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Politics : Leftwing Agenda to Destroy the US -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill who wrote (29)4/4/2006 11:47:33 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 908
 
US Academia loves their terrorists.

The ACLU loves their terrorists.

Cynthia McKinney loves her terrorists.

As does Bagdad Jim McDermott, Turban Durbin, Hillary (who kissed Arafat's sham "wife" and

The NY TIMES

The Washington Post

NEWSWEAK (owned by the The Washington Post Company)

TIME magazine

ABC CBS NBC



To: Bill who wrote (29)4/4/2006 11:50:23 AM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 908
 
Ehrlich Has Last Laugh

aim.org

In Maryland, a prominent critic of Republican Governor Bob Ehrlich has been forced to resign after pleading guilty, in effect, to plagiarism. Columnist Michael Olesker, who was a darling of the liberals for his vicious attacks on Ehrlich, had been using material for his columns from stories in the Washington Post and New York Times and even his own paper, the Baltimore Sun, without attribution or credit being given. "I made mistakes" is what he told his own paper in a story about his resignation.

Ehrlich had been so disgusted by Olesker's journalistic antics that he had banned state officials from talking to him and another journalist from the Sun. The paper had sued over the ban.

It turned out to be a case involving far more than a few "mistakes." And Olesker's editors at the Baltimore Sun have egg all over their faces for having stood behind him when the first evidence of his plagiarism surfaced.

On December 24, the Sun had run a correction about one of Olesker's columns, saying similarity in wording between his column and a story from the Washington Post had resulted from Olesker simply being confused about what was written in his notes. Sun City Editor Howard Libit gave Olesker the benefit of the doubt, insisting that "these kinds of things" had not come up before when reviewing his work. It turned out that Libit and other Sun editors had not been looking hard enough.

The first case of "borrowing" material, in what the Washington Post labeled an "attribution issue" rather than plagiarism, was uncovered by Kevin Dayhoff in an article for thetentacle.com, a website serving Frederick County, Maryland. When additional cases were uncovered by Gail Dechter of the Baltimore City Paper, Olesker was forced to quit the paper.



To: Bill who wrote (29)4/4/2006 11:52:07 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 908
 
Steve Willis- Clinton bodyguard

Robert Williams- Clinton bodyguard

Conway LeBleu- Clinton bodyguard

Todd McKeehan- Clinton bodyguard

Died: 2/28/93 - "executed" by gunfire in the Waco, Texas assault on the Branch Davidians. - All four were examined by a "private doctor" and died from nearly identical wounds to the left temple, so-called execution style. According to Linda Thompson, videotapes and other evidence indicates that none died from guns fired by Branch Davidians. In his address to employees of the Treasury Department in the Cash Room on March 18, 1993, Clinton said: "My prayers and I'm sure yours are still with the families of all four of the Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents who were killed in WACO -- Todd McKeehan and Conway Le Bleu of New Orleans; Steve Willis of Houston, and Robert Williams from my hometown of Little Rock. (I thought Mr. Clinton's hometown was Hope, Arkansas?) Three of those four were assigned to my security during the course of the primary or general election." However, the Little Rock, Arkansas office of the ATF confirmed that all four had at one point been bodyguards for Bill Clinton, three while he was campaigning for President, and while he had been governor of Arkansas. In the videotape by the American Justice Federation, "WACO II, the Big Lie Continues," Linda Thompson demonstrates that 15 shots were fired from six separate weapons into and out of a room into which three of the four agents had entered through a window. Four of these shots were fired from an overhead helicopter, at least two shots were fired into the room by an agent outside the window, firing an MP5 submachine gun, who also threw in a concussion grenade. In the autopsies of these agents, three had virtually identical wounds to the left temple that exited through the rear of the head, execution-style. All four were treated by a "private physician."


freerepublic.com



To: Bill who wrote (29)4/4/2006 11:53:16 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 908
 
If he were to walk up to your house, your lawn would die.

Garrison Keillor



img.slate.com




To: Bill who wrote (29)4/4/2006 11:57:09 AM
From: paret  Respond to of 908
 
Sandy Burglar compilation

freerepublic.com



To: Bill who wrote (29)4/7/2006 9:52:11 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 908
 
What really happened to Ron Brown

WorldNetDaily ^ | 4/7/06 | Jack Cashill

worldnetdaily.com

Photo of Ron Browns skull injury

whatreallyhappened.com

In Argentina, during the dark days, they called them "los desaparecidos," the disappeared. On April 10, 1996, Ron Brown was buried with full honors at Arlington National Cemetery and then joined his fellow desaparecidos. So thoroughly has Brown disappeared from view that the only articles I could find on Google News about the 10th anniversary of his death were those that I had written myself.
What follows, unless new information breaks, is my last article on the subject. In it, I attempt to find the one scenario that makes sense of all the existing evidence. Although speculative in part, it follows the evidence in full. There are no loose ends.
________________________________________
Aviation systems manager Niko Jerkuic does not report in for work on the morning of April 3, 1996, but he has a busy day ahead of him. He is not looking forward to it. Just a day and a half earlier, embattled Commerce Secretary Ron Brown was ordered to fly to Jerkuic's airport in Dubrovnik, Croatia. A trip like this in a war-torn area would typically require weeks of security planning. Not this time.
Right after that change of plans, agents of the Croatian intelligence services gave Jerkuic an assignment he did not feel free to turn down. They needed to misdirect Brown's plane, and they required his assistance.
The project is not technically difficult. Jerkuic has seen a lot in his 46 years. He knows all about "meaconing" or "spoofing" as it is sometimes generically known. Since the 1940s, portable Non-Directional Radio Beacon stations have been available to military and civilian operators and have proved especially useful in war-torn areas like this one near the Bosnian border.
The agents with whom he is working have brought along a gasoline driven generator, a tunable transmitter, and a temporary antenna, all loaded into the back of a pickup truck. Together, they drive to an isolated spot just outside of Dubrovnik and only about three or four miles east-southeast of Kolocep Island, the site of the real Non-Directional Radio Beacon, the beacon on which pilots are supposed to fix in order to guide their planes into the Dubrovnik airport.
Jerkuic sets the frequency of his portable beacon at 318 kilohertz to match that of the Kolocep (KLP) beacon and encodes the KLP Morse code identifier. He cannot power it up, however, until all the earlier scheduled flights have landed.
Still about 100 miles away, a CT-43A, the military version of a Boeing 737 carrying Ron Brown and 34 others, is cleared "direct to the KLP NDB." The primary reason for Brown's trip is to broker a sweetheart deal between Croatia and the Enron Corporation. Croatia's anti-Semitic strongman Franjo Tudhman has agreed to the deal, one disastrous for Croatia, in the hope that by cooperating with Enron he can ingratiate himself to the Clinton administration and avoid indictment by the World Court for war crimes. He has cancer. He doesn't want to die in prison.
The pilots are told they are "number one for beacon approach." When the word comes from the Dubrovnik tower that Brown's plane has checked in at 2:46 p.m. local time and the other planes have landed, Jerkuic shuts down the normal NDB and activates the "rogue" NDB. The automatic direction finder in Brown's plane now points to Jerkuic's beacon near Dubrovnik.
At this distance, the needle shift is negligible. USAF pilots Ashley Davis and Tim Shafer scarcely notice. "Hmmm," Davis thinks to himself when he sees it, "the NDB's a little further east than I thought." But given its 318-kilohertz frequency, Davis naturally assumes the radio signal to be coming from Kolocep and flies toward it. The Dubrovnik tower has no radar. At this stage, the radio signal is the pilots' only real guide to the world below the clouds. In fact, Brown's itinerary was shifted to Dubrovnik only after the weather service confirmed that the next several days would be overcast in Croatia. These conditions were critical for the plan to work.
As the signal strengthens, Davis gradually aligns the automatic direction finder with the posted 119-degree setting. At 2:54 pm, he watches as the ADF swings back around to the bottom, now at a 299-degree reading. He has passed over the beacon and will navigate from the tail of the ADF needle.
"We're inside the locator, inbound," he radios the tower, and the tower clears his approach and landing. At that moment, the charts tell the pilots the airport is 12 miles straight ahead on a 119-degree course. They will be able to see the runway in about three minutes. In fact, however, the plane is now heading right toward St. John's Peak about eight miles away, as the AWACs plane hovering over head will later verify.
Word of the crash comes over Jerkuic's radio. He shuts down the temporary transmitter and reactivates the Kolocep beacon. Still, he has no stomach for this. The agents assigned to him sense his unease, but they have work to do, like finding the plane and making sure the person they were assigned to kill is dead.
They make their way to St. John's Peak and up the mountain. The bodies are scattered, and there are only a few black men among them. They pull out the photo of Brown and start checking. Brown is not hard to find. But what stuns the men is that he is farther from the plane than is anyone else. He appears to have crawled there.
The leader kneels down next to Brown and turns him over on his back. He is still not sure whether Brown is dead or not. He has no obvious fatal wound. The leader pulls out his pistol and fires skillfully into the laceration on the top of Brown's head. In this part of the world, no one even blinks at the sound of gunfire.
The men look around quickly for other survivors. Tech sergeant Shelly Kelly survived the crash in the rear jump sheet. But her back is broken, and she lies mutely amidst the rubble. The men don't see or hear her. They hustle back down the hill. Their colleague back at the airport has misdirected the search in the opposite direction, out over the Adriatic, for several hours. But the men on the hill do not want to hang around any longer than necessary. They exit the area with their portable beacon and deep six it. Kelly will die from that misdirection.
Three days after the crash, a memorial service is held at the Dubrovnik airport for those killed in the crash. Just hours later, Niko Jerkuic answers the knock on his door and greets the men who recruited him. He is still anxious, and they can see it. U.S. Air Force investigators will start interviewing airport personnel in two days. The Croatian agents cannot afford to let the Air Force talk to Jerkuic.
"We hate to do this," says the one agent as he shoots Jerkuic in the chest. They don't sweat the details as they know who will be investigating, Miroslav Tudjman, Franjo's son, the head of Croatian intelligence. Miroslav declares it a suicide.
Back at the Armed Force Institute in Pathology, in Dover, Del., pathologists discover the hole in Brown's head. By order of the White House, there is no autopsy, no forensic testing, no notification of the Brown family. Brown is quickly embalmed, and the head X-rays are destroyed.
In November 1996, just months after Brown's death and one week after President Clinton's re-election, Tudjman travels not to The Hague to be tried as a war criminal but to Walter Reed Hospital in Washington to have his cancer treated. The Croatia-Enron liaison, Zdenka Gast, later shows up in the Croatian equivalent of People Magazine arm in arm with her buddy Hillary Clinton at Alexis Herman's intimate wedding reception at the White House.
By this time, Ron Brown has long since joined the ranks of "los desaparecidos."
________________________________________
Related special offer:
"Ron Brown's Body: How One Man's Death Saved the Clinton Presidency and Hillary's Future"
________________________________________
Related columns:
Part 1: Did Ron Brown die for Enron's sins?
Part 2: How 'minority capitalism' undid Ron Brown
Part 3: Competing against the Clintons for cash
Part 4: Clinton's new "bagman"
Part 5: Second 'black president' likely to build on legacy of first
Part 6: Some dare call it treason
Part 7: Wang Jun's excellent White House adventure
Part 8: Sun peeked through 'worst storm in a decade'
Part 9: The bullet hole that should have shaken Washington
Part 10: How Monica buried Ron Brown and saved the Clinton presidency
Part 11: Was Ron Brown murdered, and, if so, how and by whom?
________________________________________
Jack Cashill is an Emmy-award winning independent writer and producer with a Ph.D. in American Studies from Purdue.