On second thought, please allow me to back up a bit. For decades, the Scientology organization international, of which Hollywood actor Tom Cruise is, of course, a prominent devotee, has been charging hundreds of thousands of dollars to followers for their “spiritual freedom” coursework and in that time, hundreds, if not thousands, of allegations of forced family separations (“disconnections”), forced abortions and other abuses have emerged. Founded in the mid-20th century by science fiction writer Lafayette Ron Hubbard (a. k. a. L. Ron Hubbard, Ron Hubbard, or simply “LRH”), Scientology today calls itself a religion but many have alleged that it exerts a type of control over its adherents which is much more manipulative and total than the typical standards of a “free” or democratic type of society would require of a faith-related organization. From time to time since its founding, Scientology has been met with intense scrutiny from private individuals and governments alike. In the last few years, however, Scientology’s public image has taken what is perhaps its most significant nose dive to date, thanks in large part to a protest campaign by the on-line prankster phenomenon known as Anonymous. Anonymous’ campaign, Project Chanology, initially launched merely as retribution for Scientology’s attempts to remove a leaked promotional video featuring Tom Cruise from the web, has helped like nothing else to bring to the fore the work of Scientology critics such as Mark Bunker, who has been speaking against the abusive practices of the group for many years. Bunker’s web site, Xenu TV, is an up-to-date archive of everything anti-Scientology and contains links to many off-site anti-Scientology resources. One of his more recent endeavors, one which helped to kick off a string of PR victories against the group, was a two-hour tell-all interview with American actor Jason Beghe, who left Scientology in 2008 after a membership of fourteen years, in which Beghe describes his former life as a celebrity on the inside. Beghe, who says he entered Scientology after a spiritual quest he began in his youth went stagnant, estimates that he paid Scientology a million dollars for courses and course materials, courses which left him, quote, “f***ed up.” Joining the organization, he initially found a powerful new sense of identity through a meditative exercise but then began to deteriorate as he was indoctrinated into Scientology’s very expensive and tightly regimented program. As time went on and he noticed what he considered to be the deleterious effects of this extraordinarily strict system on some of its followers’ personalities, including his own, he grew more and more displeased with the organization and eventually parted ways with it. Beghe says he made it to Scientology’s upper levels before jumping ship, reaching the organization’s “clear” (perfect) status twice and even paying for and completing five of the “Original Thetan” or “OT” levels beyond that. Despite his graduation into these advanced course levels, however, Beghe says he continued to suffer from the troubles which Scientology had claimed it would cure. When Scientology did not deliver what it had promised and, in Beghe’s estimation, even left new marks of its own, Beghe decided that Scientology was “destructive and a rip-off [...] very, very dangerous for your spiritual/psychological/mental/emotional health” and left. The authorship of Scientology’s core beliefs and practices is attributed to occult-inspired science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard. Beginning in the 1950′s, Hubbard marketed his techniques as Dianetics, a science of the mind and an alternative to psychiatry. For reasons many, including the German government, have suspected may have had more to do with obtaining tax-exempt status than with sincerely promoting a religious faith, the Scientology organization followed was presented along what Hubbard referred to as “the religious angle” and incorporated as a “church” instead. As Beghe notes, the rank-and-file Scientologist, still riding the highs of his or her initial “wins” in the early stages of the program, perhaps, may tend to mean well and, in fact, be quite sincerely devoted to helping others. However, Scientology’s techniques seem to readily lend themselves toward the production of fanatics who believe that they have evolved into a new species: “Homo Novus,” (“New Man,” another form of the ancient “magickal Superman” concept) per Hubbard. And although Scientology spokesmen have routinely denied or refused to comment upon the existence, at Scientology’s core, of tightly guarded scriptures penned by Hubbard concerning extraterrestrial visits to Earth, a once-secret tape recording made by L. Ron Hubbard himself and intended only for OT level three aspirants teaches that a space alien named Xenu or Xemu committed a genocide on Earth millions of years ago, after which the dead souls of the murdered attached themselves to early humans. These spiritual fragments, Scientology says, are responsible for all of humankind’s misery and Scientology’s unique and very costly therapy is the way to rid oneself of them. In a way, Scientology is an easy target to attack being that it is relatively small, its outrageously expensive teachings are so patently absurd and its leadership is so transparently malevolent as to routinely order or even personally engage in stalking behavior or worse of anyone who would speak against them, tactics referred to as “fair game” policy by Hubbard. At the same time, however, they seem to be every bit as destructive and ruthless as some of the bigger predators who are more difficult to confront and are therefore worthy of every last ounce of the scornful attention they’ve attracted. [END] Permalink: Scientology Versus the World
From the 1970′s to the 1990′s, a string of mail bomb attacks gained America’s attention. The bombs were peculiar in nature, having been made of wood and sometimes adorned with carvings. Eventually, a political manifesto, said to have been written by the bomber (or bombers — the authors refer to themselves as “we”) was published in the New York Times and Washington Post. In 1995, a Montana hermit named Ted Kaczynski was apprehended by the FBI and became known as the “lone nut” solely responsible for the attacks. So many times in the cases of the high-profile mass shootings, bombings and assassinations, there is speculation about some sort of MKULTRA-style mind control of the patsy, MKULTRA generally being used as a blanket term. In the case of the Unabomber, however, Kaczynski literally was a victim of a branch of the CIA’s MKULTRA proper at Harvard University, where he had been enrolled at the age of sixteen, and yet very little has been written about it from a skeptical viewpoint. As his brother, David, explains above, Ted was abused for three years in a program disguised as graduate psychological research but which actually sought behavior modification by covert means (and sounds a lot like Bill O’Reilly’s interview with Jeremy Glick). In Ted, we have all the ingredients of a supervillainous patsy, a new model of enemy to be devoured by the wrath of Joe Public, but is he really the guy, especially since it seems like guys like him — Atta and co., McVeigh and Nichols, Harris and Klebold, etc. — never really are, or at least that’s not the whole story? Many of the bombs, for instance, seem to have been beyond the ability of a man who lived without electricity. More information can be found here, here, here, here and here. [END] Permalink: Was Ted Kaczynski Really the Unabomber?
This is part five of six of “Evidence of Revision,” an eight-hour video collection which covers many a taboo subject in American history including the assassinations of JFK, RFK and MLK, the causes of the Vietnam war, the social uprisings of the 1960s and ’70s, the Jonestown massacre, government mind control programs such as MKULTRA, and vote rigging and political corruption at the highest levels. This installment continues with part four’s discussion of the RFK assassination as it pertains to the unusual behavior of Kennedy’s presumed killer, Sirhan Sirhan, and moves into a discussion of mind control “doctors” such as the once highly regarded Ewan Cameron, who destroyed the lives of countless hundreds of psychiatric patients through exotic forms of scientifically administered torture aimed at complete and total brainwashing of the victim. Finally, part five covers possible CIA operative Jim Jones and his highly abusive “Peoples Temple” cult, which was destroyed in a mass suicide in 1978 — or was it mass murder? [END] Permalink: Evidence of Revision 5: RFK Assassination, MKULTRA and the Jonestown Massacre
Above is part one of six of “Evidence of Revision,” an eight-hour video collection which covers many a taboo subject in American history including the assassinations of JFK, RFK and MLK, the causes of the Vietnam war, the social uprisings of the 1960s and ’70s, the Jonestown massacre, government mind control programs such as MKULTRA, and vote rigging and political corruption at the highest levels. This installment, which opens with an excellent video collage on “conspiracy theory,” focuses on the highly suspicious assassination of U. S. President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. From a long and rambling introduction from a news commentator upon Kennedy’s arrival concerning the assassination of William McKinley to reports and video of two rifles and two different types of ammunition having been found in the Texas School Book Depository from where Kennedy was officially shot to the arrest and assassination of presumed killer Lee Oswald, himself, “Evidence of Revision” is a moving overview of the many questions which still remain concerning this watershed event. [END] Permalink: Evidence of Revision 1: The Assassinations of Kennedy and Oswald
Above, Michael Moore briefly discusses flack he allegedly received over his treatment of Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd in his most recent film, “Capitalism: A Love Story.” Mr. Moore may not have done outstanding work in his 9/11 and Columbine movies — despite being one of the first mainstream anti-Iraq war movies, “Fahrenheit 9/11″ barely scratched the surface with regard to the inside job that was September 11th, and “Bowling for Columbine” was way off-base in many respects — but this one was pretty good, all things considered. Below is the trailer.
Just before this one, Moore made another excellent film, “Sicko,” about the financing and accessibility of the U. S. medical care system versus health care in other countries including Canada, the UK and France. Below is its trailer.
Above, Basil Marceaux, a candidate for the Republican Party’s gubernatorial nomination in Tennessee who became the laughing stock of the internet a few months ago, partly for his ideas but mostly for his speech impediment (sadly) presents his platform on the nightly news. While Marceaux may or may not have hatched the idea about planting vegetation in vacant lots on his own, it might be worth noting that some of what might be the most unfamiliar parts of what he says, such as, “I’m-a remove all gold-fringed flags from the state,” and the bit about traffic stops (also known as “right to travel” issues) actually derive from little-known but long-standing political and legal discussions extending back at least to the Civil War, which is appropriate these days because it seems that that may be where America’s headed, right after we get through reliving the Great Depression. From the American Patriot Friends’ Network:
The flags displayed in State courts and courts of the United States have gold or yellow fringes. That is your WARNING that you are entering into a foreign enclave, the same as if you are stepping into a foreign embassy and you will be under the jurisdiction of that flag. The flag with the gold or yellow fringe has no constitution, no laws, and no rules of court, and is not recognized by any nation on the earth, and is foreign to you and the United States of America. [...] When you enter a courtroom displaying a gold or yellow fringed flag, you have just entered into a foreign country, and you better have your passport with you, because you may not be coming back to the land of the free for a long time. The judge sitting under a gold or yellow fringe flag becomes the “captain” or “master” of that ship or enclave and he has absolute power to make the rules as he goes. The gold or yellow fringe flag is your warning that you are leaving your Constitutionally secured RIGHTS on the floor outside the door to that courtroom.
Although there may or may not be legal substance to what these “constitutionalists,” libertarians and old-style republicans* suggest, there certainly is risk in some of the schemes that some of them propose. For instance, one can pay thousands of dollars to individuals such as those advertising their “sovereignty” services through the Practical Course in Miracles and then possibly end up like the Montana Freemen. Then again, there is also Joe Bannister, a former IRS agent who claims he jumped through the proper legal loopholes in court to avoid paying income tax, which, according to his research, he says, is voluntary to pay. A look back eight decades or so shows that income tax was a major pet peeve of the British Fascisti, who held that more residual income for hiring domestic servants was the solution to an unemployed workforce, just as it is a major issue for American libertarians today, a group which bases its highly individualistic philosophy on a policy of no force and no fraud, and therefore take the position that because it is not a voluntary transaction, taxation, like many or even most functions of government, is inherently immoral. (Scheming to use the natural vulnerabilities of one’s fellow man against him for gain in “the market,” however, apparently isn’t, at least, not enough so as to justify its prevention by legal mandates, which apparently can get a little bit too complicated for these often Manichean, “freedom versus tyranny” thinkers.) Frequently cited here is an unsourced and probably apocryphal quote from George Washington, “Government is not reason; it is not eloquence; it is force.” In addition, a progressive income tax is called for directly in the Communist Manifesto, which more or less automatically makes it bad to libertarians. Congressman Ron Paul’s bid for the Republican Presidential nomination in 2008 on an anti-war, “pro-liberty,” platform, brought “constitutionalist” and libertarian thought to “the masses,” a. k. a. “the sheeple.” And against other Republicans back in the 2007 and 2008 debates, he looked great. Today, next to many Democrats, and especially next to the progressives who’ve been particularly critical of the “other” antiwar interests that he, and his ridiculous son, Rand, represent, he simply doesn’t compare, and that is becoming more and more apparent as time goes on. There were a lot of details in his agenda, for instance, which went largely unmentioned until recently, such as opposition to those darn “socialistic” minimum wage laws. And how about that Department of Education? When you get right down to it, the libertarian vision for the United States is a repeal of all New Deal provisions which were enacted on behalf of the many labor strikers in the early half of the twentieth century whose demands, such as the forty-hour (versus eighty hour) work week under safe (versus lethal) job conditions could no longer be ignored. It’s the law of the jungle, baby: thrive or die, greed is good. Living in a refrigerator box? Not to worry, that’s just a “market correction,” thanks for taking one for Team Wall Street. And this is to say nothing of libertarianism’s roots in the egoistic objectivist philosophy conceived by Ayn Rand, which literally and without irony regards selfishness as a virtue, making it not at all hyperbole to compare these beliefs to modern Satanism. (There are also a number of interesting connections here between Ayn Rand and former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who would theoretically be a nemesis of Paul’s “End the Fed” movement.) The Ron Paul Revolution, as they refer to themselves, have credited themselves with starting the “populist” Tea Parties, which, they now complain, have been taken over by other forces within the Republican Party. Really though, even the movement behind Paul, itself, was, in ways, a quote-unquote “hijacked” version of the much more dangerous 9/11 skeptics’ movement which had come before it and to which the Afghanistan-invading Paul would privately proclaim sympathy while publicly denouncing it at every turn. (To be fair, however, the utterly disorganized American left, not the center-left to center-right Democratic Party, but the actual American left, can also take a good share of the blame for not picking up this and related issues more readily themselves.) But is Paul, who has for years argued for a return to the gold standard, long the bane of populists from William Hope Harvey to Bill Still for its tendency to favor the rich, really a populist? In desperate economic times such as America currently faces, all sorts of ideas can gain ground which, under any other circumstances, would flounder, as the anger of the lower and middle classes against the causers of their financial woes seeks expression. Whether that anger is going to be expressed in a way which is constructive or destructive to their actual interests is a question which remains to be seen, but a hysterical phobia of all things “communist” and “socialist,” however those terms are currently defined by the fear-mongering right, seem to be at the core of the rhetoric of the billionaire Koch Brothers-funded Tea Parties, and stands in the way of the lower American classes asserting themselves rationally. Indeed, in America, where citizens have for decades consumed more hours of the saturation levels of propagandistic television broadcasting than in most economically comparable countries, union membership is at a historic low, working conditions, where well paying work is even available, are often degrading, prejudiced attitudes about social reform movements abound and general emotional malaise and mental confusion seem to be at a maximum. Reactionary politicians, mainly Republicans but also some Democrats, such as arch sell-out Bill “End Welfare As We Know It” Clinton, have been chipping away at the progressive income tax and other such “socialist” laws for nearly a half century now. The supposedly populist libertarians and their ilk, however, offer now the promise of bringing it all down, baby and bathwater alike. The Tea Parties must be allowed to pass without further incident, and the media would do well to stop covering these hideous spectacles also. The politics of ignorance and quick fixes for complex problems have no place in a free society; they are, in fact, probably the gateway to a final American breakdown, the kind that left Europe burned and ruined in the 1940′s. Furthermore, in addition to there being nothing inevitable about “belt-tightening” and spending cuts in the face of this crisis (the same rhetoric the right wing has been spouting for decades, all the while lining their own bank accounts), any and all predictions that a “third” party of “progressive libertarians” will arise are extremely misinformed. If libertarians and progressives do see an increase in representation in office, it will largely be independently of each other, with different voter bases. Once in power, they may align from time to time on certain subjects but more often than not and especially on domestic questions, they will be each others’ bitter enemies. Civil liberties, like workers’ rights, are a vital topic of discussion, and one certainly ought to question the hundreds of U. S. military bases in operation worldwide today but as a whole, libertarianism is a no-go on almost every economic and work-related issue and is absolutely not a viable substitute for the currently absent but badly needed left in America. There must be more than pure debate, however; there must be action. Take France, for example: the government announces that benefits will be postponed several years for retirees and the middle and lower classes are able to shut the country down in protest. In the States, on the other hand, far too many working stiffs still believe that Bill O’Reilly and “Joe the Plumber” types really are looking out for them and the rest are too afraid to make more than a passing comment about their grievances. Furthermore, if America wants to remain a first-world nation following the rapidly approaching end of her economic and military supremacy, the money to maintain and build new roads, train lines, hospitals and schools has to come from somewhere. If it’s not coming from the tax-avoiding rich, those who have the least percentage of their income tied up in providing themselves with the bare essentials of life and whose Congressional representation keeps “reforming” the tax code by downgrading their own tax levels (currently at about 35% versus 90% in the mid-20th century), it’s going to have to come from the next in line, the middle class. The less cash the middle class has to spend because it’s going toward national infrastructure, the more the demand side of the economy slows down, the less time there is to spend with the children due to second jobs and overall, everyone suffers, everyone but the wealthiest five or ten percent. Why does America put up with it? Why tolerate less vacation time, less benefits, less education? Is America going to organize or is she going to let Joe the Plumber tell her to suck it up and eat macaroni and cheese more often for dinner “until the crisis passes,” i. e. until America’s ready for another fleecing? The future holds great promise for a class-conscious America which can manage to get control of its government again and while there will always be room for debate on the specifics of how government spends money, “the market” has shown time and time again that “it” will not provide for society adequately on “its” own and libertarians, despite what valid points they can make about Democratic weaknesses, will be fighting that all the way with their suicidal program of social collapse. *Are “constitutionalists” necessarily libertarians, or vice versa? No, but judging from the web sites, there is considerable overlap. For instance, Ron Paul gave his endorsement to the Constitution Party‘s Chuck Baldwin after finally stepping down from the 2008 Republican primaries and had run as a Libertarian Presidential candidate in 1988. “Constitutionalists” is in quotations here because, while there is widespread agreement that various officials have violated certain provisions of the U. S. Constitution which are not open to diverse interpretation, almost anyone can take a particular agenda, no matter how outlandish, and argue that it’s the “true” reading of the document. [END] Permalink: The Limits of Liberty
Presented here in two parts, Citizen Investigation Team’s “The North Side Flyover,” a follow-up to their “The PentaCon” video, contains interviews with additional witnesses to the “north side” flight path at the Pentagon on 9/11. [END] Permalink: The North Side Flyover
Between 2003 and 2006, not a great deal of new research on 9/11 was performed. A majority of the information which circulated at this time criticizing the official story of the attacks was based upon points which had already been made in years prior. In 2007, however, the Citizen Investigation Team published new information in “The PentaCon,” a video which summarized their original interviews with eyewitnesses to the Pentagon attack, a segment of the attacks which had left so many researchers confused due to the lack of video footage of the event and other factors. From their research, the CIT group came to the conclusion that a large airplane had most likely flown toward the Pentagon along a different trajectory than the official one, then flew over the top of the section of the Pentagon which showed damage later on while an explosion of some other origin occurred which was responsible for the explosion there. Many of the witnesses to this event specifically stated that the plane made its approach on the north side rather than the south side of a CITGO gas station near to the Pentagon, meaning that the plane’s trajectory could not match the official version and its downed light poles and other damage. [END] Permalink: The PentaCon: Smoking Gun Version
This wide ranging and highly informative talk by investigative journalist Daniel Hopsicker centers primarily on Hopsicker’s research into the pre-9/11 activities of several alleged 9/11 hijackers including Mohammed Atta in and around Venice, Florida where some of them are supposed to have attended flight school. Hopsicker’s past research has focused on the CIA’s drug trafficking activities in Arkansas and elsewhere and it is partly through these links that his 9/11 information came to light. Hopsicker makes an excellent point in this speech about how full the internet is with mere opinions and suggests that if social activists want to move forward, they ought to consider training in journalism. The video includes footage of Hopsicker’s interview with exotic dancer Amanda Keller, Mohammed Atta’s alleged American girlfriend in Florida. [END] Permalink: Daniel Hopsicker at the 2008 New England 9/11 Symposium
This German documentary gives an intimate view into the lives of U. S. soldiers in Iraq. Firefights, sniper attacks, all manners of violence are presented here in true documentary fashion. The first Gulf War began in 1991, a decade of sanctions which killed more people than the bombing of Hiroshima followed, and now a bigger war continues to drag on and on, year after year. What will be the end of the United States’ war in Iraq? [END] Permalink: Iraq: The Continuous War