207 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
207 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 7 Num. 04
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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RECAP OF AND UPDATE ON THE NORMAN THESIS
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========================================
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Thanks to an east coast source whom I will call "Mr. Mercedes", I
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have received an audio tape of Jim Norman's recent appearance on
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New York radio station WBAI, marked on the cassette as having
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been January 10, 1996.
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[...continued from CN 7.03...]
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Here are further excerpts from the program:
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CALLER #2:
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...How is it exactly -- I remember when I heard this story first
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and I was talking to somebody about it and they said, "Well how
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can they possibly get into these bank accounts?"
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DR. MICHIO KAKU [Host]:
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O.K. Mr. Norman, how *do* you get into another person's bank
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account?
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JAMES NORMAN:
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Let me begin by saying that bank computer systems are nowhere
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near as secure as the banks would like you to believe... Granted,
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there are many security features built into bank communications
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and software systems. But in most large software systems there
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are what you call "service entrances" or "back doors" by which
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software maintenance people would get in routinely to fix "bugs"
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and so forth. If you take that concept, and then consider the
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idea that our intelligence agencies, which have an extremely
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high-priority collection of financial information, would somehow
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or other see to it that they have perhaps their own "back doors"
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plugged into these various bank data systems...
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*That's* how I got onto the story, actually, was the
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proliferation of a customized version of what was called the
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PROMIS software. This was, it was designed for tracking legal
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cases, originally, [then] customized for use in tracking wire
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transfers, sold and promulgated around most of the world's
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banking system, had "back doors" in it that would allow -- if you
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knew where the "back door" was, it would allow you to basically
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dial into a computer system and not leave an audit trail: go in,
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snoop around, pull down information, and then leave.
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DR. MICHIO KAKU:
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I think the key thing, at least from my point of view, is that
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we're not dealing with high school "hackers" who, by trial and
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error, and guile, try to get into somebody's bank account. We're
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talking about former intelligence agents.
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JAMES NORMAN:
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Right. But let me point this out: a couple of months ago,
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Citibank, there were published stories about how a "hacker" in
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Russia, armed with no more than a personal computer, apparently
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had got into Citibank accounts and was doing, essentially,
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exactly the same thing. He was wire-transferring money out of
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corporate accounts... to banks in Argentina and Finland -- always
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in small amounts so that it would not set off the internal alarm
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system... What I am told is that somehow or other, this guy got
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hold of the "back door" address at Citibank and was able to use
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it.
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CALLER #3:
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Mr. Norman, outside of WBAI, has word of this gone out?
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JAMES NORMAN:
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Actually, *this* *story* has become a classic case study in
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"guerrilla journalism". Because I think it's too hot for any
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mainstream media to deal with. I mean, it's just loaded with too
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many problems: first of all, it deals with a lot of background,
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"deep throat" kind of sources; the attribution, the documents are
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kind of non-existent at this point -- although I think they'll
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eventually come out. And you're dealing with a lot of big names
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and nobody really wants to rock the boat in a big-deal
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publication.
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Media Bypass, this little magazine in Indiana, *they* came to me
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and asked me if they could run the story, because they had heard
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that Forbes [magazine] wouldn't run it; that the Wall Street
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Journal and New York Times and everybody else I'd talked to about
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it was scared of it. *They* [Media Bypass] managed to corroborate
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a key element of it themselves. One of their investigative
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reporters knew a guy who used to train IRS agents, who was
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talking with one of his former students who was assigned to
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surveil Vince Foster at the time he died. And the guy actually
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read him some of the surveillance report, off the computer
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screen, over the telephone.
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And it's not that big of a secret, apparently, within the
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intelligence community. There was a *massive* counter-
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intelligence effort going on regarding Foster. It apparently
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began just after the '92 election, but before the inauguration in
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January '93. And for about the 6 months until he died, Foster was
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under pretty intense surveillance.
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There's a French intelligence newsletter which has also
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corroborated the fact that Foster was under counter-intelligence
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surveillance at the time he died. There's, Sarah McClendon has
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written about it. (She's an old "war horse" Washington
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correspondent.)
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But the story is just *too*... It's like the media cannot deal
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with this. And ultimately I think the media will be on trial as
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much as the government for not dealing with this story. Instead,
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we've got Media Bypass, we've got talk radio... And the Internet
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has actually become a rather successful outlet for this stuff.
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And in fact, it's amazing: it has brought a whole bunch of other
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people out of the woodwork, talking about this, including a lot
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of very literate computer people, financial people.
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And I know, particularly, a former Wharton finance professor,
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Orlin Grabbe, who has posted a series of his own rather revealing
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exposes' on this stuff. [CN -- Archived at ftp.shout.net
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pub/users/bigred/og] He, after leaving Wharton, started his own
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software company, making software for pricing derivatives. And
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the intelligence community came to *him*! And said, "Hey. Can we
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use your company to help spy on brokerage houses and banks too?
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We want some way to insinuate our people into these computer
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rooms." That's what sent *him* up the wall. He said, "Holy
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smokes, we're dealin' with the Surveillance State here." And I
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think he became a renegade ever since.
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Particularly, I think he's also angry about the government's
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tirade here on money laundering: it's used, basically, as a tax
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raising measure. I mean, they want to go after every little guy
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for any kind of cash transaction. But we have, you know, what is
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so outrageous about this is, you have a two-tier system: you have
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rampant money laundering, drug dealing and kickbacks for the
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privileged elite; and you have the government's boot on the neck
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of everybody else.
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So there's significant grass-roots rage brewing over all this
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stuff, and it's gonna find an outlet somehow or other -- even if
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it's just WBAI, you and me!
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DR. MICHIO KAKU:
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O.K. Well, let's hope it gets beyond WBAI.
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CALLER #5:
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It's obvious that Iran-Contra never stopped. But my question is,
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driving along the interstate I noticed that "Next Six Exits, the
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NSA." *Who* are the people at the top of the NSA? Who runs the
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NSA? Who are they, where do they come from, and how far-reaching
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is their power?
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JAMES NORMAN:
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That's a good question. You call up Washington and they say,
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"NSA? 'No Such Agency.'" That's their nickname.
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It's a *huge* bureaucracy. It's based at Fort Meade, Maryland.
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Their budget is bigger than the CIA and the FBI combined. Their
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job was originally signal surveillance.
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CALLER #5:
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Do we know who the people are, though?
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JAMES NORMAN:
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When you look it up... I tried to find out, actually, "Who runs
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the NSA?" They have a list in this two-inch-thick book on federal
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offices I've got. *They* merit about a two-inch thing that only
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has about six names associated with it. And I forget the top
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guy's name there. I think he's an Admiral who's on assignment to
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the NSA.
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[...to be continued...]
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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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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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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For information on how to receive the new Conspiracy Nation
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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.europa.com/~johnlf/cn.html
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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See also: ftp.shout.net pub/users/bigred
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-----------------------------------------------------------------
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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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