 5 times now and it amounts to an excellent summary. A complex subject, simply explained so that anyone can understand it. Well done".

    Einstein said:

    "If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough".

    Try to follow that curve so people get educated and entertained.

    George

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  30. Dear Anon

    Monica Lennon standing, well that is very brave of her.

    George

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  31. Monica's the go-to girl for free fanny-pads. Throughout this pandemic, she has maintained a laser-like focus on free fanny-pads for all. Others, like you and me, are vexing about our delinquent legal profession, the fat husband of the FM, the Lord Advocate and civil-service, but Monica has remained resolute in spite of all of that small potatoes stuff going-on in the background.

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  32. JRM to Tommy Sheppard.....

    What is going on in the SNP is interesting, is it not? I thought the hon. Gentleman might want to tell us a bit about that—about the rows between Mrs Sturgeon and Mr Salmond, with one accusing the other of not being entirely accurate in her evidence to the Scottish Parliament’s Committees. I thought he might be asking for a debate on that. Would it not be interesting to understand all the shenanigans that are going on—the accusations of forgetfulness, of money being spent, and of breaches of the ministerial code? Not a word of that: just the old complaint that the referendum in 2014 was not a valid referendum.

    That's our SNP Westminster contingent put back in their box and the lid nailed shut.

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  33. Remember the fuss about Margaret Ferrier, the Rutherglen SNP MP who took a train to London whilst infested with Coronavirus?

    It was investigated by the Met and no charges were brought. We're in the middle of a pandemic and literally thousands of people were doing the same thing, albeit inadvertently.

    I just heard that Peter Murrell's Plod Alba have stepped in and have charged Margaret Ferrier (God knows what the charges are).

    We're not inching towards a semi-authoritarian state, we are striding towards a semi-authoritarian state.

    Is no-one else noticing this?

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  34. Alex Salmond is not attending the Holyrood Inquiry tomorrow.

    He's a private individual who is having to employ lawyers to keep him out of the grasp of James Wolffe. Why should he attend? - he has everything to lose and nothing to gain.

    Liz Lloyd didn't attend, so why should Alex?

    This story is within a whisker of national headline news and so just leave it to excellent journalists like George and Rev Stuart. They have distilled it all down so that it is easily understood by all.

    Leave the vapid Linda Fabiani and Jackie Baillie to terrorize the intellectual lightweights. These intellectual lightweights tend to be coached by James Wolffe.

    This story is getting more like Watergate every day. 40 officials went to jail in the aftermath of Watergate and so don't let yourself be kidded that anyone at Holyrood is completely innocent.

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  35. 'Getting rid of a political rival can take time. Not everyone has ready access to Novichok'.

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  36. https://gordondangerfield.com/2021/01/18/contrary-to-the-facts-the-evidence-of-leslie-evans-and-judith-mackinnon/

    No wonder Alex Salmond didn't wish to appear before the Shortbread Senate Inquiry. Civil-servants can lie their way through it and absolutely nothing happens to them. They are protected.

    Not so Alex Salmond.

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  37. The investigation which is ongoing is easily on a par with Watergate. There it was all done by a few folk at the Washington Post.

    In Scotland, our indigenous newspapers are crap. They have each lifted to SNP coin and are therefore reticent to be seen to be critical, or even to ask awkward questions.

    Our Holyrood Inquiry is a load of bollocks.

    In Scotland, the investigation is being done by the likes of Stuart Campbell, George Laird, Gordon Dangerfield, Robin McAlpine and Craig Murray.

    Each is putting himself in harms way to gather the truth, in the same way the Washington Post journalists were.

    This story has tremendous momentum now, all because of these chaps. This is award winning journalism, make no mistake about that.

    As everyone says, there is more to come. You will read a better synopsis of where we are here than you will in The Scotsman or The Herald.

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  38. 'Scotland’s roll-out of the Covid-19 vaccine is going more slowly than England’s due to a concerted effort to vaccinate care home residents, Nicola Sturgeon has said'.

    That is, of course, because a significant percentage of care home residents in Scotland are already dead due to Covid. Best look after those that remain alive.

    Otherwise, if it wasn't for the British Army our vaccinations would be even slower than they are already.

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  39. From Hero to Zero...Maybe he's getting Karma for ignoring the 1000s of abused in Scotlands Dickensian institutions. At least he can afford fancy lawyers. Others were silenced.

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  40. Dear Anon

    "The investigation which is ongoing is easily on a par with Watergate. There it was all done by a few folk at the Washington Post."

    I would like to sit with all the evidence, a note pad, access to a lawyer, and go through every page, every note, every email, every scrap of paper, to see how it all links up. I think there is still more to come out, and there should be retrospective investigations into the civil servants, with severe penalties up to and including pension entitlement loss if any of them has been involved in criminal activity while at their place of work.

    George

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  41. I understand that the Legal Ruling in the case of Salmon was made public heavily redacted. I have see an unredacted version that heavily cruises the SNo and effectively saying the actions of the Scottish Government has seriously jeopardized the accused getting a fair trial.

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