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Whipping the Sleeper - Greg Hallett and Spymaster

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12 New Zeal<strong>and</strong> – A Blackmailer’s Guide<br />

“But at some point” is usually done with photos, <strong>and</strong> Geoffrey<br />

Palmer became <strong>the</strong> Labour MP (not National) for Christchurch Central<br />

(1979–90). He <strong>the</strong>n became <strong>the</strong> Deputy Leader of <strong>the</strong> Opposition (1983),<br />

Deputy Prime Minister, Leader of <strong>the</strong> House of Representatives,<br />

Minister of Justice (1984–87) <strong>and</strong> Attorney-General (1984–89) under <strong>the</strong><br />

transvestite-rooting Labour Prime Minister David Lange. It would seem<br />

that <strong>the</strong> Labour Party was sexually bribed right up to <strong>the</strong> top of its ranks.<br />

PM & A-G David Lange. A-G & PM Geoffrey Palmer.<br />

How could this happen? Quite simply, all massage parlours <strong>and</strong> sex<br />

shops are filmed by <strong>the</strong> SIS or <strong>the</strong> SAS <strong>and</strong> this film footage is <strong>the</strong>n used<br />

to bribe people into elevated positions to achieve things <strong>the</strong>y would<br />

not o<strong>the</strong>rwise consider doing, or be considered capable of. In this way,<br />

<strong>the</strong> military controls New Zeal<strong>and</strong> <strong>and</strong> honest people are never ever<br />

promoted in politics . . . perhaps this is why politicians are <strong>the</strong> least<br />

trusted profession.<br />

The military are <strong>the</strong>n controlled by those who control <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

retirement funds, <strong>and</strong> in <strong>the</strong> case of <strong>the</strong> SAS, this is <strong>the</strong> paedophile Sir<br />

Ron Brierly, which he finds very useful in engineering his own cover.<br />

Private I: “I was told that <strong>the</strong> police officer that h<strong>and</strong>led <strong>the</strong> Banks<br />

Avenue case was brought back from leave, urgently, to brief Geoffrey<br />

Palmer <strong>and</strong> ano<strong>the</strong>r top civil servant or politician, <strong>and</strong> he was reported<br />

to have said to <strong>the</strong>m, ‘This is huge. It’s a prima facia case, <strong>and</strong> it stacks<br />

up’ . . . Palmer <strong>and</strong> his associate were openly sceptical.

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