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227 lines
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 9 Num. 64
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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MEESTER VEELSON
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===============
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The one-dimensional Woodrow Wilson shown on the PBS series, "The
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Great War," is typical of supposed highbrow entertainments
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offered by "public" television: academicist subject matter but
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without depth or disagreement, sprinkled (naturally) with blab
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from various hired hands of the federal "truth" factories.
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(Lest any say, "Ah hah. A white male with too much time on his
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hands. Why isn't he watching endless sports? Hey you! Get a
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life," note that I only watched the Woodrow Wilson part, not the
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entire 8-hour series.)
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Funding for "The Great War" came from the National Endowment for
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the Humanities, i.e. from the federal government. So, of course,
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Woodrow Wilson appeared without blemishes and like all other
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noble beings who somehow invariably gravitate to Washington, D.C.
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This marvelous circumstance is echoed by another "coincidence":
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somehow the "truth" and federal funds for "scholars" always occur
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together; rarely does a "scholar" not find lucky federal dollars
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along the road as he journeys toward the "truth."
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(The modern Rome on the Potomac does another interesting trick:
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it takes the money from a continental nation, its various
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functionaries rake off and/or steal their percentage, much of the
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loot gets distributed as largesse to corporate swine, and finally
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it does its big magic trick -- makes it appear as if a beneficent
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Washington, D.C. is generously giving money to its citizens.
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Many are fooled by this sleight-of-hand prestidigitated by Rome
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on the Potomac.)
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As my personal protest against the cartoonization of history,
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here is information on Woodrow Wilson of a counter-sainthood
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nature.
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John Dos Passos, in his book *Nineteen Nineteen* (usually
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included with two other of his books in a volume called *U.S.A.*,
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a.k.a. "The U.S.A. Trilogy"), gives his own sketch of Woodrow
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Wilson in a section he calls, "Meester Veelson." Here are
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excerpts:
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When he got his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins he moved to a
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professorship at Wesleyan, wrote articles, started a
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History of the United States.
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...in 1901 the trustees of Princeton offered him the
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presidency...
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...and in 1910 the democratic bosses of New Jersey,
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hardpressed by muckrakers and reformers, got the bright
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idea of offering the nomination for governor to the
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stainless college president...
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...so he left Princeton only half reformed to be Governor
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of New Jersey...
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He was introduced to Colonel House, that amateur Merlin of
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politics who was spinning his webs at the Hotel Gotham.
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And at the convention in Baltimore the next July the upshot
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of the puppetshow staged for sweating delegates by Hearst
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and House behind the scenes... was that Woodrow Wilson was
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nominated for the presidency.
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...he left the State of New Jersey half reformed... and
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went to the White House our twenty-eighth president.
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While Woodrow Wilson drove up Pennsylvania Avenue beside
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Taft the great buttertub, who as president had been
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genially undoing T.R.'s [Teddy Roosevelt's] reactionary
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efforts to put business under the control of the
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government, J. Pierpont Morgan sat playing solitaire in his
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back office on Wall Street, smoking twenty black cigars a
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day, cursing the follies of democracy.
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First it was "neutrality in thought and deed," then "too
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proud to fight" when the Lusitania sinking and the danger
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to the Morgan loans and the stories of the British and
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French propagandists set all the financial centers in the
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East bawling for war, but the suction of the drumbeat and
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the guns was too strong; the best people took their
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fashions from Paris and their broad "a's" from London, and
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T.R. and the House of Morgan.
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Wilson became the state (war is the health of the state),
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Washington his Versailles, manned the socialized government
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with dollar a year men out of the great corporations and
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ran the big parade.
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If you objected to making the world safe for cost plus
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democracy you went to jail with [Eugene] Debs.
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With the help of Almighty God, Right, Truth, Justice,
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Freedom, Democracy, the Selfdetermination of Nations, No
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indemnities no annexations,
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and Cuban sugar and Caucasian manganese and Northwestern
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wheat and Dixie cotton, the British blockade, General
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Pershing, the taxicabs of Paris and the seventyfive gun
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we won the war.
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On December 4th, 1918, Woodrow Wilson, the first president
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to leave the territory of the United States during his
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presidency, sailed for France.
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On June 28th the Treaty of Versailles was ready and Wilson
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had to go back home to explain to the politicians who'd
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been ganging up on him meanwhile in the Senate and House
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and to sober public opinion and to his father's God how
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he'd let himself be trimmed...
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From the day he landed in Hoboken he had his back to the
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wall of the White House, trying to save his faith in words,
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talking to save his faith in the League of Nations, talking
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to save his faith in himself, in his father's God.
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He strained every nerve of his body and brain, every agency
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of the government he had under his control; (if anybody
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disagreed he was a crook or a red; no pardon for Debs).
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In Seattle the wobblies whose leaders were in jail, in
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Seattle the wobblies whose leaders had been lynched, who'd
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been shot down like dogs, in Seattle the wobblies lined
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four blocks as Wilson passed, stood silent with their arms
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folded staring at the great liberal as he was hurried past
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in his car, huddled in his overcoat, haggard with fatigue,
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one side of his face twitching. The men in overalls, the
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workingstiffs let him pass in silence after all the other
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blocks of handclapping and patriotic cheers.
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...on the train to Wichita he had a stroke. He gave up the
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speaking tour that was to sweep the country for the League
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of Nations. After that he was a ruined paralysed man
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barely able to speak.
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The book, *Lies My Teacher Told Me* by James W. Loewen has a few
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tidbits on "Meester Veelson," such as.....
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** The Wilson administration hired two Japanese-Mexicans to
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try to poison Pancho Villa.
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** "Textbooks might begin discussing the influence of
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multinational corporations on U.S. foreign policy with the
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administration of Woodrow Wilson. Pressure from First
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National Bank of New York helped prompt Wilson's
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intervention in Haiti. U.S. interests owned more of Mexico
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than interests from anywhere else, including Mexico itself,
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which helps explain Wilson's repeated invasions of that
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country. In Russia, the new communist government
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nationalized all petroleum assets; as a consequence,
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Standard Oil of New Jersey was 'the major impetus' behind
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American opposition to the Bolsheviks."
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** "J. Edgar Hoover and the agency that became the FBI got
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their start investigating alleged communists during the
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Woodrow Wilson administration. Although the last four
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years of that administration saw more antiblack race riots
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than any other time in our history, Wilson had agents focus
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on gathering intelligence on African Americans, not on
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white Americans who were violating blacks' civil rights."
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** Says Woodrow Wilson: "We want one class of persons to
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have a liberal education, and we want another class of
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persons, a very much larger class of necessity in every
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society, to forgo the privilege of a liberal education and
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fit themselves to perform specific difficult manual tasks."
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** Under Wilson, the United States intervened in Latin
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America more often than at any other time in our history.
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** "The filmmaker David W. Griffith quoted Wilson's
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two-volume history of the United States, now notorious for
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its racist view of Reconstruction, in his infamous
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masterpiece "The Clansman," a paean to the Ku Klux Klan for
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its role in putting down "black-dominated" Republican state
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governments during Reconstruction. Griffith based the
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movie on a book by Wilson's former classmate, Thomas Dixon,
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whose obsession with race was "unrivaled until *Mein
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Kampf*." At a private White House showing, Wilson saw the
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movie, now retitled "Birth of a Nation," and returned
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Griffith's compliment: 'It is like writing history with
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lightning, and my only regret is that it is all so true.'"
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** "Wilson displayed little regard for the rights of anyone
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whose opinions differed from his own. But textbooks take
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pains to insulate him from wrongdoing. 'Congress,' not
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Wilson, is credited with having passed the Espionage Act of
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June 1917 and the Sedition Act of the following year,
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probably the most serious attacks on the civil liberties of
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Americans since the short-lived Alien and Sedition Acts of
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1798."
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Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
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of Conspiracy Nation, nor of its Editor in Chief.
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I encourage distribution of "Conspiracy Nation."
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If you would like "Conspiracy Nation" sent to your e-mail
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address, send a message in the form "subscribe cn-l My Name" to
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listproc@cornell.edu (Note: that is "CN-L" *not* "CN-1")
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For information on how to receive the improved Conspiracy
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Nation Newsletter, send an e-mail message to bigred@shout.net
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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Want to know more about Whitewater, Oklahoma City bombing, etc?
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(1) telnet prairienet.org (2) logon as "visitor" (3) go citcom
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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See also: http://www.shout.net/~bigred/cn.html
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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See also: ftp.shout.net pub/users/bigred
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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