Focus, please. Evidence that Diana was murdered, if you have any.According to the tabloids, he was forced out and even told not to contact fellow officers.
Hewitt was very bitter about it. It lead to a downward spiral.
Focus, please. Evidence that Diana was murdered, if you have any.According to the tabloids, he was forced out and even told not to contact fellow officers.
Hewitt was very bitter about it. It lead to a downward spiral.
Most of the British Army was sent to Iraq.
Why do you think a Squadron Leader in an elite armoured cavalry regiment would not be sent along with his squadron?
The Life Guards is the most senior regiment of the British Army and part of the Household Cavalry,
They are a reconnaissance regiment.
A Squadron is a big command, it comprises
Squadron Headquarters Troop of two Land Rovers, Two FV105 Sultan command vehicles and FV104 Samaritan armoured ambulance
Three Reconnaissance Troops of four FV107 Scimitar tanks
Guided Weapons Troop of four FV102 Striker anti-tank guided missile vehicles
Support Troop of four FV103 Spartan armoured personnel carriers
Mechanical Engineer Section of FV103 Spartan and FV106 Samson armoured recovery vehicle
It's not an insignificant thing.
I think it's standard for officers to get bumped up a rank on retirement.More made up BS, Hewitt retired after serving 17 years and was granted the rank of Major in retirement.
Even the Lobster, frequent purveyor of dodgy gossip, doesn't take the rumour seriously.If all electricity supply to the tunnel were suddenly cut off, at night, that would have been a major hazard. Switching off the lights, in a tunnel, at night? It would be pitch black in there.
If only cars had lights on them!
That's my impression, too, from the way it was described regarding Hewitt. It suggests to me that he wasn't in any particular disgrace that the tradition was followed in his case, despite his having failed to gain the promotion a couple of times during his service.I think it's standard for officers to get bumped up a rank on retirement.
I still think it is odd that Diana told both the butler and the lawyer that Charles was going to kill her in a car crash.... before later dying in a car crash.
I still maintain that saying "If you get caught writing letters to another man's wife, you will be fired from your job, if her husband is powerful" is very, very different from (let's say) flat earth.
I prefer bollocks, the auo-censor doesn't object.I summarized it as "bull ◊◊◊◊" over a dozen pages ago and he bent over backwards to confitm it back then
Did anyone see a set of goalposts around here?I still think there is a huge difference between believing in tarot cards and thinking "Someone is liable to hurt his ex's new partner."
By the way, I am surprised that left-wingers (I assume most atheists are left-wing) aren't more into conspiracies.
After all, most conspiracies would seem to favor the left. If you think Reagan was evil, wouldn't the October Surprise thing give you more ammunition?
If you think white people have mistreated blacks (a reasonable position) wouldn't thinking that Malcolm X was killed by the FBI give you more ammunition?
If you think Bush and Cheney were evil, wouldn't saying "He let 9/11 happen and possibly cheated Kerry in the elections" be music to your ears?
I think it's standard for officers to get bumped up a rank on retirement.
No, a fact. Based on my decades of tech experience, my knowledge of data recording and management systems and the technologies used in them.
I note, with no surprise given your history, that you have failed (as usual) to produce any refuting evidence.
No it doesn't. The head of state in the UK has very different powers and influence than the heir to the throne. And of course the crash was investigated, by a country that put paid to its monarchy a couple of hundred years ago in a rather certain manner.You are splitting hairs again. The point still stands, regardless of whether he was king or prince.
But they did investigate, didn't they? And what did they conclude from the evidence?
Please stop with you childish attempts to teach me logic,at least until you educate yourself first.Let me help you with the logical reasoning.
Consider the following propositions:
You should now be able to ascertain that none of these conditions are mutually exclusive to each other. Any one, two or all three of them can be true and logically sound. It is also logical that not necessarily all of them or any of them are true. For example, it is possible to be drunk and driving dangerously but yet reach your destination safely. Or that being an armoured merc the passengers were sufficiently unconcerned with seatbelts as was their customary behaviour. But the main point to grasp is that logically the three statements are not mutually exclusive to each other.
- The driver was drunk/substance impaired and driving extremely dangerously
- Diana failed to take note of his state and was not wearing a seatbelt
- The accident is an MI5 cover up
Now consider the following two statements:
Is that clear? We can state logically that statements 4 and 5 ARE mutually exclusive to each other. Bth cannot be true.
- 4. The accident was orchestrated/covered up by secret intelligence agencies fearful for the Britihs constitution/ as given the nod by Prince Philip or Prince Charles.
- 5. The accident was bona fide /caused by dangerous driving and nothing at all to do with any plot.
Now consider the position of the national press. Your assertion is that 'because the INDEPENDENT/TELEGRAPH calls it 'a conspiracy theory' then ipso facto it must be.
Here's where your critical thinking skills fall short. If condition no. 4 holds true, then when the newspaper contacts a source for verification of the story, then of course they will be unable to confirm it, because if no. 4 is true then the information will be classified. So of course the newspapers having no confirmation of the claim the cameras were all disabled as of the time of the accident, have no choice but to label it 'a conspiracy theory' otherwise they, as a 'reputable' broadside are publishing tacky rubbish usually reserved for the gutter press.
So now you should be able to understand that if condition no.5 holds true, the reason why a broadsheet 'reliable' newspaper would call it 'a conspiracy theory'. But logically, it does not PROVE it is a conspiracy theory and therefore untrue.
Kemo sabe?
You don't know what 'circular reasoning' means.See above re circular reasoning.
The constitutional issue had already passed by the time she died i.e. a divorce for the heir to the throne, when she died she was no longer a member of the royal family. So she presented even less of a constitutional issue than an ex-King being a nazi supporter.Let me help you with the logical reasoning.
Consider the following propositions:
You should now be able to ascertain that none of these conditions are mutually exclusive to each other. Any one, two or all three of them can be true and logically sound. It is also logical that not necessarily all of them or any of them are true. For example, it is possible to be drunk and driving dangerously but yet reach your destination safely. Or that being an armoured merc the passengers were sufficiently unconcerned with seatbelts as was their customary behaviour. But the main point to grasp is that logically the three statements are not mutually exclusive to each other.
- The driver was drunk/substance impaired and driving extremely dangerously
- Diana failed to take note of his state and was not wearing a seatbelt
- The accident is an MI5 cover up
Now consider the following two statements:
Is that clear? We can state logically that statements 4 and 5 ARE mutually exclusive to each other. Bth cannot be true.
- 4. The accident was orchestrated/covered up by secret intelligence agencies fearful for the Britihs constitution/ as given the nod by Prince Philip or Prince Charles.
- 5. The accident was bona fide /caused by dangerous driving and nothing at all to do with any plot.
Now consider the position of the national press. Your assertion is that 'because the INDEPENDENT/TELEGRAPH calls it 'a conspiracy theory' then ipso facto it must be.
Here's where your critical thinking skills fall short. If condition no. 4 holds true, then when the newspaper contacts a source for verification of the story, then of course they will be unable to confirm it, because if no. 4 is true then the information will be classified. So of course the newspapers having no confirmation of the claim the cameras were all disabled as of the time of the accident, have no choice but to label it 'a conspiracy theory' otherwise they, as a 'reputable' broadside are publishing tacky rubbish usually reserved for the gutter press.
So now you should be able to understand that if condition no.5 holds true, the reason why a broadsheet 'reliable' newspaper would call it 'a conspiracy theory'. But logically, it does not PROVE it is a conspiracy theory and therefore untrue.
Kemo sabe?
That is not circular reasoning.See above re circular reasoning.
You mean along the lines of "I believe there was a conspiracy and the investigation didn't come to the conclusions I wanted, so it must be part of the conspiracy"?See above re circular reasoning.
What constitutional crisis are you imagining?
- 4. The accident was orchestrated/covered up by secret intelligence agencies fearful for the British constitution/ as given the nod by Prince Philip or Prince Charles.
Kemo sabe?