An Evil Synthesis

January 28, 2008

9/11: Truth and Lies

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 11:33 pm

Hopsicker: Adnan Khashogghi, John Gray and Barry Zwicker

“Rogue” CIA, Islamic terrorists, and the Russian mafia.
Titan
Iran-Contra
Barry Seal

Dave Emory: interscetion of underworld and overworld

Katz

Loftus

Edmonds

Dale Scott

Notes

“Interview with Daniel Hopsicker: Victor Kozeny’s Last Stan.” For the Record 574, October 29. 2006.
http://ftrsummary.blogspot.com/2006/11/ftr-574-interview-with-daniel.html

Peter Dale Scott, The Alpha Group…

Paul Thompson, The Terror Timeline

Paul Thompson, interview on Link TV’s “9/11: Press for Truth”
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2147695828990077136

www.cooperativeresearch.org

January 27, 2008

Epigraph

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 10:29 pm

“You shall know the truth and the truth shall make you mad.”

- Aldous Huxley

Wolves in Sheep’s Clothing

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 10:28 pm

“…a criminal conspiracy so vast and monstrous it defies imagination. Using “Christian” groups as tax-exempt and cleverly camouflaged covers, wealthy right-wing businessmen and “clergy” have now assumed firm control over the biggest prize of all – the government of the United States of America. First, some housekeeping is in order. My use of the term “Christian” is merely to clearly identify the criminal conspirators who have chosen to misuse their self-avowed devotion to Jesus Christ to advance a very un-Christian agenda. The term “Christian Mafia” is what several Washington politicians have termed the major conspirators and it is not intended to debase Christians or infer that they are criminals . I will also use the term Nazi – not for shock value – but to properly tag the political affiliations of the early founders of the so-called “Christian” power cult called the Fellowship. The most important element of this story is that a destructive religious movement has now achieved almost total control over the machinery of government of the United States – its executive, its legislature, several state governments, and soon, the federal judiciary, including the U.S. Supreme Court.”

Notes

Wayne Madsen, EXPOSÉ: THE “CHRISTIAN” MAFIA, Insider Magazine,
http://www.insider-magazine.com/ChristianMafia.htm

Dave Emory, “The Future: Technology, Theocracy and the Thousand Year Reich”

Frederick Clarkson, Eternal Hostility: The Struggle Between Theocracy and Democracy

Sara Diamond, Spiritual Warfare: The Politics of the Christian Right

Strategy of Tension

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 3:51 pm

“the stay-behind network had served as a tool to spread fear amongst the population” p. 247

“Such an environment of fear, as the Gladio evidence shows, is ideally suited to manipulate the masses on both sides into more radical positions” p.248

Terrorism as psy-warfare

Gore’s strange alliance with the Phelps (see Dave Emory’s lecture)

Notes

Peter Levenda, Sinister Forces, pp. 124-126, 129, 143 etc.

Jon E. Dougherty, “Gore sought help from anti-homosexual group” WorldNet Daily, posted October 25, 2000.
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=15559

Dave Emory, “The Future: Technology, Theocracy and the Thousand-Year Reich”
http://www.spitfirelist.com/

Daniel Ganser? Nato’s Secret Armies

Bohemian Grove and other Secret Societies

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 3:33 pm

Peter Levenda, Sinister Forces, p.150

Craig Heimbichner, Blood on the Altar: The Secret History of the World’s Most Dangerous Secret Society.

January 26, 2008

Oklahoma

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 10:33 am

“The ‘OKBOMB’ investigation was rotten from the foundations up,” writes Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in The Secret Life of Bill Clinton. The British Sunday Telegraph’s correspondent in the United States devotes the first seven chapters of his investigative book to documenting the massive cover-up of the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah federal building in Oklahoma city which killed 162 people, many of them children in a day-care centre, in the greatest terrorist attack on American soil at the time.

the Official Story

the Wilburns

J. D. Cash

Carol Howe

Elohim City

Lt. Andreas Strassmeir

The Ayran Republican Army

The SPLC

Conclusion

Notes

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, The Secret Life of Bill Clinton: the unreported stories, Washington D.C. Regnery 1997

J. D. Cash, OKC Bombing Archive, McCurtin Daily Gazette,
http://www.mccurtain.com/okcarchives.shtml

Radio interviews with J.D. Cash
http://judicial-inc.biz/8_14_let_the_assassinations_begin.htm

The John Doe Times
http://www.constitution.org/okc/jdt.htm

J.D. Cash and Lt. Colonel Roger Charles (U.S.M.C. retired), “Southern Poverty Law Center tracked bomb plot around the globe,” McCurtain Daily Gazette,
http://judicial-inc.biz/OKC_Bomb_News_article.htm

David Hoffman, The Oklahoma City Bombing and the Politics of Terror

January 13, 2008

Paedophilia in High Places

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 6:50 pm

Wayne Madsen: “In early 2003, British police began to close in on some top suspects in the Operation Ore investigation, including senior members of Blair’s government. However, Blair issued a D-Notice, resulting in a gag order on the press from publishing any details of the investigation. Blair cited the impending war in Iraq as a reason for the D-Notice. Police also discovered links between British Labor government pedophile suspects and the trafficking of children for purposes of prostitution from Belgium and Portugal (including young boys from the Casa Pia orphanage in Portugal).”

“WMR has learned that the Bush administration, like that of Blair, is rife with pedophiles in top positions. The pedophile network also extends to the U.S. defense industry, particularly some of the companies that have been involved in the sexual abuse of minors at overt and covert U.S. prisons in Abu Ghraib, Iraq; Guantanamo, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Thailand, and now, at three prisons in Ethiopia.”

See Levenda on Operation Monarch.

Notes

Wayne Madsen, “Tony Blair Declares News Black-Out on Pedophile Investigations,” OpEdNews, April 5, 2007
http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_wayne_ma_070405_tony_blair_declares_.htm

Peter Levanda, The Manson Secret, pp. 24-31

January 9, 2008

A New Religion

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 3:31 pm

Theosophy?

“The increasingly successful fusion of an ephemeral, ill-defined spirituality, often hastily borrowed from native peoples, with environmental science bothered me as well. It seemed to me that the purpose of this fusion was to silence debate. Shaky science and attendant global management proposals could be pulled into the realm of the unquestionable once wrapped in the penumbra of sanctity. Critics could be attacked in their character. This is why religious belief and democratic politics don’t mix well. Democracy requires continual and creative compromise: religious belief cannot be compromised. The more leaders of nongovernmental organizations wrapped themselves in spirituality, the more suspicious I became about their commitment to democracy.”

Elaine Dewar, Cloak of Green, pp. 250-251

December 30, 2007

Media

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 7:55 pm

The most successful journalists are rarely the best ones, as one very good journalist describes in his experience in Washington. “The people who succeeded and did well,” says Robert Parry, “were those who didn’t stand up, who didn’t write the big stories, who looked the other way when history was happening in front of them, and went along either consciously or just by cowardice with the deception of the American people.”

In the “Origins of the Overclass,” Steve Kangas who appears to have been murdered in 1999, describes the relaltionship between the CIA and the media. “Journalism is a perfect cover for CIA agents,” Kangas pointed out. “People talk freely to journalists, and few think suspiciously of a journalist aggressively searching for information. Journalists also have power, influence and clout. Not surprisingly, the CIA began a mission in the late 1940s to recruit American journalists on a wide scale, a mission it dubbed Operation MOCKINGBIRD. The agency wanted these journalists not only to relay any sensitive information they discovered, but also to write anti-communist, pro-capitalist propaganda when needed.”

Gary Webb – Robert Parry

Katherine Graham – Sam Smith

Graham, in a 1988 speech to senior CIA employees, said: “There are some things the general public does not need to know and shouldn’t. I believe democracy flourishes when the government can take legitimate steps to keep its secrets and when the press can decide whether to print what it knows.”

(In the 1950s, Graham’s husband, Philip, played an important role in Operation Mockingbird, a major and remarkably successful effort by the CIA to co-opt journalists. Some 25 major news organizations and 400 journalists were seconded by the agency for its purposes during this period, as admitted by the CIA itself during the Church committee hearings. As one agency operative put it, “You could get a journalist cheaper than a good call girl, for a couple hundred dollars a month.”)

Michael Parenti: “In sum, the news media’s daily performance under what is called “democratic capitalism” is not a failure but a skillfully evasive success. We often hear that the press “got it wrong” or “dropped the ball” on this or that story. In fact, the media do their job remarkably well. Media people have a trained incapacity for the whole truth. Their job is not to inform but disinform, not to advance democratic discourse but to dilute and mute it. Their task is to give every appearance of being conscientiously concerned about events of the day, saying so much while meaning so little, offering so many calories with so few nutrients. When we understand this, we move from a liberal complaint about the press’s sloppy performance to a radical analysis of how the media maintain the dominant paradigm with much craft and craftiness.”

In The Secret Life of Bill Clinton, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard expresses his dismay with the American media’s coverage of the Timothy McVeigh trial for the Oklahoma bombing. “The reaction of the press disturbed me deeply. I never imagined that the machinery of cover-up could be so oppressively efficient.” (p.8) Evans-Pritchard alleges that the investigation was “rotten from the foundations up” and that the U.S. government were determined to suppress information that indicated that the Oklahoma bombing was “a broad conspiracy involving several members of the neo-Nazi movement in Oklahoma.”

George Seldes, Lords of the Press: “it is possible to fool all the people all the time – when government and press cooperate.”

Notes

Sam Smith, “The Canonization of Katherine Graham,” http://www.ratical.org/ratville/JFK/JohnJudge/PentaPap.html#CoKG

Daniel Brandt, “CIA and the Press: The Mighty Wurlitzer,” http://www.geocities.com/capitolhill/8425/CIAPRESS.HTM

Michael Parenti, “Monopoly Media Manipulation,” Michael Parenti Political Archive, May 2001,
http://www.michaelparenti.org/MonopolyMedia.html

Into the Buzzsaw: Leading Journalists Expose the Myth of a Free Press. ed. Kristina Borjesson, Prometheus Books, 2002

Steve Kangas, “The Origins of the Overclass,” Conspiracy Archive,
http://www.conspiracyarchive.com/NWO/Overclass.htm

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, The Secret Life of Bill Clinton: the unreported stories, 1997

Into the Buzzsaw

Robert Parry, “Fooling America,” A talk by Robert Parry given in Santa Monica on March 28, 1993
http://www.webcom.com/lpease/collections/conspiracies/parryspeech.htm

December 29, 2007

The environmental oil barons

Filed under: Uncategorized — maidhc @ 8:04 pm

According to British environmental writer and activist George Monbiot, the United States government’s reluctance to combat climate change is due to “two great corrupting forces.” One is the corporate media, which he accuses of “downplaying the threat of climate change and demonising anyone who tries to address it.” The second corrupting force is campaign finance. “The Senate rejects effective action on climate change because its members are bought and bound by the companies which stand to lose,” Monbiot writes in a recent column in the Guardian. “Since 1990, the energy and natural resources sector (mostly coal, oil, gas and electricity) has given $418m to federal politicians in the US. Transport companies have given $355m.” Both political parties benefit, although the Republicans benefit most. “During the 2000 presidential campaign, oil and gas companies lavished money on George Bush, but they also gave Al Gore $142,000, while transport companies gave him $347,000.” Monbiot concludes bitterly that, “The whole US political system is in hock to people who put their profits ahead of the biosphere.”

Based on such compelling evidence, George Monbiot and other environmentalists understandably see the issue of global warming as a clearcut battle between self-serving oil companies recklessly funding climate change deniers on one side, and independent environmental groups selflessly fighting for the future of the planet on the other side. But the truth, as Oscar Wilde once observed, is rarely that pure and never so simple.

In the history of the oil industry, the Rockefeller family towers above all others. In 1870, John D. Rockefeller founded the Standard Oil Company which quickly developed a monopoly over the fledgling industry through such means as “stealth, deception, spies, violence, and the secret takeover of enemies who became friends.” (Dewar, p.260). By 1904, Standard controlled 91% of production and 85% of final sales, earning it the nickname “The Octopus.” Eventually, the unpopularity of Standard’s monopoly, upheld by Ida Tarbell’s excellent muckraking, drew the regulatory attention of the federal government. In 1909, the US Department of Justice sued Standard under federal anti-trust law. On May 15, 1911, the US Supreme Court declared the Standard Oil group to be an “unreasonable” monopoly under the Sherman Antitrust Act. Standard was ordered to break up into 34 independent companies with different boards of directors. “This seemingly devastating blow apparently taught the Octopus members to pay close attention to the formation of public opinion,” Elaine Dewar writes in Cloak of Green (pp.260-261). By then, John D. Rockefeller was the richest man in the world, and the dissolution of the Standard Oil monopoly would not seriously hamper the family’s enormous power, which “did not spring from money, but from the unique network of Rockefeller institutions and associations, beginning in the economy but now stretching axcross all the political, cultural, and intellectual boundaries of the national enterprise.” (The Rockefellers, p. 486)

nor their influence over the course of the twentieth century and beyond.

In 1966, one of the 34 successor companies to Standard Oil, Standard’s Atlantic merged with the independent company Richfield to form Atlantic Richfield or ARCO. Despite the break-up of Standard, ARCO’s founder, Robert O. Anderson, knew the Rockefeller family well enough to share the million acre Bodoquena Ranch in Brazil with John D.’s grandson, David Rockefeller, and another partner. He also served on the board of Chase Manhattan Bank, of which David was chairman. Anderson also owned a million acres in the United States, making him America’s largest rancher. Apart from huge stakes in ranching and the oil business, Anderson was renowned for his environmental philanthropy. According to his obituary in the New York Times, he helped found the Worldwatch Institute, the International Institute for Environment and Development, and the John Muir Institute of the Environment. William Engdahl, in A Century of War, also credits Anderson with the founding of Friends of the Earth, which Engdahl claims was deployed by the oil industry to target the rival nuclear industry. Despite Anderson’s environmental largesse, he was severely criticised for spearheading the controversial drilling of Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, the largest oil field discovered in American history. An opponent of the Alaskan pipeline once doused Anderson with a can of motor oil. But Anderson held some surprising views for an oil billionaire, seemingly at odds with the industry’s interests. “He was an oilman who warned of global warming caused by fossil-fuel consumption in the 1980s,” Douglas Martin wrote in the New York Times obituary, “and more than once advocated higher taxes on his industry.”

Bilderberg etc.

Robert O. Anderson had a lot in common with another of John D. Rockeller’s grandsons. Laurance Rockefeller, like Anderson, is remembered for his environmental philanthropy. He had founded the American Conservation Association in 1958. And in 1967, the first lady, Lady Bird Johnson, called him “America’s leading conservationist.” But like Anderson, Laurance’s relationship with nature was not uncontroversial. He too was a substantial rancher in South America, owning a controlling interest in 1.5 million acres of prime agricultural land on the Magdalena River in Colombia. According to Gerald Colby and Charlotte Dennett’s Thy Will Be Done, “Laurance’s interests ranged from harvesting rich mahogany timberlands to building a hotel on the the projected Pan-American Highway to raising cattle.”
Nelson Rockefeller’s “shining dream” …
Apart from his inherited oil money, much of Laurance Rockefeller’s wealth derived from his investments in aviation and the military-industrial complex, neither considered to be very environmentally-friendly enterprises. As his obituary in the Washington Post recalls, “A meeting with J.S. McDonnell Jr., the St. Louis aircraft engineer and designer, led to an infusion of cash that created McDonnell Aircraft Corp., one of the most important military contractors in the aftermath of World War II.” Although his personal wealth was estimated at $1.5 billion, Laurance advocated a “simpler life-style” for fellow Americans. Writing in the Reader’s Digest in 1976, he championed the “emerging ecological ethic and the change in life-style which [accompany] it.”

“wolf in sheep’s clothing” – Constantine

CIA, UFOs

Opening the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, [chairman?] Maurice Strong echoed Laurance Rockefeller’s call for a radical change in lifestyles:

“It is clear that current lifestyles and consumption pattern of the affluent middle class – involving high meat intake, consumption of large amounts of frozen and convenience foods, use of fossil fuels, appliances, home and work-place air-conditioning and suburban housing – are not sustainable. A shift is necessary toward lifestyles less geared to environmentally damaging consumption patterns.”

Strong, like Laurance Rockefeller, apparently didn’t see anything jarring about a billionaire, with at least five homes around the world, exhorting the middle class to lead a simpler lifestyle. Hypocrisy is not the only thing they have in common. As Canadian journalist Elaine Dewar showed in Cloak of Green, Maurice Strong’s career, like Robert O. Anderson’s, is closely tied to the Rockefellers. Introduced to David Rockefeller when Strong was only twenty, Rockefeller money seems to have followed him all his life. When asked by Dewar about Strong, David’s spokesman said his boss considered they had “a strong working relationship.” Soon after their first meeting, Strong began work at the UN in New York, the land for which John D. Rockefeller Jr. had donated. But he quickly returned to the oil business. As the first chairman and CEO of Petro-Canada, the first oil company Strong bought was the Canadian subsidiary of Arco, owned by his friend, Robert O. Anderson. He was a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation from 1971 to 1978, during which time he became prominent in UN environmental affairs. As secretary general of the 1972 Stockholm Conference, he received a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation for the running of his office, and received the writing services of ecologist Rene Dubos from the Rockefeller University. In 1997, he was joined by Steven Rockefeller, Nelson’s son, on the Earth Charter Commission, which published the Earth Charter in 2000. Funded by the Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, the Earth Charter is described as a “declaration of fundamental principles for building a just, sustainable, and peaceful global society for the 21st century.” Strong quit his position as … over his connections to Tongsun Park, who was indicted in the Iraq oil-for-food scandal. Although he owns a large ranch in Colorado, Strong now spends much of his time in Beijing where he does business. He is reported to be exporting Chinese cars to the US in partnership with George Soros. Strange activity indeed for an environmentalist.

Although Maurice Strong has played an enormous role in environmental activism within the UN, he is not that well known to the general public. That certainly can not be said about a close friend of his, who is without doubt the world’s best known environmentalist.

Al Gore

Presidential campaign sponsored with $100,000 from Strong.

Less well-known is his involvement with the oil business.
Elk Hills Charles Lewis

Armand Hammer, Occidental Oil

Ford Foundation: Natural Resources Defense Council (L.Rock.) Engdahl p.147
Colombia U’wa
omission of “who” Catherine Austin Fitts

Coincidentally, … Jacob Schiff

So, in this cursory tour of the strange interlocking history of the oil industry and the environmental movement, we’ve come full-circle. But what does it all mean?

“Philanthropy and its purposes remain the same as when John D. dispensed millions to winch the family name out of the mud,” Alexander Cockburn and Ken Silverstein write in American Babylon. “Today the environmental movement receives about $40 million a year from three oil companies which operate front groups politely described as private foundations.” One of the big three is the Rockefeller Family Fund…

There is one thing we can be reasonably certain of though, the earth cannot sustain many Rockefellers and their mega-rich friends and associates.

There is one thing of which we can be certain though. The relationship between the oil industry and the environmental movement is not the unambiguously adversarial one that environmentalists such as George Monbiot would have us believe.

[David H. Koch]

“speaking from the pocket, not the gut.” – Monbiot

Notes

George Monbiot, “Hurray! We’re Going Backwards,” The Guardian, 17th December 2007
http://www.monbiot.com/archives/2007/12/17/hurray-were-going-backwards/#more-1096

Douglas Martin, “Robert O. Anderson, Oil Executive, Dies at 90,” New York Times, December 6, 2007

Adam Bernstein, “Laurance Rockefeller Dies at 94,” Washington Post
Monday, July 12, 2004; Page B04
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A43444-2004Jul11?language=printer

Will Banyan, “Rockefeller Internationalism,” Nexus, February-March 2004.
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/articles/rockefeller.6.html

Laurance Rockefeller, “The Case for a Simpler Life-Style”, The Reader’s Digest, February 1976, p. 61

The Earth Charter Fund, Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors
http://rockpa.org/special_programs/the-earth-charter-fund/

http://www.philanthropy.com/stats/

http://www.muckety.com/

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