The inaugural issue stated its aims as "a journal/newsletter about intelligence, parapolitics, state structures and so forth there is no copyright on the material in The Lobster we hope to break even at the present price of 50p, but we may not should appear 6 times a year".
Ramsay later described himself and his associate: "Dorril is a Freudo-anarchist, with Situationist tendencies and Ramsay is a premature anti-Militant member of the soft old left of the Labour Party". A few months later, they decided to launch a magazine, and in September 1983, they published 150 copies of The Lobster priced at 50p. In 1982, an American newsletter about the Kennedy assassination, Echoes of Conspiracy, put Robin Ramsay and Stephen Dorril in touch with each other because of their common interest in the JFK assassination story. Lobster co-founder and editor, Robin Ramsay, 2007 Founding The magazine has also carried detailed analysis of fringe and pseudoscientific subjects such as UFOs and remote viewing. The editors replied that all published details could be found in local libraries. The magazine was denounced in the House of Commons. In 1989, Lobster published names of 1,500 citizens said to be working in intelligence. Peake, notes that the editors of Lobster see it as "member of the international brotherhood of parapolitics mags," the other members being Geheim (Cologne, Germany), Intelligence Newsletter (Paris, France), and Covert Action Information Bulletin (US), and is "distinctive in its depth of coverage, its detailed documentation, and the absence of the rhetoric". The current curator of the CIA Historical Intelligence Collection, Hayden B. Questions were asked in the House of Commons and an extended scandal ensued. Colin Wallace, a former British Army Intelligence Corps officer in Northern Ireland, described how he had been instructed to smear leading UK politicians. Īccording to the Hull Daily Mail, Lobster 'investigates government conspiracies, state espionage and the secret service.' In 1986 the magazine scooped mainstream media by uncovering the secret Clockwork Orange operation, implicated in trying to destabilise the British government.
#CONSPIRE MAGAZINE PDF#
Since 2009 it is distributed as a free downloadable PDF document. Operating on a shoestring, its contributors include academics and others. Lobster is edited and published in the United Kingdom and has appeared twice a year for 39 years, at first in 16-page A5 format, then as an A4 magazine. It combines the examination of conspiracy theories and contemporary history. Lobster is a magazine that is interested primarily in the influence of intelligence and security services on politics and world trade, what it calls " deep politics" or "parapolitics".