Thank you very much...lots of familiar names all assembled in one place. It's added to my bookmarks :)
I wonder what America would look like if the "propaganda networks" devoted a few weeks to airing these talks during prime time (they could throw in rep. Roscoe's presentations while they're at it). Just imagine the official denials and ensuing chaos.
I'm sure you're familiar with Ruppert's research on CIA's direct involvement in trafficking drugs into the country via U.S. military bases. Thought you would find the following two articles interesting:
Military, law enforcement caught in FBI drug sting Friday, May 13, 2005 Posted: 11:45 AM EDT (1545 GMT)
cnn.com
TUCSON, Arizona (AP) -- FBI agents posing as cocaine traffickers nabbed 16 current and former law enforcement officers and U.S. soldiers who had accepted more than $222,000 in bribes to help move drugs past checkpoints, the government said. ... "Those charged include a former Immigration and Naturalization Service inspector, a former Army sergeant, a former federal prison guard, seven members of the Arizona Army National Guard, five members of the Arizona Department of Corrections and a police officer, officials said." ... "The defendants were not arrested..."
In summary, all 16 U.S. soldiers and law enforcement officers caught trafficking hundreds of thousands of dollars of drugs into the country were allowed to go free pending their court proceedings. hmmmmm.
and from April:
U.S. Soldiers Arrested for Colombian Cocaine Plot Reuters Apr. 1, 2005 abcnews.go.com
Five American soldiers have been arrested for trying to smuggle hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of cocaine into the United States on a U.S. military aircraft, the U.S. military said.
Again, the first sentence of both of these articles reveals that the source of the information is the U.S. government, so imagine everything they're not telling us regarding these incidents.
Jesse |