The
Nameless War
CHAPTER 15
PARTICULARS ALLEGED AS REASONS FOR MY
DETENTION
There follows here a
copy of the Particulars, which were alleged
to be reasonable grounds for my detention
for the last three years.
It will be seen that the
whole basis of every one of them is, that my
opposition to Communism, Bolshevism and
World Jewry was but a sham; a disloyal ruse,
in fact, adopted to mask anti-British
activities in relation to the war.
Anyone conversant with
doings in the House of Commons will be more
or less familiar with the anti-Bolshevik
activities that I have kept up openly and
consistently all through my time in the
House since 1931; and which activities
became anti-Jewish in 1938, when I realized
that Bolshevism was Jewish and an integral
part of their World Plan.
The framer of these
Particulars brushes aside the whole of that
eight years' record, and proceeds to
fabricate and reiterate some new and
disloyal purpose, for which slanders he
offers no shred of substantiation.
Home Office
Advisory Committee
(Defence Regulation 18B)
London, W.1.
Telephone: REGent 4784
Ref.: . . . R4. . .
24th June, 1940
REASONS FOR ORDER
MADE UNDER DEFENCE REGULATION 18B IN THE
CASE OF CAPTAIN ARCHIBALD MAULE RAMSAY,
M.P.
The Order under Defence
Regulation 18B was made against Captain
Archibald Maule Ramsay, M.P. Because the
Secretary of State had reasonable cause
to believe that the said Captain
Archibald Maule RAMSAY, M.P. had been
recently concerned in acts prejudicial to
the public safety or the defence of the
Realm, or in the preparation or instigation
of such acts, and that by reason thereof it
was necessary to exercise control over him.
[Note: Notice that ONE
Person, had "reasonable cause to believe",
and under that clause, Captain Ramsay was
imprisoned for two and a half years.
That exact language is
codified in the U.S. Criminal Code today.
Who do you suppose is 'writing the proposed
laws' for the U.S. Congress to rubber stamp?
And, bear in mind that the
U.S.A. Patriot Act as well as the 'new'
Department of Homeland Security was
laying in wait for the WTC genocidal act of
September 11th, 2001 (known now as 911)
planned by the same creatures, and
implemented by -- who knows who? Their
'minions' and 'lackeys' and those who are
damned to a hell of their own making. - j].
PARTICULARS
The said Captain Archibald
Maule RAMSAY, M.P.
Particular (i):
In or about the month of May 1939,
formed an Organisation under the name of
the "Right Club", which ostensibly
directed its activities against Jews,
Freemasons and Communists. This
Organisation, in reality, was designed
secretly to spread subversive and
defeatist views among the civil
population of Great Britain, to obstruct
the war effort of great Britain, and
thus to endanger public safety and the
defence of the Realm.
Reply
The
formation of the Right Club, as the attached
memorandum shows, was the logical outcome of
many years of work against Bolshevism,
carried on both inside and outside the House
of Commons, and well-known to all my
political colleagues since 1931.
The main object of the
Right Club was to oppose and expose the
activities of Organized Jewry, in the light
of the evidence which came into my
possession in 1938, some of which is given
in the memorandum.
Our first objective was
to clear the Conservative Party of Jewish
influence, and the character of our
membership and meetings were strictly in
keeping with this objective. There were no
other and secret purposes.
Our hope was to avert
war, which we considered to be mainly the
work of Jewish intrigue centred in New York.
Later, I and may others hoped to turn the
"phoney" war into, not total war, but an
honourable negotiated peace.
It is difficult to
imagine a body of persons less capable of
being "subversive" as this Particular
suggests, and coupling this charge with the
charge of being 'defeatist" places this
whole Particular in the realm of the
ludicrous. .
(Particular (ii):
In furtherance of the real objects of
the Organisation, the said RAMSAY
allowed the names of the members of the
Organisation to be known only to
himself, and took great precautions to
see that the register of members did not
leave his possession or control; and
stated that he had taken steps to
mislead the Police and the Intelligence
Branch of the War Office as to the real
activities of the Organisation. These
steps were taken to prevent the real
purposes of the Organisation being
known.
Reply
The real objects of the
Right Club being the declared objects, and
there being no other objects whatever, the
latter part of this Particular is pure
fabrication.
There was only one
respect in which our aims differed from the
Police and M.I., namely, the Jewish
question.
Neither Police nor M.I.
recognised the Jewish menace. Neither had
any machinery for dealing with it, or for
withholding information from Jewish members
of their personnel.
If names of members of
the Club had been placed at the disposal of
either of these departments, they would have
been seized upon by the Jewish members
therein, and reported on to the very
quarters from which many members wished them
to be withheld.
Particular (iii):
Frequently expressed sympathy with the
policy and aims of the German
Government; and at times expressed his
desire to co-operate with the German
government in the conquest and
subsequent government of Great Britain.
Reply
The latter half of this
Particular is a fabrication so preposterous
that I propose to treat it with the contempt
it deserves.
Lord Marley embroidered
this fiction in the Lords a few days after
my arrest, insinuating that I had undertaken
to be Gauleiter of Scotland
under a German occupation of
Great Britain.
My
solicitors at once invited him to repeat his
remarks outside. Needless to say, he did not
do so, for there is not a shred of
justification for either this Particular or
his slanders.
The term "sympathy with
the policy and aims of the German
Government" is misleading to the verge of
dishonesty. It suggests some general
agreement or understanding.
Nothing of the kind
existed.
I have never been to
Germany, and beyond one formal luncheon at
their Embassy knew no Germans. What little I
had learned about the Nazi system did not
appeal to me.
I have never approved of
the idea of movements on distantly similar
lines being formed in Britain. On the
contrary, I disapproved
My view was that the
Unionist Party, once enlightened, was the
body best suited to take the needful
counter-measures to the Jewish plan, and
that to do so successfully it did not even
need to go outside the powers latent in our
Constitution.
In a general way my
views concerning German aspirations
coincided exactly with those expressed by
Lord Lothian in his speech at Chatham House
on 29th June, 1937, when he said:
"Now if the
principle of self-determination were
applied on behalf of Germany in the way
in which it was applied against her, it
would mean the re-entry of Austria into
Germany, the union of the Sudeten-Deutch,
Danzig and possibly Memel with Germany,
and certain adjustments with Poland in
Silesia and the Corridor."
The only aspect of the
Nazi policy which contacted in any special
way with my views was the opposition to the
disruptive activities of Organized Jewry. No
patriot -- British, French, German or of any
other nationality -- is justified in
abandoning the defence of his country to
that onslaught, once he has recognized its
reality.
To confuse sympathy on
this one and loyal point with sympathy with
the whole Nazi policy and aims is dishonest;
to develop this fallacy into a charge of
preferring that system to our own, and being
prepared to force that system (of which I
disapproved) upon my own country, is the
last word in infamy.
Particular (iv):
After the formation of the Organisation,
made efforts, on behalf of the
Organisation, to introduce members of
the Organisation into the Foreign
Office, the Censorship, the Intelligence
Branch of the War Office, and Government
departments, in order to further the
real objects of the Organisation as set
out in (i) hereof.
Reply.
Again we have here the
fabrication of the wholly unjustifiable
charge of a secret and disloyal purpose,
already dealt with in Particular (i), and my
Memorandum.
In regard to the matter
of members of the Right Club and Government
offices, I would say this:
The objects of the Club
being to spread as rapidly as possible the
truth concerning the Jewish danger, time was
always a vital factor. From the outset we
were in a race with the Jewish
propagandists.
To counter them in as
many different spheres as possible was
obviously the quickest method. Ten members
in ten different spheres would spread our
information more widely, more quickly than
ten members all in the same office or club.
Every political group
must follow these lines; this method is the
common practice of all political parties.
I never at any time made
any effort to get any member a job in any
Government Office.
If a member had a choice
of two jobs, and didn't mind which he or she
took, and asked me about it, I should
clearly have replied that as far as the Club
was concerned, the sphere in which we had no
member to preach the gospel was the one to
choose.
For the knowledge to
reach such places as the foreign Office, War
Office, etc., was obviously to achieve the
enlightenment of influential persons most
rapidly of all.
Particular (v):
After the
outbreak of war, associated with and
made use of persons known to him to be
active in opposition to the interests of
Great Britain. Among such persons were
one, Anna Wolkoff, and one, Tyler Kent,
a Coding Officer employed at the Embassy
of the United States of America. With
knowledge of the activities in which
Wolkoff and Kent were engaged, he
continued to associate with them and to
make use of their activities on behalf
of the "Right Club" and of himself. In
particular, with knowledge that Kent had
abstracted important documents, the
property of the Embassy of the United
States of America, he visited Kent's
flat at 47, Gloucester Place, where many
of the said documents were kept, and
inspected them for his own purposes. He
further deposited with the said Kent the
secret register of the members of the
"Right Club", of which Organisation Kent
had become an important member, in order
to try and keep the nature of the
Organisation secret.
Reply.
I have never at any time
of my life associated with persons whom I
have known to be in oppositions to the
interests of Britain. On the contrary, my
whole record proves that I have devoted more
time and trouble than most people to
fighting just such persons.
I certainly did not
know, and do not now know, that either Mr.
Kent or Miss Wolkoff were engaged in
activities calculated or likely to harm the
interests of Britain.
From my own acquaintance
with them both, and conversations I have had
during that period, I know they both
recognized the activities of Organized Jewry
to be one of the most evil forces in
politics in general, and one of the most
dangerous to the interests of Britain in
particular.
All their actions will
have been directed to countering those
Powers and their designs, and most certainly
not to anything that might injure the
interests of Britain.
As for myself, I should
like to add here most emphatically, in view
of various mendacious allegations on the
subject that have since reached my ears,
that I have never, and of course could never
contemplate communicating information to
enemy quarters.
Having reasonable cause
to believe that the Jewish International
intrigues to bring about total war radiated
from New York, and knowing that activities
were being carried on to sabotage Mr.
Chamberlain's policy of pacification and to
bring about his over-throw, it was my
obvious duty as a Member of Parliament, and
one still loyal to Mr. Chamberlain, to make
any investigation I could.
I deposited the Red Book
of names of the Right Club members at Mr.
Kent's flat for the period of my absence
from London only after I heard of several
persons who had had their papers (dealing
with the same sort of subjects as mine)
ransacked by persons unknown in their
absence.
As I have stated
already, I had given explicit assurance of
privacy to some of the persons whose names
were entered therein. Had their names even
come into the hands of the British Secret
Police, personated as this force is by Jews,
their attitude vis-a-vis the Jewish menace
would have become known at once in the very
quarters from which they made a particular
point of their being withheld, namely,
Jewish quarters.
Political burglary is no
new thing in this country, when one is
suspected of possessing information relating
to the activities of Organized Jewry.
Lord Craigmyle, when
Lord of Appeal, had his whole house
ransacked, every drawer broken open and
every paper searched without anything being
stolen, at a time when it was reasonable to
suppose that his papers contained such
matter.
The Chief Lieutenant of
Police in Edinburgh declared at the time
that it was a "political burglary"; the
perpetrators were never traced.
(See the letter of
Lord Craigmyle, dated 6th July, 1920
entitled "Edinburgh and Freedom"
Published in Letters to Israel) .
(vi) Permitted and authorised
his wife to act on his behalf in associating
with, and making use of, persons known to
him to be active in opposing the interests
of Great Britain. Among these persons were
Anna Wolkoff, Tyler Kent, and Mrs.
Christabel Nicholson.
Reply.
There is no truth
whatever in this Particular; and I propose
to treat it with the contempt it deserves.
Needless to say, the
Home Office Advisory Committee produced no
evidence to support any of the slanders
contained in any of the above Particulars
CONCLUSION
I submit this statement,
and the comments on the Particulars, not for
my own sake, but to enlighten the country.
When things reach a
stage wherein a Lord of Appeal, whose papers
are suspected of relating to the plan of
Organized Jewry, can be "politically
burgled";
When a white Paper
containing vital passages on Jewish
World-Bolshevism can be immediately
withdrawn, and reprinted omitting the vital
passages;
When a leading British
Industrialist can be blackmailed by
Organized Jewry, and coerced into submission
by boycott, strikes, acts of sabotage and
arson;
When a Member of
Parliament, who dares to try and warn the
country against this menace of Organized
Jewry and their help-mates (the only Fifth
Column that really exists in this country)
is thereupon imprisoned for three years on
false charges;
When these things can
happen in Britain, then there must surely be
something wrong somewhere.
At a time when Britain
and the Empire are engaged in a
life-and-death struggle, surely there can be
no room for the foul teachings and
activities which I have touched upon.
While our sailors,
soldiers and airmen are winning victories
over the external enemies, surely it is the
duty of every patriot to fight this internal
enemy at home.
The Prime Minister, in
his speech at the Mansion House, stated that
he had not become the King's First Minister
in order to preside over the liquidation of
the British Empire.
There are more ways than
one of encompassing the liquidation of the
British Empire today; and the National Leder
who is determined to counter them all will
not only need the utmost support of all
patriots, but I believe it will be proved
that his most formidable difficulties will
emanate from just those very powers which I
and other members of the Right Club have all
along striven to oppose and expose
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Appendix 1