09-02-2010, 08:56 PM
In James Douglass' book "JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why it Matters" [unhesitatingly recommended], I am up to page 322. On the preceding 14 pages, he speaks of the stories of Navy Lt. Commander William Bruce Pritzker and retired Army Special Forces lieutenant colonel Daniel Marvin, and earlier quoted Charles Crenshaw, M.D. from his book "JFK: Conspiracy of Silence": "... anyone who would go so far as to eliminate the President of the United States would surely not hesitate to kill a doctor."
Google up General Order 100 by Abraham Lincoln, cue up the 'Godfather' theme music, and then watch Episode 1C of "The World at War" about the night of the long knives and the dawening realization of the Germans:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oyiHbQ4B...r_embedded
Extrajudicial murder has achieved a breakthrough, and now we have the condottieri of the private military contractors. See also:
The Central Intelligence Agency at Work
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/...-operation.html
And then there is this:
“The ongoing struggle to put Logan County's Blair Mountain on the National Register of Historic Places is drawing attention to West Virginia's notorious mine wars of the early 1900s. Whether or not Blair finally gets U.S. recognition, one thing is certain: The bloody conflict truly was historic.
The State Archives contain many books and reports on America's largest insurrection since the Civil War … Full-scale warfare between defenders on Blair and strikers below ensued for several days. Chafin's forces included state troopers, militiamen, Baldwin-Felts guards and deputized Logan countians. Hundreds of thousands of bullets were fired in the woodland, but casualties were surprisingly light, perhaps under 20. Nobody knows an accurate body count.
President Harding sent federal troops from Kentucky, plus an air squadron under war hero Billy Mitchell from Langley Field near Washington.”
Read the full commentary here:
http://wvgazette.com/Opinion/OpEdComment...1002060273
"Plus ca change ..."
People outside the States yell that we inside the States should wake up and do something, and some inside the States yell to the states outside the States to do something.
I don't think we'll have to wait long now to see the outcome.
Film at 11.
Google up General Order 100 by Abraham Lincoln, cue up the 'Godfather' theme music, and then watch Episode 1C of "The World at War" about the night of the long knives and the dawening realization of the Germans:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oyiHbQ4B...r_embedded
Extrajudicial murder has achieved a breakthrough, and now we have the condottieri of the private military contractors. See also:
The Central Intelligence Agency at Work
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/...-operation.html
And then there is this:
“The ongoing struggle to put Logan County's Blair Mountain on the National Register of Historic Places is drawing attention to West Virginia's notorious mine wars of the early 1900s. Whether or not Blair finally gets U.S. recognition, one thing is certain: The bloody conflict truly was historic.
The State Archives contain many books and reports on America's largest insurrection since the Civil War … Full-scale warfare between defenders on Blair and strikers below ensued for several days. Chafin's forces included state troopers, militiamen, Baldwin-Felts guards and deputized Logan countians. Hundreds of thousands of bullets were fired in the woodland, but casualties were surprisingly light, perhaps under 20. Nobody knows an accurate body count.
President Harding sent federal troops from Kentucky, plus an air squadron under war hero Billy Mitchell from Langley Field near Washington.”
Read the full commentary here:
http://wvgazette.com/Opinion/OpEdComment...1002060273
"Plus ca change ..."
People outside the States yell that we inside the States should wake up and do something, and some inside the States yell to the states outside the States to do something.
I don't think we'll have to wait long now to see the outcome.
Film at 11.
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"

