[GJM] CONSPIRACY THEORY OR CONSPIRACY FACT - BILDERBERG WORLD GOVERNMENT?

E. Crockett echojurist at yahoo.com
Tue Nov 6 20:52:27 MST 2007


From:   Dr. Ulysses S. Crockett, Jr.

To:  All persons under false belief U.S. is a nation
close to a democracy.  

    Consider the following facts:
a.  Voting is not obligatory as iin Brazin and
Australia;
b.  Only 1/3/ of "registered" voters  actually
exercise the franchise.
c.  Congress has pendingd a bill providing penalties
for"caging" where political operative use false
mailings to challenge potential voters in primarily
districts inhabited by unwealthy and persons of color;
d.  At the turn of the century, the U.S. congress has
the same number of repesentatives as now, 2007, even
though the U.S. population has trippled;
e.  The U.S. Constitution, as origilnally did not
provide the vote for Afroid slaves, First Americans,
Females, caucasoid indentured servants;
f.  S small state like Rhode Island has the same
number of senators as California with a population
several times that of Rhode Island;
g.  Until 1913, senators were appointed by state
legislatures and much for pre-1913 federal legislation
is still recognized as enforceable law;
h.  The unconstitutional so-called "Patriot Act and
its progeny was submitted to congress within the U.S.
planeed attack on the WTC and Pentagon, such proposed
legislation having been written by dprivate and public
officials associated with the Executive office. 
Congress passed the legislation with only a few
senators and representatives having read the proposed
legislation;
i.  The planning for and mapping of oil fields to be
bombed and bases to be established in Iraq was drafted
by directors of the Council On Foreign Relations, in
2002, now a matter of public record;
j.Former FSR Chair Alan Greenspan has stated pubicly
that the Iraq was and occupation was all abut oil;
k.  The so-called Help America Vote Act
unconstitutionally priviatizes the casting and
counting of "votes" iin federal elections with the
operating software of electronic voting machines
allowed to be kept secret from private and public
officials and groups;  See blackboxvoting.com;
l.  The U.S. is not a sovereign nation but is
government by unelected private fiinancial grops.  See
wrtings of former HUD official Catherin Ann Fitts;

Quod Erad Demonstradum
l.  --- Steve Consilvio <steve at behappyandfree.com>
wrote:

> The problem with most conspiracy theories is that
> you can scratch the  
> surface of any random person, and you will find that
> they share an  
> affinity for certain ideas, but that does not make
> them in league  
> with one another.
> 
> Secondarily, democracy is premised on the existence
> of conspiracies.   
> Every political party, civic or trade organization,
> and even each  
> religion is a conspiracy of sorts.  All have their
> own myopic world  
> view of what is wrong and who is to blame (never
> themselves, of  
> course,) and they take steps to evangelize and
> promote their point of  
> view.  In other words, every True Believer is a
> conspiratorialist,  
> but that doesn't mean that there is an actual
> conspiracy.
> 
> Since the law is malleable, everyone tries to use
> the law to their  
> personal benefit.  That isn't criminal, it's
> expected.  Everyone  
> tries to protect their gains, no matter how huge or
> meager, and  
> strives for more.  Greed is the ultimate
> intellectual conspiracy,  
> though what is coveted may differ.  Some want power
> and to be honored  
> and obeyed, some want wealth, some want a lifestyle,
> etc.
> 
> A criminal conspiracy has a short-term and specific
> objective (rob a  
> bank, etc.,) a political conspiracy is so ubiquitous
> that it is like  
> the word "apostate" or "blasphemy."   It reveals
> more about the  
> person who says it than about what is being
> described.  Every  
> conspiracy was formed to combat a previous
> conspiracy, real or  
> imagined.  Conspiracy theory is how fear and
> paranoia propagates itself.
> 
> The reason that certain individuals win presidential
> elections is  
> because their sense of paranoia matches so well to
> the majority of  
> the populace.  Reagan and Nixon, for example, made a
> career of  
> seeding fear of the communist conspiracy.  Once they
> attained power,  
> they were no longer afraid of the communists, and
> made peace with  
> them.  (It is perfect Orwellian logic.)  In other
> words, people vote  
> for their most favored conspiracy.  (The belief that
> the King was  
> evil, for example, was a conspiratorial idea that
> has endured for 200 
> + years.)  The more fears a person has, then the
> more likely he will  
> be trusted by a majority of people, since their
> fears overlap.   
> People never trust people who do not share their
> fears.  Reagan and  
> Nixon could be trusted with the Communists because
> they had so well  
> established that they were afraid of them, first.
> 
> That bears repeating:  People never trust people who
> do not share  
> their fears.
> 
> A lot of people do not trust me, because in general
> I have exhausted  
> all my demons.  There is very little that I fear,
> which makes me  
> universally untrustworthy.  :-)  If I formed a
> political  
> organization, I would instantly be a "conspiracy" in
> the minds of  
> some people, particularly as the ideas and influence
> grew.
> 
> The Sons of Liberty, for example, were a conspiracy
> because they  
> believed that the colonial government was conspiring
> against them.   
> Their criminal conspiracy was to throw tea into the
> harbor.  (The  
> Boston Massacre, in contrast, was not deliberate.) A
> colonial act of  
> terrorism increased the paranoia of the Empire, just
> as 9/11  
> increased the paranoia of the Bush administration. 
> It is the chicken  
> or the egg question, but like everything else, we
> reap what we sow,  
> for good and for ill.  As we saw in Moore's F911,
> Bush was already  
> afraid of the people, and was unwilling to get out
> of his limo to  
> walk to the White House at his first inauguration. 
> The people who  
> pelted the limousine with eggs already believed that
> he won because  
> of a conspiracy, but he really won legitimately, as
> the candidate  
> with the most fears.  (Al Gore now fears that the
> sky is falling,  
> which has resonated well in some corners.)
> 
> Tyranny is when the government fears the people. 
> Rebellion is when  
> the people fear the government.
> 
> When it comes to fear, there is no right side to
> choose.  I would  
> rather be an individual than be loyal to an
> orthodoxy of fear.  I  
> suspect that all heretics have shared the same
> proclivity.  Fear has  
> never solved a problem; fear is the problem. 
> Blessed are the  
> peacemakers.
> 
> peace,
> steve
> 
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