Wednesday, 17 September 2014

Conspiracy by Jim Marrs

CONSPIRACY IS NOT WHAT IT USED TO BE DEPT. 
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Jim-Marrs/107367532680105
The attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, rehabilitated the term “conspiracy theory” since 9/11 obviously involved more than one lone person. For too long—and to some extent still today, this term was used to disparage anyone whose information differed from another. In this article, Shawn Hamilton has gathered some of the more documented and horrendous conspiracies of recent years. Study these and the next time someone you know brushes off the account of an event as a “conspiracy theory,” remind them this is the last refuge of those who either have failed to consider all the evidence or have a hidden agenda. If it’s not an act of God, it’s a conspiracy.

Jim

Rethinking Conspiracy
By Shawn Hamilton
OpEdNews.com
September 14, 2014

The terms "conspiracy theorist" and "conspiracy nut" are used frequently to discredit a perceived adversary using emotional, rather than logical, appeals. It's important for the sake of true argument that we define the term "conspiracy" and use it appropriately, not as an ad hominem attack on someone whose point of view we don't share.
According to my Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, the word "conspiracy" derives from the Latin "conspirare" which means literally "to breath together" in the sense of agreeing to commit a crime. The primary definition is "planning and acting together secretly, especially for a harmful or unlawful purpose, such as murder or treason."
It was in this sense that Mark Twain astutely observed, "A conspiracy is nothing but a secret agreement of a number of men for the pursuance of policies which they dare not admit in public."
Conspiracies are common. If they weren't, police stations would not need conspiracy units to investigate and prosecute crimes such as "conspiracy to import cocaine" or any other collusion on the part of two or more people to subvert the law.
Unfortunately, too many people smugly chide "conspiracy theories" as if they imagine that such a derisive characterization reflects superior intellect--whether or not they know anything about the issue in question. It's a pitiful display of ego inflation and intellectual dishonesty, yet it appears to be a common approach preferred by those short on information and critical thinking skills.
Here are a few examples of past "conspiracy theories" that were commonly derided at the time of their occurrence but were later determined to be credible:
1933 Business Plot: Smedley Butler, a decorated United States Marine Corps major general who wrote a book called War is a Racket, testified before a congressional committee that a group of powerful industrialists, who had tried to recruit him, were planning to form a fascist veterans' group that intended to assassinate Franklin Roosevelt and overthrow the government in a coup. While news media at the time belittled Butler and called the affair a hoax, the congressional committee determined that Butler's allegations were credible although no-one was prosecuted.
Operation Paperclip: After "winning" WW2, the US imported hundreds of
Nazis and their families through "Operation Paperclip," so-named because ID photos were clipped to paper dossiers. It was set up by an agency within the Office of Strategic Services, predecessor of the CIA. Along with creating false identities and political biographies, Paperclip operatives expunged or altered Nazi records and other criminal histories in order to illegally circumvent President Truman's edict that prohibited Nazis from obtaining security clearances. Thus, high-level Nazis waltzed into sensitive positions of authority and secrecy in the US military-industrial establishment, including the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), major corporations, and universities. These Germans were conveniently referred to as "former Nazis," but "former" was commonly just a euphemism for "active" and "ardent."
Consider the irony of the United States' moon mission. In order to successfully land men on the lunar surface and return them to Earth, the US depended almost exclusively on Nazis. A notable example was rocket scientist Wernher von Braun, a member of the Allgemeine SS, who would eventually lead the US space program. Von Braun had exploited concentration camp labor in Germany to build V-2 rockets at Peenemünde, and German aviation doctors' gruesome and often fatal experiments at Dachau and other prisons afforded information that would help keep American astronauts alive in space.
While many Americans prefer to call this a conspiracy theory, the United States defeated the Nazi organization in Germany only to transplant that ideology directly into the US after the war, and not just among members of the lay population but, more significantly, among members of the very "military-industrial complex" that President Eisenhower (a five-star general during World War Two) had presciently warned the nation about in his 1961 message of leave-taking and farewell.
Operation Northwoods: Declassified documents revealed that in 1962 the CIA was planning to execute false flag terrorist attacks, such as killing random American citizens and blowing up civilian targets, including a ship and US airliner, in order to blame Castro and justify invading Cuba.
Gulf of Tonkin: President Lyndon Johnson used a contrived version of this 1964 event to justify escalation of the Vietnam War. It was claimed that Vietnamese gunboats had fired on the USS Maddox. It never happened--or at best was grossly distorted and overblown--yet the story served to prompt Congress to pass the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which provided the public justification Johnson needed to attack North Vietnam. This led to the deaths of about two million Vietnamese people and fifty thousand Americans.
MK-ULTRA: As its code name suggests, MK-ULTRA was a mind control program run by the Office of Scientific Intelligence for the ostensible purpose of discovering ways to glean information from Communist spies although its applications were undoubtedly more far-reaching. It employed various methodologies including sensory deprivation and isolation, sexual abuse, and the administration of powerful psychotropic drugs such as LSD to unwitting subjects, including military personnel, prisoners, and college students. Many of them suffered serious consequences. One biochemist, Frank Olson, who was secretly slipped a strong dose of LSD at a staff party, suffered a severe psychotic break and died when, for whatever reason, he plummeted from his apartment window to the pavement below. Such revelations came to light in 1975 during hearings by the congressional Church Committee (Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities) and the presidential Rockefeller Commission. These investigations were hindered by CIA Director Richard Helms who in 1973 had ordered the MK-ULTRA files destroyed.
Operation Mockingbird: This was a CIA media control program exposed by the Church Committee in 1975. It revealed the CIA's efforts from the 1950s through the 1970s to pay well-known foreign and domestic journalists from "reputable" media agencies such as the Washington Post, Time Magazine, Newsweek, the Miami Herald, the New York Times, the New York Herald Tribune, Miami News, and CBS, among others, to publish CIA propaganda, manipulating the news by planting stories in domestic and foreign news outlets. During the hearings, Senator Church asked an agency representative, "Do you have any people paid by the CIA who are working for television networks?" The speaker eyed his lawyer then replied, "This I think gets into the details, Mr. Chairman, that I'd like to get into in executive session." In other words, he didn't want to admit the truth publicly. He gave the same response when asked if the CIA planted stories with the major wire services United Press International (UPI) and the Associated Press (AP). According to Alex Constantine's book, Mockingbird: The Subversion of The Free Press by the CIA, in the 1950s "some 3,000 salaried and contract CIA employees were eventually engaged in propaganda efforts." I'm curious to know what the estimate would be today.
CIA Drug Smuggling: It's no longer a secret that clandestine arms of US Intelligence have profited from running drugs for many years. I first became aware of the issue when a Vietnam veteran claimed he had helped load opium cultivated in Laos onto military transport planes. The opium was turned into heroin and shipped around the world, sometimes in the visceral cavities of dead soldiers. A Hollywood version of these events is portrayed in the film Air America, but the movie is based on historical truth. When the US military presence in Southeast Asia declined and the focus shifted to Central America, cocaine became the new revenue source. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Gary Webb ran a well-documented three-part series in the San Jose Mercury News called "Dark Alliance," alleging that traffickers with US intelligence ties had marketed the cocaine in Los Angeles it its new and highly addictive form known as "crack," sparking a scourge that claimed the lives and freedom of thousands. One guy I met in Compton who had been arrested for crack possession described the drug this way: "It doesn't really get you high," he said. "You just want more." Webb's allegations were confirmed by an LAPD Narcotics Officer and whistleblower, Michael Ruppert, and the story received additional confirmation from CIA contract pilot Terry Reed, whose story is revealed in his 1994 book Compromised: Clinton, Bush and the CIA. According to Reed, the sale of cocaine was used to finance the Contras in Central America when congressional funding was blocked by the Boland Amendment. He claimed the operation was run out of Mena, Arkansas when Bill Clinton was governor. Military cargo planes were flown to Central America with military hardware, he said, then returned to Mena loaded with tons of coke.
I could add to the list, and it would be a long one. The Iran-Contra scandal, Watergate, the FBI's Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO), the Tuskegee syphilis experiment--there is no shortage of crimes that were planned and committed by two or more people and thus constituted conspiracy. Conspiracies happen, and before any crime is solved it spawns theories. There are people who look at these theories rationally using logic and discernment, and there are others who are illogical, engage in fallacious and emotion-based thinking, jumping to unjustified conclusions based on little or no evidence. The term "conspiracy theorist," however, has been manipulated to suggest only those in the latter category.
The John Kennedy assassination provides a good example of how the term "conspiracy" is misapplied to disparage people who find fault with official versions of major events. After Kennedy was murdered, very few people questioned the Warren Commission's verdict that Lee Oswald had shot the president unassisted, and anyone who challenged that belief was branded a "conspiracy nut (or buff)" unworthy of respect or consideration. 40 years later, a 2003 Gallup poll revealed that 75% of the US population believed there had been a conspiracy to kill JFK.
Apparently a certain portion of the population has a psychological need to protect themselves from unpleasant realities, so it is easier for such people to label others as conspiracy nuts than to assimilate hard but discomforting facts. In the case of the John Kennedy assassination, even a congressional committee, the House Select Committee on Assassinations, concluded in 1979 that there had been a conspiracy to kill John Kennedy. They tried to soften that reality by calling it a "limited conspiracy," as if Oswald's drunken cousin had helped him and didn't involve elements of US Intelligence, but the fact remains that the US government has officially admitted there had been a conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy. "Conspiracy theorists" were finally vindicated, but I've never heard anyone apologize for disparaging their names and questioning their sanity.
"9/11," of course, is the current topic that yields the most accusations of conspiracy nuttiness. Anyone who challenges the 9/11 Commission's conclusions are branded "conspiracy theorists" (or nuts, wackos or kooks) as were their predecessors when JFK was killed.
History repeats itself.
One of the strange truths about the 9/11 affair is that members of the 9/11 Commission also called the event a conspiracy. That alone shows the term is being intentionally manipulated. In the Commission's view, the conspirators were exclusively fanatical Muslims, but somehow that investigative body has been exempt from accusations of conspiracy theorizing even though they called the event a conspiracy. Apparently one must challenge the official version of events to qualify as a "conspiracy theorist."
I asked Jim Marrs, the popular author and critic of various official versions of history, what he considered to be the origin of "conspiracy" as a derogatory term and how it has been manipulated: "The term 'conspiracy theory' was consciously submitted to assets of the CIA back in a document from the 1960s to be used to counter factual information that was continually being made public regarding the Kennedy assassination. From there, these assets, including media personalities, pundits, academics and government officials, expanded the term to become a pejorative for any statements not complying with the Establishment line," Marrs said. "However, its repetitive overuse, plus the fact that the 9/11 attacks obviously involved a conspiracy, today has lessened the impact of the term."
Many critics of the 9/11 Commission report make some valid points, and it's not fair to simply dismiss them as conspiracy theorists when the very people they're countering also claim there was a conspiracy. The only question is simply: whose conspiracy was it?
Even officials tasked with investigating 9/11 knew there was plenty of deception involved. Senior Counsel to the 9/11 Commission, John Farmer, said on page four of his book The Ground Truth, "At some level of government, at some point in time, there was an agreement not to tell the people the truth about what happened." In their book Without Precedent: The Inside Story of the 9/11 Commission, the two co-chairs of the 9/11 Commission, Lee Hamilton and Thomas Kean, outlined reasons they believe the government established the Commission in a manner that ensured its failure. These reasons included delay in initiating the proceedings, too short a deadline for the scope of the work, insufficient funding, and lack of cooperation by politicians and key government agencies including the Department of Defense, the Federal Aviation Administration, and NORAD. "So there were all kinds of reasons we thought we were set up to fail," the chairmen said.
How much clearer can they be?
Conspiracies exist. They have always existed, and not wanting them to be true does not invalidate their existence. I think it's time we reject the intentional misappropriation of the term "conspiracy" by forces attempting to manipulate public opinion and restore the term to its original and proper meaning. As long as we observe logic and reason, there is no intellectual dishonor in contemplating and discussing conspiracies, and doing so is imperative if we wish to retain our liberty.

Shawn Hamilton is a writing teacher by trade and has taught in both the United States and Taiwan. He authored a recently published book with the satirical title, "Be All You Can Be" (the old US Army recruiting slogan) about an Air Force major who, in the latter part of his life, rejected use of our military as an instrument of US imperialism. He has worked as a capitol reporter in Sacramento for KPFA Radio (Pacifica) and written for various print publications. He received a Project Censored award in 2011 and writes poetry for fun.

Fire Tattoo Parlour

Behind a tattoo parlour is a gang by what I have studied in The Kings Cross Sting.


Appeal for information after fire at tattoo parlour - Chippendale

Wednesday, 17 September 2014 01:16:14 PM
Police are appealing for information after a fire at a tattoo parlour in Chippendale overnight.
At 2.50am (Wednesday 17 September 2014) emergency services were called to Abercrombie Street following reports of a fire.
Police have been told a neighbour woke to the sound of a loud bang and, when he went outside, saw smoke and fire coming from the nearby shopfront.
He grabbed a fire extinguisher and his partner contacted Triple Zero. The neighbour extinguished the small fire prior to police and Fire & Rescue NSW arrival.
The shop suffered minor damage as a result and inquiries into the cause are continuing.
Police are treating the fire as suspicious as a substance, believed to be an accelerant, was located within the premises.
The shop doesn’t have a residential area and no one was inside at the time.
A crime scene has been established and police are urging anyone with any information that could assist to contact them.
Police are urging anyone with information about this incident to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or use the Crime Stoppers online reporting page: https://nsw.crimestoppers.com.au/ Information you provide will be treated in the strictest of confidence. We remind people they should not report crime information via our Facebook and Twitter pages.

Pen-gun supply syndicate

I saw these in Kings Cross in 2011.


Detectives disband pen-gun supply syndicate - SCC FAOCS

Thursday, 18 September 2014 01:06:35 AM
Detectives from the Firearms and Organised Crime Squad (FAOCS) have seized more than a dozen pen-guns and arrested two people following an operation in Sydney’s south-west.
Earlier this year, FAOCS detectives formed Strike Force Expedient to investigate a syndicate allegedly involved in the manufacture and supply of pen-guns.
Around midday yesterday (Wednesday 17 September 2014), FAOCS detectives and other specialist police arrested two men at a car park in Carnes Hill. Officers also seized three pen-guns and three knives from inside the vehicle within which the men were sitting.
Both men were taken to Green Valley Police Station, where one of them – a 27-year-old from West Hoxton – was charged with numerous offences relating to the manufacture and supply of unregistered and prohibited firearms.
He has been refused bail to appear in Liverpool Local Court today (Thursday 18 September 2014).
The other man, a 24-year-old has been released without charge.
In court, detectives will allege that the 27-year-old man was involved in the manufacture and supply of pen guns.
The Commander of the Firearms and Organised Crime Squad, Detective Superintendent Mick Plotecki, said the pen guns police had seized were crudely constructed and extremely dangerous.
“These weapons have been made by people with no qualifications or skills in firearm manufacturing,” Detective Superintendent Plotecki said.
“They are crudely built and, as a result, very dangerous – both for the person firing the weapon and anyone in the near vicinity.
“Over the course of this investigation we have seized 14 of these pen-guns.
“We have tested a number of them and, thankfully, many of them didn’t work.
“However, some of those that did discharge a bullet also exploded, meaning they had the very real potential to cause serious injury or death.
“Today’s arrest will seriously disrupt this particular syndicate, but we encourage anyone else out there with information concerning pen-guns or any illegal weapons to contact Crime Stoppers.
“The information you provide could save many lives.”
Police are urging anyone with information about this illegal weapons to call Crime Stoppers on 1800 333 000 or use the Crime Stoppers online reporting page: https://nsw.crimestoppers.com.au/ Information you provide will be treated in the strictest of confidence. We remind people they should not report crime information via our Facebook and Twitter pages.

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

The Kings Cross Sting.... Cannabis tincture recipe Majick

To make Tincture
Cold Method (recommended)
Here is the recipe for highest quality tincture. This method does not use heat so keeps the integrity of the cannabinoids intact. 
Fill jar ¾ full of herb
Fill rest of jar with alcohol; leave some room at top, stir.
Shake jar [vigorously] one or two times a day for 2 weeks [or leave it until there is no green color left in the plant matter]
Strain through metal tea strainer or silkscreen.
You can use whatever kind of clean glass, not plastic, jar you have with a tight lid. One-quart mason jars are ideal. Grind the herb thoroughly in a blender. It should be well ground but doesn’t have to be a powder. You can use leaf, bud, shake, joint leftover, or stems. Too many stems will wreck your blender and a weaker tincture. Leaf work fine but for higher potency use shake or bud. Fill the jar ¾ full of herb; it does not have to be exact. You can use anywhere from ½ to 2/3 part herb but ¾ will make a full strength tincture. Use the highest proof alcohol you can, Everclear, which is 180 proof, but hard to find. So just use the highest proof Vodka you can find. Pour alcohol over the herb, filling the rest of the jar. Leave just enough space (an inch or so) at the top so that you will be able to shake the jar. Stir the mixture; the herb will absorb some of the alcohol so you may need to add more. Put the lid on tightly; label the contents and the date you started. It takes two weeks for the alcohol to extract all the active elements from the herb. Shake the jar once or twice a day for 2 weeks. The alcohol will rise to the top and a deep green/red color will develop. After 2 weeks of aging you can strain the tincture through a metal tea strainer or a silk screen into a small tincture bottle with a dropper. You can leave the rest in the jar if you want, it will age and mellow in flavor and you can strain off as much as you want at a time. Alcohol is a strong preservative it will hold for a long time, be careful when handling the tincture, it satins and will turn everything it comes in contact with green. Use Ultra Palmolive anti-bacterial dish soap, the orange kind, to clean the glass, metal or other ceramic utensils, (do not use plastic) sinks and counter tops works best at dissolving THC residue.
Dosage varies per individual but start with half a dropper dissolved in hot tea or water. Hot tea will dissipate some of the alcohol and activate the THC a bit. It can be taken straight but may burn the tongue and has a very strong herbal taste. [If you cut it with equal parts water, you can hold the dosage under the tongue without burning. Takes effect in seconds.]

Alleged Corruption James Packer

Childcare services could be offered at licensed clubs in return for tax breaks on gambling profits, the poker machine lobby has suggested to the productivity commission.
I allege we have to look at the drug network mythology how the person in control of the alleged drugs has the Club as in the sky.
We have to investigate further who allegedly is J & B Trust.
Anthony Ball, executive director of Clubs Australia, wrote in its submission to the childcare inquiry that the shortfall in childcare services could be made up by clubs around Australia, Fairfax reported on Sunday.
according to the Donor Registry, last tax year, James Packer's "Crown Limited", Donated in excess of $129,000 to Labor And Liberal parties, while Mrs Roslyn Packer Donated in excess of $580,000 to the LNP.
Registered Clubs Association of NSW, Donated in excess of $328,000 to LNP and ALP parties.
Crown Group Holdings Pty Ltd donated in excess of $21,000 to these parties as well.
On Sunday Victorian premier Denis Napthine shut down any suggestion that licensed clubs could provide childcare in exchange for tax breaks.
He said the Victorian coalition government would be “very dubious” about licensed clubs offering childcare services.
“I think that’s fraught with a lot of danger,” Napthine said.
Independent South Australian senator Nick Xenophon told Guardian Australia he was “wary” of the proposal and said the question needed to be asked if the childcare centres would be located on club premises.
“If they do have them there, there would have to be a whole range of safeguards,” said Xenophon.
“I think instinctively there must be a much better way.”

Monday, 15 September 2014

Police spend allegedly $75 million on software program from Germany

FinFisher   Was part of the Gamma Group of companies.

This alleged drug network I have one control in Germany.  Interesting this company comes from Germany.

Louthean Nelson owns the Gamma Group, a controversial computer surveillance firm employing ex-military personnel. It sells bugging technology to Middle East and south-east Asian governments. Nelson owns a BVI offshore arm, Gamma Group International Ltd.

We have to look at connections for the co-incidences to come about.

Louthean Nelson, FinFisher's discreet rep

Beirut-based British businessman Louthean Nelson is the man behind the controversial penetration software manufacturer Gamma.


This included SlovakiaMongolia,Qatar State Security, South AfricaBahrainPakistanEstoniaVietnamAustralia NSW Police, BelgiumNigeriaNetherlands KLPD, PCS Security in Singapore,Bangladesh, Secret Services of HungaryItaly and Bosnia & Herzegovina Intelligence.

Look at the links of where this program has been sold is where the alleged drug networks move.

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

We will Question the Corruption? Marie Bashir AD CVO



 A Perfect Role model for the Lebanese community. Respecting and Serving the country she loves! What an incredible woman!

When the information comes out about the emails requesting the Governor General to go over the Parliament corruption is the Governor General.

The person who has the power to go over a Judge when the corruption has been exposed is the Governor General.

We will seek this never happens to another person and you may have been good for the Lebanese Community.

What will be exposed is you have allegedly been good to the drug network.

Emails requesting the Police search warrant for Juanita Nielsen went day after day pleading for assistance.