225 lines
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225 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 11 Num. 47
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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TRICKS OF THE OBFUSCATING CLASS
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===============================
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How Aparatchiks Of The DemoPublican Government Mislead The Public
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Like their counterparts in the former Soviet Union, the "loyal
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Party members" of the Obfuscating Class -- corporate
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"journalists," media mouthpieces, and corporate/academic
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"experts" -- get their little extra rewards for serving the
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Corporate State as "Judas Goats." But one brave professor is
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unafraid to truthfully speak his mind. Is this a trend? Will
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professors become free to think and speak? Or is it just an
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anomaly? Or is some local condition, such as atmosphere or food,
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behind the latest in several eruptions of honesty and courage
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from Professor Carl Estabrook?
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Here is a partial transcript detailing rare, truthful remarks
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originating in the most unlikely place: the mind of a college
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professor. On November 29, 1997, Carl Estabrook and co-host Paul
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Mueth said as follows, on their weekly program "News From
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Neptune," courtesy of local volunteer radio station, WEFT. . . .
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CARL ESTABROOK: I had a strange argument over the holiday. At
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our Thanksgiving Dinner-table there was a long argument about
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class. And an old friend of mine actually put forth the notion
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of, "America as a classless society." After which, the dinner
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table fell into a long discussion of what was meant by "class"
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and how that could be defended; and whether the notion of class
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was useful or not.
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And it surprised me in part, because there seemed to be,
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underlying the argument, the feeling that, finally, one wants to
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buy another bit of American mythology: that, whatever else you
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want to say about this society, well, it really is a society open
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to talent, it really is a "meritocracy." [1] Of course, there
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are "difficulties" (you always admit there are "difficulties"
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when you make an argument like this), but finally, if people want
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to get out there and work hard, well, they can do okay. And the
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notion of class, whatever you mean by that, it really doesn't
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have much place in a discussion of American society.
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Now that seemed to me to be a triumph of the education system
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once again. (You have to be "well educated" to accept nonsense
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like this.) There is a refusal to deal with arguments against
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it. If one proposes, for example, that our society is run as a
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struggle between the very small minority who control wealth and
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power in this country and the vast majority who rent themselves
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to the owners of Capital (and a largish segment in-between those
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two, that has the business of obfuscating what is really going
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on.) This is Gore Vidal's division: the fraction of 1 percent
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control the 80 percent who have their labor to sell. And the
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other 20 percent who have to mask what's going on: your
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college-educated group, so to speak, whose job it is to
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misinterpret what's happening.
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If you make an argument like that to, particularly folks from
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the 20 percent [the elite-schooled obfuscating class], you're
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accused of putting forth a "conspiracy theory." (A "conspiracy
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theory" is, that there is any self-interested group in society
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whose interests do =not= correspond, and indeed are inimical to,
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those of the larger society.) =That= counts as a "conspiracy
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theory" and can be dismissed as soon as it's labeled as a
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"conspiracy theory."
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PAUL MUETH: I've heard a number of shows lately, on our sibling
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station, that have this "psychological analysis" of the current
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political situation. Bizarre, =bizarre= stuff that's going down.
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The most recent one was about "political paranoia." A piece of
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work.
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CARL ESTABROOK: It was incredibly objectionable. A fellow named
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Jerry Post(sp?) from George Washington University, who has been
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for years "covering sin with a smooth name" (as the Scriptures
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put it): that is, giving psychological accounts that justify
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American policy. They have a new book now which says, basically,
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if you're a critic of American policy on any sort of principled
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grounds, or if you hold any analysis =other= than the analysis
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that, e.g. Mack McLarty happens to hold at the moment, you are
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actually demonstrating signs of "paranoia," that we need to
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understand the psychology behind your dissent.
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An older man called in on the radio to the show and pointed
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out: domestic needs that are served by the military budget. And
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this propagandist from George Washington University said, rather
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superiorily, "Oh, yes. You're thinking of 'The
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Military-Industrial Complex,' aren't you?" And then went on to
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explain where such "paranoid" thinking might come from.
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I was reminded there was, more than a century ago: American
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physicians put forth an account of a condition they called
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"dramataphobia(sp?)" Dramataphobia was a "mental illness" that
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prompted slaves to run away from their masters. And it was often
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found with "efasia ethiopica(sp?)." Efasia ethiopica was a
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tendency of people of African descent not to do their work well.
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To be clumsy and break things, you see. Now these were "mental
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conditions," you see. These were "mental illnesses" that
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accounted for the fact that some slaves ran away from their
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"masters."
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Now it seems to me, what we have here is, the direct medical
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descendants of the "good medicos" of the mid-19th century are to
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be found in the late-20th century, in people like the man we're
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speaking of. They're giving you a psychological reason why all
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the criticisms of the powers-that-be stem from "mental illness."
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PAUL MUETH: This was the second in a series. The other one was
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suggesting that there's something in our psychological structure
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that is primeval, that causes us to mistrust the political
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system.
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CARL ESTABROOK: [Laughs] It's called "intelligence." Yeah, I
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think that's right: once the brain gets big enough, you realize
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that you're being had. [2]
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---------------------------<< Notes >>---------------------------
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[1] The American "meritocracy," class supposedly based on merit.
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The supposed "meritocratic" process is described by Noam Chomsky,
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in an interview published in Rolling Stone magazine, May 28th,
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1992.
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INTERVIEWER: Do you ever wonder about the psychology of
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these American commissars? You've written about the
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filtering process by which the obedient rise to the top and
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the disobedient end up elsewhere, but I wonder what goes on
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in their heads.
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CHOMSKY: I don't think it's that hard to figure out. All
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the people I've ever met, including me, have done bad
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things in their lives, things that they know they shouldn't
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have done. There are few people who say, "I really did
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something rotten." What people usually do is make up a way
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of explaining why that was the right thing to do. That's
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pretty much the way belief formation works in general. You
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have some interest, something you want, and then you make
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up a belief system which makes that look right and just.
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And then you believe the belief system. It's a very common
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human failing.
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Some people are better at it than others. The people who
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are best at it become commissars. It's always best to have
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columnists who believe what they're saying. Cynics tend to
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leave clues because they're always trying to get around the
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lying. So people who are capable of believing what is
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supportive of power and privilege -- but coming at it, in
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their view, independently -- those are the best.
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The norm is that if you subordinate yourself to the
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interests of the powerful, whether it's parent or teacher
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or anybody else, and if you do it politely and willingly,
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you'll get ahead. Let's say you're a student in school and
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the teacher says something about American history and it's
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so absurd you feel like laughing. I remember this as a
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child. If you get up and say: "That's really foolish.
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Nobody could believe that. The facts are the other way
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around," you're going to get in trouble.
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[2] Besides psychological-sounding attacks on conspiracists, two
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other supposed "counter-arguments" are in vogue nowadays amongst
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the "obfuscating class" (mass media mouthpieces, establishment
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journalists, "experts," etc.)
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(1) "If there were really a cover-up, any good reporter would
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jump on the story. Think of how much money one could make if
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these conspiracy stories were true!" The myth is that an honest
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investigative journalist would be rewarded for efforts in
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bringing out the truth. But look what =actually= =happens= when
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such rare, honest reporters emerge. For example, Gary Webb whose
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"Dark Alliance" story broke news on CIA drug-smuggling
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connections to a wider audience. His reward?
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Try calling Gary Webb these days at the San Jose Mercury
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News, and you're in for a surprise. After suffering close
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to a year's worth of ridicule from his mainstream
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colleagues for his three-part series "Dark Alliance: The
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Story Behind the Crack Explosion" (Aug. 18-20, 1996),
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Webb's paper in early June pulled him from the story he'd
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been investigating for two years, and transferred him to
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its bureau in Cupertino, California. There, a recorded
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voice answers your call with the greeting: "You have
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reached the San Jose Mercury News West Bureau editorial
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office and the home of the Community Focus Calendar, birth
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announcements and Lend-a-Hand Volunteer Column. No one is
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available to take your call right now." We wonder why
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Oliver North's career hasn't taken so ignominious a turn.
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(From Chicago Media Watch Newsletter, August 1997)
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Other examples of "rewards" for good journalists who dare trying
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to get at the truth are Pierre Salinger (investigating TWA 800)
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and Robert Parry (investigating "October Surprise.")
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(2) Another supposed "counter-argument" in vogue amongst the
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obfuscating class is, "And how did you know about such-and-such?
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You found it in the newspaper, that's how." Sometimes that's
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true: items are published in the back pages, in obscure stories;
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and sometimes the truth even makes it to page one. =But it's not
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emphasized=. It appears briefly and then is gone. Nonsense gets
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major emphasis from the obfuscating class; the truth is "just
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passing through and excuse the visit."
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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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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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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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