Julian Assange Gets The Bog Standard Smear Technique 1895


The Russians call it Kompromat – the use by the state of sexual accusations to destroy a public figure. When I was attacked in this way by the government I worked for, Uzbek dissidents smiled at me, shook their heads and said “Kompromat“. They were used to it from the Soviet and Uzbek governments. They found it rather amusing to find that Western governments did it too.

Well, Julian Assange has been getting the bog standard Kompromat. I had imagined he would get something rather more spectacular, like being framed for murder and found hanging with an orange in his mouth. He deserves a better class of kompromat. If I am a whistleblower, then Julian is a veritable mighty pipe organ. Yet we just have the normal sex stuff, and very weak.

Bizarrely the offence for which Julian is wanted for questioning in Sweden was dropped from rape to sexual harassment, and then from sexual harassment to just harassment. The precise law in Swedish, as translated for me and other Sam Adams alumni by our colleague Major Frank Grevil, reads:

“He who lays hands on or by means of shooting from a firearm, throwing of stones, noise or in any other way harasses another person will be sentenced for harassment to fines or imprisonment for up to one year.”

So from rape to non-sexual something. Actually I rather like that law – if we had it here, I could have had Jack Straw locked up for a year.

Julian tells us that the first woman accuser and prime mover had worked in the Swedish Embassy in Washington DC and had been expelled from Cuba for anti-Cuban government activity, as well as the rather different persona of being a feminist lesbian who owns lesbian night clubs.

Scott Ritter and I are well known whistleblowers subsequently accused of sexual offences. A less well known whistleblower is James Cameron, another FCO employee. Almost simultaneous with my case, a number of the sexual allegations the FCO made against Cameron were identical even in wording to those the FCO initially threw at me.

Another fascinating point about kompromat is that being cleared of the allegations – as happens in virtually every case – doesn’t help, as the blackening of reputation has taken effect. In my own case I was formerly cleared of all allegations of both misconduct and gross misconduct, except for the Kafkaesque charge of having told defence witnesses of the existence of the allegations. The allegations were officially a state secret, even though it was the government who leaked them to the tabloids.

Yet, even to this day, the FCO has refused to acknowledge in public that I was in fact cleared of all charges. This is even true of the new government. A letter I wrote for my MP to pass to William Hague, complaining that the FCO was obscuring the fact that I was cleared on all charges, received a reply from a junior Conservative minister stating that the allegations were serious and had needed to be properly investigated – but still failing to acknowledge the result of the process. Nor has there been any official revelation of who originated these “serious allegations”.

Governments operate in the blackest of ways, especially when it comes to big war money and big oil money. I can see what they are doing to Julian Assange, I know what they did to me and others (another recent example – Brigadier Janis Karpinski was framed for shoplifting). In a very real sense, it makes little difference if they murdered David Kelly or terrified him into doing it himself. Telling the truth is hazardous in today’s Western political system.


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1,895 thoughts on “Julian Assange Gets The Bog Standard Smear Technique

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  • tony_opmoc

    Why have you stopped learning?

    When I was a kid – My Mum bought Me MIND ALIVE – it was a weekly magazine (we couldn’t afford a Full Encyclopedia)…

    And so I read them and collected them – for years when I was growing up….

    I think they are still in my attic

    The stuff I did at University still is – and not only can I not understand any of the detailed content of the maths that I was studying to support my pure physics degree – I have extreme difficulty in reading my own hand writing…

    So when I left University and Joined The Real World Where I could Earn Lots of Money and Do Gliding and Motor Racing and Snorkeling and Diving in Some Of The Most Beautiful Places In The World

    I decided to revert from my joined up writing taught using a pen that I dipped in ink

    I would no longer try and connect each letter – and write like a typewriter (I guess in retrospect)

    I could now read my own handwriting

    But I felt really embarrassed about having to take it to a typist – to get it typed up.

    This is International Computers Limited

    And a Lot of The People I worked With – Who Were The Real Inventors of Modern Computing in Manchester and Bracknell Who Implemented and Made Live Virtual Machines and Virtual Addressing…..

    Have had their Pensions Stolen From Them…

    I couldn’t believe it – but its True

    Some of them still don’t know

    When they get to 65, expecting a pension to retire on that they have worked for all their lives dont know that ICL was taken over by a Series of Companies – the last of which was Nortel which has gone bust – and in all the changes over they years – very senior people stole their pensions bit by bit

    Its going to really piss them off.

    Tony

  • somebody

    IRAQ: THE AGE OF DARKNESS

    N ARTICLE BY

    DIRK ADRIAENSENS

    Part I : “Success”, a devastating balance sheet

    In the immediate aftermath of the 2003 invasion, the triumphalist verdict of the mainstream media was that the war had been won; Iraq was assured of a benevolent, democratic future. The Times’s writer William Rees-Mogg hymned the victory: “April 9 2003 was Liberty Day for Iraq. (… ) It was achieved by “the engine of global liberation”, the United States. “After 24 years of oppression, three wars and three weeks of relentless bombing, Baghdad has emerged from an age of darkness. Yesterday was an historic day of liberation.”

    “The problem with this war for, I think, many Americans is that the premise on which we justified going to war proved not to be valid, that is Saddam having weapons of mass destruction,” Defense Secretary Robert Gates told reporters while visiting Iraq.

    “So when you start from that standpoint, then figuring out in retrospect how you deal with the war ?” even if the outcome is a good one from the standpoint of the United States ?” it will always be clouded by how it began.”

    /……

    http://www.brussellstribunal.org/Newsletters/Newsletter6EN.htm

  • somebody

    I’m flattered to hear that you think I might have been Craig Suhayl. It was just that nobody had posted anything for hours so I did a test post to see if Crsig had closed the blog.

    I am posting this as I think it relevant to our present condition.

    They Thought They Were Free

    by Milton Mayer, The Germans, 1938-45 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1955)

    “What no one seemed to notice was the ever widening gap between the government and the people. And it became always wider…..the whole process of its coming into being, was above all diverting, it provided an excuse not to think….for people who did not want to think anyway gave us some dreadful, fundamental things to think about…..and kept us so busy with continuous changes and ‘crises’ and so fascinated…..by the machinations of the ‘national enemies,’ without and within, that we had no time to think about these dreadful things that were growing, little by little, all around us…..

    Each step was so small, so inconsequential, so well explained or, on occasion, ‘regretted,’ that unless one understood what the whole thing was in principle, what all these ‘little measures’…..must some day lead to, one no more saw it developing from day to day than a farmer in his field sees the corn growing…..Each act is worse than the last, but only a little worse. You wait for the next and the next.

    You wait for one great shocking occasion, thinking that others, when such a shock comes, will join you in resisting somehow. You don’t want to act, or even talk, alone…..you don’t want to ‘go out of your way to make trouble.’ But the one great shocking occasion, when tens or hundreds or thousands will join with you, never comes.

    That’s the difficulty. The forms are all there, all untouched, all reassuring, the houses, the shops, the jobs, the mealtimes, the visits, the concerts, the cinema, the holidays. But the spirit, which you never noticed because you made the lifelong mistake of identifying it with the forms, is changed. Now you live in a world of hate and fear, and the people who hate and fear do not even know it themselves, when everyone is transformed, no one is transformed.

    You have accepted things you would not have accepted five years ago, a year ago, things your father…..could never have imagined.”

  • Richard Robinson

    “It was just that nobody had posted anything for hours”

    The disappearance of wrongnesses to argue against seemed to take the wind out of our sails for a bit ?

    I really wish t_o hadn’t picked just then to “fill a much-needed gap”. (I don’t know who originated that phrase, but it makes me laugh).

    Arising from yr quoted article – a point I’ve heard made (and haven’t done any research on, alert); that the people Hitler’s system wasn’t victimising genuinely were better off under him (in immediate practical terms, I mean – employment statistics, food on the table, etc) until somewhere around 1942. The death & destruction was happening elsewhere, the experiences of loss were “only” family tragedies – isolated.

    There’s a stunning comparison somewhere in Schirer’s “Rise and Fall …”, from the retreat to Dunkirk – he talks of watching an army of thin, pale, weedy, underfed, rickets-ridden (not doing well under their system) Brits, pursued by an army of well-fed, strong, healthy (looked after by their system) Germans.

  • Suhayl Saadi

    Somebody, that’s a incredibly perceptive passage from which you’ve quoted. Yes, it’s really accurate.

    I’ll give you an example.

    I find that nowadays, many (especially successful) fiction writers seem afraid to write overtly in an oppositional (oppositional, that is, to the state)manner on politics, esp. on mattters relating to foreign policy. There are exceptions, of course. But we notice them precisely because they are exceptions.

    Like a naive ijeut, I post stuff up in various locations much as I do here, but there’s seldom any response from such people, even when I know they are on the forums. The people who do respond are either not writers at all or else not ‘big-name’ ones. It’s very odd. Many of them seem to wait until something becomes the subject of liberal consensus or received wisdom or orthodox dissidence, i.e. until it seems quite safe, before they will commit themselves or even express any opinion in public on it.

    Was it always thus? Possibly. Most people tend to go with the flow, trying to reap advantage where they can with whichever dominant cultural/politial forces are in power in a specific thematic area at a particular time. This applies in most places, I think, not merely in this country.

    It is as though they are afraid of tarnishing their reputations in the context of some or other influential grouping. The salon effect, perhaps.

  • Richard Robinson

    “The salon effect, perhaps.”

    Do you mean, people looking only to their own little circle and forgetting to notice the wider world ? Like the way all the journos suddenly (and briefly) were all using the word “groupthink” at the same time ?

    To add rather than disagree, among people who aim to sell their work to “the public”, perhaps also an idea of appealing to as many as possible rather than restricting their sales to a minority audience ? (ie, the idea that people won’t buy stuff they don’t agree with, I suppose. The notion of the “comfort zone”).

    The gentle art of “shaping opinion” is far more effective when it tells us that a majority of other people believe such-and-such than it is when it tries to persuade us to accept it directly. We defer to it in conversation with people whose opinions we don’t know, on the assumption they’re most likely to be part of the majority we’ve been told about.

  • technicolour

    To add rather than disagree…the opinion shapers patently failed in the case of Iraq, and it didn’t deter them one whit!

    Still wondering over this poem by Rumi:

    These spiritual window-shoppers,

    who idly ask, ‘How much is that?’ Oh, I’m just looking.

    They handle a hundred items and put them down,

    shadows with no capital.

    What is spent is love and two eyes wet with weeping.

    But these walk into a shop,

    and their whole lives pass suddenly in that moment,

    in that shop.

    Where did you go? “Nowhere.”

    What did you have to eat? “Nothing much.”

    Even if you don’t know what you want,

    buy _something,_ to be part of the exchanging flow.

    Start a huge, foolish project,

    like Noah.

    It makes absolutely no difference

    what people think of you.

  • Roderick Russell

    WHY WE NEED WIKILEAKS — AND WHY MI5/6 and CSIS SMEAR IT

    Just returning to the topic, may I again refer to Mr. Lehane’s book “Unperson, A life Destroyed”? You can see his story for yourself. The URL of this books review is:

    http://www.quartetbooks.co.uk/bookpages/unperson.html

    This important book is about an award winning journalist who — “refused to work undercover for the CIA and MI5 who, in revenge, spread rumors [totally false] that he was insane, an alcoholic and a serial rapist … . He was arrested [in London] on a trumped-up charge of terrorism, forbidden to choose any lawyers, tried in his absence and condemned to a psychiatric prison”

    The length these secret police thugs went to SMEAR Mr. Lehane is amazing, but very familiar to me and other victims of “Zerzetsen” ?” the zerzetsen process was well documented by the former East German secret police “The Stasi” and as the Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights has written ?” [Zerzetsung] .. can easily, inconspicuously be implemented by .. “democratic systems”

    As so many others have found, the Human Rights Industry seemed scared to take up Mr. Lehane’s story. On page 294 of his book it refers to an article written by Phillip Knightly on the topic “which has yet to be published” and the lame excuse that “The Guardian” gave for not publishing Mr. Knightly’s important article; on page 292 it describes how Amnesty International despite the fact that Mr. Lehane’s case “fitted squarely into its remit” did nothing at all even when he was being physically tortured.

    Canada’s Human Rights Industry (largely London, UK headquartered) is somewhat similar. I am sitting on a story that was sent to me, that Canada’s Mainstream Media also have (nothing to do with my own issue), that relates to the use by CSIS of “Diffuse & Disrupt” tactics (i.e. Zerzetsen) against a Canadian Government “Intelligence Analyst”. After reading this Canadian’s detailed story, I spoke to the guy and he sounded credible to me and has several witnesses. I think Canada’s Prime Minister is aware of it. Time Canada’s press published it!!!

    Nothing that Mr. Lehane has written about our intelligence agencies or our connected human rights industry comes as a surprise to me or any of the many other victims of Zerzetsen torture whom I am aware of. If our human rights industry was honest and independent of the intelligence services, none of this could happen.

    What is clear from Mr. Lehane’s story, my own and so many other similar cases is that organizations like MI5/6 and CSIS that used to be legitimate intelligence gathering operations, are today morphing into a bunch of Stasi-style secret police thugs. If they have any honest employees left, it is time that they spoke out and they need a confidential means to do so. If you live in the UK or Canada, you live in a very censored society and anything like Wikileaks that can help break this mould should be encouraged.

  • Richard Robinson

    “To add rather than disagree…the opinion shapers patently failed in the case of Iraq”

    I dunno. They got their war, didn’t they ?

    And then, who wasn’t aware that Everybody Knows that to protest it once it’s started would be Letting Down Our Brave Boys ? Who didn’t have that thought in their head, when talking with people who didn’t necessarily agree with them, even if they hadn’t said anything along those lines ?

    “and it didn’t deter them one whit!”

    Not in the way the protesters would have been hoping for, certainly. Maybe it gets factored into the calculations, as a problem to be circumvented. As witness, the way demonstrations trying to say “the US people won’t stand the Vietnam War” got translated into “the US people won’t stand a _long_ war”.

    That’s a poem that needs thought. Thanks.

  • Larry from St. Louis

    Roderick Russell, what’s your best piece of evidence that “Zerzetsen” exists? Remember, you writing a letter to a government agency or media organisation does not count as evidence.

  • anno

    Suhayl

    You can pull the wool over some of the people’s eyes, some of the time, but in this particular instance you are talking rubbish and most of your audience do not know enough about Islam to know the difference. Sufism has absolutely no connection to Islam. Muslims have inner consciousness of God. It is called the fitra of Iman, inbuilt belief in God.

    Don’t forget that your ancestors fought on the British side against Islam so what they knew about Islam may not have been totally kosher. Sufism, especially the whineing music of the whirling dervishes is absolutely and completely nothing whatsoever to do with Islam or any other divinely inspired religion.

    As mentioned above, it was based on a sacrificial Demeter cult. You disqualify yourself from any meaningful contibution to the discussion of Islam if you include Sufism as part of the teachings of Allah or the prophet Muhammad salallahu alaihi wasslam.

  • Mark Golding - Children of Iraq

    Richard: The opinion shapers got their war indeed and the development of ‘perception management’ continues, strategies for controlling how the British people would see and understand things. What might seem a relatively easy task for a nation unable to move in a positive direction, it’s destiny drawn by the unbreakable ties woven over years by secret pacts, promises and shared ideologies with America. The British people have been sucked into the quicksands of endless spin, half-truths and lies, a morass that is eating away at the British spirit and leading us further away from firmer ground and reality.

    The next stage of our reality decoupling will be the focus of massive cuts in services, VAT increasing the cost of living, more terror propaganda and more main stream multi-layered media apparatus causing many journalists in the corporate media to protect their careers by going with the flow or turning their attention to trivial and tabloid stories rather than pushing for difficult truths.

    But hey maybe ‘Larry’ is right, ‘You’re an idiot who believes that 911 was an inside job. Why would anyone believe anything else you have to say?’

    When H. RES. 1553 is implemented by a ‘token’ strike from Israel designed to promote an Iranian retaliation to be met by Tomahawk missiles with nuclear warheads from US submarines currently based in Diego Garcia (source: RAF supply personnel) remember me – I’ll be in Shahrivar near Natanz.

  • technicolour

    anno: “Sufism has absolutely no connection to Islam.”

    Rumi:

    What makes the Sufi? Purity of heart;

    Not the patched mantle and the lust perverse

    Of those vile earth-bound men who steal his name.

    He in all dregs discerns the essence pure:

    In hardship ease, in tribulation joy.

    The phantom sentries, who with batons drawn

    Guard Beauty’s place-gate and curtained bower,

    Give way before him, unafraid he passes,

    And showing the King’s arrow, enters in.

    Anything to disagree with there, anno?

    Or this:

    “It is said that after Muhammad and the prophets revelation does not descend upon anyone else. Why not? In fact it does, but then it is not called ‘revelation.’ It is what the Prophet referred to when he said, ‘The believer sees with the Light of God.’ When the believer looks with ‘The believer sees with the Light of God.’ When the believer looks with God’s Light, he sees all things: the first and the last, the present and the absent. For how can anything be hidden from God’s Light? And if something is hidden, then it is not the Light of God. Therefore the meaning of revelation exists, even if it is not called revelation.”

    Or there?

  • Suhayl Saadi

    Well put, but it’s clear that there’s really no point, technicolour; it’s a one-sided discussion; the other side is a comforting monologue of absolutism.

    Btw, anno, some of my ancestors fought as British stooges, others fought against the British during the 1st Indian War of Independence. And what on earth do ancestors have to do with this, anyway? You have said that you were descended on one side, presumably, from Huguenots – which is jolly interesting and engrossing too – but of course Islam is not a cult of ancestors.

    I don’t see it as being incongruous; I see all these faiths as being multivalent in their manifestations; I don’t see that necessarily as a weakness, actually.

    I know you disagree. That’s fine.

    An interesting observation: I am reluctant to reduce all these discussions to a matter of couture. But has anyone ever heard a Muslim who advocates the hijab/jilbab/whatever saying to a Muslim woman, “I fully support your right not to wear the hijab and will support you in the practice of that right”? I’ve never heard this.

    Instead, those who do not accede to the movement – and it is a movement – have constantly to display their tolerance by saying they respect the hijab, etc. etc. etc. or whatever ritual it happens to be. This has nothing to do with assaults on Muslim women who wear it – nothing whatsoever, they just say that to shut off any debate with Muslims.

    Just as anno told me that everything I say on the subject must be rubbish. I don’t say that about what he says. Through the words, one can sense a viciousness beneath the urbane exterior. Everything he says on the subject is not rubbish; he has some very good things to say. But that is not reciprocated. Ah well, that’s the way of it.

  • technicolour

    Hmm. I think there is a point. Anno, don’t worry, we all go to extremes sometimes. they are quite boring actually. Are you reading widely or have you already chosen a human to obey?

  • Lucretius

    Larry said

    “You’re an idiot who believes that 911 was an inside job. Why would anyone believe anything else you have to say?”

    “Former Chicago and Harvard law professor Cass Sunstein, who in 2009 was appointed by President Barack Obama to direct an important executive branch office, had in 2008 co-authored an article containing a plan for the government to prevent the spread of anti-government “conspiracy theories.” Arguing that such theories are believed only by groups suffering from “informational isolation,” he advocated the use of anonymous government agents to engage in “cognitive infiltration” of these groups in order to introduce “cognitive diversity,” with the aim of breaking them up.”

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1566568218?ie=UTF8&tag=hous-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1566568218

    So tell us Larry, are you one of Dr. Goebbels’, sorry, Dr. Sunstein’s, agents of “cognitive inflitration?”

  • Richard Robinson

    Lucretius – If your suggestion is so, why does he come across as about the most narrow-minded of all ?

  • Clark

    Suhayl Saadi,

    I’ve only just caught up with this thread. Thanks for the link to Mari Boine – It Sat Duolmma Mu on YouTube. Due to a strange coincidence I have Gula Gula on CD. Years ago, I bought a CD from a second-hand record shop, but I returned it as it didn’t play properly. I didn’t know what to swap it for, and the assistant recommended Gula Gula. Superb dynamics on that piece.

  • Larry from St. Louis

    “So tell us Larry, are you one of Dr. Goebbels’, sorry, Dr. Sunstein’s, agents of “cognitive inflitration?””

    Goebbels was the chief architect of Kristallnacht and extremely instrumental in the Final Solution. Sunstein co-authored a silly academic article.

    And you’re so stupid that you would compare the two.

  • Roderick Russell

    The question is posed – “Roderick Russell, what’s your best piece of evidence that “Zerzetsen” exists? Remember, you writing a letter to a government agency or media organization does not count as evidence.”

    Wherever have I suggested that I rely on letters from myself for proof of the cover-up conspiracy?? It is Larry the Liar’s old trick ?” putting words into my mouth that I never made. Nor do I rely on one piece of evidence either; there are hundreds of pieces of evidence to prove Zerzetsen.

    Click on my signature and read the WIKI. Look at the 2nd Chapter of the WIKI for precedents where “Zerzetsen” has happened to others in the UK and Canada. Google on these precedents and see it for yourself. In Canada CSIS calls “Zerzetsen” D&D.

    As for the well-witnessed 3rd party proof of the “Zerzetsen” threats and the cover-up conspiracy, just read the WIKI. Or look at my comments above of September 23, 2010 5:14 PM. for another example ?” and indeed for the reaction of The Guardian and Amnesty International.

    And Larry, I am going to bring your clients to justice. I will shortly be publishing a research paper on the topic that provides even more information and proof of “Zerzetsen”; as a courtesy it is currently with selected Canadian Members of Parliament for their preliminary review.

  • somebody

    As if they haven’t had enough in Fallujah, the people experience some work of the 50,000 US thugs left behind as ‘peace keepers’.

    Three days of mourning declared in Fallujah

    By Omar al-Mansouri

    Azzaman, September 16, 2010

    The Iraqi city of Fallujah has declared three-day long mourning after a joint U.S.-Iraqi attack on the city killed at least 10 civilians and injured many others.

    The raid on Wednesday has raised tensions and angered the city’s inhabitants as well as the nearly two million Muslim Sunnis who live in the Province of Anbar, west of Baghdad.

    The Muslim Scholars Association, a group of powerful Muslim Sunni clerics in Iraq, described the raid as “a massacre in which two children were killed.”

    U.S. and Iraqi officials claim that the raid killed a former Iraqi officer linked to al-Qaeda group in the country.

    But the claim could not be substantiated and eyewitnesses and officials in the city said all the dead and injured were civilians.

    Schools, offices and shops were closed in Fallujah on Thursday in protest against the attack (which)was also strongly condemned by provincial officials of Anbar of which the city of Ramadi is the capital.

    The Province of Anbar was the major stronghold of resistance and defied repeated U.S. onslaughts to bring it under control. U.S. troops only managed to establish relative quiet following the recruitment of Sunni tribesmen in their fight against al-Qaeda.

    The officials in Anbar have asked Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for an independent investigation of the raid, according to Mohammed Fathi, the governor’s advisor.

    “The Governor Qassem al-Fahdawi has been in touch with Maliki who has agreed to set a commission to investigate the incident” Fathi said.

    “All the casualties were civilians including the owner of the house the troops targeted,” Fathi said.

  • Roderick Russell

    Just to clarify why Larry may be confused. Zerzetsen is usually done very subtly for a long period of time, and in a manner that though very menacing to the victim is difficult to prove. This was the Stasi’s technique (look up zersetzung) and Larry will know that.

    However in a few cases (such as the Lehane case I referred to above) the intelligence agencies go overboard in their threats and for some reason are not careful in what they do. As a result they start creating witnesses and considerable 3rd party evidence to verify. This is where Larry the Liar has gone wrong. Since he has probably never read the Wiki, he doesn’t understand just quite how much his client’s went overboard in their threats in my case. Like the Lehane case, my case is unusual in the large amount of corroborative evidence that is available. Click on my signature and look at the Wiki.

  • Ruth

    And Larry I, too, will be publishing a book which will I hope quite clearly show how deeply corrupt the inner government of the UK is and that in carrying out and concealing its illegal activities it uses the agencies of the state, the judiciary and the CCRC, barristers, solicitors or anyone who is prepared to put ambition or greed before morality.

  • Mark Golding - Children of Iraq

    Why would Ahmadinejad think otherwise when history records a meeting with Mr Blair and the US President in Washington on 31st January 2003 at which they discussed plans to begin military action on March 10th 2003, irrespective of whether the United Nations had passed a new resolution authorising the use of force. To get UN support for Blair, Bush had a plan of “flying U2 reconnaissance aircraft with fighter cover over Iraq, painted in UN colours. If Saddam fired on them, he would be in breach.”

    Deception

    The great catalyst to change the political landscape and focus terror in the minds of the American people that still exists ten years was a plan to dramatically take down 3 capitalist centric buildings that were losing money and contained records of embarrassing capitalist fraud. Military grade sol nanothermate had already been sprayed I believe in thick layers throughout the tube frame, box sections and wide flanges (during post construction modifications NCSTAR 1-4 NCSTAR 1-6 and elevator modernisation) and modern software controlled encrypted wireless detonation ensured clandestine success.

    Deception

  • glenn

    Maybe we shouldn’t encourage the teabagging troll with direct replies so much, particularly since it’s not observing the ban because of profound ignorance and contempt?

  • Lucretius

    In response to

    “So tell us Larry, are you one of Dr. Goebbels’, sorry, Dr. Sunstein’s, agents of “cognitive inflitration?””

    Larry said,

    “Goebbels was the chief architect of Kristallnacht and extremely instrumental in the Final Solution. Sunstein co-authored a silly academic article.”

    So Larry won’t answer the question. Well that’s good, I suppose, if it means he’s uncomfortable about giving us the lie direct.

    Dr. Goebbels, is of course, best known as Hitler’s chief of “”cognitive infiltration.”

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