-Caveat Lector-

"I pledge Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America and to
the REPUBLIC for which it stands,  one Nation under God,indivisible,with
liberty and justice for all."

 visit my web site at
http://www.voicenet.com/~wbacon My ICQ# is 79071904
for a precise list of the powers of the Federal Government linkto:
http://www.voicenet.com/~wbacon/Enumerated.html

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2002 09:21:35 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: Time and Newsweek Use Lott to Smear GOP as Race-Baiters

              ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
   1:20pm EST, Thursday December 19, 2002 (Vol. Seven; No. 200)
  The 1,401st CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

Time and Newsweek Use Lott to Smear GOP as Race-Baiters; Jack
White: Reagan Just Like Wallace; Clooney Calls Bush "Dim" and Has
Carter Photo in His Bathroom; PBS Airs Uncritical Promotional Show
About Muslim Religion; MRC Announces Winners of Annual Awards for
Worst Reporting

    #### Distributed to more than 11,600 recipients by the Media
Research Center, bringing political balance to the news media
since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/cyberwelcome.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC donations page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20021219.asp ####

1) Both parties have used race at times to attract votes, but this
week's Time and Newsweek magazines smeared only Republicans, and
especially conservatives, as the ones exploiting white resentments
against blacks. Newsweek declared: "Trent Lott and the GOP grew up
together in the South. They both have a painful secret." Time
argued: "When the Democratic Party embrace the civil rights
movement, many alienated Southerners turned to the Republicans.
The effects are still being felt today." It only took 40 years.
Time even portrayed the Contract with America as racist.

2) Republicans and conservatives as race exploiters, part 2.
"Grand Old Segregationists" announced the headline over an online-
only piece by Newsweek's Eleanor Clift who contended: "With one
stupid and thoughtless attempt at humor, Lott stripped away the
carefully constructed facade the Bush team erected at the GOP
convention in 2000 and revealed the party's true colors." Jack
White charged in an online posting for Time that Ronald Reagan
"set a standard for exploiting white anger and resentment rarely
seen since George Wallace stood in the schoolhouse door."

3) President George Bush "is just dim," actor George Clooney
claims in the upcoming February issue of GQ magazine, the New York
Post's "Page Six" revealed on Wednesday. The Post writers relayed
how GQ reports that Clooney believes Mario Cuomo should be
President, keeps a photo of Jimmy Carter's ER set visit on display
in his bathroom and "likens Newt Gingrich to a 'dinosaur,'
laughing, 'the man has no arms.'"

4) You can't imagine PBS airing a missionary film promoting the
wonders of Christianity or treating basic elements of the
Christian faith as fact, but that apparently is just what PBS did
with a two-hour look at the Muslim faith aired Wednesday night on
most PBS stations, "Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet." Human Events
Online has posted a critical look by Daniel Pipes at the PBS show:
"PBS ignores an ongoing scholarly reassessment of Muhammad's life
that disputes every detail...of its film. This silence is
especially odd when contrasted" with a 1998 PBS documentary which
focused "almost exclusively on the work of cutting-edge scholars
and presents the latest in critical thinking on Jesus."

5) The results are in for the "Best Notable Quotables of 2002, the
15th Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting." A panel of 52
leading media observers judged 17 award categories and the winning
quotes and top runners-up have been posted on the MRC's home page.



    > 1) Though the Democratic Party was the party of segregation
since federal troops left the South in the 1870s and Democrats
suppressed blacks for the next century, a legacy reenforced a
couple of weeks ago when Louisiana maintained its near-130 year
refusal to elect a Republican to the U.S. Senate, this week's Time
and Newsweek magazines smeared Republicans, and especially
conservatives, as the ones exploiting white resentments against
blacks.

    Clearly, the record of both parties is not clean as operatives
and candidates for both at various times have tried to pit one
race against the other, but the magazines used the Trent Lott
situation to malign only Republicans and conservatives. A headline
in Newsweek declared: "Trent Lott and the GOP grew up together in
the South. They both have a painful secret."

    Both magazines cited the 1988 Willie Horton ad as an example
of GOP race-baiting, but neither bothered to point out what would
have ruined their impugning of President George H.W. Bush, that
the case of Horton, a rapist and murderer paroled by the Dukakis
administration in Massachusetts only to attack again, was first
raised in the Democratic primary against Michael Dukakis by Al
Gore.

    The December 23 Time magazine featured a two-page spread
headlined, "Race and the G.O.P." The subhead maintained: "When the
Democratic Party embrace the civil rights movement, many alienated
Southerners turned to the Republicans. The effects are still being
felt today."

    The first item on the timeline: Democrat Strom Thurmond
becoming the Dixiecrat candidate in 1948, but Time failed to point
out how Southern Democratic whites hardly fled to the Republican
Party. Thurmond didn't become a Republican until 1964 and whites
kept Democrats in control in the South well into the 1980s --
another 40 years -- as segregationist Democrats kept getting re-
elected cycle after cycle in beating Republicans.

    For 1980 the timeline had: "Ronald Reagan opens his campaign
in Philadelphia, Miss., and creates a furor when he uses the code
words states' rights to appeal to white conservatives."

    Of course, it could have just been that he wanted to launch
his campaign in the heart of his opponents region to show how much
he wanted the votes of Southerners. And with blacks voting in
block for the Democrat, what's wrong with trying to rally voters
who by then thought they didn't need federal intervention into
their lives when electoral wrongdoing in the north did not bring
such intervention.

    For 1988, under photo of Lee Atwater playing guitar with
George H.W. Bush: "Lee Atwater, above, runs George Bush's
presidential campaign. An infamous ad attacked Democratic
contender Michael Dukakis for granting a furlough to murderer
Willie Horton. While the campaign and Atwater denied
responsibility for the ad, they reaped its benefits."

    As if Dukakis would have won if not for the little-seen ad
which continues to obsess the media.

    For 1995: "Talking tough on welfare and racial quotas, Georgia
Republican Newt Gingrich leads a Republican sweep of Congress in
midterm elections, delivering a rebuke to President Bill Clinton."

    Quite a smear on at least two fronts. First, it assumes
advocating self-worth and responsibility is somehow anti-black and
that calling for an end to preferences by race is somehow racist.
Second, it ignores how Gingrich got into office in the first place
so he'd be around in 1994 to supposedly exploit race: He had to
run twice against an incumbent segregationist Democratic
Congressman and after nearly beating him in 1976 the incumbent,
Jack Flynt, retired in 1978.

    The timeline is a graphic you can access from the cover story:
http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101021223/story.html

    Over in Newsweek, Jon Meacham and Eleanor Clift contended:
    "Lott's effusive birthday remark has cast a stark light on the
grimy engine room of the post-World War II GOP and inadvertently
drawn attention to his own history, one marked by nods to a
neo-South of Confederate and 'separate but equal'
sentimentalists." At least Newsweek did acknowledge that Democrats
were "long the main bulwark of segregation in the South."

    An excerpt from the December 23 cover story by Meacham with
Clift, Julia Reed, Howard Fineman and Arian Campo-Flores:

....The power of Southern Republicanism is a political reality
that Bush and his guru Karl Rove understand very well. The painful
legacy on which it is built, however, is something they would just
as soon we all forget. Lott's effusive birthday remark has cast a
stark light on the grimy engine room of the post-World War II GOP
and inadvertently drawn attention to his own history, one marked
by nods to a neo-South of Confederate and "separate but equal"
sentimentalists....

Race was not the only element in the Republican resurgence in the
late 1960s. The Democrats -- long the main bulwark of segregation
in the South -- were in the midst of running off the left side of
the road with a cultural liberalism that alienated many Americans.
The war in Vietnam remained more popular in the old Confederacy
than in other regions, and many Southerners had respectable and
legitimate grievances against big government that had absolutely
nothing to do with civil rights. But race was there in the
beginning, and lingers still. When Nixon talked about "law and
order," it was not hard to figure out what he meant; Thurmond had
tested similar themes two decades before. If Truman's civil-rights
program was to be enforced, Thurmond said at a campaign stop in
Cherryville, N.C., "the results of civil strife may be horrible
beyond imagination. Lawlessness will be rampant. Chaos will
prevail. And there will be the greatest breakdown of law
enforcement in the history of the nation."...

    PAUSE Excerpt

    Don't forget, as Newsweek did, that it was Richard Nixon's
Justice Department which, along with federal judges, came up with
the forced school busing in many cities. That liberal policy
prescription only exacerbated white anger at blacks in such
northern cities as Boston, an example of where liberal policies
did exactly what Newsweek only blames conservatives for doing.

    Resume Excerpt:

....On racial issues, though, there was a rightward pattern of
votes and statements that unfolded in plain sight but did not
attract much attention until now. Lott talked last week about his
work on jobs and infrastructure and trade with Africa, but he
voted against extending the Voting Rights Act; against the federal
Martin Luther King Jr. holiday; against tracking racial hate
crimes. And he twice�not once but twice�averred that Strom
Thurmond's America would have been preferable to Harry Truman's,
or, presumably, Dwight Eisenhower's or John Kennedy's.

Of course, Lott was not the only modern Republican to play the
race card. In 1980 Reagan talked about states' rights in
Philadelphia, Miss., and his well-worn anecdote about a Chicago
"welfare queen" was not a particularly subtle allusion to
African-Americans. In 1988 a group sympathetic to George Bush's
presidential campaign produced the "Willie Horton ad" attacking
Michael Dukakis's furlough program. And when George W. Bush was on
the run from John McCain in the early 2000 presidential race, he
went to the fundamentalist Bob Jones University in South Carolina
to shore up his base....

    END of Excerpt

    That's online at: http://www.msnbc.com/news/847736.asp



    > 2) In addition to the material in the hard copy magazines
this week detailed above in item #1, the Newsweek and Time Web
sites feature pieces using the Lott comments as a segue to impugn
Republicans and conservatives as race exploiters. "Grand Old
Segregationists" announced the headline over an online-only piece
by Newsweek's Eleanor Clift, who contended: "With one stupid and
thoughtless attempt at humor, Lott stripped away the carefully
constructed fa�ade the Bush team erected at the GOP convention in
2000 and revealed the party's true colors."

    Ronald Reagan left a "legacy" of "race-baiting," Jack White
charged in an online posting for Time.com. White castigated Reagan
for setting "a standard for exploiting white anger and resentment
rarely seen since George Wallace stood in the schoolhouse door."

    That's quite a level of hyperbole. And quite a smear since
Reagan never used the power of the state to physically block
blacks from entering a college.

    An excerpt from Clift's December 13 posting which matched the
comments she made on the McLaughlin Group last weekend:

Not one Republican member in the next Congress is
African-American, and that's not surprising. The modern GOP is
built on a legacy of racism. Richard Nixon's "Southern Strategy"
set the poisonous tone, and Republican candidates continue to
exploit racial fears for political gain....

Most people are uncomfortable talking about race so politicians
convey messages in code. Standing up for state's rights has long
been a favorite cover for racist impulses. When Lott stepped out
of that polite way of speaking about race, he exposed the GOP's
double game: the lip service the party gives to reaching out to
blacks and the winks and nods to whites assuring them nothing
fundamental will change. With one stupid and thoughtless attempt
at humor, Lott stripped away the carefully constructed fa�ade the
Bush team erected at the GOP convention in 2000 and revealed the
party's true colors. "We're on the hook now," says a Republican
strategist, who hopes his party understands the depth of the
damage and the need to do more to contain the fallout. Keeping
Lott in place is tantamount to raising the Confederate flag over
the Capitol. No matter how many times he apologies, he has become
a visible symbol of the country's racist past, and the ongoing
hypocrisy of the Republican Party.

    END of Excerpt

    For Clift's diatribe in full:
http://www.msnbc.com/news/847195.asp

    The next day, Saturday December 14, Time posted a piece
headlined, "Lott, Reagan and Republican Racism." The subhead: "If
the GOP wants to attract black voters, argues TIME's Jack White,
it must confront the legacy not only of Trent Lott, but also of
former President Reagan."

    An excerpt from White's polemic:

....The sad truth is that many Republican leaders remain in a
massive state of denial about the party's four-decade-long
addiction to race-baiting. They won't make any headway with blacks
by bashing Lott if they persist in giving Ronald Reagan a pass for
his racial policies.

The same could be said, of course, about such Republican heroes
as, Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon or George Bush the elder, all
of whom used coded racial messages to lure disaffected blue collar
and Southern white voters away from the Democrats. Yet it's with
Reagan, who set a standard for exploiting white anger and
resentment rarely seen since George Wallace stood in the
schoolhouse door, that the Republican's selective memory about its
race-baiting habit really stands out.

Space doesn't permit a complete list of the Gipper's signals to
angry white folks that Republicans prefer to ignore, so two
incidents in which Lott was deeply involved will have to suffice.
As a young congressman, Lott was among those who urged Reagan to
deliver his first major campaign speech in Philadelphia,
Mississippi, where three civil rights workers were murdered in one
of the 1960s' ugliest cases of racist violence. It was a ringing
declaration of his support for "states' rights" -- a code word for
resistance to black advances clearly understood by white Southern
voters.

Then there was Reagan's attempt, once he reached the White House
in 1981, to reverse a long-standing policy of denying tax-exempt
status to private schools that practice racial discrimination and
grant an exemption to Bob Jones University....

Republican leaders and their apologists tend to go into a frenzy
of denial when members of the liberal media cabal bring up these
inconvenient facts. It's that lack of candor, of course, that
presents the biggest obstacle to George W. Bush's commendable and
long overdue campaign to persuade more African-Americans to defect
from the Democrats to the Republicans. It's doomed to fail until
the GOP fesses up its past addiction to race-baiting, and makes a
sincere attempt to kick the habit.

    END of Excerpt

    For White's take in full:
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,399921,00.html

    Conservatives had a non-racist reason for favoring having Bob
Jones University treated like all other colleges: They wanted to
keep the government out of regulating the practices of religion
institutions, seeing such interference as leading down a dangerous
path, one with which liberals, who wave the banner of "separation
of church and state," normally agree.

    As for the "liberal media cabal," maybe it hasn't been beaten.
On C-SPAN in November, White said the MRC should "declare victory"
over liberal media bias. White claimed that he's "constantly
amazed" that "there are still people making a living complaining
about the liberal bias in the press, our good friends, Brent
Bozell and company for example, who run the Media Research
Center." White added: "I keep wondering 'When are you gonna
declare victory fellas?' I mean, Fox News is about as blatant,
blatantly biased as you possibly could get."

    For more of what he said, a picture of him and a rundown of
some of White's liberal and anti-conservative pronouncements in
Time magazine over the years:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2002/cyb20021118.asp#5



    > 3) President George Bush "is just dim," actor George Clooney
claims in the upcoming February issue of GQ magazine, the New York
Post's "Page Six" revealed on Wednesday. The Post writers relayed
how GQ reports that Clooney, probably best known for playing a
doctor on ER and as the star of the Oceans Eleven movie, believes
Mario Cuomo should be President, keeps a photo of Jimmy Carter's
ER set visit on display in his bathroom and "likens Newt Gingrich
to a 'dinosaur,' laughing, 'the man has no arms.'"

    An excerpt from the December 18 item brought to my attention
by the MRC's Liz Swasey who saw it highlighted by Hotline. "Page
Six" is collated by Richard Johnson with Paula Froelich and Chris
Wilson:

....[I]n the upcoming issue of GQ, the Hollywood heartthrob takes
on President Bush.

"The problem is we elected a manager, and we need a leader,"
Clooney tells the magazine. "Let's face it: Bush is just dim."

GQ describes the star as "a liberal's liberal who believes Mario
Cuomo should be our president, and he keeps a photo of Jimmy
Carter's 'ER' set visit on display in his bathroom." Clooney also
likens Newt Gingrich to a "dinosaur," laughing, "The man has no
arms."...

He also revisits his feud with Bill O'Reilly, who criticized
Clooney and other celebs who fail to use due diligence when they
lend their names to dubious charities.

The actor, who refused to go on O'Reilly's show on Fox News
Channel, claims O'Reilly declined to debate him on "Larry King
Live," but O'Reilly says he was never asked.

"It makes me mad when O'Reilly [bleeps] with something that's good
and done for the right reasons," Clooney complains in GQ.

"Once again Mr. Clooney is either stretching the truth or is
misinformed," O'Reilly retorts. "I'm getting a little annoyed."

    END of Excerpt

    Page Six is online at:
http://www.nypost.com/gossip/pagesix.htm

    For a picture of Clooney and a rundown of his roles, see the
Internet Movie Database's page for him:
http://us.imdb.com/Name?Clooney,+George



    > 4) You can't imagine PBS airing a missionary film promoting
the wonders of Christianity or treating basic elements of the
Christian faith, such as the virgin birth of Christ or his rising
into heaven, as fact, but that apparently is just what PBS did
with a two-hour look at the Muslim faith aired Wednesday night on
most PBS stations.

    Human Events Online has posted a critical look by Daniel Pipes
at the PBS show, "Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet." I watched much
of it last night and what I saw matched what Pipes described.
Pipes, Director of the Middle East Forum, complained: "PBS ignores
an ongoing scholarly reassessment of Muhammad's life that disputes
every detail -- down to the century and region Muhammad lived in -
- of its film. This silence is especially odd when contrasted with
the 1998 PBS documentary, 'From Jesus to Christ,' which focuses
almost exclusively on the work of cutting-edge scholars and
presents the latest in critical thinking on Jesus."

    An excerpt from the Pipes critique:

PBS: Missionary for Islam?

....The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) will show this two-hour
documentary across the United States initially on Wednesday, Dec.
18th, in the evening, then repeat it in most areas. The film's
largest tranche of funding comes from the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, "a private, non-profit corporation created by
Congress" which in fiscal 2002 received $350 million in taxpayers'
funds.

The heart of the film consists of nine talking heads competing
with each other to praise Muhammad the most extravagantly. As a
result, not one of them criticizes him. Some of their efforts are
laughable, as when one commentator states that allegations about
Muhammad contracting a marriage of convenience with a rich, older
woman named Khadija are wrong for "he deeply, deeply loved
Khadija." Oh, and his many marriages were "an act of faith, not of
lust."

Other apologetics are more consequential. What Muhammad did for
women, viewers learn, was "amazing" -- his condemning female
infanticide, giving legal rights to wives, permitting divorce, and
protecting their inheritance rights. But no commentator is so
impolite as to note that however admirable this was in the seventh
century, Muslim women today suffer widely from genital mutilation,
forced marriages, purdah, illiteracy, sexual apartheid, polygamy,
and honor killings.

The film treats religious beliefs -- such as Muhammad's "Night
Journey," when the Qur'an says he went to heaven and entered the
divine presence -- as historical facts. Muslim wars are presented
as only defensive and reluctant. All this smacks of a film shown
by missionaries, not a prime-time documentary.

Move to the present and the political correctness is stifling.
Hostility is said to be "hurled" at American Muslims since 9/11 -
but there's no mention about the prior and vastly greater Muslim
hostility "hurled" at Americans, killing several thousand. The
narrator exaggerates the number of American Muslims, overestimates
their rate of growth, and wrongly states they are the country's
"most diverse" religious community....

"Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet" is an outrage....PBS has betrayed
its viewers by presenting an air-brushed and uncritical
documentary of a topic that has both world historical and
contemporary significance. Its patronizing film might be fine for
an Islamic Sunday school class (the Philadelphia Inquirer calls
the film a "blessed opportunity for rest and reflection"), but not
for a national audience....

    END of Excerpt

    To read the piece in full:
http://www.humaneventsonline.com/articles/12-16-02/pipes.htm

    Pipes' Web site: http://www.DanielPipes.org

    PBS's page for the program: http://www.pbs.org/muhammad/

    If you missed it, it should be repeated in most markets next
week sometime. Check local listings, as they say. I saw it last
night because Maryland Public Television, which is on local cable
around DC, carried it, but Washington, DC's PBS affiliate, WETA,
is not scheduled to air it for the first time until December 26.



    > 5) The results are in for the "Best Notable Quotables of
2002, the 15th Annual Awards for the Year's Worst Reporting." A
panel of 52 leading media observers judged 17 award categories for
the MRC.

    We've been working over the past several days to tabulate the
votes and squeeze as many quotes as we could into the eight-page
hard copy version. It went off to the printer on Monday night. A
press release announcing the results went out on Wednesday and the
issue is now featured on the MRC's home page where it is posted
along with RealPlayer clips for many of the quotes uttered on
television. Go to: http://www.mediaresearch.org

    The direct address:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/bestof/2002/welcome.asp

    You'll also see a link to an Adobe Acrobat PDF that matches
the eight-page hard copy version. Direct address for the PDF:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/bestof/2002/pdf/BestofNQ2002.pdf

    For the list of judges, with links to their Web pages for
those who have one:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/bestof/2002/bestquote.asp#judges

    The award categories:
Media Hero Award
Bill Moyers (Subsidized) Sanctimony Award
General Phil "Cheap Shot" Donahue Award
Carve Clinton into Mount Rushmore Award
Fourth Reich Award
Barbra Streisand Political IQ Award
Ashamed of the Red, White & Blue Award
Mount St. Helen Award for Helen Thomas Eruptions
Give Appeasement a Chance Award
Good Morning Morons Award
Begala & Carville War Room Award for Bush Bashing
Damn Those Conservatives Award
Media Millionaires for Smaller Paychecks Award
Politics of Meaninglessness Award
Blame America First Award
See No Liberal Media Bias Award
Quote of the Year

    So everyone gets proper credit, Mez Djouadi posted the issue,
Kristina Sewell and Amanda Monson distributed the ballots to the
judges, tabulated the results and cued up the tapes for clip
posting. Jessica Anderson re-checked the numbers so we didn't have
any Florida type problem and Geoffrey Dickens, Patrick Gregory,
Brad Wilmouth and Ken Shepherd proofread the issue.

    Rich Noyes handled laying it out in PageMaker and I sat back
and watched it all happen after Rich, Liz Swasey, Geoff, Jessica
and I all chose the quotes for the ballot and came up with award
title ideas which we hashed out with MRC President Brent Bozell.

    To find out who won in each category, for now you'll have to
go online. Keeping with tradition, on the day after Christmas
CyberAlert will feature the winning quotes. Then on the 27th the
first runners-up followed by the second runners-up on the 30th and
the third runners-up on the 31st.

    But I will give you one scoop: Bill Moyers won Quote of the
Year.

-- Brent Baker


    >>> Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon
contributions which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-
deductible donation. Be sure to fill in "CyberAlert" in the field
which asks: "What led you to become a member or donate today?" For
the secure donations page:
https://secure.mediaresearch.org/Donation/Order/MediaResearch25-27/mck-cgi/mrcdonate.asp

    To subscribe to CyberAlert, send a blank e-mail to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

    To unsubscribe, use the link at the very bottom of this
message.

    Send problems and comments to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

    You can learn what has been posted each day on the MRC's Web
site by subscribing to the "MRC Web Site News" distributed every
weekday afternoon. To subscribe, go to:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cybersub.asp#webnews <<<

====================================================================
Update your profile here:
http://topica.email-publisher.com/survey/?bUrD57.bWlTIR.d2JhY29u

Unsubscribe here:
http://topica.email-publisher.com/survey/?bUrD57.bWlTIR.d2JhY29u.u

Delivered by Topica Email Publisher, http://topica.email-publisher.com/

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
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://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/";>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

Reply via email to