When Bobby Kennedy was murdered, Walter Lippman had a story in Pittsburg
Gazette.....he quoted his own rendition of the 109th Psalm, "surely the
democrats will be punished and their offices taken away" - a friend sent
me this item an old reporter who also freelanced with Newsweek....and
said is he part of it. Oh no, Walter Lippman for you see at that time
I never heard of this CFR and Round Table bunch of assassins.....once
was Camelot, now are Assassins.
So then the got Teddy on that Bridge - but this is example - like when
the were going to knock off Reagan, the CFR it was front page stuff -
Columbus dispatch reported the 300 or 400 whatever they are, warned
Reagan - change you ways.....then next few days a front page item where
Castro going to murder Reagan, he was on list. First story credible,
2nd story - hey, the plot is underway and sure enough, Reagan shot shot
but he lived.
Now FBI used to follow me about and had couple FBI friends.....but the
day before Reagan shot, these two elderly men, were standing at the stop
where I usually took bus downtown to lunch.......
Ever see two FBI - like to get on either side of you and talk out of
corner of mouth....but these two were obviously of the Retired FBI
Association for my one bossie was FBI when I read the story of Castro
planned to kill Reagan and he was comin down hall......without thinking
I said....
They are going to shoot Reagan and blame it on Castro.......
So this one man said to me:
Read Luke 14, 28 - what do you think....only he pretended to talk to
other agnt....nothing hostile.
So read Luke 14, vs.28 ......
And wonder...."for which of you intending to build a tower sitteth not
down first and cunteth the cost, whether he have sufficient to finish
it?
Lest haply afer he hath laid the foundation, and is not able to finish
it, all that behold it begin to mock him.
Saing, Ah Ha......this man began to build and was not able to finish....
Or what king going to make war against another king sitteth not down
with ten thouand to meet him that cometh against him with twenty
thousand?
OR ELSE, while the othr is yet a gret way off, he sendeth an ambasage,
and desireth conditions of peace.....
Salt is good but what if it has lost its savour...
So little story comes to mind here.....first, Castro was NOT the
architect of the plan that nearly cost Reagan his life; and today Hill
and Bill and Castro tango, not tangle.
So Reagan like JFK invited to lunch at high twelve......to labor
temple.....masonic brother Hiram was building a temple was he not, and
killed by three thugs when he left at high noon.....for Reagan and JFK
met their high noon, and Bobby met his low twelve did they not, all
killed or hot in open sight of others, SUDDENLY.......
Martin Luther King invited by CFR controlled AFSCME Union.....and he was
hit on someone else's watch. He was sitting duck on that balcony in
this sleazy area and Jesse Jackson looked on....Moses symbolically
killed on Mt. Nebo.....he had met the SUMMIT - in a way his own High
Noon figuratively at the mountain top.
So now we have Ehud Baruk in trouble and this little blurp I
caught........compare it to bible reading, and the original KJV is best
bible, for it is used by Masons, Mafia, FBI, Unions, and CIA.....
So read this and see if you pick up a clue perhaps in CIA controlled
Washington Post? and hey that stupid numerical bible code book, The
Bible Code.....written by Washington Post Reporter? With man from
Israel how quaint.
Friend to Bob Woodward maybe?
Put stars by paragraph worthy of note to the ones who are interested in
a bible code that as Jimmy Hoffa would say......hey he aint' the
architect of that plan, now I mean figurately, not literally when I say
I wanted to see Bobby dead....words to that effect, for the heat was on
and Meyer Lansky reigned then.
So Ehud heads to mountain top?
Saba
Barak faces crisis ahead of summit Israeli leader puts off trip to
U.S. until no confidence votes are taken Israeli Prime Minister Ehud
Barak.
MSNBC STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS
JERUSALEM, July 10 � Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Barak, facing political trouble at home on the eve of a peace
summit, has put off his trip to the United States until three
no-confidence votes are taken in the Israeli parliament on Monday. The
votes come after three right-wing parties pulled out of Barak's
coalition, fearful that he would go too far in his concessions with
Palestinians.
In spite of the increased strength of the opposition, political
commentators did not believe Israel's parliament would succeed in
mustering support needed to bring down the government.
BARAK LEFT Monday morning to briefly consult with
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on the peace process, but would return
home afterward instead of flying straight to the United States.
In spite of the increased strength of the opposition,
political commentators did not believe Israel's parliament would succeed
in mustering the 61 out of the 120 members needed to bring down the
government.
The government will survive, but will emerge "battered
and bruised, by the skin of its teeth," said Israel radio's
parliamentary reporter Gil Litman.
Barak did not say explicitly what he would do if he does
lose the no-confidence votes. The law states that elections would have
to be held within 90 days. During this time Barak would continue to
enjoy all the powers of a prime minister, including the authority to
negotiate a peace treaty, at least in the legal sense.
The opposition would argue that a caretaker government
would not have the moral authority to take major decisions affecting the
future of the nation. [laborer in vineyard? Saba]
The Mideast summitFull coverage from MSNBC.com and
our global partners�The latest summit news
�Bill Clinton: Why we must succeed, from Newsweek
�Newsweek: Half-century's journey to Camp David
�Newsweek: Albright, the lioness in winter
�WashPost: Political high wire act
****************
Barak, defiant in the face of his crumbling government, said his mandate
is from the nation, not from parliament, because he was elected directly
by an unprecedented majority. He said he would leave no stone unturned
in the search for peace and is confident such a treaty will be approved
in a referendum by a large majority.
***************************
Adding to his crusade, an opinion poll published Monday
in Israel showed a majority favored making compromises for peace with
Palestinian President Yasser Arafat at the Camp David summit Tuesday
hosted by U.S. President Bill Clinton.
The opinion poll of 502 Israelis taken on Sunday showed
that 52 percent believed Barak must head for the summit.
The Dahaf Institute poll for the newspaper Yedioth
Ahronoth poll showed that 53 percent believed Barak had a mandate to
make concessions to Palestinians while 44 percent believed he did not
and 3 percent had no opinion. The poll had a 4.5 percent margin of
error.
CRUMBLING COALITION
Three of Barak's coalition parties quit on Sunday � the
ultra-Orthodox Shas party, the Russian immigrants party Yisrael B'Aliya
and the National Religious Party - stripping him of a majority in
parliament. They resigned with stunning speed, accusing Barak of keeping
them in the dark and planning to cede West Bank land they view as the
biblical birthright of the Jewish people and crucial to Israeli
security.
What's more, Barak's foreign minister, David Levy, said
he would boycott the summit because he felt the Palestinians were not
showing enough flexibility. The decision by Levy, formerly of the
right-wing Likud party, was seen as a symbolic blow to Barak because the
fiery minister has often been a good barometer of public sentiment.
Barak was defiant and angry in an evening address to the
nation Sunday, tossing aside opposition calls for him to remain home.
"None of these rejectionists will teach me how to defend
Israel and its future," he said, appealing directly to the people who
elected him a year ago - people he is convinced still support his quest
for peace.
"No one will teach me what security is. I must distance
myself from all the political controversies and party considerations to
find the way to peace that will end the conflict of blood between
ourselves and our neighbors."
� Yasser Arafat
� Ehud Barak
� Bill Clinton
Barak is expected to hold negotiations with dovish and
moderate opposition parties after his return from Camp David, in the
hope of forming an alternative coalition. In a sign of things to come,
Barak held a meeting Sunday night with one of the splinter parties, One
People. No agreement was reached but the talks are to continue.
The balance between the two sides in parliament now is
held by the centrist Shinui party, with six seats, and the
ultra-Orthodox United Torah Judaism, with five. Both said they would not
decide which side to take until shortly before the no-confidence vote.
Shinui, a secularist party, was always critical of the
government because of concessions which it made to the ultra-Orthodox
parties. However, Shinui supported Barak's efforts to achieve peace with
the Palestinians, and was not expected to vote with the opposition.
�MSNBC Cable coverage
Watch MSNBC Cable for coverage of this and other stories
Since taking office a year ago, Barak has tussled with a left-right
coalition torn over whether to cede West Bank land Israel captured in
the 1967 Middle East war in return for peace with the Palestinians.
Israeli news reports suggest that Barak is willing to
cede at least 80 percent of the West Bank land captured by Israel �
short of Palestinian expectations but more than any previous leader has
been prepared to hand over.
Israel and the Palestinians are trying to resolve by a
Sept. 13 deadline the most difficult issues of their 52-year conflict,
including the status of Jerusalem, borders and the fate of Palestinian
refugees and Jewish settlements.
Barak still probably has the support of the Arab parties,
which have 10 members, and a few other dovish parties, at least on peace
process issues. But when the resignations take effect, he'll be
governing with a clear minority in Parliament, a precarious position.
PEACE AT RISK
While some analysts say the internal turbulence inside
Israel is expected, others note that the chance for peace is quickly
fleeting.
U.S. national security adviser Sandy Berger was blunt
when asked about prospects for a peace agreement.
Advertisement
"The one thing I'm certain of is that if we don't make
this effort to reach an agreement, it will be a slide to turmoil,"
Berger said Sunday on CBS's "Face the Nation".
"Don't forget, the parties here have set their own
deadline, Sept. 13. That's about nine weeks away. And if there isn't an
agreement by that point, you're going to have, I believe, an
unraveling."
Before the leaders arrive, negotiators were gathering for
pre-summit talks in and around Washington.
Before those discussions began, U.S. Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright told reporters, "The reason that we're having a
summit is that the negotiators have worked very hard, but there are
certain decisions that can only be taken by the leaders, and the dynamic
of the leaders being together with President Clinton at Camp David we
hope will be the right atmosphere."
Clinton is committed to spending a substantial amount of
time at Camp David, the presidential retreat in the Catoctin Mountains
north of Washington. As the site of historic peace talks in 1978 between
Israel and Egypt, the choice of this compound adds a certain gravity to
the summit.
But realistically, Clinton's time is limited, because he
plans to leave on July 19 for a summit of the eight industrialized
nations in Japan.
The Mideast Endgame
Select from the list below for MSNBC's complete interactive guides to
the Mideast�Remaining obstacles to peace �A history of Jewish
settlement�Israel's secret arsenal�The intifada: Birth of a nation
NBC's Tom Aspell in Tel Aviv, The Associated Press and
Reuters contributed to this report.
Newsweek: The president's view Newsweek: A battle of
wills Syrians vote on confidence in Assad Israel's Weizman stepping
down Unorthodox duel fought in Israel
Complete coverage
Palestinian Authority
Israeli government Web site
MSNBC VIEWER'S TOP 10 Would you recommend this story to other
viewers?
not at all
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 highly
MSNBC is optimized for
� Microsoft Internet Explorer
� Windows Media Player
� MSNBC Terms, Conditions and Privacy � 2000
Cover | Headlines | News | Business | Sports | Local |
Technology | Living & Travel | Health
TV News | Opinions | Weather | Shop@MSNBC | MSN | Comics | Find | About
MSNBC | Help | Index
Cool Tools | Jobs | Write Us | Advertising on MSNBC | Terms, Conditions,
and Privacy
A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy
<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