..............................................................

>From the New Paradigms Project [Not Necessarily Endorsed]:

From: "Remy C." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "endsecrecy list" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [endsecrecy] Jim Marrs in Dallas Observer
Date: Monday, July 10, 2000 2:05 PM

>From www.dallasobserver.com
Originally published by Dallas Observer July 6, 2000
�2000 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved.

http://www.dallasobserver.com/issues/2000-07-06/feature.html/printable_page

The truth is way out there
Jim Marrs believes that Kennedy was murdered as part of a vast conspiracy,
that aliens vist us regularly, and that the Trialateral Commission controls
our governement. So, what if he's right?
By Robert Wilonsky

The Nut lives just outside a small town called Paradise, a few miles
northwest of Fort Worth. With his wife of more than 30 years, The Nut
inhabits 25 acres of land deserving of its proximity to a town called
Paradise, because even the still, damp air of summer feels light and sweet
here. The sunsets are a brighter shade of pink in the Wise County town of
Springtown; the grass grows a little greener. The Nut's home resembles a
log-cabin bohemian retreat, with a gurgling fountain, sky-high sunflowers, a
greenhouse and garage out back in which The Nut houses a cannon and a 1930s
Mercedes-Benz, and a pointed roof making it look like something out of
Hansel and Gretel.

Walk out the front door, and you will find yourself on a mile-long path that
snakes through lush, untouched woodlands. Grasshoppers leap and bound by the
thousands; the knee-high grass, still damp from late-spring and early-summer
rains, is alive. About halfway on this walk, you stumble out of the forest
and find yourself perched atop what can only be deemed a cliff, which
overlooks solid fields of neon green, each divided by straight rows of trees
that look like fences. Somewhere down there among the brambles and bushes,
says The Nut, is a creek that divides this land, which exists to disprove
the notion that North Texas' countryside is nothing but arid flatland and
barbed-wire fences.

The Nut--with his short pants and denim shirt and hiking boots and straw hat
and walking cane--and his four dogs walk up here when it's time to think, to
clear the brain and focus on shadow governments and assassinated presidents
and spacemen who live among us.

"This," says The Nut, pointing toward the spectacular horizon, "is where I
come to be alone."

It is hard to reconcile such a placid, idyllic setting with the man who has
lived on it since 1979. For a decade, The Nut--who has a name, Jim Marrs, a
most appropriate moniker for a man who not long ago wrote a book titled
Alien Agenda: Investigating the Extraterrestrial Presence Among Us--has been
among the most high-profile of conspiracy theorists, though he would prefer
you refer to him as a "truth seeker."

Ever since the publication of his first book--1989's best-selling Crossfire:
The Plot That Killed Kennedy, a compendium of theories about who really
murdered John Fitzgerald Kennedy in Dallas--Marrs has been the poster boy
for those who believe, and those who do not. His reputation was cemented in
(Oliver) Stone in 1990: When the director bought Crossfire and hired Marrs
as an advisor on JFK, the author became the go-to guy for True Believers in
search of a totem.

Yes, Marrs is given to rambling monologues about all manner of
subjects--from the government's cover-up of the Branch Davidian torching in
Waco to the crash of TWA Flight 800 to doubts about William Shakespeare's
authoring of his plays. But he remains a good ol' boy from Fort Worth who
speaks with the soft, warm twang of a man born and bred and bound to the
land on which he was raised. Marrs charms with a friendly grin. Talk to him
long enough, a few hours, and he will make you doubt your own existence.

"Jim is a very affable, likable guy," says one old friend of his. "He
reminds me of Santa Claus."

Marrs, a former journalist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, has been
vilified in the mainstream media and glorified on the Internet. Depending
upon whom you believe, he's either a man who views the world through "the
warped prism of conspiracy theory" (Publishers Weekly, in March of this
year) or who writes "must-read[s] for the entire population of America." The
latter comes from a fan on amazon.com reviewing Marrs' latest book, the
just-published Rule by Secrecy: The Hidden History That Connects the
Trilateral Commission, The Freemasons, and the Great Pyramids.

Either way, Jim Marrs can't be ignored. Few in this country shout about The
Truth louder than he.

"Years ago, when I was trying to tell people there was a big conspiracy to
kill Kennedy, I was the nut, the fringe guy, the conspiracy theorist, the
buff, but I'm used to it," Marrs says, sitting at a table in his dining
room. He is surrounded by trinkets from trips to Tibet, a page from the
Gutenberg Bible printed on the Gutenberg press, family portraits of wife
Carol and the couple's two grown daughters, Civil War memorabilia, a piano
that goes untouched most of the time, and an old coal stove that heats the
home in the winter. No Kennedy autopsy photos or drawings of giant-headed
aliens adorn the walls.

"Now, almost everybody that's awake and has paid attention knows there's
something going on with the Kennedy assassination," he continues. "There's
still a lot of argument about who, what, when, where, and how, but everybody
understands that something went on other than some lone nut got off a lucky
shot. So that's all pretty accepted, so now, of course, I'm on to other
things, and now I'm still the nut, the conspiracy theorist, so I guess I'll
just be branded with that for life." He chuckles, as though to prove how all
right with it he really is.

It would take forever to prove or disprove each of Marrs' beliefs; there are
plenty of Web sites that support and debunk his writings. Suffice it to say,
Marrs is confident of only one thing: Everything you think you know is
wrong, and everything he knows he knows is right. There is no arguing with
the man. He has an answer for everything, because, as he insists, "there is
an answer for everything." Yes--his answer.

"That's because Jim has a tendency to want to believe everything," says Fort
Worth-based Kennedy researcher Dave Perry, an old friend of Marrs' who
became critical of him once he moved from writing about the Kennedy
assassination to dealing with alien visitation. "I once told him, 'Jim,
you're more a sit-around-the-campfire kinda guy.' If I wrote a book, nobody
would buy it, because it would be too cut-and-dried. Jim's books are
entertaining, but not necessarily accurate."

Still, Perry concedes, it's fun to stop, if only for a moment, and consider
what is unfathomable to the skeptic and the cynic. What if Jim Marrs is
right? After all, Perry says, for every million words Marrs writes--and he
is a prolific author, penning not only his books but also essays for his Web
site, www.alienzoo.com--"maybe 10 are true."

So, what if the government really is covering up the assassination of John
Kennedy? What if aliens have been visiting this planet for decades, perhaps
even living among us? What if a secret cabal of politicians and bankers and
media moguls has been dictating American policy for decades? What if the
Civil War was wrought by European nations looking to divide and conquer the
United States from within? What if the government murdered the Branch
Davidians in Waco and then destroyed the evidence of their actions? What if
an American missile downed TWA 800? What if the moon is, in fact, a
spaceship placed in orbit around the earth by ancient astronauts? And what
if John Kennedy was killed because he was going to tell the American public
about the existence of UFOs?

Seriously.

Or what if just some of what Marrs believes is accurate and not the paranoid
speculations of a man dismissed by the mainstream media as a lunatic
convinced the government exists to keep its citizens in a placid daydream?
What if only one thing is true?

"This sounds kinda idealistic, but in journalism school...they taught you
about trying to find the truth and telling the truth to the public and
letting them decide," Marrs says. "Look on both sides of the issue, look
beyond the government's pronouncements--all this stuff. And, hey, I bought
into it. I really bought into that. I thought that was what I was supposed
to be doing."


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----


James Farrell Marrs, Jim's father, came to Fort Worth in the early 1930s,
seeking to escape the confines of the coal mines. James left behind Logan
County, Kentucky, and looked back long enough only to bring his parents and
his nine brothers and sisters to Texas. He made enough selling steel to buy
a house and rescue his family from the only life they knew, since all the
Marrs men were coal miners for as long as anyone could remember.
Jim's mother, Pauline Draper, had always lived in Fort Worth. Her daddy, who
worked on the Texas-Pacific Railroad, died when she was only 12, leaving her
and her mother to fend for themselves. Pauline's mother bought a house in
the center of town, on College Avenue, and opened a boarding house. James
Marrs and Pauline Draper met on a blind date, as best Jim can recall. Years
later, Jim would meet his wife, Carol, the same way.

His parents were devout Baptists; they did not drink or smoke and even
frowned on dancing. But, their son says, they were never judgmental or
strict. In 1979, Pauline Draper Marrs even wrote a romance novel titled
Second Season, published by Fawcett (and, in France, by Harlequin). The
torrid little book features a hero named Jim and a heroine named Carol. But
Jim insists his mother's brief foray into the writing business didn't move
him to pursue his given profession. He picked up pen and paper on his own,
until a childhood passion became an adult's obsession.

"On a very deep level, my parents instilled in me these ideas of honor,
righteousness, courtesy, allegiance to God and country--all that stuff you
have to have as an underpinning to put up with the slings and arrows of
truth-seeking," he says. "But they never led me into writing. They left me
with a definite impression I could make anything of myself I wanted to. My
father never said, 'Son, you need to grow up and sell structural steel.'"

Jim was born on December 5, 1943, on the south side of Fort Worth, a city
boy searching for life on the prairie. He hung out with his buddies in the
meadows near what would become Benbrook Lake, making lunch from bacon they
would fry in a pan, and he spent time on his kinfolks' farm in East Texas.
It was inevitable that, years later, he would leave Fort Worth for the
countryside.

Marrs likes to say he began his journalism career in high school when he
joined the newspaper staff at Paschal High School, where he drew the
occasional cartoon and wrote editorials and feature stories. But when he
enrolled at North Texas State University in the early 1960s, he enrolled in
journalism courses because he discovered the major required no math. It was
a most pragmatic decision.

"But even then I was the black sheep, because I started my own off-campus
humor magazine, and I almost got kicked out of school for sniping at the
administration and calling them down for all the bureaucratic stuff they
were doing," Marrs says. "But I hung in there, and I took my journalism
courses, but it was the last semester of my senior year before they finally
realized, 'Well, damn, that Marrs character, he's actually gonna graduate,
and he's been the editorial page editor for the campus paper and
everything,' so I was finally invited to join Sigma Delta Chi, which is now
the journalism society.

"But for a while, I think they tried to ignore me, so, you see, it's been
like that my whole life. I've always gone for the unconventional and the
different. But that's OK, because if you study something--any subject, I
don't care whatever it is--and come to know the truth of what's going on in
that subject, you've got the truth as a defense against everybody."

Marrs was asleep in his dorm room when events transpired at 12:30 p.m.
November 22, 1963, to wake him from his reverie. Like Jim Garrison in JFK,
Marrs would sleep no more when he heard John Kennedy had been shot while
driving through Dealey Plaza in Dallas, gunned down by the bullets of an
assassin. His initial reaction to the news of the president's shooting was
one of relief, happiness. His roommate woke him to tell him what had
happened, and all Marrs could say was one word: "Good."

By his own admission, he was then a "typical Texas redneck" who thought
Kennedy was a handsome man determined to hand the country over to the
liberals and blacks. He had no use for the man or his utopian vision of one
nation under Camelot. But like the rest of the country, he was stuck to the
television, watching every second of news coverage. When Walter Cronkite
showed up at 1 p.m. to announce Kennedy's death, Marrs was watching and, he
insists, thinking about how he could get involved in covering the biggest
news story to come out of North Texas in decades. Even now, he has all the
newspaper clippings from November 1963. They would, in time, become his
life's roadmap.

First, though, there was school to finish, which he did in 1966. But he put
his life on hold, convinced he was going to get drafted by the Army and sent
to Vietnam. It was inevitable. He took a job with a men's clothing store in
Fort Worth and waited, taking draft physical after draft physical but never
getting his notice. He was ready to go, a patriot prepared to die keeping
the Commies at bay. Yet the more he read about the burgeoning war in
Southeast Asia, the more convinced he became that the U.S. wasn't in Vietnam
to win.

He thought about high-tailing it to Canada, which seemed like the coward's
way out, or he could sit around and wait to get drafted to go fight a no-win
war. Or he could go back to school, which he did in 1967, enrolling at Texas
Tech University in Lubbock to get his master's degree. A year later, he left
school and came home, this time for a full-time job at the Fort Worth
Star-Telegram, where he was put on the police beat, a romantic assignment
for a 25-year-old kid obsessed with chasing ambulances and plane crashes and
traffic wrecks. He liked the sound of sirens, the scent of blood.

When the Army finally came calling in 1968, Marrs ended up working military
intelligence in a reserve unit, which was hardly as dramatic as it sounds.
He spent his time translating copies of French and German magazines that
could be bought at any high-class newsstand in downtown Fort Worth. By the
time he was due to go on active duty, it was discovered he had a bum
shoulder, which the Army offered to repair--either that, or Marrs could get
his release. He chose the latter and returned to the Star-Telegram.

Every now and then, Jim would find himself in Dallas covering a story, and
sooner or later, his conversations with local cops would always turn to the
Kennedy assassination. He was becoming convinced Lee Harvey Oswald did not
act alone, despite the findings of the Warren Commission, and thought it
might be fun to snoop around a little. So he'd take care of his story, then
interview police officials about what really happened in November 1963. Over
time, the trail would eventually lead him to the doorsteps of Oswald's
mother, Margueritte, and George and Jeanne De Mohrenschildt, friends of
Lee's. They convinced Marrs of what he already knew to be true: Lee Harvey
Oswald was set up by the government.

He'd spend the rest of his life trying to prove it.


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----


The phrase "conspiracy theorist" is an insult to those who believe. To them,
there are no theories, only ignored truths. The government, they will tell
you, has lied to us for decades; what we know are only the fabrications
spoon-fed to us by official documents and press releases and smiling
politicians. We are blind, stumbling around in a smokescreen. The so-called
theorist? His eyes are wide open, and it is his job to lead us through the
darkness. Those who are called "conspiracy theorists" are ridiculed by the
mainstream until they become punch lines and punching bags.

No one knows this better than writer-director Oliver Stone, who was once
hailed as the great leftist filmmaker of the 1980s until the release of JFK
in 1991. Using Marrs' Crossfire: The Plot That Killed Kennedy and
much-maligned New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison's book On the Trail
of the Assassins as his guide, Stone threw every possible theory against the
silver screen, hoping some of it would stick. Garrison, portrayed in the
film by Kevin Costner, had long been castigated for trying to prosecute a
New Orleans businessman for conspiring to kill Kennedy, but Stone insisted
on using him as his righteous hero. As a result, Stone was subjected to the
same ridicule as Garrison: He was called a liar at best, a deranged fool at
worst.

Stone insists that his career was ruined by the reaction to JFK, that his
subsequent films (among them Heaven and Earth, Natural Born Killers, and
Nixon) were dismissed by those predisposed to writing off Stone as a
conspiracy-obsessed lunatic lost in a hall of mirrors. Commentator George
Will branded Stone "an intellectual sociopath, indifferent to truth";
Newsweek ran a cover story titled "The Twisted Truth of 'JFK': Why Oliver
Stone's New Movie Can't Be Trusted." And that was just for starters.

"It outrages me some of the cheap shots taken over the years, and the same
thing happened to Garrison," Stone says, taking a break from writing a new
film about AIDS and Africa. "When he went on Johnny Carson, he got exactly
the same shit I did when I went on Letterman and Nightline. They were the
exact same questions: 'Are you paranoid?' 'Are you a conspiracy theorist?'
Who gives a fuck? Life is half conspiracy, half accident. Who gives a shit?
For them to deny conspiracy is the stupidest single argument when we've had
so many conspiracies, including the biggest one, the Communist conspiracy,
where you raise an entire generation to live in fear of a monolith Communist
front moving across the United States. It was insane, and then they don't
even talk about that. They always dismiss anyone who's trying to do
something as a nut, as a conspiracy theorist, which is a very demeaning
word."

Marrs was not the first man to write of a sinister plot to kill the
president. Nearly half a dozen books were published in the years immediately
following the assassination, including Mark Lane's seminal Rush to Judgment.
But Stone optioned Crossfire because it was the bible of conspiracy
theories; it contained every single explanation offered by those who
couldn't accept the Warren Commission's findings. It was complete: There
were government agents and Texas millionaires, Dallas cops and Mob hit men,
Cubans and CIA operatives, J. Edgar Hoover and Lyndon B. Johnson. Not a
single dart was spared. Marrs heaved them all.

The assassination had become his obsession. He wrote the occasional story
about Kennedy's death for the Star-Telegram, and by 1976 he had been asked
to teach a course about it for the University of Texas at Arlington, a
course he still teaches. Lord knows he had time to spend on it: He quit the
paper in 1980, worked some freelance ad jobs in Dallas, and even started a
couple of freebie newspapers, but nothing held his attention like John
Kennedy. By the time Crossfire was published by the New York-based house
Carroll & Graf in 1989, he had spent more than a decade researching it.

By the late 1980s, myriad studies revealed that a good portion of the
American public believed Oswald did not act alone, if he indeed was a gunman
at all. The government had admitted as much in 1979, when the House Select
Committee on Assassinations concluded there had been at least one other
shooter who escaped the crime scene.

"But the powers that be tend to blow that off and don't emphasize that, so
everybody thinks there's still a big controversy about the assassination,"
Marrs says. "Even in 1980 or '81, the majority of people who came to take my
course started off with the idea that Oswald did it all by himself, but that
began to shift by about 1984. From that point on, not one person ever showed
up for that course who would admit to thinking that Oswald ever did it all
by himself. There was a real turnaround in public perception, and when the
Stone movie hit in 1991, that really got things going. Crossfire and Stone's
movie were really popular and hit the big time not because we were changing
people's minds, but because we were demonstrating something they had already
come to know. In other words, the timing was really good."

But Marrs prefaced Crossfire with a warning--or, as Dave Perry says, an easy
out. "Do not trust this book," reads the opening line of the book, giving
Marrs leeway to write whatever he wanted, to include every theory no matter
how plausible or asinine. (Alien Agenda and Rule by Secrecy contain similar
disclaimers.) Even Stone ignored certain portions of Crossfire.

"I'm not always in agreement with Jim," the filmmaker says. "There were some
things I didn't follow up on, like the Mob thing, because I really had my
doubts about those people. But he was very helpful."

The book and film turned Marrs into a celebrity on the conspiracy circuit.
The sane and crazy sought him out, journalists begged him for quotes, and
enrollment in his course at UTA rose considerably. Even now, his phone never
stops ringing: The curious seek his wisdom, while those who claim to have
information about the death of Kennedy seek his attention. Some--like James
Files, a convicted cop killer in Illinois who now claims to have been the
Grassy Knoll gunman--are taken seriously, despite the fact that few
researchers believe his tall tale. Others are given their due consideration.
After all, Marrs argues, you never know from under which rock the truth will
crawl.

"They call a lot," says his wife, Carol. Her tone of voice suggests she
would rather they not.

"But I always give them a fair hearing, OK?" says her husband. "And they
sometimes have some valid points, and sometimes they have some valid
information. A lot of the times, it's a guy who says, 'I'm a 16-year-old
high school student from Kansas. Do you think Oswald did it all by himself?'
But I give them as much as I can."

Had Marrs stuck to researching the Kennedy assassination, to uncovering that
single and monumental "truth," his tale would be no different from those of
the hundreds of authors who have published books on the subject--those who
think Oswald acted alone, and those who think he never existed at all. He
would have disappeared on the crowded bookshelves, gotten lost in the dusty
remainder bins.

But somewhere along the way, Marrs stopped peering inside empty coffins and
turned his eyes skyward. And when that happened, the conspiracy theorist
became The Nut.


----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----


There came a time in the mid-'90s when Jim Marrs grew tired of talking only
about John Kennedy. Even obsessions become wearying when tended to forever.
He then began asking friends, publishers, students, even his good-ol'-boy
neighbors in Springtown what next great question they wanted answered. He
insists they all offered the same reply: UFOs. Do they really exist? Are
little green men out there? Are little green men right here? And if so, has
the government covered up their existence?

In 1997, Marrs gave them their answer, a book titled Alien Agenda--published
by Harper Collins, not some crackpot house--which claims the government has
known about aliens since at least the infamous 1947 "spacecraft" crash in
Roswell, New Mexico, but has orchestrated a campaign of "denial and
ridicule": Insist aliens don't exist, and make fools of those who believe
they do. The book's an enjoyable read but hard to take at face value: Marrs
spends a great deal of time writing about remote viewing, the use of psychic
ability to travel through time and space to spy on one's enemies. He insists
he has done this, just as he insists government officials and military
officers have told him of the Army's experiments with remote viewing.

On this point, as with everything else, he is adamant; he knows it is
possible. But even the most willing or the most susceptible would likely
find this hard to swallow whole. It is too much the stuff of science
fiction, as is a story Marrs offers up in Alien Agenda suggesting Kennedy
was really killed because he was about to reveal the existence of UFOs to
the American public. If you believe the tale, he even told Marilyn Monroe,
who was going to hold a press conference revealing John and Robert Kennedy's
deep, dark secrets--one of which was a memo confirming extraterrestrial
visitation. When pressed, even Marrs says he doesn't "buy into that."

Which, says Dave Perry, is precisely the problem with Marrs' books.

"I have an autographed copy of Crossfire that says, 'Always question
authority,'" says Perry. "Where Jim hurts himself is, he won't take a stand
on anything. As the years have passed by, he has moved more and more out of
real mainstream research methods into ones that are more, well, esoteric.
They don't require the level of expertise he used to use in the past.
Crossfire was like the encyclopedia of the good, the bad, and the
indifferent. Now, he mixes some common-sense information that's already
known with some strange and bizarre activities. Over the years, I've come to
the conclusion of what has changed is his attitude: He's getting more into
the fairy-tale area than he used to.

"I mean, it wasn't until the last five years he got enamored of remote
viewing, which has a questionable legacy. I used to go to his Kennedy class
at UTA and razz him, poking holes in his theories. Once I said, 'Why don't
you get one of your remote viewing friends to solve this stuff?' But you
can't get him hostile. He's so low-key. The fact is, Jim wants to believe in
Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny. All of his responses are from the fringe
element. The legitimate people dismiss him, which is sad, because there's
some great stuff in Crossfire and even Alien Agenda. There are good things,
but it's lost in all the hype."

In Alien Agenda, Marrs speculates that aliens do indeed walk among us--that
they are indeed "here to help us," as one of his sources says. Another
offers "evidence" that aliens have given us, among other things, our
religions. But when asked whether he believes such things, Marrs laughs and
says only, "I'm an agnostic."

That's too easy an answer, he is told.

"Well, it may sound easy, and it may sound glib, but it's the truth," he
says. "I've never seen a UFO, but there are enough credible people I've
talked to who said this is a legitimate deal. Even the most skeptical
scientists have all pretty much believed that, in all likelihood, there is
intelligent life somewhere out there. I hope there is. I hope we're not the
epitome of intelligent life. That's the question I keep asking myself: Is
there intelligent life on the planet earth? And I only find occasional
glimpses of it."


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This is how secretive the Trilateral Commission is: Its North American Group
phone number is (212) 661-1180, listed next to its New York City address
under the "Contact Us" section of its Web site, www.trilateral.org. The
numbers and addresses for the European Group and Japanese Group are
similarly listed, as is a roster of the organization's 37-member executive
committee, a list of its publications, a brief history of the organization,
and transcripts of speeches delivered at the commission's April 8-10, 2000,
annual meeting in Tokyo. And that's just skimming the surface.

The Trilateral Commission--a 27-year-old organization made up of 335 members
from North America, Japan, and Europe, founded to "foster closer
cooperation" between the regions--hides in plain sight.

This is how hard it is to speak to a member of the Trilateral Commission:

"Hello, I'm a reporter for the Dallas Observer, and I would like to speak to
someone about a new book by Jim Marrs titled Rule of Secrecy, which deals
with how the Trilateral Commission is a secret society trying to take over
the world's governments."

"One second, please," responds the amused woman on the other end of the
line. Fifteen seconds pass. A male voice picks up the line.

"This is Charles Heck."

Charles Heck is the Trilateral Commission's North American Director, meaning
he's just below North American Chairman Paul Volker (former chairman of the
U.S. Federal Reserve System) and North American Deputy Chairman Allan
Gotlieb (ex-Canadian ambassador to the U.S.) on the totem pole. Heck's been
with the commission almost since its inception in 1973--"since I was a young
squirt," he says, chuckling--and has heard all about how the Trilateral
Commission is a sinister entity out to control U.S. and foreign governments.
He spends a great deal of time going on radio talk shows trying to dispel
the "remarkable mythology" of global domination that surrounds the
organization. Heck doesn't recognize the name Jim Marrs ("Jim Morris?"), but
he's quite familiar with his tale.

"It seems to have gotten going in the late 1970s, when Jimmy Carter was
elected president," Heck begins, no doubt for the umpteenth time. "Carter
had been a member when he was elected president, and when he went to the
White House, he appointed a number of U.S. Trilateral members to various
positions in his administration. David Rockefeller was the main figure in
the creation of this organization, and anyone named Rockefeller inspired
this sort of mythology, and somehow the notion was that David Rockefeller
and everybody else had gotten together to elect Jimmy Carter and bring all
these other Trilateral Commission folks into government--even though David
Rockefeller was supporting Gerald Ford in 1976. If you already had a
somewhat conspiratorial bent in terms of how your government was run, you
thought you found the smoking gun just by noticing a bunch of these folks
were members of the Trilateral Commission. That was all the evidence you
needed without knowing anything else about it at all."

Conspiracy theorists have long believed the commission--not to mention its
precursor, the Council on Foreign Relations, and other so-called secret
societies--was out to create a one-world government run by the most powerful
of the world's elite: bankers, businessmen, media moguls, politicians, and
so forth. They bandy about phrases such as "one-world government" and
"globalization," terrifying themselves with the notion that our elected
officials serve only themselves, not the public.

Marrs will say he doesn't necessarily know whether globalization is good or
bad, only that he fears an Adolph Hitler will one day seize control of the
one-world government. Sitting in his living room, speaking through his white
beard and warm smile, he prophesies doom.

Meanwhile, Carol Marrs prepares lunch in the nearby kitchen: Reuben
sandwiches, bratwurst, and cold German beer. It is a beautiful day in
Springtown. Someone should send the Trilateral Commission a thank-you note.

During lunch, it becomes apparent that Jim Marrs lives with his greatest
critic, his wife. She has little interest in the Kennedy assassination,
found Rule by Secrecy "difficult" to read, and is vaguely intrigued by the
UFO stuff. She's a pragmatic high school art and drama teacher in a small,
football-obsessed town. Jim can go on trying to topple one-world
governments, but there are still bills to pay and meals to prepare and
students to coach for drama competitions and, in the back yard, a
pot-bellied pig to tend to.

"Jim and I kind of live two separate lives," Carol says, shooting a smile
her husband's way. "I mean, I do my thing and he does his thing, and I know
a little bit about some of it because I read his books, but I don't have any
memory capacity. God, I mean it just amazes me how he rattles off all these
facts and everything. I can read it and still go, 'What?'"

"This is why Carol and I make a good couple, really," Jim says, returning
the grin. "She's very earth-mother, very practical. She has her feet on the
ground, and I have both feet firmly planted in mid-air. I'm out there just
thinking about..."

His wife interrupts, and what she says next explains all you will ever need
to know about Jim Marrs. It turns out he is not a nut at all. Rather, he's
just a guy living in the countryside who is convinced he will, one day, make
a difference.

"I'll say, 'Jim, why don't you help me? And he will say, 'Not right now. I'm
taking care of the world's problems.'"

They share a small laugh, and he gives her a look that says: Yes, yes I am.

{ http://www.dallasobserver.com/issues/2000-07-06/feature.html/page1.html }





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