How can you download and
save it, is that possible?
I'd like to send to friends.
Thanks.
Terry
- Original Message -
From:
Shane
A. Saylor, Eccentric Bard
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, November 27, 1999 1:00
AM
Subject: [CTRL] FW: (earthclan) FW:
Govt-Riot Plan EXPOSED for NY on New Years Eve or a Subversive Filmmakers
debut?
-Caveat Lector--Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of BranfionnSent: Friday, November 26, 1999 12:38 PMTo:
EarthclanSubject: (earthclan) FW: Govt-Riot Plan EXPOSED for NY on New
Years Eveor a Subversive Filmmakers debut?Importance:
High-Original Message-From: Ian Goddard (by
way of Johnny Asia [EMAIL PROTECTED])(by
way of Sienna Wildfield [EMAIL PROTECTED])[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Sent: Thursday,
November 25, 1999 10:26To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject:
Govt-Riot Plan EXPOSED for NY on New Years Eve or a SubversiveFilmmakers
debut?Importance: High(forwarded)Something to chew
on . . .-Post your comments at: http://venus.beseen.com/boardroom/d/16950begin=The
FBI and the U.S. Attorney's office recently hada webpage shutdown
that had a video allegedly takenduring a military briefing,
according to a report inthe Village Voice. The video reveals a
secret Armyplan to incite race riots at Times Square on
NewYear's Eve. The fact that the FBI and US
Attorney'soffice intimidated the owner of the site and
finallycoerced his ISP with threats of shutting them
downin order to suppress the video appears to supportthis
conclusion: The video is genuine and thegovernment is planning to
create chaos on Y2K.Such an operation could establish the
necessarypretext to activate Martial Law and end
freedom,which is just what the suppressed video
indicates.According to the Voice, "Both the U.S.
Attorney'soffice and the FBI had no comment" on this
case.Here's the Internet in action, the FBI may
haveremoved the video from one site, but not fromthese
sites, download it and make it known:http://www.rumormillnews.com/assault.htmhttp://moxy.wtower.com/mirrors/timesq.ramhttp://www.angelfire.com/ma/mauicool7/timesq.ramhttp://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/11/24/013232mode=nestedHere's
the Village Voice article:== THE VILLAGE VOICE
=http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/9947/boal.shtml==Published
November 24 - 30, 1999THE MONITORBY MARK BOALSubversive
Filmmaker Attractsthe Wrong Kind of AgentFBI's Shutter
SpeedSuccess seemed imminent. A local TV station wasairing a
segment about his Web site, and he beganto savor those precious moments of
microfame. Nomore dingy years of self-subsidized screenings;now
there'd be an audience for his art. But thencame the FBI. In a highly
unusual move last week,FBI agents called mike zieper, an
independentartist who goes by thename Mike Z., and "requested"that he
remove his site from the Internet. Whenhe declined, the FBI worked in
tandem with theU.S. Attorney's office to persuade his Web hostand its
server to pull Zieper's site--18 daysafter it went up--without having a
subpoena orcourt order of any kind.Mike Z.'s Web site showed an
eerie but amateurvideo that purports to be a military briefing.The
clip opens with fuzzy shots of Times Square,over which an unseen male
voice describes asecret army plan to incite a race riot on NewYear's
Eve. "First Team," he says "you're allhere by oh?four hundred," and he
then instructsundercover black agents to "Give them a littleof the
Amadou shit, agitate it."The FBI was alerted to the site after
receivingphone calls from people who thought its BlairWitch ?style
footage was genuine army issue.The opening banner on the site read, "I
don'tknow too much about this tape you are about tosee. I got it from
my cousin Steve who's inthe army. . . . If it's fake, then
there'snothing to worry about. If it's real, thenwe're in really big
trouble."The FBI's call came when Mike Z. was at afriend's house
last Thursday watching his UPN9 interview. Suddenly, his pager hummed,
andwhen he called the number back, it turned outto be the local New
Jersey sheriff's departmentat his front door with two FBI agents in
tow,wondering if they could come in for a chat.Then agents Dan
Calemina and Joe Metzingergot on the phone and said, " 'We know
thatyou have this Web site and that it has beengetting a lot of
activity,' " Z. recalls. "'And we want to know how we can get peopleto
stop seeing it.' The implication wasobviously that I would face a subpoena
oran arrest if I didn't [take it down]," Z. says.Instead, Z.
contacted attorneys and put hiscomputer in storage. But the agents made
anend run around him. When Z. refused to pullhis site, the FBI and the
U.S. Attorney'soffice contacted Z.'s host, BECamation,