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Thursday, March 15, 2012

Andrew Breitbart's Death: Some Uncomfortable Reality - Brentwood, CA Patch

Andrew Breitbart's Death: Some Uncomfortable Reality - Brentwood, CA Patch

The CIA assassination gun:

CIA Director William Colby was forced to bring a secret pistol his agency had specifically developed to quietly murder human beings with an exotic frozen poison pellet that would cause a heart attack and then melt inside the body of the victim and be undiscoverable by autopsy procedures.
Colby himself died of a possible heart attack in 1996 under mysterious circumstances while canoeing alone. I had met Colby years before and told his son, Brentwood resident Carl Colby, maker of the film “The Man Nobody Knew: In Search of My Father, CIA Spymaster William Colby,” that I'd been told  he was assassinated at least partially because some thought he had assisted me with critical secret information for my Emmy winning and Oscar nominated film "Waco: The Rules of Engagement." That information showed the official government story about its actions against the Branch Davidians was a lie. Carl told Vanity Fair his father's "death was ruled an accident -- a stroke or a heart attack -- but I think he was done. He didn't have a lot left to live for." Perhaps, but we'll probably never really know.

A government domestic terrorism plot:

The Church Committee discovered a secret U.S. military plan to carry out  domestic acts of terrorism that would kill Americans and blame those killings on Fidel Castro as a pretext for invading Cuba. Roll that one and its implications around in your mind when applied to present circumstances.

The secret drugging of human guinea pigs:

This was a secret CIA operation to give unsuspecting people doses of LSD and other damaging substances in order to see how they reacted. One target is known to have killed himself. Some twenty years later, the secret was exposed and the man's family sued for damages.

Corruption of the American news media:

The CIA maintained an operation that paid editors and reporters in most mainstream media outlets to report the CIA's narrative of events (which may or may not have agreed with the White House version) and suppress contrary information outright or destroy its credibility as conspiracy theory, racist, extremist or the like. That legacy lives on in many of the official media narratives news consumers read and hear on almost any given day that Andrew Breitbart exposed as untrue. Hard to believe?

Investigative journalist Deborah Davis wrote in her 1979 book Katharine the Great: Katharine Graham and Her Washington Post Empire, a book Graham had the power to pull from stores and destroy when first published, that CIA co-founder Allen Dulles made a 1948 deal with the Washington Post to be the ownership front for CIA control of all CBS broadcast outlets in Washington, DC. Adds investigative reporter Carl Bernstein: "CBS was unquestionably the CIA's most valuable broadcasting asset ... Over the years, the network provided cover for CIA employees ..." So when the late Walter Cronkite, "the most trusted man in America," used CBS News to sell one world government and lie that American military victories in South Vietnam were actually defeats, one has to wonder whether he was a loose cannon with his own agenda or a mouthpiece for known world governance sentiment and Vietnam War policy opposition among the CIA
elite. We can only follow the facts.

After serving as Moscow Bureau Chief for United Press, Cronkite turned down a job as spokesman and DC lobbyist for his passion, the World Federalist Society, which advocates a global socialist government, to take a job at CBS. U.S. Army General Frederick C. Weyand maintains Cronkite told him he would lie about American military successes in South Vietnam in order to undermine domestic
support for that war, which he did.
Whether one believes Weyand or agrees or disagrees with American policy in South Vietnam then, Cronkite's lies about it and their effectiveness are a matter of record.

That was then.

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