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Non-Tech : The ENRON Scandal -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (3286)3/4/2002 2:10:53 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 5185
 
Re: I'm SHOCKED I tell you....SHOCKED....<?i>

Try unplugging yerself..... <w>



To: Skywatcher who wrote (3286)3/5/2002 12:56:56 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
The Bush Administration spent 3 1/2 million dollars of OUR money for an advertisement at the Super Bowl!!!! Is it any wonder the country is in debt. I bet he spends faster than Nancy Reagan.

This Drug Ad a Hard Sell

February 3, 2002

It's not all corporate pitchmen at this year's Super (Ad)
Bowl.

Joining Anheuser-Busch, Pepsi and tonight's other
big-budget image buffers is one advertiser with a truly
tarnished brand: White House drug czar John Walters,
desperate to add some luster to the government's
discredited war on drugs.

Sorry, John.

That'll take more than TV commercials, even during
the Super Bowl.

But Walters is a hard-nosed protege of tough-talking
drug warrior Bill Bennett. Since being confirmed by the
Senate in December, Walters has been an eager
captive of the old-school lock-'em-up approach,
emphasizing pointless police busts and endless prison
terms instead of proven drug treatment. And now he's
at it again, with a preposterous new message and
plenty of money to burn.

Our money, of course.

Three-and-a-half million dollars' worth.


It's the highest single-event advertising buy the federal
government has ever made. And look what all that
money will buy: Two 30-second spots on the
highest-priced TV platform of the year.


The ads advance the cynical claim that nonviolent
Americans who use drugs are financing international
terrorism.

"That's like blaming beer drinkers in the '20s for Al
Capone," said Matt Briggs of Manhattan's
reform-minded Drug Policy Alliance: "It's not the product - it's the prohibition that
brings the criminals in."

Officials in Washington were refusing to allow an advance look at the
commercials. So it's impossible to pick apart the language until tonight. But the
underlying argument can be refuted easily enough.

There's no denying that profits from the illegal drug trade have found their way
into the hands of terrorists. To cite just one fresh example: Opium, the precursor
to heroin, was a major cash crop in Afghanistan during the rule of the Taliban,
generous patron to al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden.

But that doesn't mean we can blame 9/11 on some kid smoking a joint in the
basement of his parents' home. That's the leap where the drugs-equal-terror
argument falls apart.

It's not the drugs themselves that produce the huge illicit profits. It's the fact that
the drugs are against the law.

Change those laws and - snap! Just like that! - those profits will disappear.

You want to blame someone for the drug-terror ties? Blame the politicians who
refuse to change America's expensive and counter-productive drug laws.

As Briggs points out: "Legal drugs like Xanax and Prozac don't create profits
that end up in the hands of people like Osama bin Laden. You make a product
illegal and the worst people in the world will gravitate to the trade. It's not normal
businesspeople anymore."

It wasn't by accident that Briggs mentioned Xanax. The popular anti-anxiety
drug, available with a doctor's prescription, makes an appearance in the other big
drug story of the week.

It's the tale of 24-year-old Noelle Bush, the president's niece and the only
daughter of Fla. Gov. Jeb Bush.


It's a sad story, a story millions of American families can relate to: a young
woman with a drug problem, getting picked up by police. Noelle Bush was
arrested Tuesday night at the drive-in window of an all-night drugstore in
Tallahassee, trying to scam her way into some Xanax.

She'd phoned in the prescription herself, pretending to be a physician. The
druggist got a funny feeling and telephoned police.

She was promptly cuffed and taken off to jail - before being released to her
parents.

Her father and mother put out a statement from the governor's mansion, calling
the incident "serious." They asked "the public and the media to respect our
family's privacy during this difficult time so that we can help our daughter."

And don't they have the right?

Did it really matter that the child in question was the daughter of the governor,
the niece of the president of the United States?

Well, in one way, it did.

The governor was asking that his kid be treated in a way that he has staunchly
refused to treat other people's children, and that's just not right.

During his three years in office, Jeb Bush has packed Florida prisons with
nonviolent drug offenders, some not so different from his daughter. He has cut
drug treatment and special drug courts.

Lately, he's been attacking a drug-reform ballot initiative that will go to Florida
voters in November. It calls for treatment - not jail - for an estimated 10,000
nonviolent Florida drug defendants a year.

A super idea, actually - that won't get any advertising boost at the Super Bowl.

Email: henican@newsday.com

Copyright © 2002, Newsday, Inc.

newsday.com.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (3286)3/5/2002 1:01:02 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
W spends money, big bucks, as fast as the Enron crowd. Normally, the covers of the national
budget are in blue. But W has to go and spend a small fortune to put a picture of the flag
on the national budget. He acts like he has money to burn. Of course, it is our money that
he has wasted.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (3286)3/5/2002 1:10:50 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
Did you hear about the latest plot from a right-wing extremist group in Montana?
They were going to kill the dog catcher and 26 local law officers. I was shocked
but not surprised. By this time, you are NOT shocked either, I bet. (LOL)

See following story about the plot to kill the dog catcher and others.



To: Skywatcher who wrote (3286)3/5/2002 1:12:50 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 5185
 
A Far-Right Militia's Far-Fetched Plot Draws Some Serious Attention

"The logic of their plan, if you can call it logic, was that by killing
local law enforcement people, the state of Montana would have
no choice but to send in the National Guard," Sheriff Dupont said
"Then they hoped to wipe out the National Guard. And then they
hoped that NATO troops would be sent in and that would trigger an all-out revolution."



The New York Times



March 3, 2002



By BLAINE HARDEN

KALISPELL, Mont., March 2 - As
its secrets began to spill out here
this week, Project 7 sounded
suspiciously like a Monty Python
sketch.

A dogcatcher was on its list of 26 local
law enforcement officials who needed
killing. The chief intelligence gatherer
for the furtive far-right militia cell was a cleaning woman,
according to Sheriff
James R. Dupont of Flathead County, who himself made the hit list of Project 7.
The militia's name comes from the Montana license plate numbering system,
which uses the numeral 7 to identify residents of Flathead.

The cleaning woman, Tracy Brockway, 32, was having an affair with the leader of
Project 7 in a house bristling with 35 guns and thousands of rounds of
ammunition, the sheriff said. He identified the militia's leader as David Earl
Burgert, 38, whose last known job was renting snowmobiles, who could often be
heard carping about judges on a local right-wing radio station and who has a long
history of being annoying. At Christmas, when his neighbors lined streets with
paper bags containing lighted candles, Mr. Burgert mounted his snowmobile and
snuffed them out.

"If you picture a schoolyard bully who has a big mouth, that would be Burgert,"
said Bruce Parish, a detective in the sheriff's office.

This far northwest corner of Montana, along with the
nearby northern neck of Idaho, has for decades been
incubating right-wing militias, conspiracy theorists and
white supremacists. Many of them have demonstrated an
outsize appetite for military hardware and survival gear.

Kalispell (population 17,000) might seem an unlikely
staging ground for militias bearing grudges. It is the
county seat of Flathead County, one of the fastest-growing
communities in Montana and a pristine outdoor
destination that includes half of Glacier National Park and
more than a million acres of mountain wilderness. The
town is near the northern end of Flathead Lake, the
largest freshwater lake in the West and one of the cleanest
lakes in the world.

Yet a decades-old decline in an economy based on logging and mining, combined
with the rise of a New West culture dominated by affluent professionals and
retirees who go outside not to work but to recreate, has left many local people
confused, resentful and looking for someone to blame. Project 7 appears to have set
a new standard, both for zany scapegoating and for industrial-strength firepower.

"This is the weirdest, most violence-prone thing we have seen in Montana for a long
time," said Ken Toole, a Democratic state senator who runs the Montana Human
Rights Network, which studies right- wing movements in Montana and Idaho.
"There is a comic element to these people," Mr. Toole said. "But it washes away
pretty quickly because of the guns."


The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms are taking it all seriously.

On Friday, after a long meeting with the county sheriff and the police chief in
Kalispell, the F.B.I. took charge of the conspiracy investigation into possible links
that Mr. Burgert may have had with other right- wing groups. The A.T.F. took
charge of tracking all the weapons.

After a tip early last month from a Project 7 defector, the sheriff's department
found two trailers packed with 30,000 rounds of ammunition, a broad array of
small arms, body armor, pipe bombs, exploding booby traps, bomb-making
chemicals and a vast inventory of survivalist gear and military rations.

"I think it would have taken hundreds of thousands of dollars to buy all that stuff
at once," Detective Parish said. "So it is very possible that it was built up over
several years."

What Project 7 was gearing up for, said the defector who tipped off the sheriff, was
a round of assassinations in early summer. The sheriff's department discovered a
list of what appeared to be targets that included local judges, the county
prosecutor, the Kalispell chief of police, members of a police swat team and the
dogcatcher.

Some of the targets worked at a police station in the nearby town of Whitefish,
where Mrs. Brockway was employed. The sheriff said she had apparently sifted
through trash baskets, gleaning information about where some officers filled their
prescriptions and how others struggled with their weight. The sheriff's department
found information sheets detailing her discoveries.

"The logic of their plan, if you can call it logic, was that by killing local law
enforcement people, the state of Montana would have no choice but to send in the
National Guard," Sheriff Dupont said. "Then they hoped to wipe out the National
Guard. And then they hoped that NATO troops would be sent in and that would
trigger an all-out revolution."


The sheriff and Detective Parish rolled their eyes incredulously as they explained
what Project 7 hoped to accomplish. They suggested that Mr. Burgert was a
blowhard who had bitten off more than he could chew.

Investigators from the sheriff's department say they have identified four or perhaps
five local people who were involved in the plot. Two of them, Mr. Burgert and Mrs.
Brockway, are in custody. Two of the others have told investigators that while they
knew about Project 7, they had no intention of killing anyone.

Sheriff Dupont learned of the plot in early February, after Mr. Burgert disappeared
for nearly a month. Mr. Burgert's wife reported him mysteriously absent on Jan. 9.
His pickup truck was found near a local river, with his fishing pole. His wife hinted
to the sheriff's department that maybe he had drowned.

The sheriff's department, though, smelled a rat. Mr. Burgert had no hook on his
fishing line and his tackle box, deputies said, was filled with lures that no
respectable Montana fisherman would ever use.

On Feb. 7, Mr. Burgert, who had become a fugitive after failing to show up for a
hearing on charges that he punched a sheriff's deputy in early 2001, was spotted
coming out of Mrs. Brockway's home.

Her husband, Alan Brockway, also a suspect in the militia plot, left Montana for
Israel several months ago. "The information we have is that he left because of the
affair between his wife and Mr. Burgert," Detective Parish said.

After Mr. Burgert was spotted, sheriff's deputies staked out the house. When he
and Mrs. Brockway drove off in a heavy snowstorm, deputies gave chase. Mr.
Burgert slid off the road, but fled into the woods, carrying a rifle. After trackers
found him and after an all-night standoff, during which Mr. Burgert held the gun
under is chin and threatened to shoot himself, he surrendered.

All this happened in early February, which was when local investigators first got
wind of Project 7 and the assassination plot. The sheriff's office kept the lid on its
investigation, as computer experts from the state police tried - and, so far, failed
- to crack encrypted information found on Mr. Burgert's home computer.

The lid came off on Tuesday, when Mrs. Brockway went to court for a bond hearing.
On the witness stand, she announced the existence of Project 7 and local reporters
began asking questions. Sheriff Dupont and other local law enforcement officials
quickly decided to reveal the inquiry.

"The real scary part of this whole deal is, what if we had not got onto Mr. Burgert?"
the sheriff asked in an interview on Friday evening in his office. "Could he have
recruited enough people to execute the plan?"

Answering his own question, the sheriff said he doubted Mr. Burgert's
conspiratorial skills. "It was always his mouth that got him in trouble," the sheriff
said.

nytimes.com