05-06-2012, 02:20 AM
Jan
Watching Sam Ervin drawling, "Fee, fie, foe, fum, I smell the blood of Nixon and Erlichmann," was great fun, culminating in the, "effective noon tomorrow" last chopper out of Saigon preview August 8, 1974.
Redford relished All the President's Men, and Felt, the little lying weasel, pretended to be what he was not.
Earlier Redford in Condor was just so aghast to find all that nasty heroin trafficking. Would he connect the dots, that the 35[SUP]th[/SUP] president was removed as the last obstacle to that trade?
In APM would he not wonder of the tape 180 degrees wrong, removed by guards, replaced by "burglars"in the same amateur-night orientation? No, nor would Woodward. One an actor, the other, an actor.
Zipping through Nambe by the river north of Santa Fe in a red SUV driven by a studio "cowboy" in a big black hat and big black shades, a windshield-wide grin on his trademarked face, Redford would not be filming Milagro in Chimayo, where los Chimayosos didn't want him, wouldn't have him. He would be going up the hill to Las Truches where the fish were biting.
When Gary DeVore rolled out of Santa Fe to enter the Twilight Zone, he was troubled by discovery of U.S. money laundering in the Panamanian drug smuggling. CIA's Chase Brandon was on the case.
The sunshine pump was directed up Redford and Woodward's respective skirts by such helpful liaison agents.
The presence of the Agency's McCord, Hunt, Sturgis, Barker et al insured Nixon would not win the staring contest with Helms.
Another matinee villain sacrificed for the balcony cheers. The doofus Fordoh, he's so dumb. Dumb enough to place Nelson Rockefeller investigating CIA for assassination evils. Dumb enough to name George Herbert Walker Bush Director of Central Witness Elimination in the run-up to the HSCA Playskool Let's Pretend Investigation.
The real Deep Throat? How about that tracheotomy on 35.
How about the Custer deposition to Gunne and Horne:
BEGIN DEPOSITION
Douglas Horne, Inside the Assassinations Record Review Board, Volume II, Chapter Five: The Autopsy X-Rays, pages 530-2:
Custer Examines the X-Rays of the Body
The noteworthy highlights of Custer's review of the x-rays of the body was Jeremy's attempt to see whether Custer could identify metal fragments near any of the cervical vertebrae, which Custer had mentioned earlier in the deposition.
Jeremy showed Custer x-ray no. 9, a view of the chest prior to removal of the lungs, and the exchange went as follows:
Gunn: Previously, you referred to there being metal fragments in the cervical area. Are you able to identify any metal fragments in this x-ray?
Custer: Not in this film.
Gunn: Does this film include a view or an exposure that would have included such metal fragments?
Custer: No sir.
Gunn: Where would the metal fragments be located?
Custer: Further up in there. This region.
Gunn: Can youand you're pointing to?
Custer: Up into the, I'd say, C3/C4 region.
Jeremy asked Custer to review x-rays no. 8 and 10, of the right shoulder and chest, and left shoulder and chest, respectivelyboth are images following the removal of the heart and lungs. Custer could not identify metal fragments in either x-ray.
Later, Jeremy asked Custer the following questions:
Gunn: Now, you had raised, previously in the deposition. . .the possibility of some metal fragments in the C3/C4 range.
Custer: I noticed I didn't see that.
Gunn: You didn't see any x-rays that would be inthat would include the C3/C4 area?
Custer: No sir.
Gunn: Are you certain that you took x-rays that included theincluded C3 and C4?
Custer: Yes, sir. Absolutely.
Gunn: How many x-rays did you take that would have included that?
Custer: Just one. And that was all that was necessary, because it showedright there.
Gunn: And what, as best you recall, did it show?
Custer: A fragmentation of a shell in and around that circular exitthat area. Let me rephrase that. I don't want to say "exit," because I don't know whether it was exit or entrance. But all I can say, there was bullet fragmentations [sic] around that areathat opening.
Gunn: Around C3/C4?
Custer: Right.
Gunn" And do you recall how many fragments there were?
Custer: Not really. There was enough. It was very prevalent.
Gunn: Did anyone make any observations about metal fragments in the C3/C4 area?
Custer: I did. And I was told to mind my own business. That's where I was shut down again.
Gunn: You have, during the course of this deposition, identified three x-rays that you are quite certain that you took, but don't appear in this collection. Are there any others that you can identify as not being included?
Custer: That's the only three that come to my mind right now; the two tangential views, and the A-P cervical spine.
Gunn: Okay.
Custer: Can I add something to that?
Gunn: Sure.
Custer: In my own opinion, I do believe, basically, the reason why they are not here is because they showed massive amounts of bullet fragments.
END DEPOSITION
If 90% of the world's heroin is no longer secure after 2014, is it time to "work with Iran" per the 2004 CFR Brzezinski-Gates paper "Iran: Time for a New Approach" or time to go down and see what Chavez and the IRGC are doing in Bolivia?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFLw26BjDZs
Redford tried twice to buy the compound on the hill north of Santa Fe where the single access road rang a bell summoning a security guard. But the families would not sell. At that time Ed Howard had a place vacant south of town in Eldorado http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/1991_cr/h911127-spy.htm
Or Wen Ho Lee's, up on the hill. The year of the 50,000-acre controlled burn that evacuated the Lab and saw Buddy Young of FEMA arrive on-scen and assure all, "the town has no need to be nervous."
Watergate is the Lone Nut of the Helms coup.
Watching Sam Ervin drawling, "Fee, fie, foe, fum, I smell the blood of Nixon and Erlichmann," was great fun, culminating in the, "effective noon tomorrow" last chopper out of Saigon preview August 8, 1974.
Redford relished All the President's Men, and Felt, the little lying weasel, pretended to be what he was not.
Earlier Redford in Condor was just so aghast to find all that nasty heroin trafficking. Would he connect the dots, that the 35[SUP]th[/SUP] president was removed as the last obstacle to that trade?
In APM would he not wonder of the tape 180 degrees wrong, removed by guards, replaced by "burglars"in the same amateur-night orientation? No, nor would Woodward. One an actor, the other, an actor.
Zipping through Nambe by the river north of Santa Fe in a red SUV driven by a studio "cowboy" in a big black hat and big black shades, a windshield-wide grin on his trademarked face, Redford would not be filming Milagro in Chimayo, where los Chimayosos didn't want him, wouldn't have him. He would be going up the hill to Las Truches where the fish were biting.
When Gary DeVore rolled out of Santa Fe to enter the Twilight Zone, he was troubled by discovery of U.S. money laundering in the Panamanian drug smuggling. CIA's Chase Brandon was on the case.
The sunshine pump was directed up Redford and Woodward's respective skirts by such helpful liaison agents.
The presence of the Agency's McCord, Hunt, Sturgis, Barker et al insured Nixon would not win the staring contest with Helms.
Another matinee villain sacrificed for the balcony cheers. The doofus Fordoh, he's so dumb. Dumb enough to place Nelson Rockefeller investigating CIA for assassination evils. Dumb enough to name George Herbert Walker Bush Director of Central Witness Elimination in the run-up to the HSCA Playskool Let's Pretend Investigation.
The real Deep Throat? How about that tracheotomy on 35.
How about the Custer deposition to Gunne and Horne:
BEGIN DEPOSITION
Douglas Horne, Inside the Assassinations Record Review Board, Volume II, Chapter Five: The Autopsy X-Rays, pages 530-2:
Custer Examines the X-Rays of the Body
The noteworthy highlights of Custer's review of the x-rays of the body was Jeremy's attempt to see whether Custer could identify metal fragments near any of the cervical vertebrae, which Custer had mentioned earlier in the deposition.
Jeremy showed Custer x-ray no. 9, a view of the chest prior to removal of the lungs, and the exchange went as follows:
Gunn: Previously, you referred to there being metal fragments in the cervical area. Are you able to identify any metal fragments in this x-ray?
Custer: Not in this film.
Gunn: Does this film include a view or an exposure that would have included such metal fragments?
Custer: No sir.
Gunn: Where would the metal fragments be located?
Custer: Further up in there. This region.
Gunn: Can youand you're pointing to?
Custer: Up into the, I'd say, C3/C4 region.
Jeremy asked Custer to review x-rays no. 8 and 10, of the right shoulder and chest, and left shoulder and chest, respectivelyboth are images following the removal of the heart and lungs. Custer could not identify metal fragments in either x-ray.
Later, Jeremy asked Custer the following questions:
Gunn: Now, you had raised, previously in the deposition. . .the possibility of some metal fragments in the C3/C4 range.
Custer: I noticed I didn't see that.
Gunn: You didn't see any x-rays that would be inthat would include the C3/C4 area?
Custer: No sir.
Gunn: Are you certain that you took x-rays that included theincluded C3 and C4?
Custer: Yes, sir. Absolutely.
Gunn: How many x-rays did you take that would have included that?
Custer: Just one. And that was all that was necessary, because it showedright there.
Gunn: And what, as best you recall, did it show?
Custer: A fragmentation of a shell in and around that circular exitthat area. Let me rephrase that. I don't want to say "exit," because I don't know whether it was exit or entrance. But all I can say, there was bullet fragmentations [sic] around that areathat opening.
Gunn: Around C3/C4?
Custer: Right.
Gunn" And do you recall how many fragments there were?
Custer: Not really. There was enough. It was very prevalent.
Gunn: Did anyone make any observations about metal fragments in the C3/C4 area?
Custer: I did. And I was told to mind my own business. That's where I was shut down again.
Gunn: You have, during the course of this deposition, identified three x-rays that you are quite certain that you took, but don't appear in this collection. Are there any others that you can identify as not being included?
Custer: That's the only three that come to my mind right now; the two tangential views, and the A-P cervical spine.
Gunn: Okay.
Custer: Can I add something to that?
Gunn: Sure.
Custer: In my own opinion, I do believe, basically, the reason why they are not here is because they showed massive amounts of bullet fragments.
END DEPOSITION
If 90% of the world's heroin is no longer secure after 2014, is it time to "work with Iran" per the 2004 CFR Brzezinski-Gates paper "Iran: Time for a New Approach" or time to go down and see what Chavez and the IRGC are doing in Bolivia?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFLw26BjDZs
Redford tried twice to buy the compound on the hill north of Santa Fe where the single access road rang a bell summoning a security guard. But the families would not sell. At that time Ed Howard had a place vacant south of town in Eldorado http://www.fas.org/irp/congress/1991_cr/h911127-spy.htm
Or Wen Ho Lee's, up on the hill. The year of the 50,000-acre controlled burn that evacuated the Lab and saw Buddy Young of FEMA arrive on-scen and assure all, "the town has no need to be nervous."
Watergate is the Lone Nut of the Helms coup.