Social Democracy Now

May 14, 2006 at 08:42 o\clock

Sequel to previous entry









ABOVE: John Howard with some of his Jewish admirers. Photos like those above may appear on Jewish websites, but they never appear in mainstream newspapers like the Herald, the Daily Telegraph and the Australian. It's not hard to see that such images are not considered appropriate for diffusion among Gentile populations, where they may not be regarded as sympathetically as they undoubtedly are among Jewish audiences.

JOHN HOWARD QUOTE: 'The personal affection I have for the state of Israel, the personal regard I have for the Jewish people of the world, will never be diminished. It is something I hold dearly, something I value as part of my being and as part of what I have tried to do with my life.' (SOURCE)

QUESTION: How does an Australian Methodist boy end up regarding 'the Jewish people of the world' as part of his 'being'? Wouldn't the most logical explanation be that Howard is actually a crypto-Jew?

FURTHER READING: Brian McKinlay, "John Howard's Grand Tour: The 'Arse Licker' Goes to Washington" here and "Zionists Stand Over Australian Politicians" here.

May 14, 2006 at 08:22 o\clock

What did Howard do to deserve B'nai B'rith honour? And why isn't the <I>Sydney Morning Herald</I> telling its readers about it?

John Howard is off to Washington, reported the Sydney Morning Herald last night. According to this story, the purpose of the trip was to further cultivate relations with U.S. President George Bush:

'Mr Howard and Mr Bush will discuss the future of troop deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan, Iran's nuclear program, the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and the growing importance of China and India in formal talks on Tuesday. The two leaders will meet informally on Sunday afternoon when Mr Howard will plant two saplings from the White House garden in the grounds of the Australian embassy. The trees are a gift from the president to mark the relationship between the two countries. President Bush will also host a black-tie dinner in the White House on Tuesday night - only the seventh such honour he has accorded to a visiting leader during his two terms of office.'

What the Herald didn't tell Australian readers, but what the Australian Jewish News had no problem informing Australian Jews, is that between his Sunday and Tuesday appointments with Bush, Howard will receive 'the prestigious B'nai B'rith international Presidential Gold Medal for his "outstanding" support of Israel and the Jewish people at a ceremony' in Washington. (NOTE)

I can't imagine why the Herald is ignoring this aspect of Howard's Washington trip. It's hardly a secret, given that it's already been reported by an Australian Jewish newspaper. Actually, I'm lying - I can imagine it only too well. Thanks to selective media reporting, it would come as a great surprise to most Australians to discover that Prime Minister Howard has performed 'outstanding' services to Israel. Presumably, what the Herald doesn't want the Australian public to realize - but what Australian Jews are allowed to know - is who Howard, along with Bush and Blair and the other most fervent supporters of the Iraq war - is really working for. As it's increasingly obvious that the Iraq war was essentially a war to advance Israeli interests, it's also increasingly obvious that Howard's support for that war - over and against the wishes of the Australian people - issues from Howard's Zionism. (Cynics would probably point out here that Jewish donors give something like twenty million dollars to Howard's Liberal party each year.) Howard has been notoriously inflexible on Iraq, despite the overwhelming opposition to the war from ordinary Australians, precisely because he's not working for Australians - he's working for Israel.

Although Howard would probably deserve a highly 'prestigious' B'nai B'rith honour solely on account of his support for the neocons' diabolical Middle East misadventures, he has performed numerous other favours for the Jews over the years. Let's attempt a partial list:

(1) Forced the withdrawal of an invitation to Yasser Arafat from the then-deputy prime minister, Tim Fisher, to visit Australia in 1997.

(2) Put in place an extradition treaty with Latvia in order to enable the extradition of alleged war criminal Konrad Kalejs, specifically as called upon to do by Australia/Israel Jewish Affairs Council (AIJAC) Director Colin Rubenstein in 2000. (SOURCE)

(3) Has made Australia join the U.S. in the United Nations as the sole source of opposition to measures that would hold Israel accountable for its persistent mistreatment of the Palestinians. As AIJAC Director Rubenstein put it in 2002, 'at the United Nations under John Howard's leadership, the Australian government has abstained from or opposed morally skewered [sic] and sometimes viciously [sic] anti-Israel resolutions. It's assisted Israel's admission into the WEOG Group at the United Nations. Australia was right to stay away from the conference of high-contracting parties to the Fourth Geneva Convention in December that convened solely for the purpose of hectoring [sic] and delegitimizing [sic] Israel. Above all, at the Durban Conference on Racism, which just turned into a display of the very evils they were supposed to combat, Australia took a vitally important role in moderating [sic] the proceedings.' (SOURCE)

(4) Aligned Australia with the neocons' insane and destructive war on Islam.

(5) Has manipulated Australia in the direction of a society in which public criticism of Israel is becoming virtually unthinkable. NB: At the time of writing, an Australian MP, Julia Irwin, is under attack for having pointed out that there is effectively in force a 'code of silence' forbidding parliamentary discussion of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. (SOURCE)

In addition, there have also been allegations that the Port Arthur massacre was actually an Israeli operation: Joe Vialls, "Special Forces at Port Arthur" here and Judicial Biz, "Port Arthur Massacre" here. Although I can't claim to have seen any evidence implicating Israel so far (other than the fact that several key members of the Australian anti-gun lobby are apparently Jewish), the massacre, which took place only about nine weeks after he took power, could well have been a 'baptism of fire' by which Howard proved his willingness to sacrifice Australian lives for Israeli interests. If Port Arthur was a Zionist black op, it is not hard to see that Howard would have earned the eternal gratitude of Israel for having covered up the conspiracy so well and for so long.

But whether the state of Israel is also indebted to Howard for the Port Arthur coverup, the fact remains that there is a generous amount of information already in the public domain on the 'outstanding' services Howard has been performing on for Israel for ten years. But if Jews are allowed to know about it, doesn't the Australian mainstream media have an obligation to tell the Australian public about it? Why is the only way an Australian citizen can ever find out what his or her country's leader is really up to is by dipping occasionally into the Jewish press, something that most of us Gentiles would rarely think of doing? Is it because they are afraid people might asking questions like the following: if Howard can do so much for the Jews, how come he doesn't seem to be able to find it in him to do something for Australians?

NOTE: I can find no information concerning previous recipients of the B'nai B'rith international Presidential Gold Medal - which tends to make me wonder how 'prestigious' it can be. In any case, it is hardly Howard's first such honour - he has a seemingly endless list of Jewish plaudits. In 2000, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from Bar-Ilan University. (Previous recipients included Margeret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev.) (SOURCE) In 2002, he was bestowed 'the American Jewish Committee's Award for distinguished public service for his record and that of his government, for his steadfast alliance with the United States, its strong support for and close bilateral ties with the state of Israel and his open and warm relations with Australia's Jewish community.' (SOURCE) In 2004, the American Jewish Committee awarded him the American [sic] Liberties Medallion. 'Previous recipients of the award include Martin Luther King, Lyndon Johnson, Ronald Reagan, Vaclav Havel, Natan Sharansky, and Elie Wiesel.' (SOURCE) And in 2005 [?], he was awarded the Australia-Israel Chamber of Commerce's highest honour, the Leon Liberman Award for trade. (SOURCE) The B'nai B'rith medal looks like merely the capstone to a period in which Jewish organisations have thanked Howard at every opportunity for his ten years of devoted service to Israel.

May 2, 2006 at 08:49 o\clock

'Forensic Investigators': a case study of the Port Arthur coverup

Over the last few years, one of the more educational programmes that has appeared on Australian commercial television is Forensic Investigators. Despite being into its third series, the programme, whose executive producer is Fiona Baker, still has not touched Port Arthur. Given that this is the largest murder case in Australian history, and given the official claims that it is an open and shut case in which the perpetrator has correctly been identified and sentenced to life imprisonment, I decided to get in touch with Baker to find out what her reasons may be for ignoring what would seem to be a showcase study in Australian criminal forensics.

BELOW: Fiona Baker of Forensic Investigators:



I rang Southern Star, FI's production house, and learned that no programme had been made about Port Arthur because there were 'all kinds of legal issues' - and, anyway, it was left up to the discretion of the producer what programmes get made. Since I wanted to clarify the question of the 'legal issues,' I asked to speak to the programme's producer or to be given his or her email address. It seems that the FI office was determined to obstruct my attempt to contact Baker by fobbing me off with an email address for a certain L. Killesteyn, whose actual connection to the programme I could never discover. (Killesteyn being a rather uncommon surname, L. Killesteyn might possibly be related to Ed Killesteyn, Australia's Deputy Secretary of the Department of Immigration, Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs. If so, L. Killesteyn's relationship to FI could plausibly involve supervising the programme from the government end.)

In any case, it wasn't hard to deduce Baker's email address from Killesteyn's (lkillesteyn@sstar.com.au), and I soon confirmed Baker's email to be fbaker@sstar.com.au. I then sent Baker the following email message:

"I recently rang Southern Star's production office to request a copy of the show I erroneously assumed you would have done on Port Arthur.

After I learned that no show on Port Arthur had been made, I asked whether there were any plans to make one, and I was assured that there weren't because there were 'all kinds of legal issues.'

The office then obstructed me in my efforts to contact you by refusing to give me your email or contact number. I must admit to being shocked to discover that you're so inaccessible. It would seem that you're treated like royalty there. Anyway, now to the matter I wish to talk to you about.

What I want to find out is 1) why there are no plans to produce a programme on the biggest murder case in Australian history and 2) what sorts of 'legal issues' might inhibit you from touching the story.

Recently, in an interview with the Bulletin, former Tasmanian premier Tony Rundle, stated that it was a pity there had been no trial in this case because if there had been a trial, the evidence would have been released to the public and that would have saved the nation all the 'conspiracy theories' that have proliferated over the years.

Since of course it's never too late to release the evidence - and I think the public has a right to know what the evidence actually is - wouldn't your programme make an excellent vehicle for making this evidence available to the public at long last?"

I received a response shortly afterwards:

"Thanks for your email. I understand that you called when I was out of the office.

I agree Port Arthur is a story of great interest, and if covered by the media needs to be handled with great care as there are many survivors and relatives of victims who need to be considered. [NB: This is the 'wall of bogus hypersensitivity' I referred to in my previous post, "The Port Arthur massacre: the media coverup continues."]

My staff member was correct in the fact that we will not be including the case in our third series. The main reason for this is the format of our show. Forensic Investigators looks at the investigation of crimes that need to be solved. That is, where an offender has not been identified. The show looks at how evidence is gathered to find and then link an offender to the crime.

My other concern in covering this story later in the year for our program is that it would yet again re-open all the past for the survivors and relatives who have had to relive it once more in these past weeks with the anniversary coverage.

I thank you for your interest in our program and your thoughts about including Port Arthur in it.

I hope you will understand the reasons for its omission."

I wrote back thus:

"I found this an intriguing response. Are you saying that no evidence was gathered to link Bryant to the crime? Presumably Tasmania Police did so, or else they wouldn't have identified him as the perpetrator! What's more, they did so in record time, which surely makes the forensic investigation of the case one of the swiftest and most efficient on record. Wouldn't that make a perfect subject for a programme?

As for the idea that the idea that 'it would yet again re-open all the past for the survivors and relatives who have had to relive it once more in these past weeks with the anniversary coverage.' It sounds to me here as if you are presuming to speak for the victims and relatives here. I find it striking how often people in the media tell us what the victims and the relatives want. How do you know they wouldn't like to know how Bryant was identified as the perpetrator? [NB: I know for a fact that some of the victims and relatives are not convinced of Bryant's guilt and would very much like to know how he was ID'd as the perp.]

In any case, even if you did make a programme about the case it wouldn't be on television for a good while yet, presumably."

I am still awaiting a reply from Baker. Of course, I do not actually expect to receive one. As any one who has actually studied the case knows, the problem is that there are no forensics linking Bryant to the massacre. Forensic Investigators can't possibly touch Port Arthur because there is nothing for it to 'investigate.'

Apr 30, 2006 at 09:47 o\clock

The Port Arthur massacre: the media coverup continues

One of the biggest mysteries in Australian history - especially if you believe the official story and can't see what anyone would have to hide - is why the Australian media pays virtually no attention to the Port Arthur massacre whatsoever. This is a subject of endless bafflement to me, given that the tragedy represents the biggest murder case in the annals of modern Australian crime: 35 deaths and 22 injured. Yet the only episodes the media in this country deems to be of public interest are those serving to illustrate the narrative that has been imposed upon the event: the story of collective recovery from trauma and return to normality. Corny as it is, this is the story, the one story, the one and only story. Everything else has slipped down a memory hole.

After the case vanished from the headlines, it lingered on in the public's attention only insofar as it was synonymous with the suffering of just one person: Walter Mikac, a photogenic young pharmacist from the nearby town of Nubeena, whose wife and two young daughters numbered among the casualties. The media strategy from the first was to focus on a person who had been affected by the tragedy in a way that most people could relate to instantly - he had lost his entire family in a few minutes, something most of us dread happening to ourselves - but who conveniently knew nothing about what had happened, because he hadn't been there at the time. He had been playing golf with friends nearby to celebrate his 34th birthday.

BELOW: Walter Mikac with his murdered wife and children:



From the standpoint of the media's obligation to the government to help cover up the crime, Mikac was an ideal personality around whom to orchestrate public sympathy. Since he had not been a witness to the actual shootings, there was little risk of him saying anything that could trigger doubts about the official story. Instantly 'tabloidized' and elevated to the status of one of the best known people in the country, he became the subject of a media-directed psychodrama that succeeded in identifying the nation with his personal recovery process to the exclusion of almost everything else about the case that actually mattered. It would not be an exaggeration to observe that the better part of everything that has appeared in print or on television relating to the massacre over the last ten years has been about how Mikac was coping. When he remarried in 2000 and started a new family, therefore, it symbolized an Australia which had at last put the massacre behind it and embraced normality again.

But whether or not you regard Mikac's tragedy and subsequent remarriage as a legitimate human interest story, the attention the media devoted to his recovery was entirely tactical: it was part of a cunning strategy to divert attention from the actual victims of the carnage and from those who had watched the tragedy unfold. While the media is always happy to focus on Mikac - who 1) wasn't a victim himself and 2) shows no tendencies to ask uncomfortable questions - it has no interest in anyone who might actually know something about the case. After an initial wave of attention, most of these people have vanished into thin air. Some of them, no doubt, were planted witnesses using false identities, but others would have been genuine victims. Among the latter group, there are, no doubt, many who would only welcome the opportunity to put their experiences on the public record. But it is not hard to see why the media is not interested in giving them a forum: they might raise questions as to what had really happened that day, while others might go so far as to denounce the official story. (At least one of the eyewitnesses, Wendy Scurr has done so publicly. As a volunteer emergency services worker, she was of some interest to the media up until the point at which she announced her conviction that there had been a government coverup.)

Another striking absence over the last ten years is the young woman who was allegedly Martin Bryant's girlfriend at the time of the massacre, Petra Wilmott. You'd think that sooner or later 'the girlfriend' would talk - that she'd unburden herself of such matters as her impressions of Bryant, the complex emotions she must have felt when she first learned that he had been declared responsible for the massacre and how the ordeal has changed her life. Yet although the tabloids would be able to offer considerable financial inducement to this woman if they actually wanted to interview her, she made no media appearances after the first anniversary of the tragedy in 1997 and did not resurface for its tenth anniversary a few days ago (when, to tell you the truth, I was almost certain she would reappear). Nothing could be more suspicious - or suggestive of the possibility that she was part of the conspiracy to set Bryant up as a patsy - than her enigmatic non-existence since 1997. It seems the media is not interested in finding her.

Above all, the media is firmly resolved to suppress information about the alleged perpetrator, 29 year-old Martin Bryant. The official line is that people shouldn't talk about Bryant because it's not good to give him any more 'publicity.' (The reasoning seems to be that mass murderers kill because they crave attention, and if we so delve into their backgrounds and their motives, we are helping them win by giving them what they want.)

The public's intelligence is clearly insulted by this preposterous idea. As Gary Linnell, editor of the magazine The Bulletin, stated in an Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) interview, 'Here is someone who killed 35 people, here is someone who transformed the gun laws in this country, who had a major effect on the Prime Ministership of John Howard, and to simply ignore him and walk away from him and pretend that he never existed and that it never happened, is to me, it just staggers me. It absolutely staggers me. And I just wonder what sort of society we're living in, if people are [I assume he means 'aren't'] asking those sort of questions.' (SOURCE)

The striking fact Linnell seems to have overlooked is that Australians have actually been living in a society in which it has been deemed unfit to ask such questions for some ten years now. The mystery is whether the Australian government has implemented this almost total blackout on discussion of the Port Arthur tragedy by means of the carrot or the stick.

Back in 2000, a critic of the official narrative of the massacre, retired policeman Andrew S. MacGregor, related having been informed that Port Arthur was subject to a D-notice (short for Defence Notice), that is to say, an official government request not to discuss a particular subject. For those who don't know anything about D-notices, they were created by the English government in 1912 as a means of deterring the press from publishing information that might have been of value to England's then enemy, Germany. It is generally stated that they are voluntary, but this is a total fiction; they are in fact perceived by newspaper editors as direct orders from the government. The Guardian, for example, has several times pulled items from its website the instant a D-notice was served. (Example here)

The D-Notice system was introduced into Australia in 1952 by the conservative prime minister Robert Menzies and is administered by the Defence Signals Directorate (DSD). In 1977, under the Fraser government - the government in which the present prime minister John Howard was treasurer - a D-Notice was issued on matters relating to the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS). (SOURCE) 'The overseas spy service has always been the most secretive member of the Australian intelligence establishment. Its existence wasn't officially acknowledged until 1977, and it was placed on a legislative footing only in 2001.' (SOURCE)

Although some members of the Australian public are under the misapprehension that the D-Notice system is defunct, this is not the case. The DSD may be defunct (it has not met since 1982), but all pre-existing D-Notices, including that on ASIS, remain in force. If the Port Arthur massacre was orchestrated by ASIS, then the Australian media is prohibited by means of the 1977 D-Notice from discussing the case.

A brief digression is required to consider the question of whether ASIS could have carried out such a monstrous crime as the Port Arthur massacre. The very fact that ASIS operations are exempt from media scrutiny (or they were at least until 2001) makes it the first organization that should be suspected of involvement. It would certainly make a great deal of sense for this blackest of black ops to have been organized and executed by the only instrument of the Australian government whose activities the media are not allowed to talk about. However, there is a second reason why ASIS looks like a prime candidate: from the inception of the organization in 1952 until 2001, it appears to have been subject to no legal restrictions whatever.

Let's assemble a few relevant facts about ASIS. Although its priority is the collection of foreign intelligence, its operations are not confined to intelligence gathering and it is not barred from conducting operations inside Australia. In fact, ASIS is known to have conducted training exercises in Australia: in 1983, it carried out 'a bungled training exercise at the Sheraton Hotel in Melbourne ... during which ASIS recruits bailed up hotel management with machine guns. In the resulting uproar, ASIS was ordered to stop paramilitary activities and to drop the use of firearms.' (SOURCE)

The million dollar question is whether ASIS genuinely ceased such operations after the Sheraton Hotel debacle, or whether it simply got better at concealing them. It may be no accident that the mass shootings that took place in Australia all took place shortly afterwards, the first two occurring in Melbourne in 1987. A theory I would certainly consider plausible, therefore, is that the Port Arthur massacre was an ASIS counter-terrorist exercise whose eventual mutation into a real massacre was brought about by through the machinations of its top officers (presumably in response to instructions that originated elsewhere).

Astonishingly, ASIS may even have been authorized to commit such horrendous acts in 1996, or at least was not expressly prohibited from committing them. According to an ABC report, it was not until the Intelligence Services Act of 2001 that legislation existed that actually prohibited ASIS from planning or undertaking 'paramilitary activities or activities involving violence against the person or the use of weapons.' (SOURCE) If no such restrictions on ASIS existed in 1996, there would seem no reason why it could not have conducted 'paramilitary activities' and 'activities involving violence against the person' and 'the use of weapons' at Port Arthur. After all, if such restrictions had constrained the organization in 1996, what was the point of the 2001 legislation?

But whether or not a D-Notice on ASIS operations has been responsible for the media's silence about the Port Arthur massacre, it is in any case clearly not the only censorship weapon in the government's arsenal. The media coverage of the massacre implies that a shift to the more sophisticated (and probably much more expensive) methods used by the United States government to control and manipulate public opinion has taken place and are in use here as well. The ABC article that discusses the decision by the editor of the Bulletin to publish an article on Martin Bryant yields a number of insights into the nature of the strategies that have been employed to suppress discussion of the massacre.

What this article reveals is that in addition to the asinine and insulting argument that talking about Bryant only gives him extra publicity, there is the idea that nothing should be written that might injure the sensitivities of the victims. Such rhetoric is disingenuous, because it's not always clear who the victims actually are and whether any particular individual (such as Walter Mikac) can legitimately be presented to the public as a spokesperson for the victims. It also presumes to speak on behalf of the victims, even though there is no evidence to suggest that there are not among the survivors many who are suspicious of the official story and would like to see it scrutinized more carefully.

In this case, the article actually suggests that priority should go to respecting the sensitivities of the 'Port Arthur community,' whose alleged spokesperson is Peter Roche, owner and operator of the Port Arthur Historical Site ferry service. Gerald Tooth, the ABC journalist interviewing Gary Linnell of The Bulletin, goes so far as to imply that anything being published about the case ought to possess the express sanction of the 'Port Arthur community.' Like any serious journalist, Linnell seems puzzled by the suggestion:

Gerald Tooth: How much consultation with the community did you engage in before you did this story, and were you aware of a forum that was held recently in Hobart, discussing this very topic of reporting the anniversary? ... how did you go about consulting with the community there before publishing this story?

Garry Linnell: Well I don't understand what you mean by consulting - with which community?

Gerald Tooth: The Port Arthur community.(SOURCE)

The ABC report - which misleadingly implies that the 'Port Arthur community' was the chief victim of the massacre (most of the casualties were in fact not locals but tourists from all over the world) - seems to be nothing more than an attempted public shaming of Linnell for having had the audacity to deal with the question of Martin Bryant's background without allowing this nebulous creation the 'Port Arthur community' to decide whether he may do so. (Since Peter Roche is the sole representative of the Port Arthur community interviewed in this report, are we to assume that Linnell is obliged to not publish anything that Roche would not want to see published?)

This kind of media coverage is typical of that which has appeared over the last ten years in that it panders to - and thereby helps perpetuate - a host of taboos that were erected in place within a few months of the massacre that cumulatively inhibit the objective discussion of the case. These include 'don't give Bryant publicity,' 'spare the sensitivities of the local people,' 'don't add to the burden of the suffering of the victims' 'we have to put the tragedy behind us' etc. etc.

If there is one reason why the Australian media has been successful in suppressing discussion of the most heinous crime in modern Australian history, it is because examination of what happened is blocked by a wall of bogus hypersensitivity. No matter which aspect of the case one looks into, one encounters the idea that it is insensitive or even sacrilegious to pry there. Don't ask question about Bryant, don't interview any witnesses - this would only upset them by forcing them to relive their dreadful experiences - and, above all, don't get into the forensics of the case. The only legitimate subject for discussion is, of course, how Walter Mikac is getting on.



FURTHER READING: Moyra Grant, "The D Notice."
Ned Wood, "The Port Arthur Massacre 10 Years On: The Secrecy Continues."

Apr 27, 2006 at 05:49 o\clock

The Port Arthur massacre: ten years ago



Tomorrow marks the tenth anniversary of the most traumatic episode in modern Australian history, the Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania, April 28, 1996. In summary, Carl Wernerhoff writes in his new e-book, What's Going On?: A Critical Study of the Port Arthur Massacre, the story the appalled public was told 'was that shortly before 1.30 p.m. that cloudless Sunday afternoon, the gunman had entered the Broad Arrow Café at the Port Arthur Historical Site [PAHS] and picked off, with unfathomable callousness, one tourist after another. He killed a number of other individuals [including small children - ed] as he exited the PAHS and holed himself up in a nearby tourist guest house, the Seascape, in a siege that only ended when he burned the building down the following morning (an event that was seen shortly afterwards on television).'

As Wernerhoff explains, in the immediate aftermath of the shootings the alleged perpetrator - a 29-year old simpleton (IQ 66) with practically no shooting experience whatsoever named Martin Bryant - was subjected to a campaign of vilification which has surpassed that directed against anyone in Australian history. [After Hitler he is the most vilified individual I know of - ed.] In addition to reports that implied that he may have been responsible for two prior deaths (those of his benefactor - an eccentric old woman, Helen Hervey - and his father), the Australian public was told that he persistently harassed women, threatened to shoot his neighbours for no reason and slept with a pig in his bed. Here's Wernerhoff on the pig story, surely the most damning of them all:

'It is not my purpose in this book to provide a systematic analysis and critique of the campaign of character assassination waged against Martin Bryant by the police and the media after the Port Arthur massacre. What I would like to do, first of all, is remind readers that by far the most incriminating component of the anti-Bryant rhetoric - his alleged partiality for violent videos – turned out to be wholly unfounded. Bryant’s video collection not only contained entirely standard fare, his tastes in films were far from violent. According to his girlfriend, Petra Wilmott, he once walked out of a movie because it depicted violence too realistically for his liking. His preferences in videos - his favourites were musicals such as The Sound of Music - seem to have been as anodyne as his preferences in music, which included The Lion King and Cliff Richard.

But, second, it is important to realize that the allegedly violent nature of his video collection was only one of a great many lines of defamation that were pursued by those who were determined to depict him as a monster. Most Australian readers will recall that Bryant is supposed to have threatened to kill a number of people, and to have given women the creeps. The best known book about the case, Mike Bingham’s trashy book Suddenly One Sunday (1996; second edition 2001), is replete with (mostly unattributed) stories of Bryant’s untoward behaviour to women, presumably in order to encourage disturbed female readers [who, after all, make up fifty percent of the public the police was trying to convince of Bryant's guilt - ed] to draw the conclusion that the police must definitely have found the right mass murderer.

However, most Australians will probably have forgotten one of the most sensational ‘revelations’ the media diffused about Bryant – which was that he slept with a pig in his bed! According to Macer Hall (The Star, April 30, 1996) – Hall is now the political editor of the same London tabloid in which the story appeared - "The psycho behind the Tasmanian massacre was a twisted loner who slept with a pig. … Bryant was known to wander around toting guns under cover of darkness - and snuggle up to his pet porker during the day."’ (SOURCE)

BELOW: Picture of a pig. Why have police refused to release pictures of Bryant's pet porker? Could the truth be that the massacre was the result of a love triangle involving Bryant, his girlfriend Petra Wilmott and the pig that went terribly wrong? Why wasn't the pig mentioned even once during Bryant's sentencing hearing? What's being covered up here?



Any resemblance between the pig shown in the above photo and Bryant's pet porker is entirely coincidental. This pig is NOT being accused of any kind of complicity in the massacre at all.

Wernerhoff continues: 'Without wishing to impugn the journalistic integrity of a Macer Hall (who is a member of the British parliamentary press gallery, and therefore should possess at least a modicum of the stuff), I would suggest that this particular claim can be pretty much dismissed as an unsubstantiated allegation. If there was a pig in Bryant’s bed, Bryant's girlfriend seems not to have noticed it there, while his mother, Carleen Bryant, who regularly cleaned her son’s house for him, never mentions the pig droppings she must have been finding all over the place.

What’s more, the identity of the pig itself – and other pertinent facts, such as its sex, age and breed - have never been released by the Tasmania Police. Whether or not the police have obfuscated the truth about Martin Bryant by deliberately suppressing information about the pig is a matter that concerned readers should probably take up with the Tasmanian Department of Public Prosecutions rather than with this author, who is entirely unfamiliar with the appropriate forensic procedures for investigating intimate relationships between psycho killers and porcine bedmates.

*****

A question I would like to leave the reader with is whether such an extensive campaign of personal vilification as that which was waged after the massacre against Martin Bryant, however deviant or creepy he may have been (and there is no reason to think that he was either), would have been necessary if there had actually been some evidence that he had in fact been its perpetrator?'

NOTE: Carl Wernerhoff's What's Going On?: A Critical Study of the Port Arthur Massacre can be downloaded free of charge from the following locations:

http://www.badongo.com/file/536915

http://www.sendspace.com/file/tixyyu

http://www.savefile.com/files/3620746