Difference between revisions of "Robin Ramsay"
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− | '''Robin Ramsay''' (born 1948, Edinburgh, Scotland) is an author, and co-founder and editor of the magazine, ''Lobster''. Ramsay writes about politics, ''"para-politics"'' or ''[[Deep Politics]]''. His books have been published by Harper-Collins and Pocket Essentials. His writings have resulted in him receiving death threats from a fascist group calling itself [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combat_18 "Combat 18".]<ref>Francis Elliott, "New Labour unshelled", ''Hull Daily Mail'', June 1, 1998, page 14</ref> | + | '''Robin Ramsay''' (born 1948, Edinburgh, Scotland) is an author, and co-founder and editor of the magazine, ''[[Lobster]]''. Ramsay writes about politics, ''"para-politics"'' or ''[[Deep Politics]]''. His books have been published by Harper-Collins and Pocket Essentials. His writings have resulted in him receiving death threats from a fascist group calling itself [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combat_18 "Combat 18".]<ref>Francis Elliott, "New Labour unshelled", ''Hull Daily Mail'', June 1, 1998, page 14</ref> |
==Background== | ==Background== |
Revision as of 16:28, 5 April 2017
Robin Ramsay (editor, author, researcher) | |
---|---|
Born | 1948 Edinburgh, Scotland |
Alma mater | Hull University |
Founder/Owner of | Lobster Magazine |
Interests | deep politics |
Robin Ramsay is co-founder and editor of the Lobster Magazine. He writes about politics, para-politics and deep Politics. |
Robin Ramsay (born 1948, Edinburgh, Scotland) is an author, and co-founder and editor of the magazine, Lobster. Ramsay writes about politics, "para-politics" or Deep Politics. His books have been published by Harper-Collins and Pocket Essentials. His writings have resulted in him receiving death threats from a fascist group calling itself "Combat 18".[1]
Contents
Background
Robin Ramsay studied at Stirling University but left after a term and moved to London. Ramsay later took a degree at Hull University where he became interested in the John F Kennedy assassination.[2]
Lobster Magazine
- Full article: Lobster Magazine
- Full article: Lobster Magazine
Ramsay met fellow Kennedy assassination research enthusiast Stephen Dorril and together they started a magazine about deep politics. Entitled Lobster Magazine, it first appeared in September 1983 as a 24-page A5 magazine. Lobster was "penetrated" by MI5 in 1987, but Ramsay discovered this and was more alert to subsequent attempts at infiltration.[3]
"Conspiracy theories"
Although Ramsay's magazine Lobster includes articles concerning political conspiracy, and he has written a book on the subject, Gareth Mclean writing in the The Scotsman newspaper, says that Ramsay "hates conspiracy theories", quoting him as saying "The term conspiracy theory is used by various intellectual establishments to dismiss people like me. It's irritating but there's nothing you can do about it."[4]
Personal
Robin Ramsay is the eldest child of a food chemist father and housewife mother.[5]
Guardian journalist Robert McCrum describes Ramsay as "an extrovert, fast-talking Scot with jack-of-all-trades experience in alternative journalism, jazz music and the theatre".[6]
In July 1988 Ramsay made an extended appearance on the Channel 4 discussion programme After Dark, alongside Merlyn Rees, H. Montgomery Hyde and others. The programme can be accessed online here.
Publications
- Smear: Wilson and the Secret State (1992) HarperCollins, ISBN 0-586-21713-4 (co-authored with Stephen Dorril)
- Prawn Cocktail Party: The Hidden Power of New Labour (1998) Vision Paperbacks, ISBN 1-901250-20-2
- New Labour (2002) Pocket Essentials, ISBN 1-903047-83-8
- Conspiracy Theories (2006) Pocket Essentials, ISBN 1-904048-65-X
- Politics and Paranoia (2008) Picnic Publishing ISBN 0-9556105-4-0
- Who Shot JFK? (2nd ed. 2009) Pocket Essentials, ISBN 1-84243-232-X
Articles
- Robin Ramsay, ""The Gemstone File" International Times, Vol.4, Number 11, 1978, retrieved 17 August 2012
Bibliography
- "Sexed-up files, lies and surveillance tapes ... One man's search to uncover what lies beneath", Hull Daily Mail, July 13, 2007 Friday, page 10
- "Shock Lobster", Sunday Herald, 17 August 2003. Online at U. Utah
Opinion on Lockerbie
In the Summer 2014 edition of Lobster magazine,[7] Robin Ramsay address the Lockerbie bombing. He reviews Morag Kerr's book "Adequately Explained by Stupidity? Lockerbie, Luggage and Lies" which left him unimpressed:
- "Kerr is a drole writer: chunks of dull technical stuff are punctuated by things like this (admittedly the best example) on page 178:
- ‘There is another possibility. Perhaps the senior detectives were so convinced of the involvement of the German-based cell of the PFLP-GC that they couldn’t conceive of the bomb not having come from Germany. In other words, perhaps those in charge of this investigation were as dumb as a bag of hammers that failed hammer school.’
- "I think the case she makes is plausible: the bomb was planted at Heathrow and the Libyans are innocent. But the last detailed account of the story I read was Paul Foot’s, which was a long time ago, so what do I know?"[8]
Ramsay writes:
- "All the great parapolitical causes célèbres turn into quagmires and Lockerbie is no exception. The quagmire is created by the complexity of the material – which facilitates varying interpretations – the role of state agencies in muddying the water, and the incompetence of some of those who engage with the subject. One of the competents engaged with Lockerbie is the journalist and author John Ashton, whose site on the subject would be the place to start if exploring the quagmire is of interest.[9] One of those making waves in the quagmire is a former diplomat, Patrick Haseldine. Ashton has written a couple of critiques of Haseldine."[10][11][12]
He is supportive of Craig Murray’s views on the topic.
Documents by Robin Ramsay
Title | Document type | Publication date | Subject(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Decoding Edward Jay Epstein's 'LEGEND' | Wikispooks Page | Edward Jay Epstein Legend JFK Assassination | Robin Ramsay claims that Edward Jay Epstein's Legend is disinformation. | |
Document:Our Secret Servants - The Shayler Affair | Article | 1 January 1998 | MI6 MI5 David Shayler | MI5 and its schizophrenic relationship with government |
Quotes by Robin Ramsay
Page | Quote | Date | Source |
---|---|---|---|
"Lone nut" | “Nor, for example, is there any reason to interpret the 'lone assassin' verdict, which emerged immediately after the assassination as itself an indicator of the conspiracy at work. On the perspective I am suggesting, almost before Kennedy's heart stopped beating the one thing which everyone involved would have agreed upon, without discussion, never mind coercion, was that a 'lone nut' verdict had to emerge. The 'truth' was not an issue: in politics the 'truth' is simply a tool.<a href="#cite_note-7">[7]</a> The point about the 'lone nut' is that it was then, and remains (cf Hinckley) the only safe explanation for political assassination within America. 'Disney America'<a href="#cite_note-8">[8]</a>, the fantasy pluralist democracy described in the textbooks on the American political system, cannot accommodate planned political assassination.<a href="#cite_note-9">[9]</a>” | 1983 | Lobster Magazine |
1989 | “In one sense MI6 and MI5 have got it right, are, in fact, a brilliant success. Faced with their biggest crisis of the post-war period, the end of the Red Menace which justified the budgets,
the careers and the gongs, they have emerged with budgets renewed, new agendas approved; untouched by the politicians, unsupervised by anyone, still - we are not supposed to laugh - still accountable to the Crown not Parliament ( i.e. to no-one). Both MI6 and MI5 have reacted to the new conditions post Cold War in thoroughly competent, even creative ways. Needing something something to justify the budget, MI6 picked the international drug trade. Far as I know, since MI6 joined the 'war against drugs' the price of cocaine and heroin in the UK at street level has halved: it is now cheaper to get off your face, as they say in Hull, on smack than it is on alcohol. And didn't I read a few months ago that MI6 had persuaded Clare Short to task them to provide her with early warning of coups in the developing world? An honest-to-goodness license to do anything, anywhere. Only a Labour government, timid and ignorant, would fall for a proposal as preposterous as that one. MI5 hardly paused for breath after losing the KGB 'threat' contained in the Soviet Embassy and its Trade Mission, before acquiring the domestic terrorism franchise from the Met Special Branch and beginning the process of hyping up the animal rights and green activists as a new terrorist threat. (And they are getting a new definition of terrorism run through the Houses of Parliament to support it.) Of course, only the politicians and some of the media - the handful who are paying any attention at all - take the talk of the war on drugs seriously. MI6 don't, I am sure; any more than they seriously intend to provide Clare Short with an early warning of coups in the Third World. At the higher levels of MI6, MI5 and all the rest they must be chortling in the senior dining rooms at the incredible gullibility of the British political class - and this present lot in particular.” | Lobster Magazine | |
1994 Scotland RAF Chinook crash | “After seventeen years of blaming the two pilots of the RAF Chinook which crashed in 1994, killing all 29 people (senior police and secret police), the MOD changed its mind and announced that it wasn’t their fault at all: it was the helicopter. Even to a casual reader like me this was obvious almost immediately after the official lies were issued. But the RAF as an institution went along with the lie. Why? Because they did not want to blame the helicopter. Criticising Sikorsky, its maker, is criticising America.” | 2012 | Lobster Magazine |
Bellingcat | “Among [Bellingcat]'s current personnel we have a former British Army officer, a former employee of GCHQ, former members of the US Department of Defense, the US Secret Service, the US Army and the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office .” | 2021 | Lobster Magazine |
NHS | “At first look II is neither surprising nor sinister... The striking thing is the listing of an II subgroup on NHS reform, which has nothing to do with Russian disinformation operations. Given the orientation of the group, we may safety presume that the subgroup’s purpose wasn’t to oppose NHS ‘reform’ – i.e. its privatisation. And this suggests a wider, neo-liberal agenda.” | 2020 | Lobster Magazine |
Research Foundation for the Study of Terrorism | “The new 'anarchist threat' has its own (slight) intellectual support unit, the Research Foundation for the Study of Terrorism. RFST's trustees are Paul Wilkinson, Michael Ivens of Aims, Norris McWhirter of the Freedom Association and John Newton Scott. Its address is 40 Doughty Street, the address of Aims. Their first contribution came out at the end of 1987 - Anarchist group Class War are systematically harassing London docklands residents - there are "Bash the Rich" marches, a pamphlet, Written in Flames, telling you who to bash - and Without A Trace on evading arrest apres-bash. Also involved are the Direct Action Movement (DAM) and groups named Hurricane and Flamethrower - oh, and the Animal Liberation Front. So there you are; they're all in it together. Battle Stations! … RFST aren't even close (and probably didn't try to be). Class War have never been at the centre of anything and provoke the same mixture of disdain and suspicion among anarchists as Militant do from socialists. The 'Bash the rich' marches were indeed Class War's idea; but the last one was in 1985. The campaign of yuppie-harassment never amounted to much more than aerosols, noise and bent aerials. Without A Trace is a forensics manual. Neither it nor Written in Flames has any connection with Class War. The Animal Liberation Front is supported by a wide variety of people, including anarchists, Christians and a character in the TV soap, Brookside. In any case all ALF actions are local and uncoordinated.” | November 1988 | Lobster Magazine |
Routledge Handbook of Conspiracy Theories | “You might think that this memorandum would be fairly central to any discussion of the current prevalence of conspiracy theories, yet is not indexed in the new Routledge Handbook of Conspiracy Theories (briefly reviewed in this issue). Which says quite a lot about said Handbook.” | 2020 | Lobster Magazine |
Sunday Times | “The Sunday Times was a serious, respectable newspaper until Andrew Neil became its editor in the mid-1980s and turned it into a mouth-piece for MI5 and the MOD to run their rubbish through.” | 8 November 2000 | Lobster Magazine |
Truth | “After a political event of the size of JFK’s assassination or 9/11, everybody runs for cover and prepares their exculpatory narrative. ‘The truth’ doesn’t make it onto the political agenda. This is normal bureaucratic behaviour.” | Lobster Magazine |
References
- ↑ Francis Elliott, "New Labour unshelled", Hull Daily Mail, June 1, 1998, page 14
- ↑ "Profile: Robin Ramsay"
- ↑ Document:Getting it Right
- ↑ Gareth Mclean, "They're Out to Get You", The Scotsman, October 9, 1999, Saturday, page 6
- ↑ "Online at U. Utah" "Shock Lobster", Sunday Herald, 17 August 2003.
- ↑ Robert McCrum, "Inside Story: In the lair of the lobster - Stephen Dorril and Robin Ramsey edit a left-wing journal that offers succour to conspiracy theorists and keeps the professionals on their toes", The Guardian (London), August 31, 1991
- ↑ "The View from the Bridge" Issue 67
- ↑ "Adequately Explained by Stupidity? Lockerbie, Luggage and Lies"
- ↑ "Megrahi: You Are My Jury"
- ↑ "Private Eye rumbles 'Haselnut' and The Ecologist"
- ↑ "Critique by John Ashton"
- ↑ "Ashton's critique of Patrick Haseldine"
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