Appendix 13b Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on ...
Transcript of Appendix 13b Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on ...
Appendix 13b
Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown
on the MK-Ultra Gate Hot Seat
‘Discomfort’, 'anxious', 'stressed' and ‘nervous’ describe how these two world leaders, both past and present, appeared when stepping into the diplomatic corridor's spotlight of transparency and accountability during the second week of April 2011.
Just how worried Britain’s former and Germany’s current leaders are about
MK-Ultra Gate is evidenced in two appearances – the former on MSNBC’s
‘Morning Joe’ on Monday, April 11th, and observed in real time and the latter
in Germany in the company of Secretary of State Clinton on Thursday, April
14th, that was uploaded onto YouTube. Beyond both being repeated
contributors to back-channel diplomacy they have one distinction in common
with President Obama. They both extended an invitation to the Custodian to
visit them and both failed to follow through; making it three-for-three in the
world leader category of coalition partner who made it appear there was an
acknowledgement of the ‘Custodian’ as the only internationally legitimized
political leader of Canada as a result of discussions and a purported ‘election’
during the April 2009 London G20 Summit. Their motives for those
initiatives and everything else they did to advance the reform and
accountability agenda are now suspect.
Gordon Brown’s interview is most revealing how trepidatious world leaders
are about the scandal and especially after three of their counterparts
stepped forward and America’s Fourth Estate condemned the secret
piggybacking on Chinada’s military human experimentation program. In
attendance at the ‘Morning Joe’ interview was Jim Cramer, whose
characterization of the downfall of the U.S. President on March 17th is akin
to the assassination of Julius Caesar rattled elected officials in every coalition
country. He, the two co-hosts and a guest host put the former Prime
Minister on the hottest of hot seats; and it’s blatantly obvious he felt the
pressure. In addition to his anxiety throughout, specific instances of body
language speak volumes for what he expects when the news breaks
internationally; reacting with palpable stress when hearing questions,
answers and remarks that had geo-relevance.
The beginning of the interview leads to this, which set the tone for
everything that followed:
Then Joe asks him a question about soccer and there is one phrase in it that
triggers a ‘guilty’ expression. It's [@ 1:11] to “Every time you think they've
turned the corner they will lose to a Westham...”:
The former PM, who knows firsthand how much his predecessor was raked
over the coals about being central to the invasion of Iraq and what he went
through in terms of commissions, inquiries and domestic and international
condemnation, couldn’t have felt the pressure more when he answers a
question with “It's a real fight to the finish and it really won't be sorted out
until the last day”. He instantly gets dry mouth, which leads to licking his
lips. Every seasoned litigator and senior judge views this behavior from
those on the witness stand as proof of profound uneasiness.
Jim’s watching how the former leader is responding during the interview and
in particular to how he answers the question; and here’s the start of what
would become unrestrained disgust:
The tension is so intense the PM executes an embellished protracted Blair
Maneuver from 1:39 until 1:51. The lexiconic gesture is named after his
predecessor and is his way to not just expressly acknowledge the interview’s
geo-political sub-text, but also the MK-Ultra Gate scandal in which he's
implicated.
When the topic turns to that which Jim was called in for, the PM states [@
2:08] “Ireland's got huge problems because they're basically guaranteeing
every penny that the banks have lost”.
He’s stating on the record with his body language that (i) he and his
counterparts are facing a most serious scandal and (ii) their respective
governments collectively owe the Custodian his ratified quantum since as
per the agreement they didn’t seize these funds from those primarily
responsible for his predicament.
MSNBC producers get creative as they’re watching him ‘confess’. They
choreograph a staffer to walk through the background [@ 2:36] and when
right behind him effect a Clooney M..
More stress is observable [@ 3:01] timed to “Equally the deficit is the
product of low growth”. The operative and guilty conscience emotion
triggering adjective is “low” as in how much he and other coalition leaders
stooped being complicit in or having condoning knowledge of the
piggybacking unlawfulness.
Co-hosts Mika and Joe show their disgust at what they see as a confession
to some kind of involvement with MK-Ultra piggybacking.
When Mika makes this comment [@ 4:08] “Obviously in this country we
have a really bad situation in terms of young people and finding
employment”, the former PM again reacts when hearing “bad situation”.
As much citing accurate statistics [@ 4:30] as to employ the lexicon for the
purposes of capitulation Mr. Brown states either consciously or
subconsciously to appease his hostile audience:
So you've got 20% youth unemployment in America; we've got 20%
youth unemployment in Britain and you've got 20% youth
unemployment in the rest of Europe. Then you go to the North African
and Middle East countries – 35% in Egypt.
Then [@ 5:06 photos x2] more grimacing to “If you don't do something in
Egypt in the next year... opportunities are so limited" [5:29: photos x4].
Jim's reaction to what he sees [x5] is more proof just how much the “Right
Honourable” guest’s actions and reactions confirm and reconfirm what lies at
the core of the scandal.
More disapproval and condemnation is witnessed during a long answer Jim
gives [from 5:55 – 6:40]:
The guest reacts to this anger:
Jim adds an O-S M. [@ 6:29]: to "your bottom line" which is to say that
exposure and accountability inescapably drives everything going forward and
the outcome.
More admonishment is fired at the former PM [@ 6:41] at the conclusion of
his answer.
He and the guest commentator create a wall of lividity that cannot but drive
home how constituents of the coalition membership are committed to
divulging this malfeasance to the public and letting accountability agencies
do what’s necessary to make things right on all levels.
As the interview winds down the PM finishes a long answer with a protracted
grimace [@ 10:02]:
Jim again reflects on the outside what he's feeling on the inside to what
he's witnessed [@ 10:14]:
During the last few seconds of the interview the beleaguered guest tries to
placate his hostile in-studio and diplomacy archive entry reviewing audience
with what he wants everyone to see as a clever reference to the Custodian
and his quantum entitlement:
Well you know what we say in Britain: the first five hundred years of
any institution is always the most difficult. The Monarchy's gone for a
thousand years or more. And you know someone said there'll soon
only be five queens left – the queen of hearts, spades, diamond, clubs
and Britain.
View video