[CTRL] New Revelation Surfaces About Gulf War II Mystery Illness
http://www.gulfwarvets.com/news13.htm PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AUGUST 8, 2003 NEW REVELATION SURFACES ABOUT GULF WAR II MYSTERY ILLNESS The American Gulf War Veterans Association (AGWVA), an independent Gulf War Veterans support organization, has long searched for answers to explain why nearly half of the 697,000 Gulf War I Veterans are now ill and why over 200,000 of those servicemen/women have requested disability, but have received no adequate diagnosis or treatment, from either the Department of Defense (DOD), or Veterans Affairs. Though there have been over 125 studies done by the government at the cost of over $300,000,000 to the taxpayer, we still have no answers as to what caused so many of our soldiers to become ill. Meanwhile, the suffering veterans are receiving little, if any, medical treatment for this illness. It seems that whenever veterans become ill, the term mystery illness seems to be the first and often the only diagnosis that is ever made. Veterans are then left to fend for themselves, sick and unable to work, with little hope of a normal life again. The AGWVA is now again asking questions, this time, about the newest mystery illness to hit the military. After being pressured by a few independent news reporters who have not permitted this mystery to continue unabated, The DOD recently has been forced to announce the mystery deaths of Gulf War II soldiers and that at least 100 other men and women have become ill. Again, however, there were no adequate answers, but, only that the mystery illness diagnosis had reared its ugly head again. According to a family member of one of the military victims, the DOD recently, has changed its label of the illness and is now calling it pneumonia in sharp contrast to what a physician on the scene reported. Due to continuing pressure for sound answers, the DOD was again forced to send an investigative team to Iraq, however the convenient, repeated lack of diagnosis, unfortunately translates into lack of treatment, and lack of compensation for the veteran. The jury is still out, however, if the DOD will be forthcoming with the truth this time. Contrary to the pneumonia and mystery illness labels, enlightening information surfaced today on THE POWER HOUR radio show (www.thepowerhour.com) in an interview with Mark Neusche, father of Josh Neusche, one of the GW II troops to lose his life from the mystery illness while serving in Iraq. The father stated that his 20-year-old healthy son, a former track star and non-smoker, had written home on June 26th explaining that he would be going on a 30-hour hauling mission, but that he could not disclose what they would be hauling. The son had stated that he had been to the Palace of Sadaam Hussein, and it was later learned that he was hauling at the Baghdad Airport. Marsha Paxson also appeared on the show, as she is the journalist who broke the U.S. story for the Lake Sun Leader (www.lakesunleader.com). Although the facts behind this story are continually changing, Ms. Paxson is one of the few journalists who is remaining true to the facts of the original story. Ms. Paxson revealed in her articles that the father reported that his son was not the only ill soldier. Neusche stated that while his son was in a coma at Landstuhl Hospital, the father overheard the nurses say that they were expecting numerous sick troops to be brought in all at one time. In fact, the father actually witnessed approximately 55 other troops being received by the hospital after they were transported by a military ambulance (bus). According to the father, the transported troops were exhibiting varying degrees of the illness. Some walked, some were in wheelchairs and others were on respirators. In the commotion, a doctor reported to the father that his son was suffering from a toxin. No mention of pneumonia was ever made to him, nor was it ever reported in the medical record. Paxson and the AGWVA now question the diagnosis, the actual number of troops that were reported ill, and when the DOD first became aware of this incident. One of the most surprising statements to come from The Power Hour interview conducted on The Genesis Network was that while the son, Josh Neusche, was a healthy young soldier on June 26, 2003, when he reported that he was going to serve on the secret hauling mission, by July 1, 2003, he was in a coma, and that day was suddenly classified by the military, as medically retired from the Army without Josh or his familys consent. Josh did not die until July 12, 2003. Among other problems that this new classification created was that the DOD was no longer obligated to assist the family in getting to Germany to be with their son as he lay in a coma. Because the DOD would not provide even so much as plane or taxi fare for the Neusche family, all 650 members of the 203 Engineer Battalion each contributed $10.00 to make the familys final visit possible. The AGWVA is demanding answers in a timely
[CTRL] Barney Frank Threatens 'Gay Sanctions'
-Caveat Lector- Reprinted from NewsMax.com Barney Frank Threatens 'Gay Sanctions' Austin RuseFriday, Aug. 8, 2003 An openly gay U.S. Congressman announced at the U.N. this week that he would seek trade sanctions against U.S. trading partners that oppose U.N. human rights measures for homosexuals. Specifically mentioning Egypt as a target for sanctions, Barney Frank, Democrat of Massachusetts, made the announcement during a meeting of homosexuals at U.N. headquarters in New York on Monday. Buoyed by a "growing level of success at the U.N." and a seemingly decisive international cultural shift, gay rights advocates met to discuss a multi-pronged strategy, including attacks on traditional morality and Christianity, that they believe will advance the complete gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender agenda. During a panel discussion, Paula Ettelbrick, Executive Director of the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission (IGLHRC) announced a coming "showdown with religion" and that the Pope's "call to arms" against homosexual marriage would be successfully combated. Anthony Appiah, a professor at Princeton University, said that religion posed "a challenge" to the homosexual agenda, and wondered whether religious freedom ought to be limited. Svend Robinson, a member of the Canadian parliament, singled out Bishop Frederick Henry of Calgary for criticism, calling his actions in defense of traditional marriage "unbelievable." Robinson also received thunderous applause from the audience when he told the Catholic Church to "clean up your own house" before criticizing the morality of homosexuals. Finally, Robinson mocked "born again" Christians, asking, "Did they have to come back again as themselves?" Definition of Discrimination The panel also discussed ways to ensure that the resolution introduced by Brazil at this year's U.N. Human Rights Commission, that sought to expand the U.N.'s definition of discrimination to include discrimination based upon "sexual orientation," would be successful next year. Robinson blamed the resolution's failure to pass this year on the Vatican, which "lobbied hard" by rallying "top people in Latin America." In response, Robinson promised a worldwide lobbying campaign, and announced that a "different champion" other than Brazil will bring the resolution forward at the next session of the Commission. There will also be a meeting held in San Diego this fall of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender parliamentarians in order to coordinate these efforts. In a flier distributed at the meeting, IGLHRC listed some of the laws it considered discriminatory towards homosexuals and that should be changed: "Sodomy, age of consent and other 'sex act' laws; laws on prostitution; laws penalizing those wearing clothing of the opposite sex; obscenity/pornography laws; denial of marriage to same sex partners; denial of marriage to trans [gender] people; laws on parenting/adoption." The meeting was sponsored by U.N. Gay, Lesbian or Bisexual Employees (UNGLOBE), and illustrates the growing influence of homosexual rights advocates at the U.N. U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan briefly attended the meeting, and Carol Bellamy, Executive Director of the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF), sent a message of support. Austin Ruse is president of the Catholic Family Human Rights Institute at the United Nations. www.ctrl.org DECLARATION DISCLAIMER == CTRL is a discussion informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply. Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. Archives Available at: http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/ A HREF=""ctrl/A To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED] To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED] Om
[CTRL] Anti-Gay Hate Messages -was- WARNING: U.N. Group in 'showdown' with religion
-Caveat Lector- Organization: http://www.cosmicpenguin.com/911 In-Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; from [EMAIL PROTECTED] on Sun, Aug 10, 2003 at 08:18:00AM -0600 Homosexuality -- in fact, any sexual activity between consenting adults -- does not harm anyone (as long as the participants avoid unwanted pregnancy and transmission of disease). Sexual activity -- the sharing of mutual pleasure -- is in fact beneficial: it often brings people closer together, and it discharges energy that otherwise might lead to frustration and anger. The purpose of moral rules is to minimize harm to people, so that all may live happily and successfully. Therefore the only basis of morality that makes any sense is, Do not harm anyone. By this sane pro-human standard, homosexuality and homosexual people are not immoral (as such) in any way. The only reason some people believe they are immoral is the influence of fundamentalist Judaeo-Christian religions. These religions are in many ways profoundly anti-human; their leaders and holy books have variously advocated and praised the genocide of many millions of people, as well as the murder of women who have sex before marriage, the murder of adherents of other religions, and the practice of genital mutilation. HIV/AIDS was spread in African nations, and in the male homosexual population in the U.S., by vaccines that were contaminated with the virus (probably intentionally). That is an appropriate topic of discussion for this list. The spewing of murderous hatred against harmless people, as motivated by fundamentalist religion, is not. On Sun, Aug 10, 2003 at 08:18:00AM -0600, Ctrl wrote: -Caveat Lector- I can't believe that whining sniveling jizz gobbler (Svend Robinson) has been the incumbent politician for as long as he has. For as long as I can remember, he's done nothing but slap decent moral Canadians across the face time and time again. While I wish the man no ill, I must admit I'd be pleased to learn he's dying of AIDS. - Original Message - From: William Bacon [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, August 08, 2003 1:06 PM Subject: [CTRL] {attack} WARNING signs of the times: U.N. Group in 'showdown' with religion (fwd) -- Forwarded message -- Date: Fri, 8 Aug 2003 17:01:37 + From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: {attack} WARNING signs of the times: U.N. Group in 'showdown' with religion YOU CAN ALSO READ IT ON THE WEB. http://www.topica.com/lists/USAttacked/read \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ Subj: U.N. group in 'showdown with religion' Date: 8/7/03 11:51:46 PM Pacific Daylight Time From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent from the Internet (Details) U.N. group in 'showdown with religion' Gathered homosexual leaders to sharpen 'rights' strategy worldwide http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33984 © 2003 WorldNetDaily.com Buoyed by growing political acceptance of homosexuals worldwide, a United Nations group promoting gay and lesbian rights met in New York to sharpen a multi-pronged strategy that includes a showdown with religion. The meeting was sponsored by the U.N. Gay, Lesbian or Bisexual Employees, known as UNGLOBE, a group officially recognized by the worldwide body in 1996. At a forum Monday, attended briefly by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, panel members singled out Roman Catholics and evangelical Protestants as opponents, according to the New York-based Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute. Speakers included U.S. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., who urged Congress to withhold support for a free trade agreement with Muslim-majority Egypt because of its treatment of homosexuals. Paula Ettelbrick, executive director of the San Francisco-based International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, or IGLHRC, announced a coming showdown with religion and vowed Pope John Paul II's call to arms against homosexual marriage would be successfully combated. Another panel member, Princeton University professor Anthony Appiah, wondered whether or not religion should be limited, as it poses a challenge to the homosexual agenda. To thunderous applause, Svend Robinson, a member of the Canadian parliament, told the Catholic Church to clean up your own house before criticizing the morality of homosexuals. Robinson criticized Roman Catholic Bishop Frederick Henry of Calgary, calling his actions in defense of traditional marriage unbelievable. The deputy mocked born again Christians, asking, Did they have to come back again as themselves? As WorldNetDaily reported, Robinson is the sponsor of a bill that would add sexual orientation as a protected category in Canada's genocide and hate crimes legislation. Opponents believe it would criminalize public expression against homosexual behavior, including making quotations from the Bible. The U.N. group that hosted