Showing posts with label IRA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IRA. Show all posts

Monday, 26 January 2026

MEME MONDAY #67

A quieter week, but we'll pick up again shortly...

Mon 19 Jan - 90 shares
Tue 20 Jan - 3,064 shares
Tue 20 Jan - 6 shares.  This photo is from a previous Davos, although Reeves did
attend this year.  The fact that the photo is from Davos 2023 - the year prior to their
general election victory - should give you some idea of the influence of the World
Economic Forum
Thu 22 Jan - 199 shares
Thu 22 Jan - 65 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 770 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 58 shares
Sun 25 Jan - 32 shares

If you appreciate what we do, you can buy us a metaphorical pint each here - we can't do this without your support.  Feel free to share our work, on the understanding that our binlabour.com watermark is retained.

Thank you.

Monday, 11 August 2025

MEME MONDAY #47

A quieter week for our meme maker, but some stirring efforts nonetheless...

Mon 4 Aug - 51 shares
Tue 5 Aug - 189 shares.  The original Facebook version has the wrong date on
it - the 25th.  Apologies for this oversight.  It came about because Karl took the
date of Tim Parry's death (the 25th) as the date of the attack.  However, while the
toddler Johnathan Ball died at the scene of the twin bombing, Tim Parry was
mortally wounded and his life support machine was sadly switched off five
days later
Tue 5 Aug - 1 share.  Not strictly a meme, but a poll, the result
of which was as follows
Yes = 50
No = 9
Thu 7 Aug - 247 shares
Thu 7 Aug - 25 shares
Thu 7 Aug - 424 shares
Thu 7 Aug - 200 shares.  Ali's resignation marked the tenth departure from
the Starmer ministry.  That's quite impressive given that the first anniversary
of his premiership was only last month
Fri 8 Aug - 62 shares
Fri 8 Aug - 153 shares
Sat 9 Aug - 67 shares
Sat 9 Aug - 37 shares
Sun 10 Aug - 170 shares
Sun 10 Aug - 52 shares

Just the one Facebook Story last week, but Karl says watch this space for the week ahead...


Do you appreciate what we do?  You can buy us a metaphorical pint each here - this helps fund our work and also provides a morale booster!

Monday, 24 March 2025

MEME MONDAY #28

As regular visitors will know, we have been pushed back onto the backup page on Facebook - not for the first time.  We have a much smaller following on this page and as such, our distribution is much lower.  However, we have added a thousand new followers to this page in our first week back and if it continues to grow we will be able to more confidently mitigate the loss of the main page in future.

We will soon be taking a financial hit when the Facebook money dries up on account of their spiteful censorship, so any contributions to our cause are deeply appreciated at this time.  You can donate via PayPal here.  Anything, however small, is most welcome.

Mon 17 Mar - 77 shares on Facebook
Wed 19 Mar - 23 shares. This one upset members of the Zelenskyy fan
club, who still resort to their conditioned assumption that opposing
globalist warmongers is precisely the same as being 'pro-Putin'

*** STAR MEME ***

Thur 20 March - 832 shares.  Karl is a little disappointed that this
somewhat basic and frivolous effort was this week's star, but
memes are subjective and this one was clearly very popular.

Thur 20 Mar - 8 shares
Fri 21 Mar - 111 shares
Sat 22 Mar - 269 shares.  The chihuahua/bulldog characterisation comes from
none other than George Galloway in a recent X post.
Sat 22 Mar - 125 shares
Sun 23 Mar - 4 shares
Sun 23 Mar - 35 shares

You are welcome to download and share our memes on the understanding that you do not remove or obscure the binlabour.com watermark.  Many thanks!

Saturday, 22 June 2024

STARMER AND THE BOMBER

Keir Starmer and Martina Anderson

There was one thing that symbolised Jeremy Corbyn for many right-minded Brits.  It was his long association with both the IRA and its political wing Sinn Fein.  As fellow Marxists with a shared hatred of Britain, Corbyn and the IRA were a match made in ideological Heaven.  Their association was no secret and when Martin McGuinness died in 2017, Corbyn paid warm tribute to his old comrade.  Corbyn was Labour leader at that time and naturally he provoked a furious backlash from veterans and relatives of IRA victims.

Corbyn's successor has gone to great lengths to distance himself from his predecessor, ejecting him permanently from the party earlier this year.  However, what the British public don't know is that Keir Starmer himself also has an ongoing relationship with the Marxists of Sinn Fein-IRA.

When Starmer won the Labour leadership election in 2020, one of those congratulating him was his friend Martina Anderson.  Who is Martina Anderson?  Well, as a young woman in the 1980s she was an IRA terrorist with multiple convictions, culminating in a life sentence in 1986 for conspiring to cause explosions.  Six years earlier she was arrested at the scene of a bombing in Londonderry and later convicted of possessing a firearm and causing an explosion.

In June 1985 she was arrested at a makeshift bomb factory in Glasgow, along with four other terrorists that included the Brighton bomber Patrick Magee.  Only Magee was convicted in relation to Brighton, but Anderson and the others were convicted of conspiring to cause explosions.  She was released from her English prison thanks to the Good Friday Agreement in 1998.

Around that time a young socialist lawyer by the name of Keir Starmer took on the role of human rights advisor to the Northern Ireland Policing Board.  He was still in that role when Anderson - now a Sinn Fein Assembly Member - was appointed a member of the policing board.  With peace in Northern Ireland still relatively new, it was a highly controversial appointment given the IRA's murder of more than 300 police officers.  Starmer didn't seem to mind, and he bonded with Anderson.

Their friendship was exposed for the world to see when Starmer was elected Labour leader in 2020.  Anderson publicly congratulated Starmer and also praised Corbyn, sharing photos of her with the respective Labour leaders (see Facebook post below).  The photo with Starmer was taken in January 2018 when he was Corbyn's Brexit spokesman.  Sinn Fein were also opposed to Brexit and campaigned to keep Northern Ireland inside the EU, which thanks to the fudged Tory Brexit it still technically is.


Anderson has not toned down her Republican rhetoric and describes herself as a 'former PoW' on her social media profiles.  While in prison she formed a close friendship with another female IRA convict, Ellie O'Dwyer.  O'Dwyer died earlier this month and photos of her and her coffin currently adorn Anderson's social media profiles (see X screenshot below).


In order to distance himself from Corbyn and present himself as a moderate, even patriotic leader, Starmer does not want to publicise his links to Sinn Fein.  Anderson's public endorsement in 2020 was a huge embarrassment to him.  Starmer tried to keep subsequent Sinn Fein meetings under wraps, in 2021 and 2022, but again came unstuck when Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald tweeted about their 'very constructive meeting'.  Oops.

Labour hasn't changed.  Starmer's embrace of the Union flag is disingenuous at best and earlier this year a former colleague alleged that as a young man, Starmer supported a united Ireland.  With Sinn Fein now at the helm in Northern Ireland, how safe can the Union be under our next Prime Minister?

Friday, 10 June 2022

STARMER OMITS SINN FEIN MEETING

Keir Starmer has been passing himself off as some kind of statesman in a visit to Ireland over the past 24 hours.  Accompanied by his shadow Northern Ireland spokesman Peter Kyle, Sir Squeaky was received by the Irish Taoiseach, the President of Ireland, the defence and foreign affairs minister, the finance minister and the Irish Labour Party leader.  He posted a series of tweets from the visit, including a set of photos from some of those aforementioned meetings...


He also tweeted the following...


He also retweeted the Taoiseach, the President, the Irish Foreign Ministry, finance minister, Trinity College Dublin and the Belfast Telegraph.  However, there was another meeting that neither Starmer or Kyle wanted voters to know about.  Unfortunately for both of them, the other party at that meeting was not so shy about it...


That's right folks, Starmer and Kyle had a cosy sit down meeting with Sinn Fein's leader Mary Lou McDonald (and yes, that is a Palestinian flag in her profile picture).
 
Why the secrecy Sir Keir?  Is it perhaps that you realise how damaging such acquaintances can be perceived back home?  At least Jeremy Corbyn was straight up and honest about his relationship with Marxist terrorists.

This is not the first time that Starmer has been embarrassed by a Sinn Fein figure.  When he was elected Labour leader in 2020 one of those who congratulated him was Martina Anderson, a former IRA bomber who was arrested in 1985 alongside Brighton bomber Patrick Magee.  She was sentenced to life the following year for conspiring to cause explosions.  In a Facebook post, she posted the following photograph of the pair together.

Keir Starmer pictured with convicted IRA terrorist Martina Anderson

Thursday, 24 March 2022

McGUINNESS MEME RESTORED

Facebook has quietly and without notification restored the Martin McGuinness meme we posted on Monday.  The meme was removed within two hours of posting, but after a swift appeal was restored to the page on Friday without warning or apology.


For those who found it distasteful - tell that to the families of the victims of republican terrorism.  There are thousands of them.

Tuesday, 22 March 2022

FACEBOOK CENSOR McGUINNESS MEME

A week ago we neglected to commemorate the death of Karl Marx.  We have a perfect meme for the event, but have thus far not used it.  We are not in the habit of celebrating death, as this trait is more commonly associated with the hate-filled left.  However, there are a handful of historical passings that are fair game.  Marx is one, after-all his ideology is still oppressing and killing people to this day - 174 years after he and Friedrich Engels published their communist manifesto.

Another is Martin McGuinness, a convicted IRA terrorist with a list of convictions longer than George Floyd's rap sheet.  While it's impossible to deny his role in bringing peace, many of us can never forget his very senior role in an organisation that was responsible for the murder and maiming of thousands of British soldiers, police officers and civilians.

On Monday we incorporated the spirit of the Marx meme into a McGuinness version.  It goes without saying that we encountered no problems posting it on free speech networks Gab and GETTR, but within two hours of posting on Facebook it was removed.  We both received the following censorship message.


Quite how we can 'harass' or 'bully' a dead terrorist is anyone's guess, but we take note that the Facebook censors for the UK are based in the Irish Republic.  Karl appealed the decision, but at the time of writing it appears that Facebook's sympathies are with the IRA.

Monday, 4 October 2021

IRA BANNER IN MANCHESTER


This was the sick banner hung on a canal bridge in Manchester over the weekend as Conservatives gathered for their party conference.  The banner references the IRA statement released following the Brighton bombing in 1984, an attack that killed five people attending the Tory party conference.

For previous Tory conferences in Manchester effigies were hung from bridges beneath banners reading 'Hang the Tories' and '130,000 killed under Tory rule, time to level the playing field'.  A red flag was painted on one banner, not that the political motivation of the culprits was in any doubt.  Red flags were very much on display on Sunday as several far left groups protested outside the conference.


The Young Communist League is the youth wing of the Communist Party of Britain, one of whose slogans is laughably 'peace and socialism'.  With their faces covered behind a resistance banner, they looked anything but peaceful.

Other groups protesting included the youth wing of the Green Party and various anti-Brexit balloon heads including Drunk Steve and Femi Izawally.

On day two of the conference two prominent Tories were confronted in the street by people shouting 'Tory scum', echoing the words of Angela Rayner during the Labour conference.  Jacob Rees-Mogg was pursued and surrounded by several individuals, including one waving an EU flag and one waving an Irish tricolour.  In a separate incident Iain Duncan Smith was pursued by a group, one of whom is alleged to have swung a traffic cone at his head.  Five people have been arrested in connection with the latter incident.

There are still two days of the conference left.

Monday, 26 October 2020

ON THIS DAY IN 1976, CORBYN'S MATES...

The Provisional IRA shot dead a part-time British Army officer at his civilian place of work.  Lieutenant Joseph Wilson had worked at the same Protestant supermarket in the town of Armagh for 20 years and had survived a previous attempt to kill him there.  On the day of the murder a young man entered the store and joined the queue for Lt Wilson's meat counter.  He asked the UDR man for some salami, but as the lieutenant turned around the man shot him three times in the back.  Lt Wilson collapsed and was pronounced dead on arrival at hospital.  The gunman fled the scene and escaped in a Hillman Avenger that had been hijacked earlier.

13 months prior to his murder, Lt Wilson had got into his car after finishing a shift when a gunman approached and fired a revolver into his windscreen.  He escaped that day, but a newspaper report following his death described him as a 'marked man'.  Earlier in the Troubles he testified in court against several Official IRA members, who were subsequently jailed for a theft from his home.

Lieutenant Joseph Wilson of 2 UDR

Lt Wilson was 53 and served in 2nd Battalion the Ulster Defence Regiment, based in Armagh.  He came from Lisdown, just outside the town, and was survived by his wife and nine children.  He was buried with full military honours at Knappagh Presbyterian Church.  The following year his UDR company unveiled a plaque inside the church in his memory.  In 1984 Lt Wilson's son-in-law was murdered by the IRA in a bomb attack.

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

ON THIS DAY IN 1978, CORBYN'S MATES...

The Provisional IRA shot dead a pensioner on the outskirts of Newry.  The 74-year-old was travelling in a car driven by his son-in-law when they were ambushed on Quay Street.  Shots were fired by at least three gunmen, but despite both men having been struck the driver continued.  The son-in-law intended to drive directly to Daisy Hill Hospital on the other side of town, but the car broke down at the junction of River Street and William Street.  The terrorists pursued the car and further shots were fired before the gunmen fled in a Ford Cortina.

Around 25 rounds were fired during the attack.  Joseph Skelly was hit in the head and back and died two hours later in hospital.  His 53-year-old son-in-law was hit in the back and remained seriously ill in hospital, but survived.  A van driver was also injured during the shooting when one of the bullets hit his vehicle and showered him in broken glass.  Two female pedestrians were treated for shock.

Mr Skelly was in a business partnership with his son-in-law and he regularly helped out at their brass lamp manufacturers on Greenbank Industrial Estate.  They had been at work on the day of the attack and were on their way home for lunch when it happened.  Mr Skelly, a father of three, lived with his daughter and son-in-law following the death of his wife.  His son-in-law was a former RUC reservist, but the attack was described as sectarian in nature.  The murder was the fourth in Newry over an 18-month period, all of which were of prominent Protestants in the largely Catholic border town.  The murders were seen as an attempt to drive out the minority Protestant population.

Joseph Skelly

A 22-year-old man from the Irish Republic was later convicted of three of the Newry murders, including that of Joseph Skelly.  As he was led from the dock he shouted "Up the Provos".

Friday, 18 September 2020

ON THIS DAY IN 1990, CORBYN'S MATES...

The Provisional IRA tried to kill a former governor of Gibraltar in a revenge attack.  Two years earlier an SAS operation took place on the island in which three IRA terrorists were shot dead.  The Governor who authorised Operation Flavius was Sir Peter Terry.  After the inquest ruled that the SAS had acted lawfully in killing the unarmed terrorists, Sir Peter told reporters: "Even in this remote place, there is no place for terrorists".  His tenure came to an end in 1989 and he retired with his family back to his native England where they settled in the Staffordshire village of Milford.  Sir Peter was at home when the IRA came calling.

At around 9pm he was sitting in a downstairs armchair when a gunman crept up to a rear window and fired around 20 shots in his direction.  He was struck at least nine times, but miraculously survived, albeit with serious injuries.  His wife, who was in another room, was hit by a stray bullet that penetrated an interior wall.  The couple's daughter was treated for shock.

Sir Peter's injuries were so severe that doctors could not clearly ascertain precisely how many times he had been shot.  Two bullets were lodged millimetres from his brain and his jawbone was shattered by another.  He was also hit in his right side and left leg.  Surgeons said it was a miracle that none of his major organs were struck.

The 63-year-old endured months of reconstructive plastic surgery to rebuild his face and numerous bullet fragments would remain lodged in his body for the rest of his life.  He died in 2017 at the age of 91.  Before he became Governor of Gibraltar he had a distinguished 38 year career in the Royal Air Force and rose through the ranks to become Air Chief Marshal, one of the most senior officers in the RAF.

Sir Peter Terry and his wife pictured before the attack

The deadly SAS operation that had been authorised by Sir Peter Terry set off a chain of events which resulted in a further five deaths.  The joint funeral for those killed on Gibraltar was attacked by a loyalist gunman who killed three mourners.  At the funeral of one of those mourners two British soldiers who strayed into the procession were abducted and shot dead by the IRA.

Monday, 14 September 2020

ON THIS DAY IN 1971, CORBYN'S MATES...

The IRA shot dead three British soldiers in separate attacks across Northern Ireland.  A Royal Artillery sergeant was murdered in Londonderry, a member of the Queen's Regiment was murdered in Belfast and a member of the Light Infantry was murdered near Dungannon in County Tyrone.  All three soldiers were young men in their early twenties and from the mainland.

Sgt Martin Carroll was on duty at the Bligh's Lane army post in the Creggan area of Londonderry.  A perimeter fence was being repaired at the time and the army wanted to keep groups of people away while the job was completed.  At one point Sgt Carroll fired CS gas canisters to disperse a large crowd that was gathering.  While he was outside a single shot was fired from the direction of Eastway Gardens.  The sergeant's brother and half-brother were also serving with the army and were both nearby when they heard the shot.  They raced to his aid, but he lost consciousness and died a short time later from a gunshot to the chest.

The Official IRA later claimed responsibility and said it had acted in retaliation for army "brutality to young children on their way to school".  Earlier that day the principal at the local primary school had complained about the use of CS gas and claimed to have witnessed a Saracen being driven at schoolchildren.  A civilian was shot dead by soldiers outside the same post in the early hours of the next morning during disturbances in which two soldiers and two civilians received gunshot wounds.

Sergeant Martin Leonard Carroll, 23, served with the 45th Medium Regiment, Royal Artillery, and came from Abergynolwyn in north Wales.  His pregnant wife gave birth to their first child four months after his murder.  Speaking about his death some time later, she noted that Sgt Carroll was a Catholic and of Irish descent on his father's side.

An Official IRA gunman pictured in Londonderry's Bogside, 1972

Private Paul Carter was standing guard outside the Royal Victoria Hospital in west Belfast when he was struck by a burst of gunfire.  Pte Carter was guarding colleagues who were in the process of delivering medical supplies to the hospital.  He was struck twice in the chest by shots that appeared to come from the direction of Dunville Park.  The park was often used by IRA gunmen to fire on soldiers as it provided an easy escape route into the rabbit warren of side streets that backed onto the other side of the park.

The immediate aftermath of the attack on Pte Carter was mired in controversy for many years.  At the time it was claimed that no-one helped the soldier as he lay wounded and that some locals had even tried to steal his rifle.  However, the murder was one of many cases reinvestigated by the Historical Enquiries Team, a unit set up by the police in 2005.  In 2012 they concluded that in actual fact two local men had carried Pte Carter into the casualty department despite a second burst of gunfire while doing so.  The young soldier died from his wounds the following day with his family by his side.  The news that he was not merely left to die in the street gave comfort to his surviving family and his sister told reporters that they had been disappointed with the way in which the army had portrayed events.

Private Paul Carter, 21, served with 2nd Battalion, the Queen's Regiment, and came from Brighton.  His mother later campaigned for British troops to be withdrawn from Northern Ireland.

Private Paul Carter

Private John Rudman was killed in an IRA ambush at the village of Edendork, County Tyrone.  Pte Rudman was travelling along the main road in a convoy, having been despatched from Dungannon to investigate disturbances in Coalisland.  As the convoy passed through the village it came under small arms fire from both sides of the road.  The terrorists were armed with shotguns, rifles and a Thompson submachine gun.  Pte Rudman, who was travelling in the back of a truck, was struck in the back of the head.  Two other soldiers were wounded during the attack and a bomb was later found nearby and defused.

Private John Ronald Rudman, 21, served with 2nd Battalion the Light Infantry and came from Hartlepool.  His younger brother was also shot dead by the IRA a year later.  Following the murder of Private Thomas Rudman in north Belfast, a third brother serving in Northern Ireland was sent home and not redeployed to the province.  Their mother later described how she had premonitions about her son's deaths and described the man who shot John as having a scar.  She gave his name as 'Seamus'.  Two men were charged with John's murder, but acquitted.  One of them was Seamus Dillon, an IRA man later convicted of two other murders.  Shortly after he was released from prison in 1997 he was himself shot dead by loyalists.

Scene of the attack looking in the direction of the soldiers' travel

Friday, 11 September 2020

ON THIS DAY IN 1978, CORBYN'S MATES...

The Provisional IRA shot dead a police reservist at his home in County Tyrone.  Reserve Constable Howard George Donaghy was working on a bungalow he was having built in preparation for his forthcoming marriage.  The property was going up on land owned by his father in the small village of Loughmacrory near Omagh.  On the day of the attack the reservist was being assisted by his brother and his brother's girlfriend when three armed men arrived and surrounded them.

The attackers were carrying rifles and appeared to know who their target was.  R/Con Donaghy's brother was told not to move while the reservist was shot several times in front of him.  After the gunmen fled, his first instinct was to call their mother, a nurse.  R/Con Donaghy was clinging to life when his mother arrived, but he died in her arms a few minutes later.  The 24-year-old was also a post office engineer and had joined the RUC Reserve four years earlier.  He was due to be married in June the following year.

R/Con Howard Donaghy

Monday, 7 September 2020

ON THIS DAY IN 1989, CORBYN'S MATES...

The Provisional IRA murdered a German woman near Dortmund in West Germany.  The 26-year-old was sitting in a car outside the married quarters of the Unna-Massen British Army base.  She was married to a staff sergeant in the army and the car had UK registration plates.  An IRA gunman disguised as a soldier approached the vehicle and opened fire with an AK-47 assault rifle.  Heidi Hazell was struck by more than a dozen bullets and was killed instantly.

A soldier who was nearby heard the gunfire and as he went to investigate saw two men escaping in an old black Capri.  The IRA admitted responsibility for the attack and said its members believed Mrs Hazell to be a member of the British Army.  It did not apologise and merely warned that civilians should “keep well clear of British military personnel”.

Heidi Hazell was born Heidi Schnaars in the West German town of Worpswede.  She had been married to a British soldier for three years.  Two decades on her niece Melanie Anan led a campaign for the murder case to be be reopened.  The original murder investigation was closed in 1993, but was reopened in 2015 in light of new evidence.  Germany is not bound by the Good Friday Agreement and initial inquiries centred on five IRA suspects, one of whom was shot dead by the SAS in 1990.  Dessie Grew was killed alongside a Sinn Fein councillor as they tried to retrieve three rifles from a farm building.

Heidi Hazell and her husband