In The Name of God Most Gracious, Most Merciful
 
The most powerful religious and political protest of this year is scheduled for
April 19, 2000
To be held at the gates of "New Jerusalem" Mt.Carmel Center  Waco Texas.
 
There will be a Solemn Assembly and a Sanctified Fast in opposition to "Cover-up Church" , and the Media party of gayety planned by the Bill Clinton Murderers of the Children of Waco.
 
The work being done here every "Sunday Sabbath" by the Bill Clinton
Stooges Clive Doyle and Alex Jones is just as much a violation of
The laws of God and a slander to the Martyrs as was the laying of the foundation on the Saturday Sabbath September 18, 1999. 
Did they really think that they could get away with this without
The people being told and shown that the murderers are still in control of
The House of David? 
 Truth will Crush the Head of Falsehood.
 
All of their work is an Abomination Unto the Lord and it Will Make Them Desolate!
 

Andrew X98  "The Watchman"
 
The "Cover-up Church" was founded on the Sabbath 9-18-99 by Agent, Clive Doyle
 
Waco Video: "X A True Revelation"  $10.98 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
The Children were "HACKED" to death before the fire!
http://www.public-action.com/SkyWriter/WacoMuseum/index.html
 
David Koresh Said:  "The earthquake in Waco is not something to be taken lightly. It will probably be "the thing" needed to shake some sense into the people."
 
 

 
-----Original Message-----
From: DIG alfred webre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, March 21, 2000 4:36 PM
Subject: [CTRL] RADICALS ON THE WEB

>-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
></A> -Cui Bono?-
>
> L.A. Kauffman                Date: Wed Mar 15, 2000 8:38pm
>              Subject: RADICALS ON THE WEB
>
>
>              pass it along . . .
>
>                              free radical: a chronicle of the new unrest
>
>-----------------------------------------------------------
>                                              by L.A. Kauffman
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>--------------------------------
>                 to subscribe, send a blank email to
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>---------------------------------RADICALS
>              ON THE WEB. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
>.  Issue #1.5
>
>              Movements aren’t born on the Internet. The digital realm can’t
>supply the mysterious spark
>              that turns an obscure cause into a widespread passion, that
>motivates scattered individuals
>              to take collective action.
>
>              But once people are in motion, the Internet is an agitator’s
>dream: fast, cheap, far-reaching.
>              Grassroots movements of all kinds increasingly use listserves
>and discussion groups to
>              coordinate their work. Email is beginning to do away with the
>expensive chore of stuffing
>              envelopes, long a staple of activist life. And with the
>planetary reach of the World Wide Web,
>              activist networks are globalizing at nearly the pace of the
>corporate order they oppose.
>
>              For radical and alternative media, the potential is enormous.
>One striking example: During
>              the Seattle WTO protests and their aftermath, the Independent
>Media Center
>              (www.indymedia.org) logged a stunning 2 million hits on its
>website, which broadcast
>              firsthand reports from the streets.
>
>              However, a "digital divide" in computer and Internet access
>remains between the haves and
>              have-nots, which in the United States often means whites and
>people of color. Such
>              disparities carry over into grassroots organizing: Even a group
>as large and media-savvy as
>              Reverend Al Sharpton’s National Action Network is not yet
>online.
>
>              What follows is a tiny sampling of what’s out there, a guided
>tour to some of the best radical
>              gathering spots on the Web:
>
>                                        CORPORATE GLOBALIZATION
>              The best place to hook up with the fight against corporate
>globalization is the A16 website
>              (www.a16.org). This site is the online hub for the main
>coalition planning the
>              sure-to-be-splashy April 16 protests in Washington, D.C., which
>will target the annual
>              meeting of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
>
>              Be sure to read Elizabeth Martinez’s influential essay on this
>burgeoning movement, "Where
>              Was the Color in Seattle? Looking for Reasons Why the Great
>Battle Was So White"
>              (http://www.zmag.org/CrisesCurEvts/Globalism/seattlkecolor.htm)
>
>              To study globalization issues in greater depth, check out the
>excellent reading list offered by
>              San Francisco’s Modern Times Bookstore
>(http://www.mtbs.com/globalization.htm). Or
>              subscribe to Essential Action’s Stop-imf listserve, which posts
>1-5 messages per day on
>              topics relating to the IMF, structural adjustment, and Third
>World debt (Send email to
>              [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "subscribe" in the
>body of the message).
>
>              Finally, a comprehensive resource guide on corporate
>globalization can be found on Global
>              Exchange’s website
>(http://www.globalexchange.org/wbimf/links.html) .
>
>                                              DIRECT ACTION
>              At the upcoming A16 World Bank/IMF protests, you can expect the
>streets to be filled with
>              music, art, exuberance, and blockades -- much as they were in
>Seattle, until the police
>              started lobbing gas canisters into the crowd.
>              This spirited protest style owes much to Reclaim the Streets, a
>worldwide phenomenon, little
>              known in the United States, that was born five years ago out of
>the convergence of England’s
>              anti-road-building movement and underground rave scene
>(http://www.gn.apc.org/rts).
>
>              RTS played a major role in the even less-well-known J18
>protest, a crucial activist watershed
>              (http://www.j18.org). This June 1999 day of anti-capitalist
>action around the world coincided
>              with a G8 global superpower summit in Germany, and pointed the
>way to Seattle and
>              beyond. Learn more at the Mid-Atlantic Infoshop’s indispensable
>website
>              (http://www.infoshop.org/june18.html).
>
>              For the latest news of radical direct action -- genetically
>engineered crops destroyed!
>              pompous capitalist pied! -- scan the voluminous offerings from
>DAMN, the Direct Action
>              Media Network (http://damn.tao.ca/main.htm). And don’t miss the
>Earth First! Journal
>              website (http://www.earthfirstjournal.org), filled with
>frontline reporting and ruminations from
>              direct action movements around the world.
>
>                                                ANARCHISTS
>              Somebody give the mainstream media a clue phone: Anarchists
>don’t all smash windows
>              and wear black masks. On the contrary, there are nearly as many
>anarchisms as there are
>              anarchists, and spirited debates rage among them about tactics,
>strategies, and political
>              styles.
>
>              Anarchist influences pervade many of the liveliest grassroots
>movements today. The best
>              portal by far into this activist realm is the sprawling
>Mid-Atlantic Infoshop site
>              (http://www.infoshop.org).It features daily news updates, key
>texts and manifestos, extensive
>              links, and an excellent FAQ that dispels common misconceptions
>about anarchism.
>
>              Of course, some anarchists do smash windows, wear black masks,
>and so forth. Read what
>              they have to say in the "N30 Black Bloc Communique"
>              (http://www.infoshop.org/octo/wto_blackbloc.html), written
>shortly after Seattle. And check out
>              the recently issued call for a "Revolutionary Anti-Capitalist
>Bloc" at the A16 protests
>              (http://www.infoshop.org/news5/a16_call.html).
>              To get a sense of anarchism’s international reach, peruse the
>multi-lingual A-Infos news
>              service (http://www.ainfos.ca).
>
>                                             POLICE & PRISONS
>              New youth movements are building throughout the U.S. on an
>array of criminal justice issues:
>              police brutality, racial profiling, the death penalty, prison
>expansion and privatization.
>
>              >From the protests against the police acquittals in New York’s
>Amadou Diallo killing to the
>              civil disobedience actions in response to California’s Youth
>Crime Initiative, young activists
>              have brought new life and creativity to longstanding campaigns.
>The Schools Not Jails
>              website (http://www.schoolsnotjails.com) details fiesty teen
>actions against "the incarceration
>              of a generation" in California.
>
>              Hip hop has been central to much of this organizing. A key
>example is the Prison Moratorium
>              Project’s "No More Prisons" CD, released in late 1999
>(www.nomoreprisons.org). For an
>              overview of related efforts, read Angela Ard’s nuanced essay,
>"Rhyme and Resist:
>              Organizing the Hip-Hop Generation"
>              (http://www.thenation.com/issue/990726/0726ards.shtml).
>
>              The Prison Activist Resource Center
>(http://www.prisonactivist.org) includes statistics,
>              background materials, and links to activist groups. Finally,
>for comprehensive background
>              materials on the "war on youth," check out the resource guide
>available at the website of
>              ColorLines magazine (http://www.colorlines.com/waronyouth/).
>
>                                           ====================
>
>                                            ABOUT THE AUTHOR
>
>              L.A. Kauffman ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is a longtime radical
>writer and activist whose work
>              has appeared in the Village Voice, The Nation, The Progressive,
>Spin, Mother Jones,
>              Salon.com, and numerous other publications. Currently, she is
>writing a history of American
>              radicalism since 1970. She lives in New York City, where she
>has been active in the
>              community garden movement, the Lower East Side Collective, and
>the Direct Action
>              Network.
>
>
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>              All contents Copyright 2000 by L.A. Kauffman
>
>              For information on reprinting FREE RADICAL, write to
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>
>              FREE RADICAL is syndicated by Alternet (www.alternet.org)
>
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