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Duchess of Cambridge Suicide - MI5 Conspiracy?

  • 07-12-2012 4:45pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,580 ✭✭✭✭


    Hey guys,

    In the wake of this poor woman apparently taking her own life over allowing a phone call to get through to the hospital it made me wonder, could she have been murdered by Mi5?

    I was discussing it with my friend in London on Facebook who lives local to the hospital and he says the cops/secret service are all over the area as if London is going to be evacuated, he thinks there is a lot more to it then meets the eye...

    Then I remembered all the hassle of the photos of Kate with her baps out during the summer, and the furore it caused in the press, and to add to it, this new law for the press the UK government are "recommending" to the Media industry to take away rights of free speech in the press (JP Rowling amongst others are against it) but Cameron didn't want to impose it if he said the press found a common law to adhere to...

    So, if the media made this prank call, and caused this "suicide" then it will give Cameron the go ahead he needs to get this press law brought into force in the UK...

    After Lady Diana and Harrys naked scandal aswell the royals will definitely be looking for ways to block press from future embarrassing stories that leak out about them!

    I mean this post as no disrespect to the lady in question, but I am keeping an open mind on this one.....

    Opinions CF posters? Am I mad or is my theory plausible?

    Just thought I'd put it out there.... :)


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,231 ✭✭✭Hercule Poirot


    I don't think so, the editor of that french magazine would have been long gone if they had gone down to that level - in fact, I think your theory is plain daft. But I repsect your right to have it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,580 ✭✭✭✭Riesen_Meal


    I don't think so, the editor of that french magazine would have been long gone if they had gone down to that level - in fact, I think your theory is plain daft. But I repsect your right to have it.

    Thanks for your opinion Hercule, but I do think this story may have more to it, as it does practically give Cameron and the UK govt. a reason to bring in this law suggested in the Leveson report, which strips a lot of basic free speech away for journalists, I just think its a wee bit convenient that this happened after yesterdays event's....

    Time will tell I suppose... :)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,231 ✭✭✭Hercule Poirot


    Fieldog wrote: »
    Thanks for your opinion Hercule, but I do think this story may have more to it, as it does practically give Cameron and the UK govt. a reason to bring in this law suggested in the Leveson report, which strips a lot of basic free speech away for journalists, I just think its a wee bit convenient that this happened after yesterdays event's....

    Time will tell I suppose... :)

    That's the thing with Mi5, we willl never know if it went down the way you think it did, personally though I just don't think it would warrant such a reaction. It may turn out that the woman's suicide was not caused directly by the prank - more of a tip-of-the-iceberg/ last straw kind of thing, she may have been depressed for a good while before this happened.

    The reigning in of the press' freedom of speech rights will happen regardless of these events.

    But if it turns out that you are right then I might just lock myself in my room with 50 litres of Captain Morgan and a shotgun :D


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 52 ✭✭crackers and cheese


    wow...very interesting theory all the same
    bit out there but good points made
    Its always reported that the royals and all around them want to
    avoid the media scrutiny that followed Diana
    If this was true then its an extreme way to twist it around and use to their advantage
    I personally think the poor woman had other issues going on
    and this drove her over the edge


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,791 ✭✭✭JJJJNR


    I think there is more to this and agree with the OP, its nothing a normal person would do after a prank call, particularly someone who has dedicated themselves to the life of a care giver.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/kate-middleton-prank-call-prince-1475441


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 13,616 ✭✭✭✭ArmaniJeanss


    Fieldog wrote: »
    Thanks for your opinion Hercule, but I do think this story may have more to it, as it does practically give Cameron and the UK govt. a reason to bring in this law suggested in the Leveson report, which strips a lot of basic free speech away for journalists, I just think its a wee bit convenient that this happened after yesterdays event's....

    Why do they actually need such a reason to bring in this law?
    Its been recommended by the Leveson Inquiry - that would already be reason enough to bring in such a law if thats what they wanted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,925 ✭✭✭aidan24326


    JJJJNR wrote: »
    I think there is more to this and agree with the OP, its nothing a normal person would do after a prank call, particularly someone who has dedicated themselves to the life of a care giver.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/kate-middleton-prank-call-prince-1475441

    But we don't know how 'normal' she was. She may have been depressed or had other problems and stresses going on in her life. I doubt very much she killed herself just because of the prank call issue.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,922 ✭✭✭hooradiation


    JJJJNR wrote: »
    I think there is more to this and agree with the OP, its nothing a normal person would do after a prank call, particularly someone who has dedicated themselves to the life of a care giver.

    This, of course, makes the rather massive assumption that Mrs. Saldanha was "normal" before hand.

    edit: And that's without getting into the massive clusterfuck of how suicidal people may view the world and, of course, the innate childishness of claims of normality.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,924 ✭✭✭wonderfullife


    JJJJNR wrote: »
    I think there is more to this and agree with the OP, its nothing a normal person would do after a prank call, particularly someone who has dedicated themselves to the life of a care giver.

    http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/kate-middleton-prank-call-prince-1475441

    all the more reason this episode may have triggered her to this sad act. Can you not see how a dedicated, proud nurse could be ashamed and embarrassed at leaking sensitive information of a patient to pranksters? Having her voice replayed globally? Having her job/livelihood in jeopardy over it?

    Not everyone who commits suicide is depressed; some people do it for reasons most of us would find inexplicable. Often a specific event is all it takes ....as for "normal people" whilst i get what you mean, its a poor choice of word. You could be perfectly "normal" and have every family member die in a plane crash and decide to kill yourself. Sometimes events trigger extreme reactions and "normality" doesnt come into it.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 262 ✭✭pcworldisajoke


    A man died in Ireland of a heart attack yesterday ( which was genuinely sad) doing the Gangnam style dance on a stage. Going on recent precedent, i'm fully expecting Irish police to make inquiries with police in Korea, where Psi is originally from about entertainers dancing a bit too different than mainstream dancing. I'm expecting Psi to be hounded out of his singing profession because after all, this is his fauilt isn't it? I'm expecting Irish politicians to invite the family to Irish parliament to pay their respects at this tragedy, and all Gangnam style dancing will now be banned at parties and weddings via new legislation.


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