Archive for the ‘Revolutionary History’ Category
British Trotskyism Until 1949 on Mastermind
We wonder is this a spoof? How many questions did you get right? Happy Christmas and give the 2013 New Year a fab welcome!
Update, Stephen’s Day, December 26 2012 :
Definitely this is genuine, not a spoof :
Mastermind – First Round Heat 21/24
Practically a photo finishThe BBC’s inscrutable campaign to sabotage the original Mastermind show continues. For at exactly the same time that the show began tonight on BBC2, a version of Celebrity Mastermind, featuring David Tennant, and Screamin’ Davina hosted by John Humphrys made up a small segment of the Comic Relief Extravaganza. Coincidence ? I should cocoa.If you missed the original and best, then its a shame, since it was a great episode tonight, and the tension for me was heightened by the fact that I know two of tonight’s contenders. Howard Pizzey took part in the 2007 series of blessed memory, and achieved the unenviable feat of scoring a massive 29 in the first round, but still not getting to the semi finals. Howard had no luck whatsoever last year, so my fingers were resolutely crossed for him.I also know David Porch, in as much as David is a ‘face’ in the pub quiz circuit between Cardiff and Bridgend. We’ve played against each other in many quizzes. Eagle eyed viewers might also have spotted David playing for one of the teams in Battle of the Brains a couple of weeks ago. David , who is new to Mastermind,was answering questions on the films of Sidney Poitier. It was a virtuoso performance too, and these questions were no picnic. 14 and 1 pass sounded like a pretty good score to me.
Paul Moorhouse is not someone I know personally, but he is not unknown in Mastermind circles. This was, I believe his third Mastermind performance, having made the semi finals in both 2000 in the Radio 4 Mastermind competition, and the 2004 series. It seemed to me that he had some very long questions on his subject of British Trotskyism, so 12 points and no passes was not by any means a bad return. Read the rest of this entry »
British State Helped UDA to kill Pat Finucane – but Prevented this Loyalist Killing Machine from Bumping Off Gerry Adams
The British State facilitated the murder of Pat Finucane – and prevented the UDA from killing Gerry Adams – all done to help the Six County Peace Process.
UPDATED DECEMBER 7th
It remains to be seen just which UDA plot to kill the Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams it was that leading UK barrister Sir Desmond de Silva was referring to when he sent a message to the Louth TD this week warning him that details of the plot would be revealed in his 500-page report into the UDA’s killing of Belfast solicitor, Pat Finucane which is due to be published in the coming days.
De Silva’s private, and remarkably speedy inquiry into the Finucane murder was the response of British prime minister David Cameron to nearly two decades of calls for a full, sworn public inquiry into a scandal that nearly everyone knows, especially the British government, enmeshes MI5, British military intelligence and the RUC Special Branch in a series of murders carried out mostly in Belfast in the 1980’s by Loyalists, acting as a classic counter…
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Book Launch – Ireland in the World Order, written by Maurice Coakley – Thursday September 20, 7.00pm, Teachers’ Club 36 Parnell Square West, Dublin 1
Invitation to a Dublin launch of a new book :
Ireland in the World Order, written by Maurice Coakley

Maurice Coakley focuses on key elements that contributed to Ireland’s development, examining its bloody and violent incorporation into the British state, its refusal to embrace the Protestant Reformation and failure to industrialise in the 19th century. Coakley considers the crucial question of why Ireland’s national identity has come to rest on a mass movement for independence.
Andy Storey will launch the book
Details :
Thursday September 20, 7.00pm, in the
Teachers’ Club 36 Parnell Square West, Dublin 1
Feel free to bring a friend
Ireland in the World Order examines Ireland’s development from the medieval to the modern era, comparing its unique trajectory with that of England, Scotland and Wales.
Maurice Coakley focuses on key elements that contributed to Ireland’s development, examining its bloody and violent incorporation into the British state, its refusal to embrace the Protestant Reformation and failure to industrialise in the 19th century. Coakley considers the crucial question of why Ireland’s national identity has come to rest on a mass movement for independence.
Cutting through many of the myths – imperialist and nationalist – which have obscured the real reasons for Ireland’s course of development, Ireland in the World Order provides a new perspective for students and academics of Irish history.
About The Author
Maurice Coakley lectures in the Journalism and Media Studies faculty of Griffith College, Dublin.
More information at this link :
Ireland in the World Order – by Maurice Coakley
Bernadette McAliskey Interview – Not Much Has Changed in Northern Ireland
http://m.midulstermail.co.uk/news/local/progress-yes-change-bernadette-devlin-mcaliskey-1-4177025 This is a very sharp interview – highly recommended.
Boston College Oral History Archive – Dealing with the Past: BBC Radio Ulster Talkback Transcript | Boston College Subpoena News
Tommy McKearney (Former IRA Volunteer), discusses the Boston Tapes Dispute with two other panelists – Norman Hamill, a former police officer, and Roger Bailey, a psychologist. It is an excellent debate.
Link :
Former IRA Volunteer, an Ex Police Officer and a Psychologist Assess the Boston Archive
Norman Hamill’s Opinion :
The whole issue is enormously difficult but I think on balance I tend to come down on the side of thinking that the police are making a mistake in seeking these tapes because it is important that history is accurately recorded and that can make a contribution to our understanding.
And after all, we do have a mature attitude to the past now. People aren’t going to serve lengthy prison sentences for anything they’ve done.
So I think on balance it would have been better if the police had let this drop.
The Guardian (July 10) carries an Anthony McIntyre article :
Northern Ireland conflict archives should not fall into police hands
The British State is attempting to monopolise an “official version” of history :
Moreover, the double standards of the British state are on full display. It refuses access to the archives in the possession of its security services to the family of the murdered solicitor Pat Finucane, despite David Cameron admitting security force collusion in Finucane’s death.
What sort of history do we want? :
Ultimately, law enforcement agencies, which cannot escape culpability for Northern Ireland’s “dirty war”, are now trying to shape society’s knowledge of that war by seeking to monopolise control over what unfolds from the past while simultaneously relegating the role of academic and journalistic researchers. Any agency other than law enforcement is liable to be sabotaged. A law enforcement view of history is a partial and self-serving one, which seeks to conceal rather than reveal.
Link :
NUJ Dismay over Boston Tapes Ruling | Boston College Subpoena News
National Union of Journalists : Dismay Over Boston Tapes Ruling
NUJ General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet said the ruling has “significant implications” for academic and journalistic research.
She said:
“These interviews were recorded between 2001 and 2006 and each participant understood the recording would not be released prior to their death. We salute the stand taken by Ed Moloney, Belfast Project Director and Anthony McIntyre, who carried out the interviews in good faith. It is regrettable that Boston College did not support their legal challenge in relation to the Price interview. It is deeply disappointing that the challenge has failed. As a union we are concerned at the chilling effect which this ruling will have on academic and journalistic research but we are also concerned at the possible threat to the safety of Anthony McIntyre and Ed Moloney.”
This Henry McDonald Guardian article is also worth reading:
Disclosure of IRA testimony held in Boston could stall search for truth
Link :
SECOND FRONT OPENED IN LEGAL FIGHT TO SAVE BOSTON COLLEGE ARCHIVES
SECOND FRONT OPENED IN LEGAL FIGHT TO SAVE BOSTON COLLEGE ARCHIVES
Ed Moloney and Anthony McIntyre are pleased to announce that they are opening a second front in their fight to prevent the Police Service of Northern Ireland gaining access to the Belfast Archive at Boston College. In addition to the legal action currently ongoing in the federal appeals court in Boston, they have this week filed papers in the Belfast courts seeking a judicial review of the PSNI action alleging that the UK authorities are in breach of the European Convention on Human Rights and the British Human RIghts Act of 1998. The Judicial Review asks that the British Home Office’s request of assistance from the United States be quashed, the subpoenas be declared unlawful, a discontinuation of the PSNI’s application for the material, and for an injunction stopping any material from Boston College being received by the PSNI. The two legal actions in Belfast and Boston emphasise our utter determination that the enormously valuable historical documents in the Boston College archive will never fall into the hands of anyone except those authorised by the terms of the solemn and unbreakable contracts we made with the interviewees. Ultimately these papers tell a part of Ireland’s recent troubled history and they should be used for no reason other than to educate and inform. Read the rest of this entry »
Dignified Protest in Clonmel at Labour Party Hypocrisy – Honouring James Connolly and Jim Larkin
We publish below a Report from Séamus Healy TD on Protests marking the 100th anniversary of the all-Ireland Labour party founded by James Connolly and Jim Larkin.
See also an Irish Times account of the same event,
Dignified Protest in Clonmel at Labour Party Hypocrisy
A dignified and successful protest organised by the Workers and Unemployed Action Group was held outside the Town Hall Clonmel on Sunday last , May 27 2012.
The event was organised to protest against the savage austerity being imposed on the Irish people by the Labour Party in Government and to expose the claim that the Labour Party of today has anything in common with the all-Ireland Labour party founded by James Connolly and Jim Larkin in Clonmel 100 years ago.
As is now usual the Labour Party was in hiding, they had run away again, cancelling the ceremony and sneaking into the Town Hall ‘earlier’ for a private unveiling. Three weeks ago Eamonn Gilmore and the Labour Leadership ran away, pulling out of the Clonmel Commemoration and giving the pathetic excuse of the Referendum. Read the rest of this entry »
Gerry Foley 1939 – 2012 : An American Revolutionary Inspired by Irish Rebellions
Gerry Foley 1939 – 2012 : An American Revolutionary Inspired by Irish Rebellions
Many thanks to friends and comrades on the Cedar Lounge Site for publishing a tribute to an old friend and comrade, Gerry Foley. Here is an article from March 1996 where Foley analyses the state of the “Peace Process” in Ireland after the IRA had broken its ceasefire and started a bombing campaign in England. Two key points are highlighted here :
There is a well-established pattern in the long history of Irish republicanism that when the movement loses its momentum or its perspective in Ireland it turns to bombing England in the hope that scattered explosions in the imperial heartland will have a political effect greater than anything that can be achieved in Ireland. Such a course was followed in the name of the “Skirmishing Fund” in the 1880s after the Land League struggles were defused by a reformist leadership and at the end of the 1930s when the IRA was torn apart by unresolved political differences and lost its direction.
The movement found itself in a blind alley when it proved unable to widen the political breakthrough that it had made in 1980-81 as a result of the mass movement in support of the ten Republican prisoners who starved themselves to death one after the other in protest against the British machinery of repression. This was the basic political context in which Republican leadership began negotiations with the British authorities in 1990, which led to the IRA ceasefire on August 31, 1994.John Meehan April 23 2012 What's behind the breakdown of the Irish Peace Process? by Gerry Foley The Irish "peace process" was not ended by the flurry of IRA bombings in London in February. At the end of the month, the British and Irish governments announced agreement for the start of all-party talks -- including Sinn Fein, the Irish Republican political organization -- on June 10.So-called proximity talks -- that is, indirectly involving Sinn Fein -- were to be held in March 4-13 to prepare for a new round of negotiations. As a condition for including Sinn Fein in the June talks, London and Dublin insisted on a resumption of the IRA ceasefire. Gerry Adams, president of Sinn Fein, and John Hume, leader of the bourgeois nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), met with the IRA leadership to discuss renewal of the "peace process." The IRA response was noncommittal, obviously reflecting an uneasiness in the Republican movement over where the peace process had been leading. The IRA statement, released February 29, said: "We listened attentively to the case presented by both leaders and noted their shared commitment to restoring the peace process... "For our part," the IRA leadership continued, "we restated our absolute commitment to our republican objectives, which include the free exercise by the Irish people of our inalienable right to national self-determination. "We also took the opportunity to reiterate what we said on February 9 [the date of the statement declaring the end of the ceasefire], stressing that a resolution of the conflict in our country demands justice and an inclusive negotiated settlement without preconditions. "We pointed out to Mr. Hume and Mr. Adams that the failure of the British government to put in place inclusive negotiations free from preconditions, the abuse of the peace process by the British over 18 months, and the absence of an effective and democratic approach capable of providing an irrevocable momentum towards a just and lasting peace in Ireland, were the critical elements which led to the failure, thus farm, of the Irish peace process." The conditions that led to the "peace process" still exist. The British government and its pro-imperialist allies in Northern Ireland have not crushed the insurgency of the radicalized section of the nationalist population in the Catholic ghettos. On the other hand, the military campaign of the IRA has been effectively contained by the massive British military machine. Politically, the militant nationalists have been clearly isolated and on the defensive for many years. In a blind alley The movement found itself in a blind alley when it proved unable to widen the political breakthrough that it had made in 1980-81 as a result of the mass movement in support of the ten Republican prisoners who starved themselves to death one after the other in protest against the British machinery of repression. This was the basic political context in which Republican leadership began negotiations with the British authorities in 1990, which led to the IRA ceasefire on August 31, 1994. On February 9, 1996, the IRA leadership announced that it was ending the ceasefire. Their statement said: "The [ceasefire] presented an historic challenge for everyone, and an Oglaigh na hIireann [IRA] commends the leaderships of nationalist Ireland at home and abroad. "They rose to the challenge. The British prime minister did not. Instead of embracing the peace process, the British government acted in bad faith with Mr. Major and the Unionist leaders squandering this unprecedented opportunity to resolve the conflict.... "We take this opportunity to reiterate our total commitment to our Republican objectives. The resolution of the conflict in our country demands justice. It demands an inclusive negotiated settlement. That is not possible unless and until the British government faces up to its responsibilities. "The blame for the failure thus far of the Irish peace process lies squarely with John Major and his government." This statement was followed within hours by the explosion of a truck bomb outside a large building in the Docklands area of London. The blast was claimed by the IRA. On February 15, a small bomb placed by the IRA in a phone box in London's theatre district was defused by police, following an IRA warning. On February 18, a bomb carried by an IRA operative on a London bus exploded prematurely, killing him and injuring several passengers. According to accounts in the British press, about a third of the IRA men killed since the start of the insurgency in Northern Ireland have died in premature explosions of their own bombs. This figure attests to readiness for self-sacrifice of the Republican volunteers but not to a high degree of military organization. That is understandable. The IRA is based essentially on a small impoverished community that is under the constant surveillance of one of the world's biggest and best equipped professional military forces. A well-established pattern What is decisive for the IRA, therefore, is the political impact of its actions, and in particular the effect on the morale of its activists and supporters. There is a well-established pattern in the long history of Irish republicanism that when the movement loses its momentum or its perspective in Ireland it turns to bombing England in the hope that scattered explosions in the imperial heartland will have a political effect greater than anything that can be achieved in Ireland. Such a course was followed in the name of the "Skirmishing Fund" in the 1880s after the Land League struggles were defused by a reformist leadership and at the end of the 1930s when the IRA was torn apart by unresolved political differences and lost its direction. This pattern tends to recur, despite the fact that its political effects on British and international pubic opinion have always been negative. On the other hand, these actions have served as a symbol of indomitable resistance for Irish Republicans themselves. In the present situation of the peace process, however, the Republican strategy is to use the pressure of international public opinion to induce the British to give concessions to the nationalist people. In this respect, it is hard to see how the London bombings could have any effect other than to weaken the political position of the Republican movement. That point was made in fact in two quite long letters published in the February 29 issue of An Phoblacht/Republican News, the weekly newspaper of the Republican movement. In one of them, a Republican political prisoner in England, Joe O'Connell, wrote: "For the IRA to order a resumption of war until it is promised a date for all-party negotiations -- something which is achievable under the now binned peace process anyway -- must surely go down as the most stupid, blinkered and ill-conceived decision ever made by a revolutionary body anywhere ever before in history." Given the intense pressures on the Republicans in the wake of the London bombings, publication of these letters must have been a carefully considered political decision. Endless "talks about talks" On the other hand, in the same issue of An Phoblacht, the editorial touched on the nub of the problem: "So the convoluted progress of the peace process continues with yet more convoluted language.... "Republicans should welcome the fixed date for all-party talks, but essential guarantees must be in place.... Sinn Fein cannot sign up to a process which underpins the unionist veto [e.g. the veto of the pro-imperialist settler caste that is a majority in Northern Ireland but a minority in Ireland as a whole] and partition.... "On Wednesday evening, in the aftermath of the communique, Unionists signalled that they will not move beyond the first item on the agenda -- in effect, decommissioning [the IRA surrendering its weapons] -- until it is resolved. "In fact, David Trimble went further and said that his party will not meet face to face with Sinn Fein until the issue is resolved. How then can there be all-party talks?" To sum it up, the peace process has become a labyrinth in which the Republicans find themselves becoming more and more lost, further and further from the goals of their struggle, and without even any real alleviation of the repression from which they have been suffering. That is obviously the reason why the IRA statements kept repeating that the movement is going to stick resolutely to its goal -- a united Ireland free of imperialist domination. One might think something else from the Sinn Fein leaders' exaltation of "peace" as the greatest of "sublunary blessings," and from the "hand of friendship" that Adams has extended even to British Prime Minister John Major. Since the IRA have suffered most for the movement's goals, obviously they feel the drift from them most acutely. In this regard, the new promise of "all party talks" solves absolutely nothing. In fact, it appears only to be a continuation of the British delaying tactics designed to exhaust the patience of the militant nationalists and provoke them into desperate acts that can be exploited to further isolate and demoralize themselves and their supporters. Increasing frustration The critics in the February 29 An Phoblacht of the IRA's resumption of military action were quite correct about the effects of these actions. What they failed to recognize is that they are absolutely inevitable if the "peace process" talks about talks keep dragging on with no results expect increasing the confusion and frustration of the nationalist population. In fact, the new agreement for talks is between the British and Irish governments, in which Sinn Fein is included as basically a juvenile delinquent ward of the Irish government. Dublin effectively promised to get the Republicans to mind their manners in order to be accepted into talks, and thus is now twisting their arms harder and harder. After the end of the IRA ceasefire, the Sinn Fein leadership called for public pressure for a resumption of the peace process. On the weekend of February 24-25, in fact, there were demonstrations of tens of thousands of people in Ireland for peace. But Sinn Fein found itself mingling with forces that were demanding a peace that meant simply condemnation of the IRA and abandonment of the goal of national liberation. The IRA itself, while impatient with the "peace process," has still not challenged its basic premise, the "nationalist consensus" -- that is, a bloc of all nationalists, including the Dublin government and the bourgeois nationalists of the SDLP. That is the nub of the problem. The Republicans recognize there is a contradiction between the British imperialist and all nationalists, including the bourgeois nationalists. After all, the bourgeois nationalists rule in the name of the goal of Irish independence. But they have decided to forget that they live by selling out Irish nationalism. Thus, the contradiction cannot be exploited simply by hobnobbing with them. That means that they pull the Republicans rather than the other way around. The only way to exploit the contradiction is to expose the bourgeois nationalists' false pretences of defending the interests of the Irish people. But this requires mass campaigns against the most acutely felt concrete effects of imperialist domination, not abstract appeals to the bourgeois nationalists' presumed love of peace and sense of responsibility, or concern for the fate of their compatriots. The civil rights struggle that led to the insurgency in Northern Ireland and assured its continuation for more than 25 years shows what can be accomplished by such a course. It was the failure of the Republicans to set in motion such a process in the South after the end of the 1980-81 hunger strikes that led them into their present predicament. Gerry Foley was International Editor for Socialist Action USA when this article first appeared in March 1996.
On foot of the sad news that Gerry Foley has died here’s a few pieces relating to him and his life. As a socialist with a profound interest in Ireland and matters Irish and as the author of a number of pamphlets directly linked to that his views of the situation, particularly in the early to mid 1970s are of particular interest.
We start with with a letter from a comrade of his reflecting on his passing and his life.
Dear Comrades,
I just learned from Gerry Foley’s friend in Mexico that Gerry died suddenly today in Mexico. Gerry called me a few days ago to say that he was happily moving from his rented home in Mérida to a happy home in San Cristobol de Las Cases, in the mountains of Chiapas.
Just a few moments ago Gerry was walking into his house. He fell down and died almost immediately…
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