On the day of the
7 July Inquests verdict,
The Guardian, with their Orwellianly titled 'Comment is Free' 'discussion' forum, have deleted a short comment left on their live
inquest verdict coverage thread by
J7: The July 7th Truth Campaign.
A few pertinent points of fact: The work of J7: The July 7th Truth Campaign was
referenced at the start of the inquest proceedings, at
the end of inquest proceedings, and
repeatedly throughout the course of the inquests, to the point that anomalies and questions highlighted by J7 were raised by counsels for the bereaved in the coroner's court. Furthermore, the work of J7 even
formed the basis for a series of articles by Guardian journalist
Shiv Malik on the subject of Mohammed Junaid Babar, the US State's star witness in every significant 'terrorist' trial in the last few years. J7's work has also been referenced by no less than the Guardian's assistant editor,
Michael White, in a piece about UK complicity in torture. J7 were also featured in seven page
Media Guardian spread, Seeing Isn't Believing, in June 2006. Oh, and
J7 even penned a Comment is Free article.
The comment below was previously
here.
 |
The Disappeared |
Not only have The Guardian seen fit to delete the comment, they have also removed J7's account from their system.
"This user profile is not available."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/discussion/user/j7truthcampaign
Let us all be grateful for the freedom, democracy, freedom of speech, and all the other stuff regularly championed as the cherished way of life in our
glorious land, even though it doesn't really exist.