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287 lines
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 12 Num. 04
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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AGE OF SECRETS
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==============
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(*Age of Secrets* by Gerald Bellett. Maitland, Ontario:
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Voyageur North America, 1995. ISBN: 0-921842-42-2. To order:
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telephone -- 1-800-268-2946; fax -- 1-800-444-5899.)
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Cay Sal is one of the cays and islands stretching out from the
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southern tip of Florida. In 1976, John H. Meier, a former
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associate of Howard Hughes, landed there under cover of darkness.
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Guided by "Chuck," Meier snuck past armed patrols. They both
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reached a shed. "Chuck" picked the lock and they entered.
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Inside was a case measuring about 7 feet long by 3 feet high. On
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closer inspection, the "case" was found to be a cryonics chamber
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containing the frozen corpse of Howard Hughes.
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Or so says *Age of Secrets*.
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Is the book true? On the one hand, if I wanted to avoid
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upsetting those readers sensitive to human doubt, I could just
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"cop out" by saying, "Hey, who knows? I'm not an expert." Then
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again, "signs point to 'yes.'" Bottom line: the waters are deep
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and it's hard to see all that's there, down below.
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Readers familiar with Gerald Carroll's classic work on the
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"Gemstone Thesis," *Project Seek* (Carson City: Bridger House
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Publishers, Inc., 1994. ISBN: 0-9640104-0-2. Phone
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1-800-729-4131), may recall the Howard Hughes/Richard Nixon
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connection alluded to therein. Nixon's brother, Donald, is
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mentioned as possibly engaged in business activities feared to be
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potentially harmful to President Nixon's 1972 re-election hopes.
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Quoting from a February 4, 1974 UPI (United Press International)
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report, Carroll substantiates the claim:
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...The White House got the Secret Service to investigate
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business activities of the President's brother, F. Donald
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Nixon, and put him under electronic surveillance at a time
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when aides were worried that Donald's affairs would hurt
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Nixon's 1972 re-election chances.
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The President told a news conference last fall he
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authorized electronic surveillance of his brother because
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of a national security matter.
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But government sources report that administration concern
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about Donald began with his dealings with an associate of
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billionaire Howard Hughes and later included trips to the
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Dominican Republic, Switzerland, Italy, Greece and Hawaii.
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And who is the "associate of billionaire Howard Hughes" mentioned
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in the above UPI article? Carroll goes on to quote *Las Vegas
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Sun* publisher Herman "Hank" Greenspun:
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...For more than a year, the investigation centered on the
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brother's [Donald Nixon's] business deals with John Meier,
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a Hughes scientific advisor for mining claims now under
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indictment for income tax evasion.
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According to *Age of Secrets*, one of Meier's "business deals"
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with Donald Nixon consisted of Meier's inadvertantly facilitating
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a $1 million bribe. The money is said to have passed, through
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intermediaries, from Howard Hughes to President Nixon in return
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for Nixon's greasing the skids on Hughes' acquisition of Air
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West. Meier, reportedly, was asked to keep a locked briefcase in
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his hotel room overnight. Next morning, Ken Wright, head of
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Howard Hughes' Medical Institute, came to Meier's room to reclaim
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the briefcase. Unfortunately for Meier, Wright had imposed on
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him by arranging, without Meier's foreknowledge, to exchange the
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contents of the briefcase with one Bebe Rebozo -- right there in
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Meier's hotel room.
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Wright is said to have opened the briefcase and a stunned Meier
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saw it contained rows of $100 bills totalling $1 million. Wright
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then, according to the book, phoned Bebe Rebozo, a banker and
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close friend of Richard Nixon, and told him to come up to Meier's
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room. Uneasy about what was transpiring, Meier hid in the
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bathroom. Rebozo is said to have then arrived and begun counting
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the cash.
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Our old "friend," the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), is
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alleged to have been a key player in the transaction: "The
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secret transaction linked three powerful entities -- the
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presidency, the CIA and the Hughes empire -- whose vital
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interests would be imperilled by any disclosure of what had
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happened in that room..."
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For some reason not clear to me, Meier then made the big mistake
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of leaving his bathroom hiding place, thereby alerting Rebozo to
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his presence. Rebozo was not pleased to have Meier as a witness.
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He grabbed the loot and made a hasty exit. Through Rebozo,
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President Nixon then learned that "leftist" Meier had the goods
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on him and could start talking.
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So Richard Nixon, with all the power of the executive branch, is
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said to have launched a "pre-emptive strike" against Meier.
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"Their formula was simple," writes Meier in the book's Afterword.
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"First they charged me with something since most people think
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that indictment is synonymous with guilt... They persecuted me
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in the press and the courtroom... My story is of a man
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devastated by a corrupt system..."
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The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was unleashed against Meier.
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They searched his Los Angeles office. The IRS investigation of
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Meier was reportedly launched at the behest of John D.
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Ehrlichman, a high-ranking Nixon White House official. President
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Nixon, on his part, was said to have dreaded the IRS discovering
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the $1 million bribe from Hughes. A trap was allegedly laid
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whereby R.M. Nixon and associates were lured by certain Democrats
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into the ill-fated Watergate break-in. "Watergate was a
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masterpiece of political espionage that can be boiled down to a
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few important elements: the deliberate baiting of the Nixon
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camp; the laying of a false trail to the DNC headquarters; the
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use of an inside spy... and the collaring of the burglary team by
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accident or by design," writes *Age of Secrets* author Gerald
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Bellett.
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Meier apparently had witnessed the bribing of Nixon; he passed on
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what he knew to certain Democrats; and they laid a trap that a
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nervous Nixon fell for. Meier, through his contacts with Donald
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Nixon, suckered Donald into believing that the DNC (Democratic
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National Committee) had incriminating info hidden in the
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Watergate complex. Donald passed the false story on, to his
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brother, Richard Nixon, and President Nixon fell right into the
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trap.
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President Nixon, for his part uneasy about Meier's likely
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blabbing on what he knew, sought through his executive powers to
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discredit and harass Meier. Meier was hounded, but had the laugh
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on Nixon who was toppled from power in spite of his vicious
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attempts at "damage control." So says the book.
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Meier's allegations are corroborated by "The Gonzalez Affidavit."
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Virgino Gonzalez (not his real name) was a deep-cover CIA agent
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who apparently suffered pangs of conscience in connection with
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deeds committed during his employment with "The Company" (a.k.a.,
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the CIA). Deciding to tell all and expose to the world what the
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CIA had been doing, he surfaced in Mexico City on May 2nd, 1975.
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He carried a 10-page affidavit into the law offices of Goodrich,
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Dalton and Rigueline, signed it, and asked that it be translated
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into Spanish and filed in the Mexican federal court. Here are
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excerpts from the Gonzalez Affidavit:
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I love the United States and am grateful for all that it
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has done for me... It is not my intention to place the
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security of the country at risk and to involve any of my
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colleagues in this statement. My intention is simply to
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show that the agency [CIA] is a tool of the President and
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those close to him in power and is used in a wrongful way
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to harass people for personal political purposes.
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At the end of 1971 I was ordered to an assignment that
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included monitoring the activities of John Meier and was
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shown a file on him, along with other agents.
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On file were photographs taken at Orange County Airport on
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July 8, 1969, showing Meier with Don Nixon and others.
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These were taken by the Secret Service and had been passed
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to Bebe Rebozo at the President's request.
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The Hughes people, I was told, were still worried about the
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campaign but I was then told that the IRS would release a
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story on Meier in May [1972]. This they did on May 11,
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saying they were investigating his affairs in Nevada.
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[I handed] to the IRS some of the files we had taken from
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Tom Benavides' office in Albuquerque; included were Meier's
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own tax files and letters to and from politicians.
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[On September 8th, 1973, Meier] met with George Clifford,
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Jack Anderson's [1] assistant, at Vancouver airport. It
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later showed from the stories coming out that Meier had
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talked about payoffs, the President, Air West, and other
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things bad for the administration.
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Meier's troubles with the U.S. government escalated when he
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helped the tiny nation of Tonga, located between Fiji and French
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Polynesia, improve their airport so that the little kingdom could
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improve its tourism industry. For some reason not directly
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stated, the United States did not want Tonga to have a modern
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airport. Hinted at in the book is a wish to keep Tonga isolated
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so as to lessen the chance of curious eyes discovering a major
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illicit narcotics operation being run through there. The Peace
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Corps, says the book, had built and operated a warehouse in Tonga
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which cleared parcels entering and leaving the U.S. Cocaine was
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discovered. But why would cocaine be going through Tonga? Isn't
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the enormous international narcotics industry laid out so that
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South and Central America handles the cocaine and the Pacific Rim
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manages the heroin?
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The bottom line is that for some reason the American octopus
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became even more displeased with Meier, and federal harassment
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against him increased. The U.S. Secret Police apparatus began to
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get quite nasty. Meier is said to have been railroaded into
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prison on dubious forgery charges. While a prisoner, Meier was
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visited by the CIA. He offered to prove his innocence by taking
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a lie detector test. He did so, says Meier, and passed. The CIA
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didn't care. One of the agents is purported to have said, "Mr.
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Meier, isn't it obvious that we can charge you and convict you
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and sentence you for anything we like? We know you didn't commit
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forgery, but let me tell you, if you don't cooperate your life
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will be a disaster..."
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But Meier did not cooperate. The CIA wanted Meier to play ball
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with them by signing some documents. One would have forced him
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to reveal government sources who had been secretly feeding him
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information. Another would have granted the feds complete access
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to his files. Meier said, "No deal." Result? Right after Meier
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was released from prison, after serving his sentence for
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"forgery," he was framed-up on a murder charge. Although, after
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years of trouble, the charge of murder was found to be without
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merit, in the meantime Meier suffered enormously. He had his
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bail set at a million dollars (which he at first had trouble
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meeting), was shuffled from prison to prison, was often kept in
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solitary confinement, was beaten by guards, and generally had
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horrible treatment. Reading what happened to Meier -- all of it
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without his having yet been found guilty of the murder charge --
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made me sick. I keep coming across this type of story again and
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again: individuals targeted by a government from Hell, either
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because of greed hiding behind the badge of authority, or because
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some politician is afraid of being found out. The American
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people, commonly these days referred to as being furious at
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"their" government -- just where do you think this anger is
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coming from? Are millions of Americans all "crazy?" Or could it
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maybe, possibly, by some stretch of the imagination be that there
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is some =real= reason for all the horror stories having as their
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origin Mr. Uncle Sam?
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*Age of Secrets* sums it up like this:
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In Cold War days, while the Soviet Empire still existed,
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Western democracies perpetuated the image of communist bloc
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governments as sufficiently hostile to human freedom to pit
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the apparatus of the State against dissenting individuals.
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Heroes have been made out of Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov for
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their fortitude in resisting.
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Ironically, in the United States of America -- for many a
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symbol of freedom -- the government marshalled equally
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sweeping forces to crush dissent.
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Where openly repressive regimes silenced their dissidents
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through committal to psychiatric wards and banishment, the
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American way led to more subtle forms of harassment by
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government agencies and ruin through the courts. If one
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method was cruder, it was only because it operated in a
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climate in which there was no need to maintain an illusion
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of freedom while punishing enemies of the State.
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---------------------------<< Notes >>---------------------------
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[1] Jack Anderson was a well-known newspaper columnist of the
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time, who broke many inside stories on Watergate and other
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matters.
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+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
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For related stories, visit:
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http://www.shout.net/~bigred/cn.html
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http://www.netcom.com/~feustel
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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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New mailing list: leave message in the old hollow tree stump.
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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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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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