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replacing old ellipsis point spaces
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@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
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<xml><p>
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WHO Murdered Africa
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WHO Murdered Africa
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The Greatest Murder Mystery of all Time
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There is no question mark after the title of this article because
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@ -337,9 +337,9 @@ sort out the insane, irresponsible and traitorous scientists involved
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in these experiments and try them for murder. Then maybe, just ,maybe, we
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can re-populate and re-civilize the world.
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William Campbell Douglass, M.D.
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P.O. Box 38 Lakemont, GA 30552
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William Campbell Douglass, M.D.
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P.O. Box 38 Lakemont, GA 30552
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</p></xml>
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</p></xml>
|
@ -1,19 +1,19 @@
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<xml><p>
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Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
|
||||
Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
|
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PO BOX 1031
|
||||
Mesquite, TX 75150</p>
|
||||
Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
|
||||
PO BOX 1031
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Mesquite, TX 75150</p>
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|
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<p> August 16, 1990
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AIDSPLOT.ASC</p>
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<p> August 16, 1990
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AIDSPLOT.ASC</p>
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<p> AIDS as a Weapon of War</p>
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<p> AIDS as a Weapon of War</p>
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<p> by Dr. William Campbell Douglas, M.D.</p>
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<p> by Dr. William Campbell Douglas, M.D.</p>
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<p> Introduction & Comments by Jim Shults</p>
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<p> Introduction & Comments by Jim Shults</p>
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<p> INTRODUCTION AND COMMENTS</p>
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<p> INTRODUCTION AND COMMENTS</p>
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<p> I must admit I am just a little gun shy of doing this
|
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particular article. The reason is pretty obvious. Who in hell is
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@ -56,7 +56,7 @@
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mail box and address in the United States a brochure attempting to
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explain AIDS, its danger, myths and means of transmission. The</p>
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<p> Page 1</p>
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<p> Page 1</p>
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<p> absolutely amazing thing about this was that it was done at
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all.
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@ -102,32 +102,32 @@
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<p> -- Jim Shults</p>
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<p> Page 2</p>
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<p> Page 2</p>
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<p> ABOUT THE AUTHOR</p>
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<p> ABOUT THE AUTHOR</p>
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<p> William Campbell Douglass, M.D.</p>
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<p> William Campbell Douglass, M.D.</p>
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<p> Age: 62</p>
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<p> Education: BS, University of Rochester, New York;
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MD, University of Miami School of
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Medicine; Graduate, U.S. Navy School of
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Aviation and Space Medicine</p>
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MD, University of Miami School of
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Medicine; Graduate, U.S. Navy School of
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Aviation and Space Medicine</p>
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|
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<p> Career: U.S. Navy, 7 years -- Flight Surgeon.
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In practice for over 25 years. Former
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state president, Florida, American
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College of Emergency Physicians.
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Former Editor of the Journal of the
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Sarasota County Medical Society.
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Consulting Editor, Health Freedom News.
|
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On Board of Governors of the National
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Health Federation. Regular speaker at
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the National Health Federation meetings
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around the United States. Appears
|
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regularly on radio and television
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programs on health.
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In practice for over 25 years. Former
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state president, Florida, American
|
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College of Emergency Physicians.
|
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Former Editor of the Journal of the
|
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Sarasota County Medical Society.
|
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Consulting Editor, Health Freedom News.
|
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On Board of Governors of the National
|
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Health Federation. Regular speaker at
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the National Health Federation meetings
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around the United States. Appears
|
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regularly on radio and television
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programs on health.
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Doctor of the
|
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Year: National Health Federation, 1985.</p>
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|
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@ -136,11 +136,11 @@
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first doctors in the United States to diagnose and treat PMS.
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He opened his PMS Clinic in 1981.</p>
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<p> Page 3</p>
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<p> Page 3</p>
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<p> AIDS as a Weapon of War</p>
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<p> AIDS as a Weapon of War</p>
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|
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<p> William Campbell Douglass, M.D.</p>
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<p> William Campbell Douglass, M.D.</p>
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<p> The great powers renounced chemical and biological warfare 20
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years ago -- but kept right on experimenting. The germ warfare
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@ -197,7 +197,7 @@
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<p> This answer to an interview question refers to the high number
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of Soviet bloc scientists in this U.S. facility who act as</p>
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<p> Page 4</p>
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<p> Page 4</p>
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<p> inspectors to ensure that we are not producing bacteriological
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weapons in violation of treaties with the Soviets.</p>
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@ -235,12 +235,12 @@
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<p> 3. Genetically, AIDS (HIV-1) is not even close to the monkey form
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of immunodeficiency virus.
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[Ed. Note: For references on the three items above,
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see: Seale, Dr. John J.,
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Royal Society of Medicine, Sept. 1987,
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Seale, Dr. John J.,
|
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The Origin of AIDS -- International
|
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Conference on AIDS, Cairo, March 1988.]</p>
|
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[Ed. Note: For references on the three items above,
|
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see: Seale, Dr. John J.,
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Royal Society of Medicine, Sept. 1987,
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Seale, Dr. John J.,
|
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The Origin of AIDS -- International
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Conference on AIDS, Cairo, March 1988.]</p>
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<p> 4. AIDS started not in the villages but in the cities of Africa,
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where there are no wild monkeys.</p>
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@ -259,7 +259,7 @@
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<p> The only worldwide simultaneous seeding going on at the same
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time was the smallpox vaccine program of the World Health
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Organization (the WHO).
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Page 5</p>
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Page 5</p>
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<p> The early epidemiology of the AIDS pandemic fits the smallpox
|
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vaccination project of the WHO -- AND NOTHING ELSE -- with the
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@ -321,7 +321,7 @@
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<p> But where? -- the Pentagon? The Pentagon is supporting</p>
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<p> Page 6</p>
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<p> Page 6</p>
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<p> research on biological warfare in over 100 federal and private
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laboratories, including those at many prominent universities.8 Yet,
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@ -343,25 +343,25 @@
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<p> For example, this virus:</p>
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|
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<p> -----------
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|==| ||| |
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-----------</p>
|
||||
<p> -----------
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|==| ||| |
|
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-----------</p>
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<p> ... a virus of bacteria (bugs have diseases, too), doesn't look
|
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anything like this virus:</p>
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|
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<p> ___________
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/ \
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/ ~~~~~~~ \
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\ /
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\___________/</p>
|
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<p> ___________
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/ \
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/ ~~~~~~~ \
|
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\ /
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\___________/</p>
|
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<p> ... a virus of ticks that's transmitted to pigs, or this virus:</p>
|
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|
||||
<p> __________
|
||||
____/ ~~~~ \
|
||||
/ ______/
|
||||
\________/</p>
|
||||
<p> __________
|
||||
____/ ~~~~ \
|
||||
/ ______/
|
||||
\________/</p>
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<p> ... which is found in horses.</p>
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@ -369,40 +369,40 @@
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viruses" is almost certainly a recombinant virus from fusing a
|
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cattle virus, bovine leukemia virus:</p>
|
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|
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<p> =
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*
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||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =
|
||||
*
|
||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* ++++ *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* ++++ *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* *=
|
||||
*
|
||||
=</p>
|
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<p> =* *=
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*
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||||
=</p>
|
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<p> Page 7</p>
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<p> Page 7</p>
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<p> ...with sheep visna virus:</p>
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<p> *
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||||
* *</p>
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<p> *
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||||
* *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> * ==== *</p>
|
||||
<p> * ==== *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> * *
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||||
*</p>
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||||
<p> * *
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*</p>
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||||
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<p> You combine the two in human tissue culture cells and you get bovine
|
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visna virus:</p>
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||||
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||||
<p> =
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||||
*
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=* *=</p>
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||||
<p> =
|
||||
*
|
||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* ==== *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* ==== *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* *=
|
||||
*
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||||
=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* *=
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*
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=</p>
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<p> ... A VIRUS THAT HERETOFORE DID NOT EXIST -- a product of man,
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engineered in a laboratory.</p>
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@ -410,48 +410,48 @@
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<p> Now, if you isolate the AIDS virus from an infected human, it
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looks like this:</p>
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||||
<p> =
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*
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||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =
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*
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||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* ==== *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* ==== *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* *=
|
||||
*
|
||||
=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* *=
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*
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=</p>
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||||
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<p> It doesn't look like this (the tick virus):</p>
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||||
<p> __________
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||||
____/ ~~~~ \
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||||
/ ______/
|
||||
\________/</p>
|
||||
<p> __________
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||||
____/ ~~~~ \
|
||||
/ ______/
|
||||
\________/</p>
|
||||
|
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<p> ... or this (the cattle virus):</p>
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|
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<p> =
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*
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||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =
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||||
*
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||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* ++++ *=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* ++++ *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* *=
|
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*
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||||
=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* *=
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*
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=</p>
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<p> Page 8</p>
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<p> Page 8</p>
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<p> It looks like THIS:</p>
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<p> =
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*
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=* *=</p>
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<p> =
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||||
*
|
||||
=* *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* ==== *=</p>
|
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<p> =* ==== *=</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> =* *=
|
||||
*
|
||||
=</p>
|
||||
<p> =* *=
|
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*
|
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=</p>
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<p> ... the recombinant virus from cattle and sheep AND ITS CALLED
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AIDS. You don't have to be a genius to understand this. Any
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@ -501,7 +501,7 @@
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<p> WITH NO AMERICAN CREDENTIALS WHATSOEVER, he immediately got a</p>
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<p> Page 9</p>
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<p> Page 9</p>
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<p> job as a "lab technician" at the New York City Blood Center. Within
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a very few years this Polish immigrant was GIVEN HIS OWN LAB, a
|
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@ -561,7 +561,7 @@
|
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the grim results of this bio-attack against Americans, largely in
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the form of brain tumors and leukemia.</p>
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<p> Page 10</p>
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<p> Page 10</p>
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<p> Salk didn't like the Sabin vaccine and Sabin didn't like the
|
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Salk vaccine. I think they are both right. It is interesting to
|
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@ -623,7 +623,7 @@
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<p> Dr. Zhores Medvedev, unlike Bysencho and Litvinov, supposedly
|
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is a Russian exile. Medvedev operates out of London at the National</p>
|
||||
|
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<p> Page 11</p>
|
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<p> Page 11</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Institute for Medical Research. He's a senior research scientist
|
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who continues to communicate freely with his supposed enemies in the
|
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@ -680,9 +680,9 @@
|
||||
|
||||
<p> I don't know the answer. *****</p>
|
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|
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<p> _________________________</p>
|
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<p> _________________________</p>
|
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|
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<p> Page 12</p>
|
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<p> Page 12</p>
|
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|
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<p> 1 Project Whitecoat, to be published in Health Freedom News,
|
||||
P.O. Box 688, Monrovia CA 91016/Subscription $20.00 per year.</p>
|
||||
@ -723,7 +723,7 @@
|
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consideration, interest and support.</p>
|
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|
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<p> Jerry W. Decker...Ron Barker.....Chuck Henderson
|
||||
Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
|
||||
Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet
|
||||
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
If we can be of service, you may contact
|
||||
Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 484-3189
|
||||
|
@ -2,9 +2,9 @@
|
||||
|
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<p>Source : American Red Cross</p>
|
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|
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<p> AIDS:
|
||||
Spread Facts
|
||||
Not Fear</p>
|
||||
<p> AIDS:
|
||||
Spread Facts
|
||||
Not Fear</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>What Is AIDS?</p>
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>
|
||||
Anti-American Jewish League
|
||||
---------------------------</p>
|
||||
Anti-American Jewish League
|
||||
---------------------------</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>From: San Francisco Chronicle, Wed. Dec. 12, 1990 (Briefing Section)
|
||||
----</p>
|
||||
@ -66,8 +66,8 @@ Turks? The Arabs realized that they had been outmaneuvered.</p>
|
||||
this low-profile takeover of our country, or else it will
|
||||
be too late to control it. Thank you for your time.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> American Anti-Jewish League
|
||||
---------------------------</p>
|
||||
<p> American Anti-Jewish League
|
||||
---------------------------</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Have you ever wondered why so many people hate or dislike Jews? From their
|
||||
very first existence, they have been hated by people around them and people
|
||||
@ -147,8 +147,8 @@ cannot do whatever they want. Please, help us out. Spread these
|
||||
files around, call your senators and representatives, read more
|
||||
about this stuff, etc. JEWS MUST BE STOPPED... NOW!</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> American Anti-Jewish League
|
||||
--------------------------- </p>
|
||||
<p> American Anti-Jewish League
|
||||
--------------------------- </p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>How would you like it if another peoples, with greater military capability
|
||||
and more money came to the United States and started to control it. If
|
||||
@ -297,10 +297,10 @@ more informed. STOP THEM BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE!</p>
|
||||
They run practically all the biggest TV networks, newspapers, radio
|
||||
stations, higher posts, etc. in the USA. </p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> American Anti-Jewish League
|
||||
---------------------------</p>
|
||||
<p> American Anti-Jewish League
|
||||
---------------------------</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> UPDATE</p>
|
||||
<p> UPDATE</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>So, now that Saddam Hussein has fired Scud missiles into Israel, and the
|
||||
Jews have shown restraint, they immediately expect something from us. Today
|
||||
|
@ -236,10 +236,10 @@ lists are presented later in this column with the detailed Ohio data.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Frequency Plan:</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> A-1 167.3375 B-1 167.600
|
||||
A-2 167.4875 B-2 167.675
|
||||
<p> A-1 167.3375 B-1 167.600
|
||||
A-2 167.4875 B-2 167.675
|
||||
A-3 167.425 B-3 167.7375
|
||||
A-4 167.5625 B-4 167.5625
|
||||
A-4 167.5625 B-4 167.5625
|
||||
A-5 163.9875/167.3375 B-5 162.8625/167.600
|
||||
A-6 Unconfirmed B-6 Unconfirmed
|
||||
A-7 163.8625/167.5375 B-7 163.8625/167.5375
|
||||
@ -676,16 +676,16 @@ following are common ranges reported nationwide:</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>FBI COMMON TEN CODES</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> 10-0 Negative 10-29 O.L. Check
|
||||
<p> 10-0 Negative 10-29 O.L. Check
|
||||
10-4 Affirmative 10-42 Residence
|
||||
10-7 Out-of-Service 10-58 Mileage
|
||||
10-8 In-Service 10-66 Alarm (?)
|
||||
10-9 Repeat 10-76 Enroute
|
||||
10-16 Message Check 10-77 Bank Alarm
|
||||
10-20 Location 10-85 Meet w/agent ...
|
||||
10-20 Location 10-85 Meet w/agent ...
|
||||
10-21 Telephone Call 10-90 Bank Robbery
|
||||
10-22 Report to Office 10-91 BR In Progress
|
||||
10-23 Stand-By 10-99 Assist Agent
|
||||
10-23 Stand-By 10-99 Assist Agent
|
||||
10-26 N.C.I.C. Check
|
||||
10-28 Registration check</p>
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -1,53 +1,53 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 56
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 56
|
||||
Subject: Keyword(s) : KENNEDY and ASSASSINATION
|
||||
Title : Do Assassinations Alter the Course of History?
|
||||
Author : Simon Freeman and Ronald Payne
|
||||
Source : European
|
||||
Author : Simon Freeman and Ronald Payne
|
||||
Source : European
|
||||
Publication Date : May 24-26, 1991
|
||||
Page Number(s) : 9
|
||||
|
||||
EUROPEAN
|
||||
(London, England)
|
||||
May 24-26, 1991, p. 9
|
||||
"Reprinted courtesy of THE EUROPEAN."
|
||||
|
||||
EUROPEAN
|
||||
(London, England)
|
||||
May 24-26, 1991, p. 9
|
||||
"Reprinted courtesy of THE EUROPEAN."
|
||||
|
||||
DO ASSASSINATIONS ALTER THE COURSE OF HISTORY?
|
||||
by Simon Freeman and Ronald Payne
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
India faces collapse with the violent death of Rajiv Gandhi--or
|
||||
does it? Simon Freeman and Ronald Payne analyse the importance of
|
||||
individuals in the march of events
|
||||
|
||||
individuals in the march of events
|
||||
|
||||
They have paid their tributes, expressed their horror and
|
||||
pledged, as they always do when one of their number is murdered,
|
||||
that democracy will triumph in the face of terrorism. Now, in
|
||||
their weekend retreats, with their foreign affairs advisers and
|
||||
their top secret intelligence reports, world leaders will have to
|
||||
judge the true impact on India of the assassination of Rajiv
|
||||
Gandhi.
|
||||
|
||||
Gandhi.
|
||||
|
||||
They will conclude, perhaps a little unhappily for them but
|
||||
fortunately for the rest of us, that Gandhi's death is unlikely
|
||||
to be more than a footnote, if a substantial one, in the history
|
||||
of his country. India will not disintegrate. There will be no
|
||||
civil war. The Indian military will not stage a coup. Pakistan
|
||||
will not launch the oft-predicted strike which would set the
|
||||
region ablaze.
|
||||
|
||||
region ablaze.
|
||||
|
||||
Some Indians, perhaps many, may die over the next month in
|
||||
the kind of primitive ethnic and religious feuding which has
|
||||
always threatened to destroy the country. But, unless history is
|
||||
truly mischievous, India will muddle through and get on with the
|
||||
business of trying to survive.
|
||||
|
||||
business of trying to survive.
|
||||
|
||||
It is rarely the personal stature of a statesman which
|
||||
decides how pivotal his contribution to history will be. History
|
||||
usually depends less on the drama of an assassination or the
|
||||
status of the victim than on more profound political, economic or
|
||||
demographic forces. In retrospect, it often appears that assassin
|
||||
and victim were inexorably drawn together to become the catalyst
|
||||
for inevitable change.
|
||||
|
||||
for inevitable change.
|
||||
|
||||
The most spectacular assassination in modern European
|
||||
history--the shooting of Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife
|
||||
at Sarajevo in 1914 by a Serbian student, Gavrilo Princip--was
|
||||
@ -55,29 +55,29 @@ undoubtedly the immediate cause of the First World War. But few
|
||||
serious historians today subscribe to the theory that, had
|
||||
Princip not pressed the trigger that late June day in the cause
|
||||
of Serbian nationalism, the 19th-century order would have
|
||||
survived.
|
||||
|
||||
survived.
|
||||
|
||||
Dr Christopher Andrew, of Cambridge University, believes
|
||||
that the assassination merely set the timetable for war. He said:
|
||||
"Even if the Archduke had not been killed then there might have
|
||||
been a great war anyway." Other experts now talk not of Princip
|
||||
but of an explosive cocktail of nationalism straining within
|
||||
decrepit empires and of fatally dangerous alliances built by
|
||||
leaders from an earlier world.
|
||||
|
||||
leaders from an earlier world.
|
||||
|
||||
It is possible to see Sarajevo as the climax to a period in
|
||||
which political murders became almost routine. The reference
|
||||
books on late 19th-century Europe are peppered with the names of
|
||||
hapless, long-forgotten politicians who were shot, bombed or
|
||||
stabbed because, so it was thought by the many bands of
|
||||
extremists, that was the only way to force change.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
While there are no precise ways to assess the real
|
||||
importance of an assassination, historians like Andrew reckon
|
||||
that there are some general guidelines. In the stable, advanced
|
||||
democracies of today the murder of a top politician is unlikely
|
||||
to cause more than outrage and pain.
|
||||
|
||||
to cause more than outrage and pain.
|
||||
|
||||
When the Irish Republican Army blew up the Grand Hotel in
|
||||
Brighton in 1984 in an attempt to kill Prime Minister Margaret
|
||||
Thatcher and most of her Cabinet, they hoped that there would be
|
||||
@ -85,8 +85,8 @@ such disgust at the murders that the British public would force
|
||||
their leaders to pull out of Northern Ireland. But, even if
|
||||
Thatcher had died this would not have happened. Her death would
|
||||
probably have strengthened her successor's resolve not to bow to
|
||||
terrorism.
|
||||
|
||||
terrorism.
|
||||
|
||||
The IRA should have known this from the reaction to the
|
||||
killing five years earlier of Lord Louis Mountbatten,
|
||||
distinguished soldier, public servant and pillar of the British
|
||||
@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ Prime Minister Olof Palme accomplish anything. The murder--still
|
||||
unsolved--drew the usual, but clearly genuine, shocked response
|
||||
from world leaders. But even at the time they were hardpressed to
|
||||
pretend that Palme's murder would fundamentally matter to Sweden.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The Third World, on the other hand, is more volatile.
|
||||
Sometimes, as in India, countries are an uneasy blend of
|
||||
feudalism and capitalism, dynastic authoritarianism and
|
||||
@ -111,14 +111,14 @@ signal major upheaval. General Zia ul-Haque, who had ruled
|
||||
Pakistan since 1977, was blown up in his plane in the summer of
|
||||
1988. But, though he had long seemed crucial to the continuing
|
||||
stability of the country, his death seemed to be the fated climax
|
||||
to the era of military rule.
|
||||
|
||||
to the era of military rule.
|
||||
|
||||
The murder of Egypt's President Sadat in October 1981 seemed
|
||||
then to herald some new dark age of internal repression and
|
||||
aggression towards Israel. But his successor, Hosni Mubarak,
|
||||
merely edged closer to the Arab world without returning to the
|
||||
pre-Sadat hostility towards Israel.
|
||||
|
||||
pre-Sadat hostility towards Israel.
|
||||
|
||||
The killers of kings and dictators in other Arab countries
|
||||
have also discovered that they have murdered in vain. Iraq has
|
||||
endured a succession of brutal military dictators who have died
|
||||
@ -126,8 +126,8 @@ as violently as they lived. The fact that Iraq has never
|
||||
experienced democracy is the result of economic and historical
|
||||
realities, not assassins' bullets. Saudi Arabia has also seen its
|
||||
share of high level killings yet, today, the House of Saud
|
||||
remains immovably in power.
|
||||
|
||||
remains immovably in power.
|
||||
|
||||
But in the United States, where the idea of righteous
|
||||
violence is deeply embedded in the national consciousness, the
|
||||
grand assassination has been part of the political process for
|
||||
@ -138,26 +138,26 @@ Kennedy in 1963; his brother, Robert, heir apparent, shot in
|
||||
1968; Martin Luther King, civil rights campaigner and Nobel Peace
|
||||
Prize winner, gunned down the same year. Ronald Reagan could
|
||||
easily have followed in 1981 when he was shot and badly wounded.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
John Kennedy's death now appears important for different
|
||||
reasons from those one might have expected at the time. It did
|
||||
not derail any of his vaunted civil rights or welfare programmes;
|
||||
rather his death guaranteed that his successor, Lyndon Johnson,
|
||||
would be able to push the Kennedy blueprint for a New America
|
||||
through Congress. Nor did it end the creeping US involvement in
|
||||
Vietnam.
|
||||
|
||||
Vietnam.
|
||||
|
||||
But Kennedy has been immortalised by his assassin and the
|
||||
mythology of his unfulfilled promise will endure long after his
|
||||
real accomplishments are forgotten.
|
||||
|
||||
real accomplishments are forgotten.
|
||||
|
||||
In a curious, perverse, sense he and his fellow-martyrs
|
||||
might live on as far more potent symbols of change than if they
|
||||
had survived into gentle retirement with their fudges revealed
|
||||
and their frailties exposed.
|
||||
|
||||
and their frailties exposed.
|
||||
|
||||
Why good leaders die and bad ones survive
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Few names of hated tyrants appear on the roll-call of world
|
||||
leaders who fall to the assassin's bomb, knife or bullet, writes
|
||||
Ronald Payne. One of the curiosities of the trade in political
|
||||
@ -165,49 +165,49 @@ murder is that those the world generally recognises as bad guys
|
||||
often live to a ripe old age or die quietly in their beds. Few
|
||||
who mourn the passing of Rajiv Gandhi would have shed so many
|
||||
tears had President Saddam Hussein been blown to pieces in Iraq.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
There was a time only a few years ago when Americans and
|
||||
Europeans would have celebrated the violent demise of President
|
||||
Muammar Gaddafi. Both the Libyan leader and Hussein live on, as
|
||||
do Idi Amin of Uganda, or Fidel Castro, whom the American Central
|
||||
Intelligence Agency plotted so imaginatively and ineffectually to
|
||||
remove.
|
||||
|
||||
remove.
|
||||
|
||||
When academics play the game of what might have been, the
|
||||
consequences of assassinating such monstres sacres as Stalin and
|
||||
Hitler arise.
|
||||
|
||||
Hitler arise.
|
||||
|
||||
When the Russian dictator died suddenly of natural causes,
|
||||
the whole Soviet Union was paralysed because no leader dared
|
||||
claim the right to succeed him. That in itself suggests what
|
||||
might have happened had Stalin been shot unexpectedly at a more
|
||||
critical moment.
|
||||
|
||||
critical moment.
|
||||
|
||||
The timing of a political murder is crucial. Had Adolf
|
||||
Hitler been assassinated before he achieved full power or before
|
||||
his invasion of the Soviet Union, the history of Germany, and
|
||||
indeed of Europe, would have been very different.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Fascinating though such intellectual exercises are, it seems
|
||||
that as a rule it is the decent, the innocent and the relatively
|
||||
harmless who perish as assassins' victims.
|
||||
|
||||
harmless who perish as assassins' victims.
|
||||
|
||||
The reason may not be far to seek. Tyrants watch their backs
|
||||
pretty carefully. The secret police are ever active. It is easier
|
||||
to kill statesmen in democracies where the rule of law prevails
|
||||
and the sad truth is that leaders in those countries which
|
||||
exercise authority through voting rather than shooting are more
|
||||
at risk than Middle East tyrants.
|
||||
|
||||
at risk than Middle East tyrants.
|
||||
|
||||
A further reason for the survival of the hated monster
|
||||
figure might be that Western intelligence services have been
|
||||
forbidden to go in for execution. The CIA and the British secret
|
||||
intelligence service are now out of the killing business. Even
|
||||
the KGB's assassination specialists seem to have been stood down.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
In any case the Kremlin was hardly keen on the murder of
|
||||
ruling statesmen even in the bad old days. Soviet leaders
|
||||
understood the realities of power well enough to know that such
|
||||
acts were unlikely to further their cause.
|
||||
|
||||
acts were unlikely to further their cause.
|
||||
|
||||
</p></xml>
|
@ -1,69 +1,69 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
||||
Subject: Keyword(s) : KENNEDY and ASSASSINATION
|
||||
Title : Conspiracy Theories: Doubts Refuse to Die
|
||||
Author : Bob Dudney
|
||||
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Title : Conspiracy Theories: Doubts Refuse to Die
|
||||
Author : Bob Dudney
|
||||
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Publication Date : Nov. 20, 1983
|
||||
Page Number(s) : Special Sec. 11
|
||||
|
||||
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
||||
(Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Nov. 20, 1983, Commemorative Section, pp. 11
|
||||
Reprinted with permission from the author.
|
||||
|
||||
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
||||
(Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Nov. 20, 1983, Commemorative Section, pp. 11
|
||||
Reprinted with permission from the author.
|
||||
|
||||
CONSPIRACY THEORIES: DOUBTS REFUSE TO DIE
|
||||
by Bob Dudney
|
||||
Special to the Times Herald
|
||||
|
||||
by Bob Dudney
|
||||
Special to the Times Herald
|
||||
|
||||
Editor's Note: Bob Dudney, a former reporter for the Dallas Times
|
||||
Herald, has written hundreds of articles about the investigation
|
||||
of President Kennedy's assassination. He has covered
|
||||
congressional inquiries on the subject, has interviewed dozens of
|
||||
people connected with it, and has examined thousands of
|
||||
government documents.
|
||||
|
||||
government documents.
|
||||
|
||||
The shots fired in Dealey Plaza on a sunny Dallas day 20
|
||||
years ago still reverberate in a bizarre way: the belief that
|
||||
President John F. Kennedy's assassination resulted from a
|
||||
conspiracy.
|
||||
|
||||
conspiracy.
|
||||
|
||||
There is a deep, almost theological assumption by some
|
||||
Americans that the President was the victim of conspirators who
|
||||
still roam at large. The conclusion is strange because there is
|
||||
no solid evidence to support it--and significant reasons to
|
||||
believe it is false.
|
||||
|
||||
believe it is false.
|
||||
|
||||
There is no denying the difficulty of accepting the Warren
|
||||
Commission's verdict on the events of Nov. 22, 1963--that a
|
||||
down-and-out, 24-year-old ex-Marine named Lee Harvey Oswald, with
|
||||
no outside assistance, murdered the most glamorous, powerful man
|
||||
in the world at the time.
|
||||
|
||||
in the world at the time.
|
||||
|
||||
But no matter how strong the unwillingness to believe, the
|
||||
evidence in the case demonstrates beyond a reasonable doubt that
|
||||
there was no plot. Undermining the scores of conspiracy theories
|
||||
that have cropped up over the years are three crucial factors:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
- The scientific, eyewitness and medical data establishing
|
||||
that Oswald shot Kennedy.
|
||||
|
||||
that Oswald shot Kennedy.
|
||||
|
||||
- The absence of uncontroverted evidence linking Oswald to
|
||||
other conspirators.
|
||||
|
||||
other conspirators.
|
||||
|
||||
- The lack of evidence to suggest that Oswald was
|
||||
unwittingly manipulated by others.
|
||||
|
||||
unwittingly manipulated by others.
|
||||
|
||||
So long as these elements remain unshaken, claims that a
|
||||
sinister plot was afoot that November day will amount to nothing
|
||||
more than speculation.
|
||||
|
||||
more than speculation.
|
||||
|
||||
Nevertheless, theories about the active involvement of
|
||||
others in the assassination thrive and multiply. Their
|
||||
proponents--some skilled and some not, some sincere and some not
|
||||
--have produced dozens of books, films and articles that purport
|
||||
to reveal the "full" treachery of events in Dallas two decades
|
||||
ago.
|
||||
|
||||
ago.
|
||||
|
||||
In fact, from the volume and variety of conspiracy theories,
|
||||
one might conclude that the possibility of a conspiracy had never
|
||||
been officially probed. The theories discount thousands of
|
||||
@ -71,8 +71,8 @@ documents and millions of investigative man-hours devoted to that
|
||||
question by the Warren panel, the FBI and the CIA in 1963 and
|
||||
1964; the Rockefeller Commission in 1975; the Senate Select
|
||||
Committee on Intelligence in 1975 and the House Committee on
|
||||
Assassinations in 1977-1978.
|
||||
|
||||
Assassinations in 1977-1978.
|
||||
|
||||
The list of "suspects" the theories implicate is extensive.
|
||||
Among them: The Soviet KGB; anti-Soviet exiles; Fidel Castro;
|
||||
pro-Castro Cubans in the United States; anti-Castro Cubans;
|
||||
@ -81,76 +81,76 @@ wing fanatics; left wing Marxists; the Mafia; rogue Texas oilmen;
|
||||
labor unions; Southern white racists; the Dallas Police
|
||||
Department; the CIA; the FBI; the Secret Service; the Chinese
|
||||
communists; reactionary Army officers; and Jewish extremists.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
But it is not enough to demonstrate that some group stood to
|
||||
benefit from the murder. Theorists must establish participation
|
||||
of two or more people in the murder. This they have not done.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Each theory alters the nature of Oswald's role in the death,
|
||||
but the possible changes are necessarily limited. The principle
|
||||
theories are:
|
||||
|
||||
theories are:
|
||||
|
||||
Oswald is innocent: Adherents of this contention maintain
|
||||
that law enforcement officials--cynically or through honest
|
||||
error--settled on Oswald as the assassin even though there was no
|
||||
reliable evidence against him. They say Oswald could have
|
||||
exonerated himself at a trial had he not been killed by Dallas
|
||||
nightclub owner Jack Ruby.
|
||||
|
||||
nightclub owner Jack Ruby.
|
||||
|
||||
Challenging this theory is an abundance of evidence.
|
||||
Scientific testing and physical evidence found at the scene show
|
||||
that shots were fired at Kennedy's limousine from a sixth-floor
|
||||
window of the Texas School Book Depository building.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Oswald worked in the building at Elm and Houston. He was
|
||||
seen leaving it shortly after the shooting. Crates were found
|
||||
stacked by the sixth-floor window as an apparent gun brace.
|
||||
Oswald's fingerprints were on the crates. The morning of the
|
||||
assassination, Oswald was seen carrying a long, paper-wrapped
|
||||
object into the building. Wrapping paper found near the window
|
||||
bore Oswald's fingerprints.
|
||||
|
||||
bore Oswald's fingerprints.
|
||||
|
||||
A rifle was found hidden between boxes in the building. A
|
||||
bullet and the bullet fragments removed from Kennedy, Connally
|
||||
and the limousine ballistically matched the rifle. Oswald's palm
|
||||
print was found on the rifle. The rifle, purchased from a Chicago
|
||||
mail order house, had been shipped to a Dallas post office box
|
||||
rented by Oswald. A photograph showed Oswald holding a rifle
|
||||
identical to the one found.
|
||||
|
||||
identical to the one found.
|
||||
|
||||
Proponents of this theory retort that all of the evidence
|
||||
was fabricated and put credence in Oswald's post-arrest
|
||||
declaration that he hadn't killed anyone.
|
||||
|
||||
declaration that he hadn't killed anyone.
|
||||
|
||||
But claims that the incriminating rifle photo was doctored--
|
||||
with Oswald's head superimposed over another man's body--were
|
||||
dispelled by Marina Oswald's confirmation that she took the
|
||||
picture. And claims that Oswald's rifle was planted in the room
|
||||
after the assassination were refuted by ballistic tests that
|
||||
showed it fired the deadly shots.
|
||||
|
||||
showed it fired the deadly shots.
|
||||
|
||||
Given the problems with claims of planted evidence, some
|
||||
theorists have argued that there must have been a "planted
|
||||
Oswald," or Oswald impersonator on the scene. This contention,
|
||||
however, has been difficult to reconcile with the Oswald
|
||||
fingerprints and palmprints found on the evidence.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Two years ago, conspiracy theorists, successfully pressed
|
||||
for the opening of Oswald's grave to show it contained an
|
||||
imposter--probably a Soviet agent. Subsequent examination,
|
||||
however, determined the body was the "real" Lee Harvey Oswald.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Oswald had accomplices: Faced with the weight of evidence
|
||||
indicating Oswald's guilt, quite a few conspiracy theories have
|
||||
contended he was only one of those involved.
|
||||
|
||||
contended he was only one of those involved.
|
||||
|
||||
Some theories assert that a person or persons helped put
|
||||
Oswald in position to shoot the President. They leave unexplained
|
||||
why Oswald would need such help. As an employee of the book
|
||||
depository, he had easy access to the building. After the
|
||||
shooting, according to witnesses' testimony, he sought no help in
|
||||
fleeing and left downtown Dallas by city bus and then a taxi.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Moreover, it would seem unlikely that accomplices could have
|
||||
helped get Oswald a job that put him on the motorcycle route.
|
||||
Oswald got his job at the depository on Oct. 15. White House
|
||||
@ -158,31 +158,31 @@ planning for the President's motorcade route did not begin until
|
||||
Nov. 4, and the map of the route was not published until Nov. 19.
|
||||
Somewhat more credible is the contention others provided
|
||||
secret financing, planning, direction or encouragement for the
|
||||
murder that Oswald carried out.
|
||||
|
||||
murder that Oswald carried out.
|
||||
|
||||
In this scenario, the chief suspect over the years has been
|
||||
the Soviet Union. After all, Oswald defected to Russia in 1959.
|
||||
He married a Russian woman, Marina Prusakova, in 1961. He was a
|
||||
vociferous Marxist. Even after he returned to the United States
|
||||
in June 1962, Oswald had several fleeting contacts with Soviet
|
||||
diplomats.
|
||||
|
||||
diplomats.
|
||||
|
||||
However, no evidence of Soviet complicity has been found.
|
||||
Investigators who combed Oswald's effects discovered no
|
||||
unexplained funds, no code books, no messages--nothing to suggest
|
||||
a Soviet hand in Oswald's actions. Also, had Oswald been
|
||||
recruited as a Soviet agent, the Russians would not have been
|
||||
likely to allow him to defect, as he did--thereby exposing his
|
||||
relationship with them.
|
||||
|
||||
relationship with them.
|
||||
|
||||
The other top suspect has been Cuba. Oswald admired Fidel
|
||||
Castro; he was a member of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee in
|
||||
the United States; he visited the Cuban embassy in Mexico City a
|
||||
few weeks before the assassination, seeking a travel visa to that
|
||||
country. Because the CIA was backing assassination plots against
|
||||
Castro at the time, some speculate that Castro may have
|
||||
retaliated through Oswald.
|
||||
|
||||
retaliated through Oswald.
|
||||
|
||||
But, as with the theory of Soviet involvement, there is no
|
||||
evidence. At one point, there did appear to be some. A young
|
||||
Central American informant told U.S. authorities he saw Oswald in
|
||||
@ -193,8 +193,8 @@ the informant admitted he had never seen Oswald and had
|
||||
fabricated the transaction, wishing to stir up American hatred
|
||||
for Castro's Cuba. Subsequently, he retracted his retraction.
|
||||
Finally, he failed a lie-detector test. Anyway, Oswald did not
|
||||
speak Spanish.
|
||||
|
||||
speak Spanish.
|
||||
|
||||
Another account suggesting possible Cuban involvement was
|
||||
provided by a Cuban exile who testified before the Warren
|
||||
commission. She said two Hispanic men and an Anglo man they
|
||||
@ -205,18 +205,18 @@ Oswald in television film as the man she had seen, but federal
|
||||
investigators said they do not believe it was him. They said they
|
||||
believe that at that time, Oswald was traveling from his New
|
||||
Orleans home to Mexico in his quest for a Cuban entry visa.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The most publicized theories involving Oswald accomplices
|
||||
are those that have featured other gunmen.
|
||||
|
||||
are those that have featured other gunmen.
|
||||
|
||||
These various versions have assassins firing from other
|
||||
windows in the depository building; from the Dal-Tex building;
|
||||
from sewer drains, a grassy knoll near Dealey Plaza, the railroad
|
||||
bridge over Elm, Main and Commerce streets and the Dallas County
|
||||
Courthouse roof; and firing with silencers or automatic weapons.
|
||||
|
||||
The arguments surrounding these claims:
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The arguments surrounding these claims:
|
||||
|
||||
- One-man, one-bullet: The first shot that wounded Kennedy
|
||||
in the neck did not also hit John Connally, as the Warren
|
||||
Commission concluded. Rather they were struck by individual
|
||||
@ -225,24 +225,24 @@ team of experts, including a National Aeronautics and Space
|
||||
Administration engineer, conducted an exhaustive study of this
|
||||
question in 1978. The panel's conclusion: It is not only
|
||||
possible, but almost certain that Kennedy and Connally were hit
|
||||
by the same bullet.
|
||||
|
||||
by the same bullet.
|
||||
|
||||
- Filmed accomplices: Photographs of Dealey Plaza taken at
|
||||
the time of the assassination show a dim form behind a wall on a
|
||||
grassy knoll to the right and in front of the presidential
|
||||
limousine. However, investigators found no spent cartridges,
|
||||
weapons or footprints in this area. A panel of photography
|
||||
experts concluded in 1978 that the images on the film were
|
||||
shadows.
|
||||
|
||||
shadows.
|
||||
|
||||
Films and photos also show a man in Dealey Plaza opening and
|
||||
closing a black umbrella. Conspiracy theories suggest he was
|
||||
signaling gunmen or that some weapon was hidden in the umbrella.
|
||||
But at a hearing of the House Assassinations Committee in 1978, a
|
||||
mild-mannered Dallas insurance worker identified himself as the
|
||||
mysterious "umbrella man" and said he was only trying to harass
|
||||
Kennedy.
|
||||
|
||||
Kennedy.
|
||||
|
||||
- Head movement: The famous Zapruder film of the
|
||||
assassination clearly shows President Kennedy's head lurching
|
||||
backward when it was struck by the fatal gunshot. If the shot had
|
||||
@ -252,8 +252,8 @@ medical experts concluded in 1978 that Kennedy's head wounds were
|
||||
caused by a shot from the rear. Moreover, a panel of
|
||||
wound-ballistics scientists concluded that the backward motion
|
||||
was caused by the sudden tightening of the President's neck
|
||||
muscles.
|
||||
|
||||
muscles.
|
||||
|
||||
- Tape-recorded sounds: Sound transmitted through the
|
||||
microphone of a motorcycle patrolman in the motorcade, and
|
||||
recorded at Dallas police headquarters, shows four noise
|
||||
@ -264,36 +264,36 @@ firings in Dealey Plaza, compared the sounds and concluded it was
|
||||
Commission had concluded that no more than three shots had been
|
||||
fired from the window. The source of the previously unknown one,
|
||||
the acoustical experts said, was the grassy knoll area.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The finding was the first scientific evidence supporting a
|
||||
conspiracy theory and stirred an uproar. But it, too, was later
|
||||
discounted. Twelve experts assembled by the National Research
|
||||
Council reviewed the tapes and concluded the "spikes" were
|
||||
actually recorded about a minute after the assassination.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The Assassinations Committee also grappled futily with the
|
||||
prospect of a likely colleague for Oswald. "The question is with
|
||||
who," said one member of the now-defunct committee. "If there's a
|
||||
conspirator, then who could it have been? We asked ourselves over
|
||||
and over: What associates did Oswald have, where was there
|
||||
evidence of conspiracy? We found none."
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Oswald was manipulated: These theories suggest that Oswald,
|
||||
and perhaps other operatives, were unknowingly influenced in
|
||||
their actions.
|
||||
|
||||
their actions.
|
||||
|
||||
There can be only one reasonable candidate to mastermind
|
||||
such a project--the KGB. It would have been the only organization
|
||||
with the scientific means and the extended access to Oswald. Even
|
||||
some Warren Commission lawyers and CIA members briefly toyed with
|
||||
the possibility. Because Oswald spent some time in a Soviet
|
||||
hospital while residing in Russia, there was the suspicion he
|
||||
might have been brainwashed.
|
||||
|
||||
might have been brainwashed.
|
||||
|
||||
Once again, the problem is that there is no evidence to
|
||||
suggest Oswald was brainwashed. Moreover, the CIA believes KGB
|
||||
"mind conditioning" techniques at the time were primitive.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Surely, it is impossible to rule out the prospect of a
|
||||
conspiracy in the assassination. The Warren Commission itself did
|
||||
not do so. "Because of the difficulty of providing negatives to a
|
||||
@ -301,8 +301,8 @@ certainty," the panel said, proving there was no conspiracy
|
||||
"cannot be established categorically." However, the panel said,
|
||||
"if there is any such evidence it has been beyond the reach of
|
||||
all the investigative agencies and resources of the United
|
||||
States."
|
||||
|
||||
Twenty years later, that is still the case.
|
||||
|
||||
States."
|
||||
|
||||
Twenty years later, that is still the case.
|
||||
|
||||
</p></xml>
|
@ -1,29 +1,29 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
||||
Subject: Keyword(s) : KENNEDY and ASSASSINATION
|
||||
Title : The Day John Kennedy Died
|
||||
Author : Bryan Woolley
|
||||
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Title : The Day John Kennedy Died
|
||||
Author : Bryan Woolley
|
||||
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Publication Date : Nov. 20, 1983
|
||||
Page Number(s) : Sec. Sec. 2-3
|
||||
|
||||
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
||||
(Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Nov. 20, 1983, Special Section, pp. 2-3
|
||||
Reprinted with permission from the author.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
||||
(Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Nov. 20, 1983, Special Section, pp. 2-3
|
||||
Reprinted with permission from the author.
|
||||
|
||||
THE DAY JOHN KENNEDY DIED
|
||||
Sun cleared dawn's drizzle, but gloom clouded Dallas
|
||||
by Bryan Woolley
|
||||
Staff Writer
|
||||
|
||||
by Bryan Woolley
|
||||
Staff Writer
|
||||
|
||||
The valet walked past the Secret Service guard and entered
|
||||
Suite 850 of Fort Worth's Texas Hotel. He knocked on the door of
|
||||
the master bedroom. It was 7:30 a.m. "Mr. President," he said,
|
||||
"it's raining out."
|
||||
|
||||
"it's raining out."
|
||||
|
||||
President John F. Kennedy, coming out of sleep, replied,
|
||||
"That's too bad."
|
||||
|
||||
"That's too bad."
|
||||
|
||||
While he was dressing, he heard the murmur of the crowd
|
||||
outside and went to the window. Below him, 5,000 people were
|
||||
standing patiently in the soft drizzle, some wearing raincoats,
|
||||
@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ dawn to hear the speech the President would make in the parking
|
||||
lot where they stood. Mounted police officers wearing yellow
|
||||
slickers moved among them. "Gosh, look at the crowd!" the
|
||||
President said to his wife. "Just look! Isn't that terrific."
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
In the lobby, he was joined by Vice President Lyndon
|
||||
Johnson, Gov. John Connally, Sen. Ralph Yarborough, several
|
||||
members of Congress and the president of the Fort Worth Chamber
|
||||
@ -41,35 +41,35 @@ of Commerce. They crossed Eighth Street and plunged into the
|
||||
crowd, shaking hands, smiling. They mounted the truck that was to
|
||||
serve as the speaker's platform. Kennedy grabbed the microphone
|
||||
and shouted: "There are no faint hearts in Fort Worth!"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The crowd cheered. Somebody yelled, "Where's Jackie?"
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Kennedy pointed toward his eighth-floor window. "Mrs.
|
||||
Kennedy is organizing herself," he replied. "It takes her a
|
||||
little longer, but, of course, she looks better than we do when
|
||||
she does it."
|
||||
|
||||
she does it."
|
||||
|
||||
Fort Worth was the third stop on the President's five-city
|
||||
Texas tour. He had ridden through Houston and San Antonio like a
|
||||
triumphant emperor, and Fort Worth had stayed up past midnight to
|
||||
welcome the handsome 46-year-old President and his beautiful
|
||||
34-year-old wife, lining their route from Carswell Air Force base
|
||||
to the hotel.
|
||||
|
||||
to the hotel.
|
||||
|
||||
After an informal speech in the parking lot, he would go to
|
||||
the hotel, deliver a breakfast speech, fly from Carswell to Love
|
||||
Field, ride in a motorcade through Dallas, deliver a speech at a
|
||||
$100-a-plate luncheon at the Dallas Trade Mart, fly to Austin for
|
||||
a banquet and a reception at the Governor's Mansion, and then go
|
||||
to the LBJ ranch for a weekend of rest.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Back inside the Texas Hotel, Kennedy accepted the ceremonial
|
||||
cowboy hat from his hosts, but refused to wear it for
|
||||
photographers and TV cameramen. He would model it later, he said,
|
||||
at the White House. His breakfast speech was the standard
|
||||
fence-mending one-- about the greatness of Texas and Fort Worth
|
||||
and the Democratic Party--and it drew a thunderous ovation.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The President and the first lady retired to Suite 850 to
|
||||
prepare for the flight to Dallas. Kennedy placed a call to former
|
||||
Vice President John Nance "Cactus Jack" Garner in Uvalde, Texas,
|
||||
@ -78,8 +78,8 @@ black-bordered full-page ad with a sardonic headline in The
|
||||
Dallas Morning News. "Welcome Mr. Kennedy to Dallas," it read. In
|
||||
13 rhetorical questions, something called the "American
|
||||
Fact-Finding Committee" accused the administration of selling out
|
||||
the world to communism.
|
||||
|
||||
the world to communism.
|
||||
|
||||
"Oh, you know, we're heading into nut country today," the
|
||||
President said. Mrs. Kennedy later told author William Manchester
|
||||
that he paced the floor and then stopped in front of her. "You
|
||||
@ -87,18 +87,18 @@ know, last night would have been a hell of a night to assassinate
|
||||
a president," he said. "There was the rain and the night, and we
|
||||
were all getting jostled. Suppose a man had a pistol in a
|
||||
briefcase." He pointed a finger at the wall and pretended to fire
|
||||
two shots.
|
||||
|
||||
two shots.
|
||||
|
||||
Not many in the presidential party were looking forward to
|
||||
Dallas. Several Texans--some from Dallas--had warned the
|
||||
President not to include Dallas on his Texas tour, that an ugly
|
||||
incident was likely to occur there. But Kennedy insisted that the
|
||||
state's second-largest city be placed on the itinerary.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
So the preparations had been made. Dallas civic leaders had
|
||||
launched a public relations campaign to try to ensure a friendly
|
||||
turnout for the President.
|
||||
|
||||
turnout for the President.
|
||||
|
||||
Seven hundred law officers--city police officers and
|
||||
firefighters, sheriff's deputies, Texas Rangers and state highway
|
||||
patrol officers--had been assembled to keep order. About the time
|
||||
@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ that John Kennedy was waking up, Dallas Police Chief Jesse Curry
|
||||
had gone on TV to warn that his officers would take "immediate
|
||||
action to block any improper conduct." If the police were
|
||||
inadequate, he said, even citizen's arrests were authorized.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Others were preparing, too, in the early morning. Waiters
|
||||
were setting the places for the Trade Mart luncheon. A warehouse
|
||||
worker named Lee Harvey Oswald sneaked a rifle and a telescopic
|
||||
@ -114,8 +114,8 @@ sight into the Texas School Book Depository. Because of forecasts
|
||||
showing that the rain probably would be past Dallas by the time
|
||||
the presidential party arrived, a Kennedy aide told the Secret
|
||||
Service not to put the bubble-top on the big blue limousine in
|
||||
which the President and Mrs. Kennedy would ride.
|
||||
|
||||
which the President and Mrs. Kennedy would ride.
|
||||
|
||||
Air Force One had barely left the runway at Carswell before
|
||||
it began its descent toward Love Field. The flight took only 13
|
||||
minutes. The big plane touched down at 11:38 a.m. Police armed
|
||||
@ -127,8 +127,8 @@ for JFK." Others were less friendly. They held placards, too:
|
||||
Freedom," "Yankees Go Home And Take Your Equals With You." They
|
||||
booed and hissed when the President and first lady emerged from
|
||||
the plane, smiled, waved and descended the stairs of Air Force
|
||||
One.
|
||||
|
||||
One.
|
||||
|
||||
For the fourth time in 24 hours, Lyndon and Lady Bird
|
||||
Johnson were waiting to welcome the Kennedys to a Texas city. The
|
||||
presidential couple was introduced to the 12-man official
|
||||
@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ welcoming committee. Mrs. Earle Cabell, wife of the Dallas mayor,
|
||||
presented Mrs. Kennedy with a bouquet of red roses. Then Kennedy
|
||||
broke from the official cluster and moved along the chain-link
|
||||
fence, smiling, shaking hands; letting people touch him.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
At 11:55, two motorcycle police officers led the motorcade
|
||||
out of Love Field and turned left on Mockingbird Lane. Police
|
||||
Chief Curry drove the lead car. With him rode Dallas County
|
||||
@ -146,22 +146,22 @@ Service agents in the front, John and Nellie Connally in the jump
|
||||
seats and the Kennedys in the back seat. Two motorcycles flanked
|
||||
the car on each side. Next was another convertible, full of
|
||||
Kennedy aides and Secret Service agents, and four more agents
|
||||
standing on its running boards.
|
||||
|
||||
standing on its running boards.
|
||||
|
||||
Then came the vice presidential convertible, carrying two
|
||||
Secret Service agents, the Johnsons and Yarborough. A Texas
|
||||
highway patrol officer and four Secret Service agents rode in the
|
||||
next car. A press pool car, a press bus, convertibles bearing
|
||||
photographers, and cars carrying lesser dignitaries completed the
|
||||
procession.
|
||||
|
||||
procession.
|
||||
|
||||
The motorcade would move through a sizable portion of
|
||||
Dallas--along Mockingbird to Lemmon Avenue, right on Lemmon to
|
||||
Turtle Creek Boulevard, along Turtle Creek and Cedar Springs Road
|
||||
to Harwood Street, down Harwood to Main Street, where, at City
|
||||
Hall, it would turn right and move westward along Main through
|
||||
the downtown business district.
|
||||
|
||||
the downtown business district.
|
||||
|
||||
At the west end of downtown, it would turn right onto
|
||||
Houston Street and then immediately left onto Elm Street and move
|
||||
through the Triple Underpass. A few yards beyond the underpass,
|
||||
@ -175,8 +175,8 @@ look. The sun was bright now, and Mrs. Kennedy was regretting
|
||||
that she was wearing the pink wool suit. She had expected woolen
|
||||
weather. It was, after all, late November. She put on sunglasses,
|
||||
but her husband told her to take them off. The people wanted to
|
||||
see her, he said.
|
||||
|
||||
see her, he said.
|
||||
|
||||
At the corner of Lemmon and Lomo Alto, a group of children
|
||||
held a long banner reading, "Please Stop and Shake Our Hands."
|
||||
Kennedy ordered his driver to stop. He got out and shook their
|
||||
@ -185,14 +185,14 @@ greet a group of nuns. At Lee Park on Turtle Creek, the crowd
|
||||
began to thicken. And at Harwood and Live Oak, still two blocks
|
||||
from the turn onto Main, the people in the motorcade heard the
|
||||
downtown crowd murmuring like a distant tide.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
When the caravan made the turn, it faced pandemonium. People
|
||||
were standing 10 and 12 deep on the sidewalks. Red, white and
|
||||
blue bunting fluttered from the buildings. People leaned out
|
||||
windows, waving and screaming. There were no picket signs, no
|
||||
sour faces. The feared Dallas crowd was friendly--even adoring.
|
||||
The nuts had stayed home. It was 12:21 p.m.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
At the Trade Mart, the luncheon guests were showing their
|
||||
tickets to the door guards and filing to their seats. The huge
|
||||
building was surrounded by Dallas and Texas police, standing at
|
||||
@ -201,14 +201,14 @@ protesters. Inside the atrium hall, parakeets flew freely from
|
||||
tree to tree. A fountain splashed. An organist was practicing
|
||||
"Hail to the Chief." Dozens of yellow roses adorned the head
|
||||
table. The presidential seal had been mounted on the rostrum.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
As the motorcade neared Houston Street, the size of the
|
||||
crowd diminished, but the cheers and applause were still hearty.
|
||||
Nellie Connally turned in her seat and said, "You can't say
|
||||
Dallas doesn't love you, Mr. President."
|
||||
|
||||
Kennedy replied, "No, you can't."
|
||||
|
||||
Dallas doesn't love you, Mr. President."
|
||||
|
||||
Kennedy replied, "No, you can't."
|
||||
|
||||
Workers from the Texas School Book Depository, the Dal-Tex
|
||||
Building and the Dallas County buildings lined the sidewalks at
|
||||
Houston and Elm as the head of the motorcade turned toward the
|
||||
@ -217,41 +217,41 @@ had brought their children to see the President. Several
|
||||
spectators noticed a man standing very still in a sixth-floor
|
||||
corner window of the depository. One man saw the rifle he was
|
||||
holding and assumed he was a Secret Service agent.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
As the blue limousine made the sharp left turn from Houston
|
||||
onto Elm, the Hertz rental car time-and-temperature sign on the
|
||||
roof of the depository red 12:30. A Secret Service man in the
|
||||
motorcade radioed the Trade Mart: "Halfback to Base. Five minutes
|
||||
to destination." He wrote in his shift log: "12:35 p.m. President
|
||||
Kennedy arrived at Trade Mart."
|
||||
|
||||
Kennedy arrived at Trade Mart."
|
||||
|
||||
Some thought the noises were firecrackers. Others thought a
|
||||
motorcycle was backfiring. Some recognized them as rifle shots.
|
||||
Pigeons flew from the roof of the depository. Kennedy lurched
|
||||
forward and grabbed his neck.
|
||||
|
||||
forward and grabbed his neck.
|
||||
|
||||
Sen. Yarborough, in the vice president's car, cried, "My
|
||||
God! They've shot the President!" Secret Service agent Rufus
|
||||
Youngblood climbed from the front seat to the back, threw Johnson
|
||||
to the floorboard and covered him with his own body.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
In the blue limousine, Gov. Connally had been hit, too. He
|
||||
pitched forward and fell toward his wife. "No, no, no, no, no!"
|
||||
he screamed.
|
||||
|
||||
he screamed.
|
||||
|
||||
Then another shot. The President's head exploded. Blood
|
||||
spattered the occupants of the blue car. The first lady, in
|
||||
shock, tried to climb out over the trunk. A Secret Service agent
|
||||
pushed her back. The car slowed and then lurched out of the
|
||||
motorcade line and sped past the Triple Underpass, with Chief
|
||||
Curry's car and the Secret Service car in pursuit.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
UPI White House correspondent Merriman Smith was sitting in
|
||||
the middle of the front seat of the press pool car. He grabbed
|
||||
the mobile phone. He called the wire service's Dallas bureau and
|
||||
dictated the first bulletin: "Three shots were fired at President
|
||||
Kennedy's motorcade in downtown Dallas."
|
||||
|
||||
Kennedy's motorcade in downtown Dallas."
|
||||
|
||||
The cheers of greeting in Dealey Plaza rose to screams of
|
||||
horror and fear. "They killed him! They killed him! They killed
|
||||
him!" Parents grabbed children and ran. Men and women lay
|
||||
@ -259,31 +259,31 @@ prostrate on the grass and sidewalks, as if dead. The motorcade
|
||||
was disintegrating, the cars veering hither and yon, trying to
|
||||
get through the crowd and follow the limousine. Helmeted police
|
||||
officers leaped from motorcycles, pulled guns, looked wildly
|
||||
about. The Hertz clock still read 12:30.
|
||||
|
||||
about. The Hertz clock still read 12:30.
|
||||
|
||||
The staff at Parkland Memorial Hospital had only five
|
||||
minutes notice of the massive emergency rushing upon them, and
|
||||
many thought the message was a joke. When the blue car arrived,
|
||||
they weren't ready. No one was waiting at the emergency entrance.
|
||||
A Secret Service agent dashed inside to order stretchers.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Connally--whose wounds were serious but not fatal--was
|
||||
wheeled to Trauma Room No. 2, Kennedy to Trauma Room No. 1. Teams
|
||||
of surgeons and nurses went to work. The Secret Service regrouped
|
||||
around the Johnsons and hustled them to seclusion in another part
|
||||
of the hospital. Reporters dashed around the halls and offices,
|
||||
searching for phones. Parkland patients heard the news and rushed
|
||||
to have a look.
|
||||
|
||||
to have a look.
|
||||
|
||||
"Gentlemen," a weeping Yarborough told reporters, "this has
|
||||
been a deed of horror. Excalibur has sunk beneath the waves."
|
||||
Mrs. Kennedy insisted on being in the trauma room with her
|
||||
husband. A nurse protested, but she was admitted.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Outside, more of the motorcade vehicles were arriving. Their
|
||||
passengers tumbled out and stared in horror at the blood-soaked
|
||||
convertible.
|
||||
|
||||
convertible.
|
||||
|
||||
At 1 p.m., Dr. Kemp Clark, the senior physician working on
|
||||
the President, pronounced him dead. A priest administered last
|
||||
rites. At 1:13, the news was carried to the vice president. At
|
||||
@ -292,7 +292,7 @@ massive plot against the government, spirited the Johnsons away
|
||||
to unmarked cars and sped to Love Field. They boarded Air Force
|
||||
One at 1:33, while Kennedy press aide Malcolm Kilduff was
|
||||
announcing the President's death to the press.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Police were still combing the Dealey Plaza area for
|
||||
Kennedy's murderer. Indeed, only a minute after the fatal shot
|
||||
was fired, Marrion Baker, a Dallas motorcycle officer, had
|
||||
@ -306,7 +306,7 @@ Baker let him go. A minute later, Oswald walked out the front
|
||||
door of the depository, where he encountered NBC reporter Robert
|
||||
MacNeil, who was looking for a phone. Oswald told him he could
|
||||
find one inside. Five minutes later, police sealed off the door.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
At 12:44, Oswald boarded a bus at Elm and Murphy streets,
|
||||
seven blocks from the depository, but got off a few minutes later
|
||||
when the bus was caught in a traffic snarl. By 12:45, Dallas
|
||||
@ -316,14 +316,14 @@ description from a radio car in front of the depository. Two
|
||||
minutes later, Oswald caught a taxicab at the Greyhound bus
|
||||
station and rode to Beckley and Neely, a corner near his Oak
|
||||
Cliff rooming house. He went to his room, got a pistol and left
|
||||
again.
|
||||
|
||||
again.
|
||||
|
||||
Meanwhile, Roy Truly had drawn up a list of depository
|
||||
employees and told police that Oswald was missing. At 1:12,
|
||||
sheriff's deputies found three empty cartridge cases near the
|
||||
sixth floor corner window. Ten minutes later, they would find the
|
||||
rifle, hidden between boxes of textbooks in the room.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
At 1:15, Dallas officer J.D. Tippett was cruising by a drug
|
||||
store at 10th and Patton, less than a mile from the Oak Cliff
|
||||
rooming house, and spotted Oswald walking along the sidewalk.
|
||||
@ -331,8 +331,8 @@ Tippett, for reasons never determined, pulled over and stopped
|
||||
him. Oswald jerked his pistol from under his jacket, shot four
|
||||
times and ran away. Nine people saw the shooting. A pickup truck
|
||||
driver took the dead officer's radio mike and said, "Hello,
|
||||
police operator. We've had a shooting out here."
|
||||
|
||||
police operator. We've had a shooting out here."
|
||||
|
||||
On Air Force One, stewards were removing some of the seats
|
||||
in the tail compartment to make room for President Kennedy's
|
||||
coffin. In the plane's stateroom, Lyndon Johnson was watching
|
||||
@ -342,8 +342,8 @@ until they had returned to Washington. Some thought he should
|
||||
wait. Others thought it might be dangerous for the country to be
|
||||
without a President while he was en route. Johnson decided he
|
||||
would assume the office in Dallas. "Now," he said, "What about
|
||||
the oath?"
|
||||
|
||||
the oath?"
|
||||
|
||||
The aides and congressmen were embarrassed. They could
|
||||
remember neither the words nor where to find them. They couldn't
|
||||
remember who, besides Supreme Court justices, was authorized to
|
||||
@ -355,8 +355,8 @@ the Constitution. Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach
|
||||
dictated it by phone from Washington, and U.S. District Judge
|
||||
Sarah Hughes, an old friend of Johnson who had been appointed to
|
||||
the North Texas federal bench by Kennedy, was dispatched to Love
|
||||
Field.
|
||||
|
||||
Field.
|
||||
|
||||
At 1:40, Lee Oswald ran into the Texas Theater on West
|
||||
Jefferson--eight blocks from officer Tippit's body--without
|
||||
buying a ticket. The box office attendant called the police.
|
||||
@ -364,7 +364,7 @@ Cruisers began converging on the theater. At 1:50, the house
|
||||
lights went up, and officers moved up and down the aisles, looked
|
||||
into the faces of the few patrons. Officer M.N. McDonald stopped
|
||||
at the 10th row and said to a man sitting alone: "Get up."
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
"Well, it's all over now," Oswald said, according to
|
||||
witnesses and he stood up. But when McDonald moved closer, Oswald
|
||||
struck him in the face and went for his pistol. McDonald struck
|
||||
@ -373,22 +373,22 @@ web of skin between McDonald's thumb and forefinger was caught
|
||||
under the hammer. The gun didn't fire. Other officers joined the
|
||||
fight. They subdued Oswald and hustled him out of the theater. "I
|
||||
protest this police brutality!" Oswald shouted.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Twenty-five minutes later, Capt. Will Fritz, chief of
|
||||
homicide, returned to the Police Department and ordered that the
|
||||
missing Texas School Book Depository worker named Lee Harvey
|
||||
Oswald be arrested as a suspect in the presidential killing. An
|
||||
officer pointed to a small young man with a bruised eye who was
|
||||
sitting in a chair. "There he sits," he said.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
At Parkland, a Secret Service agent called Oneal's Funeral
|
||||
Home in Oak Lawn to order a casket. The funeral director, Vernon
|
||||
Oneal, arrived with it at 1:30. After the President's body had
|
||||
been placed in the casket, Mrs. Kennedy entered Trauma Room No.
|
||||
1, took off her wedding ring and placed it on her husband's
|
||||
finger. The casket was closed and placed on a funeral home cart
|
||||
to be moved to the hearse.
|
||||
|
||||
to be moved to the hearse.
|
||||
|
||||
Dr. Earl Rose, the Dallas County medical examiner,
|
||||
protested. Kennedy was a homicide victim, he said, and the body
|
||||
couldn't be released legally until after an autopsy had been
|
||||
@ -398,29 +398,29 @@ casket through the crowd that had gathered at the hospital door
|
||||
and loaded it into the hearse. Mrs. Kennedy rode in the back with
|
||||
it. At 2:20, the dead President was carried up the stairs into
|
||||
Air Force One. Mrs. Kennedy retired to the bedroom.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Judge Hughes boarded the plane at 2:35 and was handed a
|
||||
small white card with the oath scrawled on it. Capt. Cecil
|
||||
Stoughton, an Army Signal Corps photographer, tried to arrange
|
||||
the crowd in the cramped stateroom so that he could take a
|
||||
picture of the ceremony. "We'll wait for Mrs. Kennedy," Johnson
|
||||
said. "I want her here."
|
||||
|
||||
said. "I want her here."
|
||||
|
||||
Mrs. Kennedy came out of the bedroom still wearing the
|
||||
blood-soaked pink suit. Johnson pressed her hand and said, "This
|
||||
is the saddest moment of my life." The photographer placed her on
|
||||
Johnson's left, Lady Bird on his right. Judge Hughes, the first
|
||||
woman to administer the presidential oath, was shaking.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
"What about a Bible?" asked one of the witnesses. Someone
|
||||
remembered that President Kennedy had kept a Bible in the bedroom
|
||||
and went to get it.
|
||||
|
||||
"I do solemnly swear..."
|
||||
|
||||
and went to get it.
|
||||
|
||||
"I do solemnly swear..."
|
||||
|
||||
The oath lasted 28 seconds. At 2:38 p.m., Lyndon B. Johnson
|
||||
became the 36th President of the United States. The big jet's
|
||||
engines already were screaming. "Now, let's get airborne," he
|
||||
said.
|
||||
|
||||
said.
|
||||
|
||||
</p></xml>
|
@ -1,42 +1,42 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
||||
<xml><p>Volume : SIRS 1991 History, Article 02
|
||||
Subject: Keyword(s) : KENNEDY and ASSASSINATION
|
||||
Title : A Remembrance of Kennedy
|
||||
Author : Jim Henderson
|
||||
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Title : A Remembrance of Kennedy
|
||||
Author : Jim Henderson
|
||||
Source : Dallas Times Herald (Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Publication Date : Nov. 20, 1983
|
||||
Page Number(s) : Special Sec. 1+
|
||||
|
||||
. . . Reprinted with permission from
|
||||
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
||||
(Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Nov. 20, 1983, Special Section, pp. 1+
|
||||
|
||||
A REMEMBRANCE OF KENNEDY
|
||||
by Jim Henderson
|
||||
Staff Writer
|
||||
|
||||
. . . Reprinted with permission from
|
||||
DALLAS TIMES HERALD
|
||||
(Dallas, Texas)
|
||||
Nov. 20, 1983, Special Section, pp. 1+
|
||||
|
||||
A REMEMBRANCE OF KENNEDY
|
||||
by Jim Henderson
|
||||
Staff Writer
|
||||
|
||||
`Let the word go forth from this time and place...that the torch
|
||||
has been passed to a new generation of Americans--born in this
|
||||
century, tempered by war, disciplined by a hard and bitter peace,
|
||||
proud of our ancient heritage.'
|
||||
|
||||
proud of our ancient heritage.'
|
||||
|
||||
After 20 years, the events seem as compressed as a leanly
|
||||
edited videotape.
|
||||
|
||||
edited videotape.
|
||||
|
||||
A sunny day, a dark convertible, a steady din rebounding
|
||||
from the canyon walls above a crowded street, three cracks from a
|
||||
rifle in a sniper's nest, a scramble below, engines racing, a
|
||||
sobbing black woman outside Parkland Memorial Hospital, a
|
||||
policeman shot across town, a pronouncement of death, a scrawny,
|
||||
handcuffed suspect in a corridor with Jack Ruby's .38 exploding
|
||||
in his belly.
|
||||
|
||||
in his belly.
|
||||
|
||||
The nation was stunned by the images that were transmitted
|
||||
from Dallas--hard images formed in terse, teletype prose and more
|
||||
vivid ones fashioned from bits and pieces of celluloid.
|
||||
|
||||
America paused to watch the newsreel.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
America paused to watch the newsreel.
|
||||
|
||||
A new President quickly sworn in and airlifted into command,
|
||||
a bloodstained widow never far from the coffin, a change to
|
||||
black, a bewildered daughter kneeling before a flag-draped box in
|
||||
@ -44,35 +44,35 @@ the Capitol rotunda, the wintry streets of the capital, a dark
|
||||
riderless horse with empty boots facing backward in the stirrups,
|
||||
a slow-moving caisson, a young boy saluting the honor guard
|
||||
carrying his father to Arlington National Cemetery, the lighting
|
||||
of the eternal flame.
|
||||
|
||||
of the eternal flame.
|
||||
|
||||
On the day John F. Kennedy was buried, Alistair Cooke wrote:
|
||||
"He was snuffed out. In that moment, all the decent grief of a
|
||||
nation was taunted and outraged. So along with the sorrow, there
|
||||
is a desperate and howling note from over the land. We may pray
|
||||
on our knees, but when we get up from them, we cry with the poet:
|
||||
Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the
|
||||
dying of the light."
|
||||
|
||||
dying of the light."
|
||||
|
||||
It is only in memory that the howling note from those four
|
||||
days flits past. Behind the newsreel, the hours were agonizing
|
||||
and interminable. For many, particularly in Dallas, time moved as
|
||||
slowly as a motorcade or a horse-drawn caisson.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Erik Jonsson, then-president of the Dallas Citizens Council,
|
||||
would recall the anxiety he felt when the President did not show
|
||||
up on schedule for a luncheon at the Trade Mart. What's going on?
|
||||
he asked himself over and over as the wait, only a few moments in
|
||||
duration, seemed endless.
|
||||
|
||||
duration, seemed endless.
|
||||
|
||||
After 12:33 p.m. Nov. 22, 1963, the time the first news
|
||||
bulletin notified the republic that its President had been shot
|
||||
in Dallas, the city stood motionless and helpless, waiting for
|
||||
the firestorm of scorn. It came in searing, overlapping bursts.
|
||||
"Are these human beings or are these animals?" Adlai Stevenson
|
||||
had asked moments after he escaped from a violent crowd in Dallas
|
||||
a month earlier.
|
||||
|
||||
a month earlier.
|
||||
|
||||
The world looked again at Dallas with the same question. It
|
||||
would seem, in the slow-motion drift of events, that the answer
|
||||
would never come. Dallas mourned the assassination as the rest of
|
||||
@ -80,32 +80,32 @@ the nation mourned it, as a deeply personal tragedy.
|
||||
Schoolteachers wept as they broke the news to their classes. Men
|
||||
cried in public. Rage and shame and guilt and dread melted into
|
||||
one great immobilizing glob of emotional turmoil.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
An eternity, two hours and 20 minutes, passed before the
|
||||
truth would be known. Kennedy's assassin was not of Dallas, was
|
||||
far removed from the nation's perception of the city and the
|
||||
city's own worst fears of itself.
|
||||
|
||||
city's own worst fears of itself.
|
||||
|
||||
In time, the world, as well as Dallas, would believe the
|
||||
city was merely caught in one of history's inscrutable warps,
|
||||
that it was only by chance that the light passing through the
|
||||
long prism of that era intersected in Dealey Plaza.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The howl that was heard through the dark night of those
|
||||
times had the tone of a primal scream, a victim raging against a
|
||||
felon. In truth, it was a cry of national doubt, of the sense
|
||||
that America would not be the same. More than mere innocence was
|
||||
lost that day in Dallas. With it went the cable that anchored the
|
||||
nation to its sense of order.
|
||||
|
||||
nation to its sense of order.
|
||||
|
||||
To the historians who define eras in terms of events rather
|
||||
than years, the decade of the '60s was born in Dallas.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
In a great, shuddering spasm, the fragile floodgates that
|
||||
had held back the reservoir of a restless social movement was
|
||||
punctured by the bullets that rained down from the Texas School
|
||||
Book Depository.
|
||||
|
||||
Book Depository.
|
||||
|
||||
Within months, America would experience the first of her
|
||||
long hot summers, just the beginning of another newsreel: the
|
||||
dogs and fire hoses of Birmingham, the first smiling Marines
|
||||
@ -116,15 +116,15 @@ the fires of Watts and Newark and Detroit, Dr. Strangelove,
|
||||
Apollo 11, Woodstock, Charles Manson, the cultural revolution,
|
||||
the counterculture revolution, the sexual revolution, the
|
||||
yippies, the hippies, the peaceniks and the crazies.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
In 1968, Stuart Udall, secretary of interior for both
|
||||
Kennedy and Johnson, was asked his opinion of the times, which
|
||||
seemed to be reeling out of control. He offered a sober, but
|
||||
startling, observation.
|
||||
|
||||
startling, observation.
|
||||
|
||||
"This may be remembered," he said, "as the most creative
|
||||
time in our history."
|
||||
|
||||
time in our history."
|
||||
|
||||
It did not seem such an outrageous judgment when the
|
||||
hurricane had passed. A sorting out had occurred in the storm.
|
||||
Not many years would pass before a black preacher from Chicago
|
||||
@ -133,22 +133,22 @@ and supervise staffs of men. Men with an eye on the White House
|
||||
could talk of a female running mate without risking ridicule.
|
||||
Wars would be harder to make, nuclear waste harder to conceal,
|
||||
books harder to burn, air harder to pollute, justice harder to
|
||||
deny.
|
||||
|
||||
deny.
|
||||
|
||||
America was starkly different. Kennedy's presidency and his
|
||||
assassination may have been essential to unlocking the passions
|
||||
of the time, but what the land became was neither his legacy, nor
|
||||
Oswald's nor Dallas.'
|
||||
|
||||
Oswald's nor Dallas.'
|
||||
|
||||
After the trauma and shame and guilt were gone, the judgment
|
||||
of history would be that Kennedy and Oswald, Edwin Walker and
|
||||
Martin Luther King, George Wallace and Stokely Carmichael, Angela
|
||||
Davis and George Lincoln Rockwell, Dallas and Los Angeles,
|
||||
Memphis and Birmingham, Detroit and Da Nang were fragments of the
|
||||
American character, slivers of the dream and the nightmare.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
The legacy of that sunlit moment in Dallas was a nation's
|
||||
fretful and all-consuming search for itself, a long and howling
|
||||
rage against the dying of the light.
|
||||
|
||||
rage against the dying of the light.
|
||||
|
||||
</p></xml>
|
@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
||||
<xml><p></p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The Next Banking Crisis:
|
||||
<p> The Next Banking Crisis:
|
||||
=========================================
|
||||
The Issue Whose Name They Dare Not Speak.
|
||||
========================================= </p>
|
||||
@ -26,7 +26,7 @@
|
||||
cost of the S&L bailout -- enough to fund the Aid to Families with
|
||||
Dependent Children program for three years, or AIDS research for 50 </p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The Next Banking Crisis:
|
||||
<p> The Next Banking Crisis:
|
||||
=========================================
|
||||
The Issue Whose Name They Dare Not Speak.
|
||||
=========================================
|
||||
|
@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
BCCI THE BIG PICTURE
|
||||
A system out of control, not just one bank
|
||||
By George Winslow
|
||||
By George Winslow
|
||||
|
||||
This is the first story in a two-part "In These Times" investigation
|
||||
into the broader economic implication of the BCCI affair.
|
||||
@ -293,7 +293,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
| `Bank of Crooks and Criminals International' had |
|
||||
| links to U.S. intelligence and Third World tyrants |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| It's no wonder the Bank of Credit and Commerce |
|
||||
| International (BCCI) is enmeshed in one of the |
|
||||
| biggest financial scandals of the 20th century. A |
|
||||
@ -302,10 +302,10 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| history of involvement in major arms deals or |
|
||||
| corporate bribery scams. In addition, several key |
|
||||
| BCCI insiders have extensive ties to Western |
|
||||
| intelligence agencies. |
|
||||
| intelligence agencies. |
|
||||
| These same figures helped loot the bank, receiving |
|
||||
| hundreds of millions of dollars worth of loans that |
|
||||
| were never repaid. |
|
||||
| were never repaid. |
|
||||
| One major shareholder and a front man for BCCI's |
|
||||
| illegal purchases of various American banks-- |
|
||||
| including First American Bankshares in Washington, |
|
||||
@ -315,7 +315,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| CIA. And like many members of the Saudi ruling |
|
||||
| family, he often demanded commissions (a polite way |
|
||||
| of saying bribe) from multinational corporations |
|
||||
| operating around the mideast. |
|
||||
| operating around the mideast. |
|
||||
| In the `50s and `60s, Kamal accepted kickbacks from |
|
||||
| the Japanese in return for cheap oil. He also took |
|
||||
| commissions for arms deals set up for Northrup and |
|
||||
@ -337,13 +337,13 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| after Sadat took power. These funds convinced Sadat |
|
||||
| to expel Soviet military advisers in 1973 and to |
|
||||
| establish a closer relationship with the United |
|
||||
| States. |
|
||||
| States. |
|
||||
| In Kamal's years as the head of Saudi intelligence, |
|
||||
| he was responsible for a number of human rights |
|
||||
| abuses, including torture and executions of political |
|
||||
| opponents. Internal BCCI documents show that Kamal |
|
||||
| received over $313 million in loans from BCCI, most |
|
||||
| of which have not been repaid. |
|
||||
| of which have not been repaid. |
|
||||
| Other one-time BCCI shareholders with close |
|
||||
| connections to the CIA and the Western arms industry |
|
||||
| include Iran's now-ousted ruling family. Shah |
|
||||
@ -353,7 +353,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| had nationalized American oil companies. In the |
|
||||
| `70s, before he was overthrown, the Shah purchased |
|
||||
| billions of dollars worth of arms from American |
|
||||
| companies. |
|
||||
| companies. |
|
||||
| Kuwaiti businessman Faisal Saud al Fulajj was a |
|
||||
| small BCCI shareholder. According to the "Wall |
|
||||
| Street Journal," he accepted over $300,000 in bribes |
|
||||
@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| to Egypt right after the Camp David accords. |
|
||||
| Internal BCCI documents show that BCCI gave Fulajj at |
|
||||
| least $113 million in loans and Shorafa $123 million |
|
||||
| in loans. |
|
||||
| in loans. |
|
||||
| Agha Hasan Abedi, BCCI's founder, kept close ties |
|
||||
| to Pakistani military and intelligence officials. |
|
||||
| Abedi hired a number of bank officials with links to |
|
||||
@ -384,7 +384,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| reported that one top Pakistani official who refused |
| to extradite Abedi to the United States to face |
|
||||
| charges of fraud and larceny, "had received (from |
|
||||
| BCCI) a monthly stipend, free travel, a home loan and |
|
||||
| an expensive automobile." |
|
||||
| an expensive automobile." |
|
||||
| Abedi was so close to Pakistani Dictator Zia al- |
|
||||
| Haq, that Zia rushed to Abedi's bedside when the |
|
||||
| banker had a heart attack. Zia's term in office |
|
||||
@ -392,11 +392,11 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| continual allegations that top Kaistani officials |
|
||||
| were involved in the lucrative heroin trade. Zia |
|
||||
| overthrew the democratically elected government of |
|
||||
| Zulfikav Ali Bhutto and executed Bhutto. |
|
||||
| Zulfikav Ali Bhutto and executed Bhutto. |
|
||||
| The U.S. government rewarded Zia's support for the |
|
||||
| Afghan rebels with $2.1 billion worth of U.S. Agency |
|
||||
| for International Development grants and hundreds of |
|
||||
| millions of dollars in military aid. |
|
||||
| millions of dollars in military aid. |
|
||||
| The bin Mahfouz family--which owns Saudi Arabia's |
|
||||
| largest bank--sold its 20 percent stake in BCCI in |
|
||||
| 1990. The family also has a long history of |
|
||||
@ -409,7 +409,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| it was halted by U.S. regulators. More recently, the |
|
||||
| bin Mahfouz family used BCCI as a private piggy bank, |
|
||||
| receiving over $176 million in unsecured loans from |
|
||||
| the bank. |
|
||||
| the bank. |
|
||||
| Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, the ruler of Abu |
|
||||
| Dhabi and head of the United Arab Emirates us BCCI's |
|
||||
| largest shareholder. He rose to power in 1966 when |
|
||||
@ -429,7 +429,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
| arms. President Bush recently asked Congress to |
|
||||
| approve another $648 million U.S. arms deal as a |
|
||||
| reward for Sheik Zayed's staunch support for the U.S. |
|
||||
| during the Iraq war. |
|
||||
| during the Iraq war. |
|
||||
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@ -586,11 +586,11 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
the CIA, drug dealers, sleazy S&Ls, and influence peddlers.
|
||||
|
||||
--
|
||||
daveus rattus
|
||||
daveus rattus
|
||||
|
||||
yer friendly neighborhood ratman
|
||||
yer friendly neighborhood ratman
|
||||
|
||||
KOYAANISQATSI
|
||||
KOYAANISQATSI
|
||||
|
||||
ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
||||
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
||||
@ -629,7 +629,7 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
|
||||
from the October 30-November 5, 1991 issue of "IN THESE TIMES":
|
||||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
BCCI THE BIG PICTURE
|
||||
BCCI THE BIG PICTURE
|
||||
New capitalism: bank fraud, drug trade, espionage
|
||||
By George Winslow
|
||||
|
||||
@ -1210,11 +1210,11 @@ Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
|
||||
covers white-collar crime and international finance.
|
||||
|
||||
--
|
||||
daveus rattus
|
||||
daveus rattus
|
||||
|
||||
yer friendly neighborhood ratman
|
||||
yer friendly neighborhood ratman
|
||||
|
||||
KOYAANISQATSI
|
||||
KOYAANISQATSI
|
||||
|
||||
ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
||||
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
||||
|
@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#
|
||||
%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&
|
||||
#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%
|
||||
&%# &%#
|
||||
%#& Axon Industries Present %#&
|
||||
#&% #&%
|
||||
&%# &%#
|
||||
%#& Axon Industries Present %#&
|
||||
#&% #&%
|
||||
&%# The Kromery Converter/Free Electricity &%#
|
||||
%#& %#&
|
||||
%#& %#&
|
||||
#&% Original articles by John Bedini, Eike Mueller, and Tom Bearden. #&%
|
||||
&%# Retyped Without Permission 07/04/86 by (_>Shadow Hawk 1<_) &%#
|
||||
%#& %#&
|
||||
%#& %#&
|
||||
#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%
|
||||
&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#
|
||||
%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&%#&</p>
|
||||
@ -123,9 +123,9 @@ e can all afford them - including the shivering little old lady at the end of t
|
||||
<p> And when we do, lets give John Bedini, and men like him the credit and appreciation
|
||||
they so richly deserve.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Tom Bearden</p>
|
||||
<p> Tom Bearden</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> April 13,1984</p>
|
||||
<p> April 13,1984</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>John Bedini</p>
|
||||
|
||||
@ -185,17 +185,17 @@ then utilize a special means to cause the battery to recharge itself.</p>
|
||||
<p> First, the battery, controller, and generator are interconnected as shown in figure
|
||||
3. (See also Figure 1)</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
/-----\ /-----\
|
||||
o-12v | |===| || | 14v.o
|
||||
[Motor==| |==||===Gen. ]
|
||||
o+ | |===| || | .o
|
||||
\-----/ Mass \-----/
|
||||
Controller
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Controller
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Figure 1: The Kromery Converter
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> __________
|
||||
= Brush 1
|
||||
@ -205,17 +205,17 @@ then utilize a special means to cause the battery to recharge itself.</p>
|
||||
| x*x=|_________ _o--o1
|
||||
\ \x/ /Brush 2 /|
|
||||
\_ _/ 2o--/
|
||||
-
|
||||
-
|
||||
= Brush 3 o--o3
|
||||
__________ Equivelant
|
||||
Circuit
|
||||
|
||||
Circuit
|
||||
|
||||
Figure 2: Controller Construction
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> 3O To controller 1O To controller
|
||||
| brush #3 | brush #1
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| Mass | 2O To controller
|
||||
| Gen. Motor| | brush #2
|
||||
| ____ = ____ | |
|
||||
@ -223,9 +223,9 @@ then utilize a special means to cause the battery to recharge itself.</p>
|
||||
/--O- |-=-| -O--+---To batt -
|
||||
| ---- = ---- |
|
||||
\---------------/
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Figure 3: Schematic of the device
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Let's begin by stating certain facts. The ions move backwards under charging
|
||||
conditions and in reverse under discharging conditions. So here we start our new
|
||||
@ -342,19 +342,19 @@ positive line a 12 V light bulb.</p>
|
||||
batrery voltage had dropped from 11.05 V to 9.10 V. The speed of the converter
|
||||
was stabale at 1020 rpm.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> /----------\ /----\
|
||||
/--O Kromery +O----+--O+12v|
|
||||
<p> /----------\ /----\
|
||||
/--O Kromery +O----+--O+12v|
|
||||
|/-OConverter-O---+---O- | FIGURE K - 1 || \--
|
||||
--------/ || \----/ ||
|
||||
|| || /------------/|
|
||||
KROMERY CONVERTER |\-------. |
|
||||
| | / \ |
|
||||
| | /FW \ |
|
||||
TEST SETUP #1 | \-Bridg+--(X)-/
|
||||
| \ / Bulb
|
||||
| \ /
|
||||
\--------.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
--------/ || \----/ ||
|
||||
|| || /------------/|
|
||||
KROMERY CONVERTER |\-------. |
|
||||
| | / \ |
|
||||
| | /FW \ |
|
||||
TEST SETUP #1 | \-Bridg+--(X)-/
|
||||
| \ / Bulb
|
||||
| \ /
|
||||
\--------.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>In the next test we introduced a seperate battery (battery #2) for charging from
|
||||
the converter.</p>
|
||||
@ -362,19 +362,19 @@ the converter.</p>
|
||||
<p>We recharged the battery #2 from 12.30 V to 12.40 V within 4 minutes, and we measured
|
||||
a current flow into the battery #2 of 0.8 amperes.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> /----------\ /----\
|
||||
/--O Kromery +O-------O+12v|
|
||||
<p> /----------\ /----\
|
||||
/--O Kromery +O-------O+12v|
|
||||
|/-OConverter-O-------O-#1 | FIGURE K - 2 || \--
|
||||
--------/ \----/ ||
|
||||
|| /-------------\
|
||||
/----\ KROMERY CONVERTER |\-------. \--O-
|
||||
12*| | | / \ /--O+#2 |
|
||||
| | /FW \ | \----/
|
||||
TEST SETUP #2 | \-Bridg+--(/)-/
|
||||
| \ / Ampere *Note difference
|
||||
| \ / Meter in polarity from
|
||||
\--------. battery #1.
|
||||
|
||||
--------/ \----/ ||
|
||||
|| /-------------\
|
||||
/----\ KROMERY CONVERTER |\-------. \--O-
|
||||
12*| | | / \ /--O+#2 |
|
||||
| | /FW \ | \----/
|
||||
TEST SETUP #2 | \-Bridg+--(/)-/
|
||||
| \ / Ampere *Note difference
|
||||
| \ / Meter in polarity from
|
||||
\--------. battery #1.
|
||||
|
||||
Figure K-2 shows the second test setup. Because the kromery converter ran
|
||||
too slow on one 12 V battery, we decided to drive the converter using 24 V via tw
|
||||
o 12 V batteries, connected in series.</p>
|
||||
@ -392,8 +392,8 @@ battery voltage had reached 12.41 V. The measurement is depicted in Figure K-3.
|
||||
|
||||
<p> THE BATTERY CHARGER NEEDED 119 MINUTES</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> TO RAISE THE BATTERY VOLTAGE FROM 11.51 V TO 12.41 V
|
||||
FIGURE K - 3</p>
|
||||
<p> TO RAISE THE BATTERY VOLTAGE FROM 11.51 V TO 12.41 V
|
||||
FIGURE K - 3</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> THE KROMERY CONVERTER NEEDED 11 MINUTES</p>
|
||||
|
||||
@ -414,7 +414,7 @@ measure the input energy and speed when the output was shorted. Again, the inpu
|
||||
dropped and the speed increased.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Measurement No Load Loaded With Shorted Corrected
|
||||
Battery Fact. 5.535
|
||||
Battery Fact. 5.535
|
||||
============================================================</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Input Voltage 25.30 25.00 24.90 </p>
|
||||
@ -452,7 +452,7 @@ the more we load down the output side. This effect is totally contradic
|
||||
to the conventional laws of physics.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Measurement No Load Loaded With Loaded w/ Loaded w/
|
||||
Lamp & Batt 13.5 Ohms 0.63 Ohms
|
||||
Lamp & Batt 13.5 Ohms 0.63 Ohms
|
||||
============================================================</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Input Voltage 25.40 25.30 20.00 21.90 </p>
|
||||
|
@ -11,9 +11,9 @@ power, contact Matthew Freedman at 32 Union Square East, New York, NY
|
||||
Contributions are always welcome. All materials may be reproduced without
|
||||
permission.
|
||||
|
||||
--------------------
|
||||
--------------------
|
||||
|
||||
BNL - IRAQGATE SCANDAL
|
||||
BNL - IRAQGATE SCANDAL
|
||||
|
||||
The Chicago Connection - Bush & Saddam Inc.
|
||||
Key documents - sought by Gonzalez - withheld
|
||||
|
@ -52,20 +52,20 @@ Nam War and sell heroin to soldiers and JP4 fuel and military jets/helicopters
|
||||
to U.S. TAXPAYERS! </p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>**** SEND THIS TO YOUR FRIENDS AND CONGRESSMAN/WOMAN AND TELL HER/HIM YOU WANT
|
||||
BUSH IMPEACHED TODAY AND NO EXCUSES !!!
|
||||
BUSH IMPEACHED TODAY AND NO EXCUSES !!!
|
||||
BESIDES, QUALE WOULD HAVE TROUBLE ESCALATING A BAR FIGHT BY DIALING 911
|
||||
- HE COULDN'T START A WAR!!!
|
||||
- HE COULDN'T START A WAR!!!
|
||||
(MANY UNCONFIRMED THEORIES FORMULATE THAT IF BUSH WERE TO LOSE HIS LIFE OR GET
|
||||
ROUND FILED, THE CIA WOULD HAVE TO ASSASINATE QUALE)
|
||||
ROUND FILED, THE CIA WOULD HAVE TO ASSASINATE QUALE)
|
||||
______________________________________________
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| WHAT FOLLOWS ARE EXPLANATIONS AND SOURCES: |
|
||||
|______________________________________________|</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Part B:(Some facts and logical conclusions about lawyers)</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> "AN AMERICAN TYRANNY,"
|
||||
by David C. Morrow:</p>
|
||||
<p> "AN AMERICAN TYRANNY,"
|
||||
by David C. Morrow:</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>LAWYERS MAKE THE LAWS, JUDGE THE LAWS, BREAK THE LAWS, FUDGE THE LAWS
|
||||
----------------> SHOULDN'T THIS CHANGE?
|
||||
@ -303,8 +303,8 @@ talking over murdering a 12-year-old child and burying bodies in New Jersey...
|
||||
Narcotics, manipulation of businesses that cause prices to spiral, we can
|
||||
go on for a long, long time. . . .It goes on and on.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Mob defector Gerald Zelmanowitz, testifying
|
||||
in 1973 before a U.S. Senate committee"</p>
|
||||
<p> Mob defector Gerald Zelmanowitz, testifying
|
||||
in 1973 before a U.S. Senate committee"</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>BUSH & THE MOB:</p>
|
||||
|
||||
@ -513,7 +513,7 @@ Thus the manipulation of global affairs began!</p>
|
||||
8 - Equal liability of all to labor.
|
||||
9 - Distribution of the population.
|
||||
10 - Free education to all in "public" schools.
|
||||
(Sounds like bigbro ta me, Booboo!)</p>
|
||||
(Sounds like bigbro ta me, Booboo!)</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The chart shows that in 1798 the following 3 things occurred:
|
||||
1 - Washington warned of the danger of the Illuminati.
|
||||
@ -531,7 +531,7 @@ International bankers at this time.</p>
|
||||
Illuminati's links and activities as "Control," which appears
|
||||
to be their new name. Get the damn chart - I don't care what
|
||||
you think of Baptists, these folks are just helping us now!
|
||||
?
|
||||
?
|
||||
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
||||
* PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE THIS TO AS MANY PEOPLE AS POSSIBLE !!! *
|
||||
* SEND A COPY TO YOUR POLICE, GOVERNORS, LEGISLATORS, RELATIVES !!! *
|
||||
|
@ -2,14 +2,14 @@
|
||||
keep my name and this sentence on it.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The Bill of Rights, a Status Report
|
||||
by Eric Postpischil</p>
|
||||
by Eric Postpischil</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> 4 September 1990</p>
|
||||
<p> 4 September 1990</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> 6 Hamlett Drive, Apt. 17
|
||||
Nashua, NH 03062</p>
|
||||
<p> 6 Hamlett Drive, Apt. 17
|
||||
Nashua, NH 03062</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> edp@jareth.enet.dec.com</p>
|
||||
<p> edp@jareth.enet.dec.com</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> How many rights do you have? You should check, because it
|
||||
might not be as many today as it was a few years ago, or
|
||||
@ -29,7 +29,7 @@
|
||||
wrongness, but the sheer number of rights that are under
|
||||
attack.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment I</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment I</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Congress shall make no law respecting an
|
||||
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
|
||||
@ -147,7 +147,7 @@
|
||||
custody to petition for redress and also limits the courts
|
||||
in which such an appeal may be heard.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment II</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment II</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the
|
||||
security of a free State, the right of the people
|
||||
@ -178,7 +178,7 @@
|
||||
granted permits, or towns where women are generally denied
|
||||
the right to carry a weapon for self-defense.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment III</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment III</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered
|
||||
in any house, without the consent of the Owner,
|
||||
@ -195,7 +195,7 @@
|
||||
a direct hit on the third amendment, but the disregard for
|
||||
private property is uncomfortably close.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment IV</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment IV</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The right of the people to be secure in their
|
||||
persons, houses, papers and effects, against
|
||||
@ -271,7 +271,7 @@
|
||||
at that time were wearing sweat pants and plaid shirts.
|
||||
</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment V</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment V</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> No person shall be held to answer for a capital,
|
||||
or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a
|
||||
@ -384,7 +384,7 @@
|
||||
property. Otherwise, the government auctions off the
|
||||
property and keeps the proceeds.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment VI</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment VI</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall
|
||||
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by
|
||||
@ -472,7 +472,7 @@
|
||||
the names of clients who paid cash for fees exceeding
|
||||
$10,000.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment VII</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment VII</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> In Suits at common law, where the value in
|
||||
controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the
|
||||
@ -486,7 +486,7 @@
|
||||
by it and has not made attacks on it that I am aware of.
|
||||
This is our only remaining safe haven in the Bill of Rights.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment VIII</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment VIII</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Excessive bail shall not be required, nor
|
||||
excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual
|
||||
@ -521,7 +521,7 @@
|
||||
cocaine in a separate but similar case). Judge Cauthorn
|
||||
called the sentences "Draconian."</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment IX</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment IX</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain
|
||||
rights, shall not be construed to deny or
|
||||
@ -533,7 +533,7 @@
|
||||
law can you appeal to a court to find you not guilty of
|
||||
violating because the law denies a right retained by you?</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Amendment X</p>
|
||||
<p> Amendment X</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The powers not delegated to the United States by
|
||||
the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the
|
||||
|
@ -2,13 +2,13 @@
|
||||
|
||||
<p>NOTE: This is a report on Government and military techniques, notterrorist!</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> B R A I N W A S H I N G
|
||||
By Lorenzo Saint Dubois</p>
|
||||
<p> B R A I N W A S H I N G
|
||||
By Lorenzo Saint Dubois</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>The report that follows is a condensation of a study by training experts of
|
||||
the important information available on this subject.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> BACKGROUND</p>
|
||||
<p> BACKGROUND</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Brainwashing, as a technique, has been used for centuries and is no mystery
|
||||
to psychologists. In this sense, brainwashing means involuntary re-education
|
||||
@ -294,8 +294,8 @@ resistance are:</p>
|
||||
intelligence was not known to the prisoner. His attempts to protect
|
||||
such information was made at the expense of hastening his own breakdown.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> EXERCISE OF CONTROL
|
||||
A SCHEDULE FOR BRAINWASHING</p>
|
||||
<p> EXERCISE OF CONTROL
|
||||
A SCHEDULE FOR BRAINWASHING</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>From the many fragmentary accounts reviewed, the following appears to be the
|
||||
most likely description of what occurs during brainwashing. In the period
|
||||
|
@ -4,9 +4,9 @@
|
||||
|
||||
[Reproduced with permission from _The Spotlight_, June 22, 1992
|
||||
|
||||
The Spotlight
|
||||
The Spotlight
|
||||
300 Independence Avenue, SE
|
||||
Washington, DC 20003
|
||||
Washington, DC 20003
|
||||
|
||||
Free use of this material is permitted provided that _The Spotlight_
|
||||
is credited, including publisher's address]
|
||||
@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ Council demand his extradition to Cuba or the World Court, as Bush and the
|
||||
UN have done in the case of Libyan suspects in a similar crime?
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
By Warren Hough
|
||||
By Warren Hough
|
||||
Exclusive to The Spotlight
|
||||
|
||||
Washington, DC, 6/12/92 -- Long-suppressed records have turned up
|
||||
@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ airplane bombing. My case was heard by military, civilian and appellate
|
||||
courts. I was found innocent each time. But after each acquittal, the CIA
|
||||
came up with new `suggestions' about my guilt."
|
||||
|
||||
PALE AND FRAIL
|
||||
PALE AND FRAIL
|
||||
|
||||
Finally the Venezuelan government told Washington it could no longer
|
||||
hold Bosch. Pale and in frail health, the falsely accused "terrorist" was
|
||||
|
@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>
|
||||
*** The "Liberation of the Camps": FACTS vs. LIES ***</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> By Theodore J. O'Keefe
|
||||
<p> By Theodore J. O'Keefe
|
||||
_______________________________________________________________________________</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Nothing has been more effective in establishing the authenticity of the Holocaust in the minds of Americans than the terrible scenes U.S. GI's discovered when they entered the German concentration camps at the close of World War II.</p>
|
||||
@ -19,13 +19,13 @@ es, it was true: the Germans DID exterminate six million Jews, most of them in l
|
||||
, if not all, of the horror stories Americans were told about Dachau, Buchenwald, and other places captured by the U.S. Army, the Holocaust could pass for one of the most documented, one of the most authenticated, one of the most proven historical ep
|
||||
sodes in the human record.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> A Different Reality</p>
|
||||
<p> A Different Reality</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>* But it is known today that, very soon after the liberation of the *
|
||||
* camps, American authorities were aware that the real story of the camps *
|
||||
* was quite different from the one in which they were coaching military *
|
||||
* public information officers, government spokesmen, politicians, *
|
||||
* journalists, and other mouthpieces. *</p>
|
||||
* journalists, and other mouthpieces. *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> When American and British forces overran western and central Germany in the spring of 1945, they were followed by troops charged with discovering and securing any evidence of German war crimes. Among them was Dr. Charles Larson, one of America's
|
||||
leading forensic pathologists, who was assigned to the Judge Advocate General's Department. Dr. Larson performed autopsies at Dachau and some twenty other German camps, examining on some days more than 100 corpses. After his grim work at Dachau, he w
|
||||
@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ s questioned for three days by U.S. Army prosecutors.^1</p>
|
||||
hat to his knowledge he "was the only forensic pathologist on duty in the entire European Theater,"^3 informed "Wichita Eagle" reporter Jan Floerchinger that "never was a case of poison gas uncovered."^4 Neither Dr. Larson nor any other forensic spec
|
||||
alist has ever been cited by any Holocaust historian to substantiate a single case of death by poison gas, whether Zyklon-B or any other variety.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Typhus, Not Poison Gas</p>
|
||||
<p> Typhus, Not Poison Gas</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> If not by gassing, how did the unfortunate victims at Dachau, Buchenwald, and Bergen-Belsen perish? Were they tortured to death? Deliberately starved? The answers to these questions are known as well. As Dr. Larson and other Allied medical men d
|
||||
scovered, the chief cause of death at Dachau, Belsen, and the other camps was disease, above all typhus, an old and terrible scourge of mankind which until recently flourished in places where populations were crowded together in circumstances where p
|
||||
@ -46,19 +46,19 @@ ollapse of Germany's food, transport, and public health systems led to catastrop
|
||||
who was with U.S. forces in Germany in 1945. Dr. Gordon reported in 1948 that "The outbreaks in concentration camps and prisons made up the great bulk of typhus infection encountered in Germany." Dr. Gordon summarized the causes for the outbreaks as
|
||||
follows:</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> * * *</p>
|
||||
<p> * * *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Germany was in chaos. The destruction of whole cities and the path left by advancing armies produced a disruption of living conditions contributing to the spread of the disease. Sanitation was low grade, public utilities were seriously disrupted
|
||||
food supply and food distribution was poor, housing was inadequate and order and discipline were everywhere lacking. Still more important, a shifting of populations was occurring such as few countries and few times have experienced.^5</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> * * *</p>
|
||||
<p> * * *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Dr. Gordon's findings are corroborated by Dr. Russel Barton, today a psychiatrist of international repute, who entered Bergen-Belsen with British forces as a young medical student in 1945. Barton, who volunteered to care for the diseased survivo
|
||||
s, testified under sworn oath in a Toronto courtroom in 1985 that "Thousands of prisoners who died at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp during World War II weren't deliberately starved to death but died from a rash of diseases."^6 Dr. Barton furth
|
||||
r testified that on entering the camp he had credited stories of deliberate starvations but had decided such stories were untrue after inspecting the well-equipped kitchens and the meticulously maintained ledgers, dating back to 1942, of food cooked
|
||||
nd dispensed each day. Despite noisily publicized claims and widespread popular notions to the contrary, no researcher has been able to document a German policy of extermination through starvation in the German camps.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> No Lampshades, No Handbags, Etc.</p>
|
||||
<p> No Lampshades, No Handbags, Etc.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> What of the ghoulish stories of concentration camp inmates skinned for their tattoos, flayed to make lampshades and handbags, or other artifacts? What of the innumerable "torture racks," "meathooks," whipping posts, gallows, and other tools of t
|
||||
rment and death that are reported to have abounded at every German camp? These allegations, and even more grotesque ones profferred by Soviet prosecutors, found their way into the record at Nuremberg.</p>
|
||||
@ -87,12 +87,12 @@ es, eliminated their foes with Stalinist ruthlessness.</p>
|
||||
mbs, their commander, who wrote a preface to the report, "how the prisoners themselves organized a deadly terror within the Nazi terror."^12</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Fleck and Tenenbaum described the power exercised by criminals and Communists as follows:
|
||||
* * *</p>
|
||||
* * *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>. . . The trusties, who in time became almost exclusively Communist Germans, had the power of life and death over all other inmates. They could sentence a man or a group to almost certain death . . . The Communist trusties were directly responsible f
|
||||
r a large part of the brutalities at Buchenwald.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> * * *</p>
|
||||
<p> * * *</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Colonel Donald B. Robinson, chief historian of the American military government in Germany, summarized the Fleck-Tenenbaum report in an article which appeared in "The American Mercury" shortly after the war. Colonel Robinson wrote succinctly of
|
||||
he American investigators' findings: "It appeared that the prisoners who agreed with the Communists ate; those who didn't starved to death."^13</p>
|
||||
@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ he American investigators' findings: "It appeared that the prisoners who agreed
|
||||
<p> Additional corroboration of inmate brutality has been provided by Ellis E. Spackman, who, as Chief of Counter-Intelligence Arrests and Detentions for the Seventh U.S. Army, was involved in the liberation of Dachau. Spackman, later a professor of
|
||||
history at San Bernardino Valley College in California, wrote in 1966 that at Dachau "the prisoners were the actual instruments that inflicted the barbarities on their fellow prisoners."^14</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> "Gas Chambers"</p>
|
||||
<p> "Gas Chambers"</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> On December 9, 1944 Col. Paul Kirk and Lt. Col. Edward J. Gully inspected the German concentration camp at Natzweiler in Alsace. They reported their findings to their superiors at the headquarters of the U.S. 6th Army Group, which subsequently f
|
||||
rwarded Kirk and Gully's report to the War Crimes Division. While, significantly, the full text of their report has never been published, it has been revealed, by an author supportive of Holocaust claims, that the two investigators were careful to ch
|
||||
@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ Hollywood, and the print media in New York continue to churn out millions of wor
|
||||
ica has ever so suffered so complete and devestating defeat as did Germany in 1945, the mass media and the politicians and bureaucrats behave as if Hitler, his troops, and his concentration camps continue to exist in an eternal present, and our opini
|
||||
n makers continue to distort, through ignorance or malice, the facts about the camps.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Time for the Truth</p>
|
||||
<p> Time for the Truth</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> It is time that the government and the professional historians revealed the facts about Dachau, Buchenwald, and the other camps. It is time that they let the American public know how the inmates died, and how they didn't die. It is time that the
|
||||
claims as to mass murder by gassing were clarified and investigated in the same manner as any other claims of murder are dealt with. It is time that the free ride certain groups have enjoyed as the result of unchallenged Holocaust claims be terminate
|
||||
@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ onewalling reality. The truth will out, and it is time the government of this co
|
||||
the years 1933-1945, so that we may put paid to the lies, without fear or favor, and carry out the work of reconciliation and renewal that is and must be the granite foundation of mutual tolerance between peoples and of a peace based on justice, rath
|
||||
r than on guns, barbed wire, prisons, and lies.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> NOTES</p>
|
||||
<p> NOTES</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> 1. _Crime Doctor_, a biography of Larson by John D. McCallum, Mercer,
|
||||
Washington & Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, 1979, p. 69.</p>
|
||||
@ -202,28 +202,28 @@ _______________________________________________________________________________<
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Theodore J. O'Keefe is the editor of "The Journal of Historical Review." Educated at Harvard, he has studied history and literature on three continents, and has published many articles on historical and political subjects.
|
||||
_____________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| The conclusions of the early U.S. Army investigations as to the |
|
||||
| truth about the wartime German concentration camps have since been |
|
||||
| corroborated by all subsequent investigators and can be summarized: |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| 1. The harrowing scenes of dead and dying inmates were not the result of |
|
||||
| a German policy of "extermination," but rather the result of epidemics of |
|
||||
| typhus and other disease brought about largely by the effects of Allied |
|
||||
| aerial attacks. |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| aerial attacks. |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| 2. Stories of Nazi supercriminals and sadists who turned Jews and others |
|
||||
| into handbags and lampshades for their private profit or amusement were |
|
||||
| sick lies or diseased fantasies; indeed, the German authorities |
|
||||
| consistently punished corruption AND cruelty on the part of camp |
|
||||
| commanders and guards. |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| commanders and guards. |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| 3. On the other hand, the representations of the newly liberated inmates |
|
||||
| to have been saints and martyrs of Hitlerism were quite often very far |
|
||||
| from the truth; indeed, most of the brutalities inflicted on camp |
|
||||
| detainees were the work of their fellow prisoners, in contravention of |
|
||||
| German policy and German orders. |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| German policy and German orders. |
|
||||
| |
|
||||
| 4. The alleged homicidal showers and gas chambers had been used either |
|
||||
| for bathing camp inmates or delousing their clothes; the claim that they |
|
||||
| had been used to murder Jews or other human beings is a contemptible |
|
||||
@ -236,11 +236,11 @@ _______________________________________________________________________________<
|
||||
|_____________________________________________________________________________|</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Send $2 for a packet of literature and a full listing of books, audio cassettes and videotapes. Or, order more copies of this leaflet, postpaid, at the following prices:
|
||||
10 copies: $2
|
||||
50 copies: $5
|
||||
100 copies or more: 8 cents each
|
||||
10 copies: $2
|
||||
50 copies: $5
|
||||
100 copies or more: 8 cents each
|
||||
|
||||
THE INSTITUTE FOR HISTORICAL REVIEW
|
||||
THE INSTITUTE FOR HISTORICAL REVIEW
|
||||
1822 1/2 Newport Blvd., Suite 191
|
||||
Costa Mesa, California 92627
|
||||
</p></xml>
|
@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
|
||||
<xml><p>
|
||||
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||||
CARTER'S TRUE LEGACY SHOCKING</p>
|
||||
CARTER'S TRUE LEGACY SHOCKING</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> By Mike Blair
|
||||
<p> By Mike Blair
|
||||
Exclusive to The SPOTLIGHT</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>Washington, DC -- While many frown when they think of the high interest
|
||||
@ -106,8 +106,8 @@ he was unable to pull off the presidential coup.</p>
|
||||
May 25, 1992. This text may be freely reproduced provided acknowledgement
|
||||
to The Spotlight appears, including this address:</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The SPOTLIGHT
|
||||
<p> The SPOTLIGHT
|
||||
300 Independence Avenue, SE
|
||||
Washington, DC 20003
|
||||
Washington, DC 20003
|
||||
|
||||
</p></xml>
|
@ -678,10 +678,10 @@ Downloaded from Just Say Yes. 2 lines, More than 1500 files online!
|
||||
Do you write? Give us a call! 415-922-2008 CASFA </p>
|
||||
<p> Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)</p>
|
||||
<p> & the Temple of the Screaming Electron 415-935-5845
|
||||
Just Say Yes 415-922-1613
|
||||
Rat Head 415-524-3649
|
||||
Cheez Whiz 408-363-9766
|
||||
Reality Check 415-474-2602
|
||||
Just Say Yes 415-922-1613
|
||||
Rat Head 415-524-3649
|
||||
Cheez Whiz 408-363-9766
|
||||
Reality Check 415-474-2602
|
||||
|
||||
Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
|
||||
arcane knowledge, political extremism, diversive sexuality,
|
||||
|
@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ must be created. And so on, forever.</p>
|
||||
* POLICE MUST MONITOR THEM TO *
|
||||
* BE SURE THEY ARE NOT ACQUIRING *
|
||||
* TOO MUCH POWER. *
|
||||
****************************************** </p>
|
||||
****************************************** </p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> In practice, of course, this cannot really regress to
|
||||
infinity, but only to the point where every other citizen, or
|
||||
@ -281,7 +281,7 @@ today who isn't paranoid must be crazy!!!</p>
|
||||
* "IF THE GOVERMENT DOESN'T *
|
||||
* TRUST THE PEOPLE, WHY DOESN'T *
|
||||
* IT DISSOLVE THEM AND ELECT A *
|
||||
* NEW PEOPLE?" *
|
||||
* NEW PEOPLE?" *
|
||||
**********************************</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> The deliberate production of misinformation (or, as
|
||||
@ -498,9 +498,9 @@ I am mad. </p>
|
||||
<p> Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> & the Temple of the Screaming Electron 415-935-5845
|
||||
Just Say Yes 415-922-2008
|
||||
Rat Head 415-524-3649
|
||||
Cheez Whiz 408-363-9766</p>
|
||||
Just Say Yes 415-922-2008
|
||||
Rat Head 415-524-3649
|
||||
Cheez Whiz 408-363-9766</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
|
||||
arcane knowledge, political extremism, diversive sexuality,
|
||||
@ -509,6 +509,6 @@ I am mad. </p>
|
||||
<p> Full access for first-time callers. We don't want to know who you are,
|
||||
where you live, or what your phone number is. We are not Big Brother.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> "Raw Data for Raw Nerves"</p>
|
||||
<p> "Raw Data for Raw Nerves"</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p></p></xml>
|
@ -18,8 +18,8 @@ Lines: 321</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> the following is taken from the June, 1978 issue of "Gallery" magazine:
|
||||
__________________________________________________________________________
|
||||
THE CIA'S SECRET WEAPONS SYSTEMS
|
||||
by Andrew Stark</p>
|
||||
THE CIA'S SECRET WEAPONS SYSTEMS
|
||||
by Andrew Stark</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> Exploding wine bottles, guns constructed out of pipes,
|
||||
bullets made of teeth, aspirin explosives: they sound like
|
||||
@ -304,13 +304,12 @@ Lines: 321</p>
|
||||
<p> Andrew Stark is a pseudonym for a specialist on weaponry.</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>--
|
||||
daveus rattus </p>
|
||||
daveus rattus </p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> yer friendly neighborhood ratman</p>
|
||||
<p> yer friendly neighborhood ratman</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> KOYAANISQATSI</p>
|
||||
<p> KOYAANISQATSI</p>
|
||||
|
||||
<p> ko.yan.nis.qatsi (from the Hopi Language) n. 1. crazy life. 2. life
|
||||
in turmoil. 3. life out of balance. 4. life disintegrating.
|
||||
5. a state of life that calls for another way of living.
|
||||
t |