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<xml><p>The SPOTLIGHT January 7 & 14, 1991 Data Entry by SYSOP
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SEARCH FOR REAL ENEMY CENTERED IN WASHINGTON
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By Jim Townsend
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The main enemy facing the American people is not located in
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Iraq, Moscow, Havana or Peking. It,s located in Washington, D.C.
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and it's ruled over by elected congressmen and women who in an
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unholy alliance with its tens of thousands of bureaucrats, are out
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to skunk the civilian population of this nation.
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Government, as it's known, is a big business and, just like the
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multinational corporations, this government has been allowed to
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spawn. It's dedicated to reducing its citizens to paupers. As the
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script is written, if everything goes as planned, the New World
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Order will see the merger of the U.S,, Soviet Russia and, perhaps,
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even England. If it goes as the script is written, "We, the People"
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will have come full circle from near political slaves to freedom
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under a constitution to political slaves under the New World Order.
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Once the New World Order has been implemented, just as the
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people in Russia came to understand under communism, the state is
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the total authority and owns every thing.
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The unseen forces that have been dedicated to this New World
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Order have been plotting, planning and working for the day when
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freedom as we have come to know it, will be a thing of the past.
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Private business and competition will cease to exist. Once again,
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central planning will bet the order of the day; people will work
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where their political commissar dictates and live in whatever part
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of the world they are forced to move.
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YESTERDAY'S WORRIES
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Only yesterday, the people were worried about the collapse of
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the savings and loan companies that were projected to cost the
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taxpayers up to a half-trillion bucks. Banks were failing, the real
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estate moguls were starting to see their empires go under the
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hammer, Congress was working night and day to heap more taxes on
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the backs of the already bent taxpayers and, to top it off, a
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national election was just around the corner. These were just some
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of the problems facing our so-called national leaders. What to do?
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Well, if one could find a trusting Mideast dictator who was
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hurting from an eight-year war and having trouble selling his oil
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at what was needed to pull his country out of a military sinkhole,
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it could be just the ticket to take people's minds off domestic
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problems that seem insurmountable on the home front.
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Finding a greedy and brutal Mideast dictator was easy enough.
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With just the slightest hint from the U.S. State Department that
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our government would not oppose a move on territory that had been
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politically chopped off the dictator's country in the past, you
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have a gift-wrapped diversion from the domestic problems on the
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home front.
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Just what was needed,. Now, quickly assemble as many of the armed
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forces as possible, rush them overseas to the sand dunes of Saudi
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Arabia, confront the double-crossed dictator and demand that he
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leave Kuwait or else.
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WORKED LIKE A CHARM
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By accident or design, it worked like a charm and suddenly all
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the talk was about Saddam Hussein, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, troop
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movements, military demands and what was going to happen next.
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Suddenly, the media, printed or electronic, were no longer
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talking about our cosmetic problems. While the Justice Department
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continued to indict and arrest savings and loan officials, the
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focus was on Kuwait and Hussein. The rip-off the Congress and the
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president loaded on all taxpayers' backs was shoved completely into
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the background. The domestic pressure that had congressmen and
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their political parties so worried just seemed to fade away.
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Result? Almost 100 percent of incumbents were re-elected. The
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national movement to throw the bums out had not only fizzled, it
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had completely flopped.
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Elections are history for another two years, but the problems
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"We, the People" are facing in the coming months ar only beginning.
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We don't know if Congress is going to allow President George Bush
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to usurp the right of Congress to get us into a shooting war. The
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public must react with letters, phone calls and telegrams to their
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congressmen immediately. People must let Bush know we are not
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willing to pay the cost of fighting someone else's war at the
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expense of 30,000 or more body bags full of our young soldiers.
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A WAR NOT WORTH WINNING
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We must let the Bush administration know that we are not going
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to buy any more government-instigated, no-win wars. We were
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suckered into a no-win war in Korea and another one in Vietnam. All
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undeclared but paid for by some 100,000 of the cream of the crop of
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our youth. It is my contention that a war not worth winning is not
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worth fighting and that the right of determining if this nation is
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to engage in a war belongs to the people who must make their views
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known to Congress.
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If this war gets off the ground, as it appears it will, and if
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Saddam Hussein decides to stand and fight, as most military men
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seem to feel he will, we could be locked up in a war for years.
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Saddam Hussein has already shown he not only will fight, but is
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willing to see untold thousands of his troops killed and wounded if
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he can inflict heavy casualties on his enemy.
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When the Bush body bags start coming back by the hundreds and
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thousands, the public is going to have a fit. By then, however,
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we'll be too involved to get out. Thus, the time to act is now.
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Don't let the Washington warlords use Saddam Hussein to promote a
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shooting war to bring on the New World Order. Act now. |