mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-27 00:09:39 -05:00
483 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
483 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
|
<conspiracyFile>INTRODUCTION: URGENT!
|
||
|
On July 5, 1987 the front page of the Miami Herald
|
||
|
Newspaper carried a now famous article describing secret
|
||
|
White House plans to:
|
||
|
A.) DECLARE AN UNDEFINED "NATIONAL EMERGENCY,"
|
||
|
B.) RE-OPEN CONCENTRATION CAMPS FOR PREVENTIVE
|
||
|
DETENTION OF LEGAL DISSIDENTS CERTAIN ETHNIC
|
||
|
GROUPS, AND
|
||
|
C.) SUSPEND OUR UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION
|
||
|
---***---
|
||
|
Those of us viewing the Iran-Contragate hearings,
|
||
|
then being broadcast live on TV, had our curiousity peaked
|
||
|
when one committee member began inquiring about an article
|
||
|
alleging secret White House plans to suspend the
|
||
|
Constitution.
|
||
|
We were even more puzzled when committee chair
|
||
|
Daniel Inouye interrupted him demanding all discussion on
|
||
|
that question take place in closed session, out of public
|
||
|
hearing.
|
||
|
Not content to wonder, I researched the original
|
||
|
article, transcribed it, and now present it to you for your
|
||
|
urgent consideration. You have a right to read this. In
|
||
|
fact, you'd better know about it because it's about secret
|
||
|
White House plans to remove your rights by SUSPENDING OUR
|
||
|
UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION. It's about a government which
|
||
|
we, the people, did NOT elect but which has gained power
|
||
|
nonetheless.
|
||
|
What follows is not the whole story but a crucial
|
||
|
and overlooked part of it. Read "between the lines" and
|
||
|
very carefully. This is not some paranoid's nightmare or
|
||
|
some fanatic's fantasy. This is reality in the Reagan White
|
||
|
House.
|
||
|
---***---
|
||
|
Please copy this article and circulate it among
|
||
|
your friends and co-workers. If George Bush gets into the
|
||
|
White House, we'll have "elected," or had selected for us,
|
||
|
precisely the same carnivorous crew comprising The Secret
|
||
|
Government referred to in this article.
|
||
|
---***---
|
||
|
First, I offer three appropriate quotes which
|
||
|
provide a certain perspective in which to view what follows.
|
||
|
Then, I present the "sidebar" articles which
|
||
|
summarized and accompanied the main article.
|
||
|
Finally, I give you the complete text of the
|
||
|
original article, unedited and uncensored. While local
|
||
|
papers ignored this historic article or presented only
|
||
|
extracts from it, none of them gave you this, the entire
|
||
|
text.
|
||
|
---***---
|
||
|
The following did not appear with the original
|
||
|
article but they provide a certain appropriate perspective
|
||
|
on it:
|
||
|
"Perception of reality is sometimes
|
||
|
more important than reality itself."
|
||
|
-Henry Kissenger
|
||
|
"He who controls the past, controls the future.
|
||
|
He who controls the present, controls the past."
|
||
|
-O'Brian, the dictator
|
||
|
in George Orwell's novel "1984"
|
||
|
"If you don't like the news,
|
||
|
go out and make some of your own!"
|
||
|
-Scoop Nisker
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
from THE MIAMI HERALD....SUNDAY JULY 5, 1987....page one:
|
||
|
SOME SECRET ACTIVITIES
|
||
|
Sources say the parallel government behind the
|
||
|
Reagan administration engaged in secret actions
|
||
|
including:
|
||
|
A CONTINGENCY plan to suspend Constitution and impose
|
||
|
martial law in United States in case of nuclear
|
||
|
war or national rebellion.
|
||
|
1985 VISIT to Libya by William Wilson, then U.S. ambassador
|
||
|
to Vatican and close Reagan friend, to meet with
|
||
|
Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi.
|
||
|
HAVING ROUTES of sophisticated surveillance satellites
|
||
|
altered to follow Soviet ships around world.
|
||
|
LAUNCHING of spy aircraft on secret missions over Cuba and
|
||
|
Nicaragua.
|
||
|
PROPOSAL in 1981 to provide covert support of anti-
|
||
|
Sandinista groups that fled Nicaragua after
|
||
|
Sandinista revolution in 1979.
|
||
|
DISSEMINATION of information that cast Nicaragua as threat
|
||
|
to neighbors and United States.
|
||
|
---***---
|
||
|
Before Reagan was elected, campaign aides who
|
||
|
became the president's top advisers carried out
|
||
|
these secret activities:
|
||
|
CREATION in 1980 of October Surprise Group to monitor
|
||
|
President Carter's negotiations with Iran for
|
||
|
release of 52 American hostages. Group met with
|
||
|
man who claimed to represent Iran and who offered
|
||
|
to release hostages to Reagan. Offer declined,
|
||
|
officials say.
|
||
|
ACQUISITION of stolen confidential briefing materials from
|
||
|
Carter's campaign before Oct. 28, 1980, Carter-
|
||
|
Reagan debate.
|
||
|
---***---
|
||
|
[photo captions:]
|
||
|
PRINCIPALS:
|
||
|
William Clark: Allowed bigger North role at NSC.
|
||
|
William Casey: Kept guard on President Carter
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
What follows is the complete text of the original article as
|
||
|
printed in the Miami Herald for July 5, 1987:
|
||
|
REAGAN AIDES AND THE 'SECRET' GOVERNMENT
|
||
|
by ALFONSO CHARDY, HERALD WASHINGTON BUREAU
|
||
|
WASHINGTON -- Some of President Reagan's top
|
||
|
advisers have operated a virtual parallel government outside
|
||
|
the traditional Cabinet departments and agencies almost from
|
||
|
the day Reagan took office, congressional investigators and
|
||
|
administration officials have concluded.
|
||
|
Investigators believe that the advisers'
|
||
|
activities extended well beyond the secret arms sales to
|
||
|
Iran and aid to the contras now under investigation.
|
||
|
Lt. Col. Oliver North, for example, helped draw up
|
||
|
a controversial plan to suspend the Constitution in the
|
||
|
event of a national crisis, such as nuclear war, violent and
|
||
|
widespread internal dissent or national opposition to a U.S.
|
||
|
military invasion abroad.
|
||
|
When the attorney general at the time, William
|
||
|
French Smith, learned of the proposal, he protested in
|
||
|
writing to North's boss, then-national security adviser
|
||
|
Robert McFarlane.
|
||
|
The advisers conducted their activities through
|
||
|
secret contacts throughout the government with persons who
|
||
|
acted at their direction but did not officially report to
|
||
|
them.
|
||
|
The activities of those contacts were coordinated
|
||
|
by the National Security Council, the officials and
|
||
|
investigators said.
|
||
|
There appears to have been no formal directive for
|
||
|
the advisers' activities, which knowledgeable sources
|
||
|
described as a parallel government.
|
||
|
In a secret assessment of the activities, the lead
|
||
|
counsel for the Senate Iran-contra committee called it a
|
||
|
"secret government-within-a-government."
|
||
|
The arrangement permitted Reagan administration
|
||
|
officials to claim that they were not involved in
|
||
|
controversial or illegal activities, the officials said.
|
||
|
"It was the ultimate plausible deniability," said
|
||
|
a well-briefed official who has served the Reagan
|
||
|
administration since 1982 and who often collaborated on
|
||
|
covert assistance to the Nicaraguan contras.
|
||
|
The roles of top-level officials and of Reagan
|
||
|
himself are still not clear. But that is expected to be a
|
||
|
primary topic when North appears before the Iran-contra
|
||
|
committees beginning Tuesday. Special prosecutor Lawrence
|
||
|
Walsh also is believed to be trying to prove in his
|
||
|
investigation of the Iran-contra affair that government
|
||
|
officials engaged in a criminal conspiracy.
|
||
|
ADVISERS FORMED SHADOW GOVERNMENT, PROBERS SAY
|
||
|
Much of the time, Cabinet secretaries and their
|
||
|
aides were unaware of the advisers' activities. When they
|
||
|
periodically detected operations, they complained or tried
|
||
|
to derail them, interviews show.
|
||
|
But no one ever questioned the activities in a
|
||
|
broad way, possibly out of a belief that the advisers were
|
||
|
operating with presidential
|
||
|
sanction, officials said.
|
||
|
Reagan did know of or approve at least some of the
|
||
|
actions of the secret group, according to previous accounts
|
||
|
by aides, friends and high-ranking foreign officials.
|
||
|
One such case is the 1985 visit to Libya by
|
||
|
William Wilson, then-U.S. ambassador to the Vatican and a
|
||
|
close Reagan friend, to meet with Libyan leader Col. Moammar
|
||
|
Gadhafi, officials said last week. Secretary of State
|
||
|
George Shultz rebuked Wilson, but the officials said Reagan
|
||
|
knew of the trip in advance.
|
||
|
The heart of the secret structure from 1983 to
|
||
|
1986 was North's office in the Old Executive Office Building
|
||
|
adjacent to the White House, investigators believe.
|
||
|
North's influence within the secret structure was
|
||
|
so great, the sources said, that he was able to have the
|
||
|
orbits of sophisticated surveillance satellites altered to
|
||
|
follow Soviet ships around the world, call for the launching
|
||
|
of high-flying spy aircraft on secret missions over Cuba and
|
||
|
Nicaragua and become involved in sensitive domestic
|
||
|
activities.
|
||
|
Many initiatives
|
||
|
Others in the structure included some of Reagan's
|
||
|
closest friends and advisers, including former national
|
||
|
security adviser William Clark, the late CIA Director
|
||
|
William Casey and Attorney General Edwin Meese, officials
|
||
|
and investigators said.
|
||
|
Congressional investigators said the Iran deal was
|
||
|
just one of the group's initiatives. They say exposure of
|
||
|
the unusual arrangement may be the legacy of their inquiry.
|
||
|
"After we establish that a policy decision was
|
||
|
made at the highest levels to transfer responsibility for
|
||
|
contra support to the NSC..., we favor examining how that
|
||
|
decision was implemented," wrote Arthur Liman, chief counsel
|
||
|
of the Senate committee, in a secret memorandum to panel
|
||
|
leaders Sens. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, and Warren Rudman, R-
|
||
|
N.H., before hearings began May 5.
|
||
|
"This is the part of the story that reveals the
|
||
|
whole secret government-within-a-government, operated from
|
||
|
the [Executive Office Building] by a Lt. Col., with its own
|
||
|
army, air force, diplomatic agents, intelligence operatives
|
||
|
and appropriations capacity," Limon wrote in the memo, parts
|
||
|
of which were shared with The Herald.
|
||
|
A spokesman for Liman declined comment but did not
|
||
|
dispute the memo's existence.
|
||
|
A White House official rejected the notion that
|
||
|
any of Reagan's advisers were operating secretly.
|
||
|
"The president has constantly expressed his
|
||
|
foreign policy positions to the public and has consulted
|
||
|
with the Congress," the official said.
|
||
|
Began in 1980
|
||
|
Congressional investigators and current and former
|
||
|
officials interviewed -- members of the CIA, State
|
||
|
Department and Pentagon -- said they still do not have a
|
||
|
full record of the impact of the the advisers' activities.
|
||
|
But based on investigations and personal
|
||
|
experience, they believe the secret governing arrangement
|
||
|
traces its roots to the last weeks of Reagan's 1980
|
||
|
campaign.
|
||
|
Officials say the genesis may have been an October
|
||
|
1980 decision by Casey, Reagan's campaign manager and a
|
||
|
former officer in the World War II precursor of the CIA, to
|
||
|
create an October Surprise Group to monitor Jimmy Carter's
|
||
|
feverish negotiations with Iran for the release of 52
|
||
|
American hostages.
|
||
|
The group, led by campaign foreign policy adviser
|
||
|
Richard Allen, was founded out of concern Carter might pull
|
||
|
off an "October surprise" such as a last-minute deal for the
|
||
|
release of the hostages before the Nov. 4 election. One of
|
||
|
the group's first acts was a meeting with a man claiming to
|
||
|
represent Iran who offered to release the hostages to
|
||
|
Reagan.
|
||
|
Allen -- Reagan's first national security adviser--
|
||
|
and another campaign aide, Laurence Silberman, told The
|
||
|
Herald in April of the meeting. they said McFarlane, then a
|
||
|
Senate Armed Services Committee aide, arranged and attended
|
||
|
it. McFarlane later became Reagan's national security
|
||
|
adviser and played a key role in the Iran-contra affair.
|
||
|
Allen and Silberman said they rejected the offer to release
|
||
|
the hostages to Reagan.
|
||
|
Briefing book theft
|
||
|
Congressional aides now link another well-known
|
||
|
campaign incident -- the theft of confidential briefing
|
||
|
materials from Carter's campaign before the Oct. 28, 1980,
|
||
|
Carter-Reagan debate -- to the same group of advisers.
|
||
|
They believe that Casey obtained the briefing
|
||
|
materials and passed them to James Baker, another top
|
||
|
Reagan campaign aide, who was White House chief of staff in
|
||
|
Reagan's first term.
|
||
|
Once Reagan was sworn in, the group moved quickly
|
||
|
to set itself up, officials said. Within months, the
|
||
|
advisers were clashing with officials in the traditional
|
||
|
agencies.
|
||
|
Six weeks after Reagan was sworn in, apparently
|
||
|
over State Department objections, then-CIA director Casey
|
||
|
submitted a proposal to Reagan calling for covert support of
|
||
|
anti-Sandinista groups that had fled Nicaragua after the
|
||
|
1979 revolution.
|
||
|
[THE IRAN-CONTRA CONNECTION:
|
||
|
NORTH HAD BIG ROLE IN INNER CIRCLE, INVESTIGATORS SAY]
|
||
|
It is still unclear whether Casey cleared the plan
|
||
|
with Reagan. But In November 1981 the CIA secretly flew an
|
||
|
Argentine military leader, Gen. Leopoldo Galtieri, to
|
||
|
Washington to devise a secret agreement under which
|
||
|
Argentine military officers trained Nicaraguan rebels,
|
||
|
according to an administration official familiar with the
|
||
|
agreement.
|
||
|
About the same time, North completed his transfer
|
||
|
to the NSC from the Marine Corps. Those who worked with
|
||
|
North in 1981 remember his first assignments as routine,
|
||
|
although not unimportant.
|
||
|
North, they recalled, was briefly assigned to
|
||
|
carry the "football," the briefcase containing the secret
|
||
|
contingency plans for fighting a nuclear war, which is taken
|
||
|
everywhere the president goes. North later widened his
|
||
|
assignment to cover national crisis contingency planning.
|
||
|
In that capacity he became involved with the controversial
|
||
|
national crisis plan drafted by the Federal Emergency
|
||
|
Management Agency.
|
||
|
NATIONAL CRISIS PLAN
|
||
|
From 1982 to 1984, North assisted FEMA, the U.S.
|
||
|
government's chief national crisis-management unit, in
|
||
|
revising contingency plans for dealing with nuclear war,
|
||
|
insurrection or massive military mobilization.
|
||
|
North's involvement with FEMA set off the first
|
||
|
major clash between the official government and the advisers
|
||
|
and led to the formal letter of protest in 1984 from then-
|
||
|
Attorney General Smith.
|
||
|
Smith was in Europe last week and could not be
|
||
|
reached for comment.
|
||
|
But a government official familiar with North's
|
||
|
collaboration with FEMA said then-Director Louis O.
|
||
|
Guiffrida, a close friend of Meese's, mentioned North in
|
||
|
meetings during that time as FEMA's NSC contact.
|
||
|
Guiffrida could not be reached for comment, but
|
||
|
FEMA spokesman Bill McAda confirmed the relationship.
|
||
|
"Officials of FEMA met with Col. North during 1982
|
||
|
to 1984," McAda said. "These meetings were appropriate to
|
||
|
Col. North's duties with the National Security Council and
|
||
|
FEMA's responsibilities in certain areas of national
|
||
|
security."
|
||
|
FEMA's clash with Smith occurred over a secret
|
||
|
contingency plan that called for suspension of the
|
||
|
Constitution, turning control of the United States over to
|
||
|
FEMA, appointment of military commanders to run state and
|
||
|
local governments and declaration of martial law during a
|
||
|
national crisis.
|
||
|
The plan did not define national crisis, but it
|
||
|
was understood to be nuclear war, violent and widespread
|
||
|
internal dissent or national opposition against a military
|
||
|
invasion abroad.
|
||
|
PLAN WAS PROTESTED
|
||
|
The official said the contingency plan was written
|
||
|
as part of an executive order or legislative package that
|
||
|
Reagan would sign and hold within the NSC until a severe
|
||
|
crisis arose.
|
||
|
The martial law portions of the plan were outlined
|
||
|
in a June 30, 1982, memo by Guiffrida's deputy for national
|
||
|
preparedness programs, John Brinkerhoff. A copy of the memo
|
||
|
was obtained by The Herald.
|
||
|
The scenario outlined in the Brinkerhoff memo
|
||
|
resembled somewhat a paper Guiffrida had written in 1970 at
|
||
|
the Army War College in Carlisle, Pa., in which he advocated
|
||
|
martial law in case of a national uprising by black
|
||
|
militants. The paper also advocated the roundup and
|
||
|
transfer to "assembly centers or relocation camps" of at
|
||
|
least 21000000 "American Negroes."
|
||
|
When he saw the FEMA plans, Attorney General Smith
|
||
|
became alarmed. He dispatched a letter to McFarlane Aug. 2,
|
||
|
1984 lodging his objections and urging a delay in signing
|
||
|
the directive.
|
||
|
"I believe that the role assigned to the Federal
|
||
|
Emergency Management Agency in the revised Executive Order
|
||
|
exceeds its proper function as a coordinating agency for
|
||
|
emergency preparedness," Smith said in the letter to
|
||
|
McFarlane, which The Herald obtained. "This department and
|
||
|
others have repeatedly raised serious policy and legal
|
||
|
objections to the creation of an 'emergency czar' role for
|
||
|
FEMA."
|
||
|
It is unclear whether the executive order was
|
||
|
signed or whether it contained the martial law plans.
|
||
|
Congressional sources familiar with national disaster
|
||
|
procedures said they believe Reagan did sign an executive
|
||
|
order in 1984 that revised national military mobilization
|
||
|
measures to deal with civilians in case of nuclear war or
|
||
|
other crisis.
|
||
|
ORCHESTRATED NEWS LEAKS
|
||
|
Around the time that issue was producing fireworks
|
||
|
with the administration, McFarlane and Casey reassigned
|
||
|
North from national crisis planning to international covert
|
||
|
management of the contras. The transfer came after North
|
||
|
took a personal interest, realizing that neither the State
|
||
|
Department nor any other government agency wanted to handle
|
||
|
the issue after it became clear early in 1984 that Congress
|
||
|
was moving to bar official aid to the rebels.
|
||
|
The new assignment, plus North's natural
|
||
|
organizational ability, creativity and the sheer energy he
|
||
|
dedicated to the issue, gradually led to an expansion of his
|
||
|
power and stature within the covert structure, officials and
|
||
|
investigators believe.
|
||
|
Meese also was said to have played a role in the
|
||
|
secret government, investigators now believe, but his role
|
||
|
is less clear.
|
||
|
Meese sometimes referred private American citizens
|
||
|
to the NSC so they could be screened and contacted for
|
||
|
soliciting support for the Nicaraguan contras.
|
||
|
One of those supporters, Philip Mabry of Fort
|
||
|
Worth, told The Herald earlier this year that in 1983 he was
|
||
|
told by fellow conservatives in Texas to contact Meese, then
|
||
|
White House counselor, if he wanted to help the contras.
|
||
|
After he contacted Meese's office, Mabry received a letter
|
||
|
from Meese obtained by The Herald advising him that his name
|
||
|
had been given to the "appropriate people."
|
||
|
Shortly thereafter, Mabry said, a woman who
|
||
|
identified herself as Meese's secretary gave him the name
|
||
|
and phone number of another NSC secretary who, in turn, gave
|
||
|
him North and his secretary, Fawn Hall, as contacts.
|
||
|
Meese's Justice Department spokesman, Patrick
|
||
|
Korten, denies that Meese was part of North's secret contra
|
||
|
supply network and notes that Meese does not recall having
|
||
|
referred anyone to North on contra-related matters.
|
||
|
In addition to North's role as contra commander
|
||
|
and fund-raiser, North became secret overseer of the State
|
||
|
Department's Office of Public Diplomacy, through which the
|
||
|
Reagan administration disseminated information that cast
|
||
|
Nicaragua as a threat to its neighbors and the United
|
||
|
States.
|
||
|
An intelligence source familiar with North's
|
||
|
relationship with that office said North was directly
|
||
|
involved in many of the best publicized news leaks,
|
||
|
including the Nov. 4, 1984, Election Day announcement that
|
||
|
Soviet-made MiG jet fighters were on their way to Nicaragua.
|
||
|
McFarlane is now believed to have been the senior
|
||
|
administration official who told reporters that the Soviet
|
||
|
cargo ship Bakuriani, en route to Nicaragua from a Soviet
|
||
|
Black Sea port, was probably carrying MiGs.
|
||
|
The intelligence official said North apparently
|
||
|
recommended that the information be leaked to the press on
|
||
|
Election Day so it would reach millions of people watching
|
||
|
election results. CBS and NBC broadcast the report that
|
||
|
night.
|
||
|
CLARK HAD KEY ROLE
|
||
|
The leak led to a new clash between the regular
|
||
|
bureaucracy and the president's advisers. The official
|
||
|
State Department spokesman, John Hughes, tried hard to play
|
||
|
down the report, pointing out that it was unproven that the
|
||
|
Bakuriani was carrying MiGs. At the same time, employees of
|
||
|
the Office of Public Diplomacy, acting under North's
|
||
|
direction, insisted that the crates were inside the ship and
|
||
|
that MiGs were still a possibility.
|
||
|
To take a closer look, the source said, North
|
||
|
requested a high-flying SR-71 Blackbird spy aircraft be sent
|
||
|
from Beale Air Force Base near Sacramento, Calif., to fly
|
||
|
over the Nicaraguan port of Corinto while the Bakuriani
|
||
|
unloaded its cargo. The pictures showed that the Bakuriani
|
||
|
unloaded helicopters, not MiGs.
|
||
|
North was not the only adviser who operated
|
||
|
outside traditional government channels, investigators have
|
||
|
concluded.
|
||
|
Others were known as the RIGLET, a semi-official
|
||
|
unit made up of North; Alan Fiers, a CIA Central American
|
||
|
affairs officer; and Elliott Abrams, the current assistant
|
||
|
secretary of state for inter-American affairs, according to
|
||
|
Abrams' subordinate Richard Melton. Melton revealed the
|
||
|
existence of the RIGLET in a deposition given to the Iran-
|
||
|
contra committees. The name is a diminutive for RIG, which
|
||
|
stands for Restricted Interagency Group.
|
||
|
Among the RIGLET's actions was ordering the U.S.
|
||
|
ambassador to Costa Rica, Lewis Tambs, to assist the contras
|
||
|
in setting up a front in southern Nicaragua. Tambs, who
|
||
|
resigned suddenly last year after his links to North were
|
||
|
revealed, testified about the instructions to Iran-contra
|
||
|
investigators.
|
||
|
But perhaps the key to the parallel government was
|
||
|
the role played by Reagan's second national security
|
||
|
adviser, William Clark. It was during Clark's tenure that
|
||
|
North began to gain influence in the NSC.
|
||
|
Clark also recruited several midlevel officers
|
||
|
from the Pentagon and the CIA to work on a special Central
|
||
|
American task force in 1983 to push aid for El Salvador, a
|
||
|
task force member said.
|
||
|
"Judge Clark was the granddaddy of the system," he
|
||
|
said. "I was working at the Pentagon on another issue when
|
||
|
my boss said that because of special circumstances, I was to
|
||
|
be reassigned to the task force."
|
||
|
A former administration official familiar with
|
||
|
Clark's activities said Clark also had approved contacts
|
||
|
between Vatican Ambassador Wilson and Libya before Wilson's
|
||
|
November 1985 journey, which came after McFarlane replaced
|
||
|
Clark at the NSC.
|
||
|
The former official said Wilson also had carried
|
||
|
out secret missions for the Reagan administration in a Latin
|
||
|
American country where Wilson reportedly maintained contacts
|
||
|
with high-level officials. The source asked that the
|
||
|
country not be identified because the system is still in
|
||
|
place and had reduced tensions by circumventing the regular
|
||
|
bureaucracies of both countries.
|
||
|
Calls to Wilson's and Clark's offices in
|
||
|
California were not returned.
|
||
|
<div>END<div>
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
The above brought to you as a public service
|
||
|
by SAX ALLEN of Free San Francisco, California
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
by SAX ALLEN of Free San Francisco, California
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
Downloaded from Just Say Yes. 2 lines, More than 500 files online!
|
||
|
Full access on first call. <data type="phoneNumber">415-922-2008</data> CASFA
|
||
|
Another file downloaded from:
|
||
|
!
|
||
|
-$- & the Temple of the Screaming Electron
|
||
|
! * Walnut Creek, CA
|
||
|
+ /^
|
||
|
! //^ _^_ 2400/1200/300 baud <data type="phoneNumber">(415) 935-5845</data>
|
||
|
/^ / @ /_-_ Jeff Hunter, Sysop
|
||
|
@ _@ @- - -
|
||
|
/^ _ - - - - - - - - - *
|
||
|
<div>/<div>___(_)_Aaaaaeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! /
|
||
|
Specializing in conversations, E-Mail, obscure information,
|
||
|
entertainment, the arts, politics, futurism, thoughtful discussion,
|
||
|
insane speculation, and wild rumours. An ALL-TEXT BBS.
|
||
|
"Raw data for raw minds."</conspiracyFile>
|