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TRAPPED IN A MASONIC WORLD

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- 37 -<br />

Mr Prentis salary was actually £92,688], RMT‘s Mr Crow was £105,679, and Unite‘s Mr Simpson<br />

£120,328. Whilst incredibly based on a combined figure for salary and benefits, Gordon Taylor, chief<br />

executive of the Professional Footballer‘s Association, was reported to be £856,007, and little did I realise,<br />

but the tax payer contributes to his earnings.<br />

I‘m all for a ‗good and decent wage‘, a wage than allows you to have an un-stressful life, pay your rent<br />

and bills, put food on the table, buy yourself and the kids clothes, have a car, bike or whatever, and a nice<br />

annual holiday with the odd weekend break here and there, with a social life that allows you to able to save<br />

a little bit for a ―rainy day‖, and contribute towards a pension. I think your find most working class people<br />

would be happy with that kind of life, I might have overlooked a few things, but in general you could live<br />

rather well on the supposed £26,000 ―average wage‖ what people are meant to be earning. - However, this<br />

is not the average wage, in fact it‘s far from it, as the vast majority of workers don‘t earn anywhere near<br />

that amount, and that‘s the real problem.<br />

Tony Woodley, joint leader of Unite angrily remonstrated with the protesters telling them to ―shut up,<br />

shut up‖, when demonstrators pushed past security guards and made it to the 23rd floor, where talks were<br />

taking place, between union representatives, and management in an industrial dispute with BA. [5] The<br />

demonstrators came face to face with BA‘s chief executive Willie Walsh and Tony Woodley, joint leader<br />

of Unite. Then a day or so later, Woodley was due to meet the press to make a statement, and as he<br />

approached the scrum of cameramen, journalists and photographers, Woodley unaware he was already be<br />

filmed and recorded, asked a direct and specific question as to which one of the cameras belonged to Sky<br />

News. He said along the lines; saying that was the one he wishes to address. Sky News soon picked up on<br />

this request and incorporated it within their news trailers, constantly showing the clip when Woodley asks;<br />

―Which one is the Sky camera‖.<br />

Now when you normally get people addressing the press, they address the whole group, not make<br />

specific reference to any ‗one‘ news organisation showing obvious bias and favouritism. So there we go,<br />

Tony Woodley, son of George, who was also a union representative, would prefer to address his ‗brothers‘<br />

via the camera of the Masonic owned anti-unionist Rupert Murdoch, as opposed to any of the others, yet<br />

oddly enough almost a year prior to this, in 2009 at the Labour Party Conference, Woodley tore up a copy<br />

of The Sun newspaper as he made a speech, ―In Liverpool, we learnt a long time ago what to do, [tearing<br />

the paper], I suggest the rest of the country does the same thing.‖ This was a reference to The Sun‘s<br />

controversial coverage of the Hillsborough Disaster 20 years earlier, which had caused widespread public<br />

outrage, and many people on Merseyside had still not forgiven the newspaper, - I wonder what brought<br />

about this sudden change of heart towards the Murdoch Corporation? [6]<br />

As I‘ve said before, like the Conservatives, Liberals and Labour parties, there‘s also the thickness of a<br />

Rizla paper between the links of ‗brotherhood of the Freemasons‘, and the origins of the ‗brotherhood of<br />

the Trade Unions‘. - You only have to look at one of the Orangemen marches on the 12th of July in<br />

Northern Ireland, to that of a ‗Trade Union rally‘, to not be mistaken for thinking you‘re seeing the same<br />

group of people, and especially so with their sashes, banners, symbols and flags with ‗Standard Bearers‘<br />

reminiscent of the same Order.<br />

And it is because of these connections why I wouldn‘t hold my breath in anticipation that these well<br />

paid high ranking union representatives, are really that concerned about their fellow low paid workers, - of<br />

course they will say they do, but isn‘t that what MP‘s say about us the people, and what do they do for us?<br />

Fuck all, - that‘s what. - And especially when it comes to those ‗closed talks‘ and ‗secret meetings‘ they all<br />

have between the bosses of one kind of Masonic lodge, whilst they themselves are from another one. In<br />

the US, it‘s long been known it‘s the ‗mob‘, aka Mafia that runs and controls the trade unions, and the only<br />

difference over here, is that they go under different names!<br />

Yet if a union boss such as those quoted above, earned say £35,000 per year, then that‘s decent enough<br />

to live on, as opposed to £92,000 plus, just as it is adequate enough for an MP to earn in the region of<br />

£45,000, - not the actual £200,000 plus it finally costs the tax payer with all their costs combined, - as is it<br />

for the Chairman‘s of banks and other financial institutions etc., to earn around £150,000 each, and not the<br />

silly millions they are presently paying ―themselves‖, and the ludicrous millions they payout in bonuses to<br />

encourage their staff to gamble with ―other people‘s money‖, knowing full well they will still get their<br />

money, win or lose, and especially so whilst the tax payer has a majority holding in these kind of<br />

establishments.<br />

So it‘s because of these astronomical amounts of pay, that many other sectors also pay an elite handful<br />

of employees in wages, and why the ―average‖ person‘s earnings are still just a pittance. I‘ve made this<br />

kind of example before, so don‘t forget, when you hear their so called ―defenders‖, they‘re either their own

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