No One Gives A Flying About Huw Edwards
I well remember my reaction when I first heard rumours of a high level paedophile circle in the British Establishment: shock, outrage, disgust.
Unfortunately at the time - for this was before my Awakening - my shock, outrage, disgust was directed entirely at the idiots circulating these lunatic allegations.
How frankly outrageous to insinuate that field marshals, law lords, archbishops, viscounts, leading politicians and members of the Royal Family would ever become embroiled in something so sordid and frankly unEnglish as torturing and sexually abusing small children!
This is how I thought until only a few years ago. And it is, I’m afraid, how most people still do think. Few of us want to live in a world where children are bred, kidnapped and groomed on an industrial scale to be tortured and raped by perverts, many of them ‘authority figures’ and household names. So instead, our natural response when hearing of its possible existence is to shoot the messenger.
I say ‘natural’ response, though I think a more accurate adjective would be ‘conditioned.’ There’s only one way that children could be abused so frequently in such numbers by a twisted ‘elite’ without it becoming an international scandal: through careful manipulation of the information cycle by a complicit mainstream media, so that when the odd unhelpful rumour does leak out it can be quickly squashed through a mixture of deception and distraction.
This is why I am somewhat sceptical towards the current story, heavily promoted in the MSM, about a ‘high-profile’ BBC personality embroiled in a sex scandal. The scandal, when you look at the details, isn’t that scandalous: a previously anonymous BBC presenter (now identified as Huw Edwards) paid a 17 year old child £35,000 for ‘sexually explicit images’. “All right, a bit pervy, seedy and exploitative but not as bad as I’d imagined,” many people will respond. And that, of course, is the whole point. While the public were kept busy speculating on who the mystery offender was - and simultaneously wondering why so much fuss was being made about so relatively little - the genuinely malign behaviour, involving sex crimes far worse than this involving much younger minors, carried on unabated.
Perhaps the most egregious example of this well-worn technique was in the media’s coverage of Jeffrey Epstein. If you believe the papers and TV, about the worst thing that ever happened on Epstein Island is that Prince Andrew may - or possibly not - have enjoyed the sexual favours of 17-year old escort called Virginia Giuffre (nee Roberts).
Really? We know from the researchers like Whitney Webb - who has written two whole books on the subject - that Jeffrey Epstein was more, oh so much more, than just a social climbing billionaire who courted the rich and powerful by providing them with free, consensual sex on his private party island. One of the things we know is that he was funded by criminal backers - with the support of the intelligence services - to gather kompromat on his high-level guests. Does anyone honestly believe that the most exotic service he provided was a night or two with a more-or-less willing escort above the age of legal consent?
Whatever depravities were committed on Epstein’s private island - Little St James - they were at least bad enough to ensure that rather than be allowed to spill the beans in court Epstein was suicided in his cell. Most likely they were so perverse as to be quite unsuitable for publication in a newspaper or to be mentioned in any detail on TV. But that’s hardly an excuse for the way they were covered - or rather not covered at all - in the mainstream media, which did everything in its considerable power to pretend that the story was about something else entirely.
As far as the British coverage went, this meant focusing on the designated clown figure of Prince Andrew and, to a lesser extent, on the designated semi-victim figure Ghislaine Maxwell. We were invited to chortle, via a ludicrous, staged interview conducted on the BBC by Emily Maitlis, at the prince’s mix of pomposity, arrogance and flailing incompetence. And we were encouraged to believe that this was just another classic case of Prince Andrew (once fondly nicknamed ‘Randy Andy’) making an idiot of himself and putting his foot in it. (“Did he honestly think he was going to outwit Emily Maitlis?” “Did you hear the bit where he said he couldn’t possibly have been in bed with the girl that night because he’d gone with his kids to Pizza Express in Woking?”)
But it was all theatre with everyone dutifully playing their allotted role: from the abashed prince and the feisty, no-nonsense female TV presenter right up to the Queen who affected to be so cross that she let it be known in the press that she had banned her son (supposedly her favourite) from carrying out any more of his royal duties. And the British public, trained from birth to coo and drool over every last gobbet of royal tittle tattle, played their role too by falling wholesale for the distraction.
Meanwhile, the real crimes of Epstein and his paedophile enterprise were all airbrushed from history. Which is pretty extraordinary when you remember how many weeks it was that Epstein and his antics dominated the headlines: all that time in the media, all that space for detailed investigation, but with little more to show for it than a few non-stories about Prince Andrew (the £10 million settlement; the “I’ve never sweated since I fought in the Falklands” nonsense) and another few more about Ghislaine (“I’m not suicidal…”). This, potentially, was the biggest sex scandal in the history of the world featuring a cast - from ex-presidents to top movie stars to billionaire entrepreneurs - of the people who mostly run the world. And the mainstream media buried it.
The mainstream media always buries it: that’s one of its jobs. Remember Carl Beech, the child sex abuse victim who made lurid allegations about a ‘Westminster VIP paedophile ring’ involving everyone from former prime minister Sir Edward Heath to the ex-head of MI5? More importantly, do you remember your righteous fury when he was exposed in the courts as a serial liar and fantasist - and you felt so sorry for all those blameless pillars of society so wrongfully accused?
Or remember, even further back, the Satanic Ritual Abuse stories which surfaced in the 1980s. You might have wondered about these too, for a moment, what with so many children from different parts of the world presenting such lurid testimony. But then you’ll remember how it ended: with the media reassuring you that it had all been a lot of fuss about nothing - a ‘moral panic’ induced, apparently, by dubious psychiatrists deploying a discredited technique called False Memory Syndrome?
And how about Madeleine McCann? Or Baby P? Why do we know the names of these missing and abused children when the same thing happens to tens of thousands of others in the UK alone every year? Because, of course, the mainstream media wishes to implant the notion that such incidents are rare to the point of freakishness, rather than something so terrifyingly commonplace that they could fill a newspaper’s pages every day.
Do you see how it works? Whenever a story appears in the mainstream media about anything to do with sexually abused children, the purpose is not to illuminate the issue but rather to obfuscate it, distract from it, or, ultimately, to kill it. The Huw Edwards drama is but the latest sorry example. He’s not a rarity but the tip of the iceberg. If you’re looking for a scandal, that is where the real scandal lies.