10-12-2010, 09:17 PM
Jan, no argument from me on your clarification about deletion.
Matter of fact, without disagreeing with the dismantling or the individual doing the dismantling, I saw a piece from a different place that may or may not have been supportive of the argument, but I am now reticent to post it or much of anything else (I'll probably get over that shortly) for fear of being branded somehow as a poor thinker, a contaminant, a purposeful disinformationalist, or something else. (I may have to beef up my "legend" before I can be considered worthy; maybe I'll have some young student of media production do up a YouTube on me.)
What I see going on in America and the American commentaries from some sides of the debate is akin to self-recruitment in the thought police. I think falsified credentials are being crafted as we speak.
We even have Janet Napolitano from Der Heimat Protectors Collective encouraging -- via public service announcements carried by leading retailers' in-house video tellies -- to report what it is we see. Well, I see lots of crimes being committed in lots of places, and the Wikileaks hypercaliboondanza taking people's attentions away from the continued fraud and theft perpetrated by Wall Street, the Fed, and its primary spokeperson, I Have Hope as a Progressive Liberal (but I'm really strengthening the theft of the middle class and the vacuuming of wealth and rights), otherwise known as Barry Soetoro.
While some of what has emerged from Wikileaks is eye-opening, it is merely confirmation of what was already known or suspected by aonyone doing some astute observation; it might be akin to the leaks' perpetrators thumbing their noses at those who think they can change things or do anything to bring these people to justice. In that vein, it fits right in with the observations of Vince Salandria about Dealey Plaza and pertinent to 9/11 as well; here it is, in plain sight; we are powerful, you can't stop us. it might be cognitive infiltration in action.
Well, enough of that... I've made progress in "A Terrible Mistake"; I'm in the section on assassinations, highlighter in hand.
Matter of fact, without disagreeing with the dismantling or the individual doing the dismantling, I saw a piece from a different place that may or may not have been supportive of the argument, but I am now reticent to post it or much of anything else (I'll probably get over that shortly) for fear of being branded somehow as a poor thinker, a contaminant, a purposeful disinformationalist, or something else. (I may have to beef up my "legend" before I can be considered worthy; maybe I'll have some young student of media production do up a YouTube on me.)
What I see going on in America and the American commentaries from some sides of the debate is akin to self-recruitment in the thought police. I think falsified credentials are being crafted as we speak.
We even have Janet Napolitano from Der Heimat Protectors Collective encouraging -- via public service announcements carried by leading retailers' in-house video tellies -- to report what it is we see. Well, I see lots of crimes being committed in lots of places, and the Wikileaks hypercaliboondanza taking people's attentions away from the continued fraud and theft perpetrated by Wall Street, the Fed, and its primary spokeperson, I Have Hope as a Progressive Liberal (but I'm really strengthening the theft of the middle class and the vacuuming of wealth and rights), otherwise known as Barry Soetoro.
While some of what has emerged from Wikileaks is eye-opening, it is merely confirmation of what was already known or suspected by aonyone doing some astute observation; it might be akin to the leaks' perpetrators thumbing their noses at those who think they can change things or do anything to bring these people to justice. In that vein, it fits right in with the observations of Vince Salandria about Dealey Plaza and pertinent to 9/11 as well; here it is, in plain sight; we are powerful, you can't stop us. it might be cognitive infiltration in action.
Well, enough of that... I've made progress in "A Terrible Mistake"; I'm in the section on assassinations, highlighter in hand.
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"