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Dublin feud and the iron fist of newco

category national | crime and justice | news report author Sunday August 04, 2013 15:20author by Ernie O'Malley Report this post to the editors

those who oppose the take over of republicanism by 'former' pia men of newco are being threatened and shot. soe of those shot were involved in crime, crime that was supported by those who now claim the are involved in a 'clean up'. those being shot and threatened also not coincidently oppose the take over by outside forces. thos ebeing threatened include a mother of a fallen volunteer.



'NewCo/NIRA' have been shooting various individuals either associated or formerly associated with the 32csm/RIRA in Dublin. Far more have been threatened with death. Some of these were involved in criminality. crime that was fully permitted and encouraged under the new six county 'leadership' who were more concerned with money in the short term, then in the inevitable repercussions to both working class communities and republicanism.

But there are others now being threatened and in the latest instance even shot not over any criminality but because they are standing up for their political beliefs and 32csm were founded around the concept of national sovergnty and the new 'bosses' are not a bit interested in such ideas. lets be clear, this is not a 'clean up' but a hostile takeover by a northern based gang of 'former' PIRA men who see any resistance to such takeover as a hurdle that must be jumped by brutal armed force. if you oppose this takeover by these provies you are under threat at the moment. The same situation is now about to unravel in other areas , as 32 members and supporters who do not tow the 'newco' line are being sidelined and threatened with violence..

This is the 'success' vaunted of the takeover by 'independent Republicans'/ 'former PIRA' yes men from Lurgan and the east Tyrone area.

It gets even more ludicrous, not content with those that were until very recently were muscle used by the Gerry's 'kitchen cabinet' against principled Republicans and the 'dissidents', this 'newco' leadership then merges with outright MI5 outfit RAAD. This group operates loosely under numerous monikers; NIRA, Friends & Family, 1916 Societies, etc. They must be opposed. Francie Mackey has bravely spoken out at the 32csm Wolfe Tone commemoration against this take over. There are many who support him in this. To repair this they must oust those that supported the take over and resist the introduction of redmondite poll ', the Adamsism without Adams' line of the newco front group the 1916 societies as other Republicans are refering to the 'republicanism' of the 'border poll' and so called 'independent' events and commemorations organised by and for newco. In fact, a new nickname has appeared in Republican circles, as 32, irsp, eirigi and rsf members talk about 'the tuffies'. at first, i didn't understand how sucha nickname came to be, then i was told it was a joke that referred to both the 'hard man' strut of these newco tough men and it also rhymed with the face of NewCo. While humourus is the nickname, the iron fist they seek to impose is far from funny.

What they have engaged in Maghaberry is certainly not a joke. The Armagh man thought to be behind the merger managed to get a well respected Republican, since released, thrown into SSU. Other prisoners were attacked for not accepting this man as 'boss'. Michael Campbell case completely forgotten about. One could easily wonder if the internment cases against Marion Price was connected? Is the case of Martin Corey linked to all this. the connection? Would Marion allow 32csm to cheer the criminal provo takeover who have taken over the 32cs? She has since left the 32csm. Would Martin, a well respected Republican veteran be able to talk younger people away from the clutches of any of these people who promise them 'action'?

And now we have the Dublin feud. A rather one sided feud where only those who oppose the takeover are dealt with. And the free state media is lapping it up. Enough is enough. Republicans who believe our cause is noble are duty bound to speak out. Let them call it what they like, remember it is principles that matter, not numbers. Remember what these people are and what they have done: In all cases, they are being utilised to confuse and demoralise and are useful to maintain an eye on younger, naive Republicans who are foolishly drawn to these groups with their promises of 'action'. They are poisoning our communities and destroying republicanism. While the joke about ' the tuffys' those in eirigi, irsp or rsf should not feel immune. the iron fist of newco will come to your door as well eventually. this seek total control. Stand up, now because as the gunshots ringing out in the capital city tell us, they have already arrived.

author by George Gilmorepublication date Mon Aug 05, 2013 19:57author address author phone Report this post to the editors

It hardly matters, the 32s is full of yes men, they will toe the line no matter what, it is populated with people who bought the lies about POWs on one landing in Maghaberry and spread them themsleves.

Anyone with half a brain knows where those lies came from.

They tried to criminalise the RNU and prisoners on roe 3 with their smear campaign but they failed.

Imagine the very idea of the 32s/RIRA running back to the provos and embracing an outift (RAAD) they labelled in 2009 an MI5 counter gang, hardly surprising when most of its founders left it due to the corruption, and the taxation of drug dealers who they 'oppose'.

It all comes down to their inability to wage war on the one hand and the fact that they dont care about politics. they may talk about sovereignty, but do they really care? for many its about being the hard man.

They have a presence in about 5 counties and call themselves 32csm, they have been in decline for so long talking shit about killing this drug dealer and that dealer and fighting the british and doing nothing about it.

The 'Dissidents' in the early days were well ale to accept the rot at the core of the PRM, and accept that the ADAMS leadership was rotten and highly dubious and now they wouldnt beleive for a minute that their new found movement maybe run by Imperialist elements agents and spies.

The PRM was infiltrated at top and maybe this one is too

author by brionOcleirigh - AllVoicespublication date Tue Aug 06, 2013 07:18author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I though this was a good article, I hope no one minds if I put it here !

"The war on drugs is often more harmful to the users than the illicit substances that they use. Click here to make a minimum contribution of $30 and receive a compelling personal and professional account of why the war on drugs is doomed to fail. Dr. Carl Hart's "High Price: A Neuroscientist's Journey of Self-Discovery That Challenges Everything You Know About Drugs and Society" is now available, shipped directly from Truthout.
Eugene Jarecki, award-winning documentary filmmaker of "The House I Live In," which explores the injustices of America's prison system writes of "High Price," "Carl Hart is a peerless contributor to America's discourse on drug policy. He combines the rigor of a scientist with the street smarts of a former hustler. The result here is 'High Price', a fiercely uncompromising look at public health and an inspiring personal journey."

Prologue
The paradox of education is precisely this - that as one begins to become conscious, one begins to examine the society in which he is being educated.
—James Baldwin

The straight glass pipe filled with ethereal white smoke. It was thick enough to see that it could be a good hit, but it still had the wispy quality that distinguishes crack cocaine smoke from cigarette or marijuana smoke. The smoker was thirty-nine, a black man, who worked as a street bookseller. He closed his eyes and lay back in the battered leather office chair, holding his breath to keep the drug in his lungs as long as possible. Eventually, he exhaled, a serene smile on his face, his eyes closed to savor the bliss.
About fifteen minutes later, the computer signaled that another hit was available.
“No, thanks, doc,” he said, raising his left hand slightly. He hit the space bar on the Mac in the way that he’d been trained to press to signal his choice.
Although I couldn’t know for sure whether he was getting cocaine or placebo, I knew the experiment was going well. Here was a middle-aged brother, someone most people would label a “crackhead,” a guy who smoked rock at least four to five times a week, just saying no to a legal hit of what had a good chance of being 100 percent pure pharmaceutical-grade cocaine. In the movie version, he would have been demanding more within seconds of his first hit, bug-eyed and threatening—or pleading and desperate.
Nonetheless, he’d just calmly turned it down because he preferred to receive five dollars in cash instead. He’d sampled the dose of cocaine earlier in the session: he knew what he would get for his money. At five dollars for what I later learned was a low dose of real crack cocaine, he preferred the cash.
Meanwhile, there I was, another black man, raised in one of the roughest neighborhoods of Miami, who might just as easily have wound up selling cocaine on the street. Instead, I was wearing a white lab coat and being funded by grants from the federal government to provide cocaine as part of my research into understanding the real effects of drugs on behavior and physiology. The year was 1999.
In this particular experiment, I was trying to understand how crack cocaine users would respond when presented with a choice between the drug and an “alternative reinforcer”—or another type of reward, in this case, cash money. Would anything else seem valuable to them? In a calm, laboratory setting, where the participants lived in a locked ward and had a chance to earn more than they usually could on the street, would they take every dose of crack, even small ones, or would they be selectiveabout getting high? Would merchandise vouchers be as effective as cash in altering their behavior? What would affect their choices?
Before I’d become a researcher, these weren’t even questions that I would think to ask. These were drug addicts, I would have said. No matter what, they’d do anything to get to take as much drugs as often as possible. I thought of them in the disparaging ways I’d seen them depicted in films like New Jack City and Jungle Fever and in songs like Public Enemy’s “Night of the Living Baseheads.” I’d seen some of my cousins become shells of their former selves and had blamed crack cocaine. Back then I believed that drug users could never make rational choices, especially about their drug use, because their brains had been altered or damaged by drugs.
And the research participants I studied should have been especially driven to use drugs. They were experienced and committed crack cocaine users, who typically spent between $100 and $500 a week on it. We deliberately recruited individuals who were not seeking treatment, because we felt that it would be unethical to give cocaine to someone who had expressed an interest in quitting.
The bookseller was seated in a small, bare chamber at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital (now New York–Presbyterian) in upper Manhattan; his cocaine pipe had been lit by a nurse at his side with a lighter, who also helped monitor his vital signs during the research. I was watching him and several others in similar rooms through a one-way mirror; they knew we were observing them. And over and over, these drug users continued to defy conventional expectations.
Not one of them crawled on the floor, picking up random white particles and trying to smoke them. Not one was ranting or raving. No one was begging for more, either—and absolutelynone of the cocaine users I studied ever became violent. I was getting similar results with methamphetamine users. They, too, defied stereotypes. The staff on the ward where my drug studyparticipants lived for several weeks of tests couldn’t even distinguish them from others who were there for studies on far less stigmatized conditions like heart disease and diabetes.
To me, by that point in my career, their myth-busting behavior was no longer a surprise—no matter how odd and unlikely it may seem to many Americans raised on Drug Awareness Resistance Education (DARE) antidrug programs and “This is your brain on drugs” TV commercials. My participants’ responses—and those in the dozens of other studies we’d already run, as well as studies by other researchers around the country—had begun to expose important truths. Not just about crack cocaine and about addiction, but about the way the brain works and the way that pleasure affects human behavior. Not just about drugs, but about the way science works and about what we can learn when we apply rigorous scientific methods. This research was beginning to reveal what lies behind choice and decision-making in general and how, even when affected by drugs, it is influenced powerfully by other factors as well.
These experiments were potentially controversial, of course: the tabloids could have described me as a “taxpayer-funded pusher, giving ‘crackheads’ and ‘meth-monsters’ what they want.”
Nevertheless, I tried to keep the sensational stuff hidden in the mantle and cold language of science in my scholarly publications. I’d published dozens of papers in important journals, had been awarded prestigious fellowships and competitive grants to conduct research, and had been invited to join influential scientific committees. I cowrote a respected textbook that became the number-onetext used to teach college students about drugs; I won awards for my teaching at Columbia University. But throughout my career I mainly tried to avoid controversy, fearing it might derail me from conducting the work I so loved.
Eventually, I realized that I could no longer stay silent. Much of what we are doing in terms of drug education, treatment, and public policy is inconsistent with scientific data. In order to come to terms with what I have seen in the lab and read in the scientific literature, there is nothing else to do but speak out. Using empirical data, not just personal anecdotes or speculation, I have to discuss the implications of my work outside the insulated and cautious scientific journals, which were my normal métier. Because basically, most of what we think we know about drugs, addiction, and choice is wrong. And my work—and my life—shows why.
As I monitored the people I was studying, I began to think about what had brought each of us to such different places. Why was I the one in the white coat—and not the crack cocaine smoker in the cubicle? What made us different? How did I escape the distressed neighborhoods I grew up in—and the adult lives marked by drugs, prison, violent death, and chaos that so many of my family and childhood friends have had? Why did I instead become a psychology professor at Columbia, specializing in neuropsychopharmacology? What allowed me to make such different choices?
These questions weighed on me even more heavily later in the year as I continued to conduct these experiments. Sometimes, while I watched the drug users contemplate whether to take another dose, I couldn’t help thinking about some of the choices I’d made during my youth. Marvin Gaye’s lyric from “Trouble Man” would run through my head, especially the lines about growing up under difficult circumstances, but eventually turning the tables to succeed. Usually, I tried to keep my past far behind me. But that part of my life had been called to my attention in an unavoidable and shocking way that spring.
Early one morning in March 2000, I was awakened by a loud banging on the door of my Bronx apartment. It was about 6 a.m.; I was in bed with my wife. We had a young son, Damon, who was about to turn five. Several months earlier, I had been promoted to assistant professor at Columbia. Life was good. As we say back home, I was feeling myself. But I also knew that word of my success had hit the streets of South Florida. Indeed, I’d recently received what I thought was an absurd letter from a Florida court claiming that I was the father of a sixteen-year- old boy. The pounding became more insistent.
When I opened the door, I was met by a thick-necked white guy wearing an undersized suit and displaying a badge. He handed me some official paperwork and instructed me to appear before a judge. As it turned out, the boy’s mother had actually gone ahead and filed a paternity suit. I’m embarrassed to say that I didn’t even know her last name. But, in the fall of 1982, when I was fifteen and she was sixteen, we’d had a one-night stand. It started to come to me as I thought back; soon I had a vague memory of her signaling me to sneak in through her window to avoid alerting her mother that she had a visitor.
As the DNA test ultimately confirmed, I’d gotten her pregnant that night. For the next two years, prior to joining the U.S. Air Force, I’d lived in and around the Carol City neighborhood of Miami (known to hip-hop fans as the gun-and drug-filled home of rapper Rick Ross and his Carol City Cartel), but she had never even mentioned the possibility to me that I was the father of her baby boy. And I never even thought to ask, because I had engaged in this type of behavior in the past without noticeable consequences.
But that’s the abrupt way I discovered that I had a son I didn’t know—one who was being raised in the place I’d tried so hard to escape; yet another fatherless black child of a teenage mother. At first, I was enraged, horrified, and embarrassed. I thought I had at least avoided making that mistake. Here I was doing the best I could to raise the child I knew I had in a middle-class, two-parent family. I couldn’t believe it. I didn’t know what to do. Once I got over my initial shock, I was appalled to think about what it must have been like for my son to grow up without ever knowing his father. It really got me thinking about how I’d managed to thrive despite lacking those advantages.
I’d wanted to teach my children everything I hadn’t known as I grew up with a struggling single mother, surrounded by people whose lives were limited by their own lack of knowledge. I wanted them to go to good schools, to know how to negotiate the potential pitfalls of being black in the United States, to not have to live and die by whether they were considered “man” enough on the street. I also wanted to illustrate by my own example that bad experiences like those I had as a child aren’t the defining factor in being authentically black.
Now I had learned that one of my own children—a boy, whose name I learned was Tobias, had grown up for sixteen years in the same way I had, but without any of the hard-earned knowledge I could now offer.
Later, I’d discover as well that he’d taken the very path I feared most. He had dropped out of high school and fathered several children with different women. He had sold drugs and allegedly shot someone. What could I tell my sons about how I’d escaped from the streets? Could my experience and knowledge help change Tobias’s downward trajectory? How did I really manage to go from being one of the black kids in the auxiliary trailer for those with “learning difficulties” in elementary school to being an Ivy League professor?
Though I now regret much of this behavior, like my newfound son I’d sold drugs, I’d carried guns. I’d had my share of fun with the ladies. I’d deejayed in the skating rinks and gyms of Miami performing with rappers like Run-DMC and Luther Campbell in their early gigs, ducking when people started shooting. I’d seen the aftermath of what the police call a “drug-related” homicide up close for the first time when I was just twelve years old; I lost my first friend to gun violence as part of the same chain of events. Indeed, my cousins Michael and Anthony had stolen from their own mother, and I had attributed this abhorrent behavior to their “crack cocaine addictions.” I saw what happened as the crack first took hold in Miami’s poorest black communities. Falling for media interpretations and street myths about all of these experiences had originally misled and misdirected me. Some of that, as we shall see, may ironically have helped me at certain times. But more often, it was a distraction, one that prevented me and so many others in my community from learning how to think critically.
So how could I now in good conscience study this scourge of a drug, even offer it to my own people in the laboratory? In the grand scheme of things, what was really so different between what I was doing in my research and what was likely to get Tobias arrested on the street?
The answers lie in my story and the science, which reveal the untold truth about the real effects of drugs and the choices we make about them as a society. By exploring how these myths and social forces shaped my childhood and career, we can strip away the misinformation that actually drives so-called drug epidemics and leads us to take actions that harm the people and communities we presumably intend to help."

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