The Clan Gibson of Sutton! (9.11.2023)

Our branch of the Gibson family is recorded as having been ‘rope-makers’ and are believed to have originally migrated out of Scotland hundreds of years ago – and to have ‘walked’ down through England until they eventually settled in East London. This is a journey that took decades and involved small clusters settling here and there. Featured is out Scottish Tartan – but as ‘Gibson’ is of Viking heritage – the Vikings settled in both England and Scotland at different times and during the centuries prior to the Norman Conquest of 1066 CE. As the Normans were Vikings who had settled in France – this adds yet another level of transmission. The ‘Son of Gibb’ was thought to have been a mighty Viking warrior!

Oxford University: Why Were the Jews Expelled from England in 1290 CE? (21.6.2023)

The post-1948 hijacking of the WWII narratives by the Zionists (which ‘excludes’ all mention of the Soviet Red Army ‘liberating’ the Death Camps) is a major problem, particularly as the far-right pursues the straw dog argument that ‘Communism’ equals ‘Judaism’ and vice versa. The Zionists reject Soviet (and ‘Socialist’) ideology – whilst the far-right accuses the Jews and the Zionists of being the very essence of ‘Communism’! Of course, bourgeois academia has continuously pursued a false narrative when assessing the Socialist cause – but as this class currently controls the means of production – one of its lies possesses the ability to withstand the impact of a hundred proletariat facts that prove it wrong! However, we have to start somewhere and we might as well use Oxford to our advantage – a University which has produced its own fair share of Communists – and it own far share of anti-Communist propaganda (such as its infamous, inaccurate ‘Black Book’)!

Berry Pomeroy Castle – South Devon – 4.8.15

After the Norman victory of 1066 CE in Britain, the warriors of the indigenous British kept-up a fierce resistance to the Norman presence for decades. The Normans spread-out across the land, and built very strong fortified houses and castles. These structures allowed the Norman occupiers to live in relative safety against the continuous threat of British attack. This castle building skill marked a significant evolution in the building of militarised structures in Britain, and there was very little the indigenous British warriors could do against the high and smooth stone walls, deep water-filled moats, and steep inclines.