View Full Version : CIA internet op goes straight...
Nomen Nescio
02-10-2004, 11:00 PM
From another forum, a CIA internet op goes straight...its happened before,
The CIA is well known for infiltrating everything that moves..
This account is from a CIA op in Holland, hired to ridicule anyone that
posted anti G W Bush views to the NG he was assigned to...
http://lightscion.com/whistleblower.htm
chitlins con carny
02-11-2004, 01:26 PM
Nomen Nescio <nobody@dizum.com> wrote in message news:<19bbdbbc374cd40bbef6f465e372976b@dizum.com>...
> From another forum, a CIA internet op goes straight...its happened before,
> The CIA is well known for infiltrating everything that moves..
> This account is from a CIA op in Holland, hired to ridicule anyone that
> posted anti G W Bush views to the NG he was assigned to...
>
>
> http://lightscion.com/whistleblower.htm
If I were a terrorist, my target would be:
Yale
Spook City
The Devil's stomping ground
The Masonic shrine to Lucifer
The Birthplace of the Skull & Crossbones cult
The Birthplace of the Kennedy-Killing Zio-Nazi CIA-Assassins
The Birthplace of evil US Presidents.
Yale - The Devil's maternity ward.
That's why Yale rhymes with Hell.
U.S.A. Today
White House 'Bonesman' leads nation into the dark
Sept. 26, 2003
By Alexandra Robbins
"My senior year (at Yale University) I joined Skull and Bones, a
secret society," President Bush wrote in his autobiography, "so
secret, I can't say anything more."
He doesn't have to. He's practically turning the government into a
secret society - an old-boy, throwback establishment that even holds
its secret spy-court proceedings in an elaborately locked, windowless
room that sounds similar to the Bones' elaborately locked, practically
windowless "tomb," or campus clubhouse.
Bush, a loyal and particularly active member of Skull and Bones, a
mysterious, historically misogynist Yale-based secret society, seems
to have done almost all he can to promote a level of secrecy in
government not seen since the Nixon administration:
Last month, Bush-appointed Assistant Attorney General Robert McCallum,
a member of Bush's 1968 Skull and Bones class, filed pleadings in U.S.
District Court seeking to extend executive privilege to any government
official in pardon cases; the move makes information on presidential
pardons more secret than it has ever been.
After 9/11, without initially telling Congress, Bush assembled a
shadow government assigned to secret bunkers somewhere on the East
Coast. He also tried to cut off some members of Congress from
classified information about the anti-terrorist campaign.
The USA Patriot Act Bush eagerly signed lets the FBI - with permission
from a secret Washington "spy court" - view some customer records;
store owners cannot reveal the review
In October 2001, Attorney General John Ashcroft released a memo
encouraging federal agencies to withhold as much information as
possible from the public.
A month later, just before documents from the Reagan-Bush
administration were to be released, Bush signed an executive order
severely hindering public access to former presidents' records.
Bush also signed legislation that jails or fines journalists who
publish sensitive leaks, essentially reviving the Official Secrecy Act
that President Clinton vetoed.
Bush has a "fetish for secrecy," Vanderbilt University professor
emeritus Hugh Davis Graham, now deceased, told the National Journal
earlier this year.
Granted, pressing issues of national security merit a level of
secrecy. But security and secrecy are not always necessary companions,
and some of these examples suggest secrecy for secrecy's sake, such as
the pardons and the Reagan documents. Also, a government that operates
in secret prevents its constituents from holding it accountable and so
may be more prone to arbitrariness and ill-considered conduct. This
administration may even be doing itself a disservice with its excess
secrecy, which can cause people to conjure up much more malicious and
elitist scenarios than may actually exist.
That is what has happened with Skull and Bones, which operates a
powerful alumni network but, despite the lore, does not run a secret
world government, collaborate with Nazis or require initiates to lie
naked in a coffin.
Bonesmen have long helped Bush; he received a fair chunk of his early
business financing from them and turned to them for help when he
needed a job, investors and campaign assistance. Even his
baseball-team purchase involved at least one Bonesman. As president,
Bush has appointed fellow Bonesmen to high-level positions, such as
Edward McNally, the general counsel of the Office on Homeland Security
and senior associate counsel on national security. Yet, although one
of his first social gatherings at the White House was a Skull and
Bones reunion, Bush feigned ignorance when asked recently about Bones:
"The thing is so secret that I'm not even sure it still exists," he
replied.
Is it a coincidence that the federal government suddenly prioritizes
secrecy when a Skull and Bones president is in power? Maybe. But
there's no question that the Bush administration increasingly
resembles the Bones' dark, locked tomb.
Alexandra Robbins is the author of Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and
Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power.
Offot
02-11-2004, 03:19 PM
"chitlins con carny" <Timeforhemp@wmconnect.com> >
There´s no reason to be a terrorist.
Offot
chitlins con carny
02-11-2004, 11:16 PM
"Offot" <offotnospam@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:<402a560f$1_1@news.dnainternet.net>...
> There´s no reason to be a terrorist.
>
> Offot
Don't let my student body hear you say that.
Bongblaster opens Terror School. Dares Israel to bomb it.
Bongblaster's school for aspiring terrorists. Fully accredited.
Terrorist University at Ruby, South Carolina (Terrorist U.R.)
Fall Quarter Curriculum:
Terror 101. We are but cattle. The Protocols of Zion
Terror 102. How to be sneaky. The Tulmud.
Terror 103. Rewriting History. The Holohoax
Terror 104. Invasion/Occupation/Annexation
School Colors: Black and Blue.
School Yell: "Ouch!!!"
School Motto: "We're coming to get ya, Baby."
If Israel bombs my school the neighbors will complain and demand
that the U.N. issue a meaningless resolution that the United States
will veto and Israel will ignore ... but bring it on anyway.
Dean Bongi
Terrorist U.R.
Ed Dolan
02-13-2004, 12:04 AM
Don't forget the Yale graduate also joined Skull and Bones. Just
think whoever wins in November will be a Bonesman.
Timeforhemp@wmconnect.com (chitlins con carny) wrote in message news:<7d6ba8c3.0402110626.7429fc5b@posting.google.com>...
> Nomen Nescio <nobody@dizum.com> wrote in message news:<19bbdbbc374cd40bbef6f465e372976b@dizum.com>...
> > From another forum, a CIA internet op goes straight...its happened before,
> > The CIA is well known for infiltrating everything that moves..
> > This account is from a CIA op in Holland, hired to ridicule anyone that
> > posted anti G W Bush views to the NG he was assigned to...
> >
> >
> > http://lightscion.com/whistleblower.htm
>
>
> If I were a terrorist, my target would be:
>
> Yale
>
> Spook City
>
> The Devil's stomping ground
>
> The Masonic shrine to Lucifer
>
> The Birthplace of the Skull & Crossbones cult
>
> The Birthplace of the Kennedy-Killing Zio-Nazi CIA-Assassins
>
> The Birthplace of evil US Presidents.
>
> Yale - The Devil's maternity ward.
>
> That's why Yale rhymes with Hell.
>
>
> U.S.A. Today
>
> White House 'Bonesman' leads nation into the dark
>
> Sept. 26, 2003
>
> By Alexandra Robbins
>
> "My senior year (at Yale University) I joined Skull and Bones, a
> secret society," President Bush wrote in his autobiography, "so
> secret, I can't say anything more."
>
> He doesn't have to. He's practically turning the government into a
> secret society - an old-boy, throwback establishment that even holds
> its secret spy-court proceedings in an elaborately locked, windowless
> room that sounds similar to the Bones' elaborately locked, practically
> windowless "tomb," or campus clubhouse.
>
> Bush, a loyal and particularly active member of Skull and Bones, a
> mysterious, historically misogynist Yale-based secret society, seems
> to have done almost all he can to promote a level of secrecy in
> government not seen since the Nixon administration:
>
> Last month, Bush-appointed Assistant Attorney General Robert McCallum,
> a member of Bush's 1968 Skull and Bones class, filed pleadings in U.S.
> District Court seeking to extend executive privilege to any government
> official in pardon cases; the move makes information on presidential
> pardons more secret than it has ever been.
>
> After 9/11, without initially telling Congress, Bush assembled a
> shadow government assigned to secret bunkers somewhere on the East
> Coast. He also tried to cut off some members of Congress from
> classified information about the anti-terrorist campaign.
>
> The USA Patriot Act Bush eagerly signed lets the FBI - with permission
> from a secret Washington "spy court" - view some customer records;
> store owners cannot reveal the review
>
> In October 2001, Attorney General John Ashcroft released a memo
> encouraging federal agencies to withhold as much information as
> possible from the public.
>
> A month later, just before documents from the Reagan-Bush
> administration were to be released, Bush signed an executive order
> severely hindering public access to former presidents' records.
>
> Bush also signed legislation that jails or fines journalists who
> publish sensitive leaks, essentially reviving the Official Secrecy Act
> that President Clinton vetoed.
>
> Bush has a "fetish for secrecy," Vanderbilt University professor
> emeritus Hugh Davis Graham, now deceased, told the National Journal
> earlier this year.
>
> Granted, pressing issues of national security merit a level of
> secrecy. But security and secrecy are not always necessary companions,
> and some of these examples suggest secrecy for secrecy's sake, such as
> the pardons and the Reagan documents. Also, a government that operates
> in secret prevents its constituents from holding it accountable and so
> may be more prone to arbitrariness and ill-considered conduct. This
> administration may even be doing itself a disservice with its excess
> secrecy, which can cause people to conjure up much more malicious and
> elitist scenarios than may actually exist.
> That is what has happened with Skull and Bones, which operates a
> powerful alumni network but, despite the lore, does not run a secret
> world government, collaborate with Nazis or require initiates to lie
> naked in a coffin.
>
> Bonesmen have long helped Bush; he received a fair chunk of his early
> business financing from them and turned to them for help when he
> needed a job, investors and campaign assistance. Even his
> baseball-team purchase involved at least one Bonesman. As president,
> Bush has appointed fellow Bonesmen to high-level positions, such as
> Edward McNally, the general counsel of the Office on Homeland Security
> and senior associate counsel on national security. Yet, although one
> of his first social gatherings at the White House was a Skull and
> Bones reunion, Bush feigned ignorance when asked recently about Bones:
> "The thing is so secret that I'm not even sure it still exists," he
> replied.
>
> Is it a coincidence that the federal government suddenly prioritizes
> secrecy when a Skull and Bones president is in power? Maybe. But
> there's no question that the Bush administration increasingly
> resembles the Bones' dark, locked tomb.
>
> Alexandra Robbins is the author of Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and
> Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power.
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