156 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
156 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 12 Num. 21
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=======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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IN RUSSIA: BIG FUSS OVER "THE TSAR'S" BONES
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Associated Press (AP) reports (7/15/98) on current ceremonies in
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Russia involving the formal burial of supposed remains of Tsar
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Nicholas II and members of the Russian royal family. But several
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hundred demonstrators in St. Petersburg marched in protest: "The
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marchers don't believe the bones are those of the royal
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family..." [1]
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"The Russian Orthodox Church has refused to accept [DNA test
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results which] scientists believe has conclusively proven the
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authenticity of the remains." [2]
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Some other experts are claiming that "the discovery of the
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[supposedly royal] remains in 1991 was a KGB-inspired fraud." [3]
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The controversy raging in Russia over whether or not the bones
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are those of certain Romanovs, supposedly murdered by Bolsheviks
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at Ekaterinburg in 1918, has caused Russian president Boris
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Yeltsin to abruptly cancel his plans to attend the burial
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ceremony.
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Remains of two of the Romanov children, Alexei and Maria, have
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never officially been found.
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Yet strong evidence throughout the years consistently points to
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at least two of the Romanov children, Alexei and Anastasia, as
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having survived the supposed 1918 "mass execution" and having
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lived for decades thereafter. (See, for example, the book "The
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File on the Tsar" by Anthony Summers and Tom Mangold. ISBN:
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0-06-012807-0.)
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So why is this important? Because (1) there =is= such a thing as
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"the truth," and (2) because the truth matters. We know that,
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contrary to pronouncements by academic eggheads, that the truth
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is not always "subjective." For example, 2 + 2 = 4; there's
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nothing "subjective" about it. See also the little book,
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"Meditations," by Rene Descartes to convince yourself that, yes,
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there is such a thing as "the truth." As to whether or not the
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truth matters, that is harder to prove. But consider that for
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centuries the pursuit of truth has been regarded as =the= most
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important occupation. "There is no religion higher than truth."
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Or, as inscribed on the door of the Bishop Payne Library,
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Virginia Theological Seminary:
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Seek the truth
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Come whence it may
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Cost what it will.
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So Conspiracy Nation (CN) keeps plugging away, offering
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counterpoint to a universe of lies constantly propagated by
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supposed "intellectuals." CN is just silly enough to believe
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that the truth might actually matter. And the truth is that not
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all of the Romanovs, and even none of the Romanovs, were murdered
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in 1918 at Ekaterinburg.
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The motive for this massive, ongoing cover-up of the actual fate
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of the Romanovs seems to be based on greed. Tsar "Nicholas was
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in theory the richest man in the world with eight magnificent
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palaces, a staff of 15,000 and crown property estimated at
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between eight and ten billion pounds." [4] Surviving Romanovs
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would have laid claim to that property, much of it consisting of
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billions of dollars worth of gold and precious gems. But if the
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false claim that the Tsar and his family had all died at
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Ekaterinburg came to be accepted, then "someone else" could claim
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the vast treasure. Likely suspects for the "someone else" would
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be the British royals, the German royals, and the Rockefellers.
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Maybe they "divied up the loot" between themselves. We are
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talking here about perhaps the greatest robbery ever to have
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occurred in the history of the world.
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See CN 4.26 for a reproduction of a United Press International
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(UPI) story carried initially in -- then pulled from -- the
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Chicago Tribune, 12/14/70: "U.S. Aided Rescue Of Czar Nicholas,
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British Hint." It appears that a "Sir William Wiseman, a partner
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in the New York banking house of Kuhn, Loeb & Co." received
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$75,000 from the U.S. government as part of a "scheme" for a
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secret mission to rescue the Tsar and his family. "There is also
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mounting evidence that the unpublished complete text of the
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treaty of Brest-Litovsk... contained a guarantee from the Lenin
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government that no harm would come to the Romanovs..." [5]
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Commander of "White Russian" forces, Prince Kuli-Mirza, believed
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that the Romanovs survived Ekaterinburg, and showed Gleb Botkin,
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son of the Tsar's doctor, several secret reports "according to
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which the imperial family had first been taken to a monastery in
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the province of Perm, and later sent to Denmark." [6]
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According to the official story, 23 people were supposed to have
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all crammed together into the cellar of the Ipatiev House at
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Ekaterinburg for the "mass execution" -- 23 people -- shooters
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and shot -- in a room measuring 17 feet by 14 feet. [7]
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A Captain Malinovsky of the Officer's Commission, one of the
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first investigators on the scene subsequent to the "mass
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execution," wrote this, in an official dossier: "As a result of
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my work on this case I became convinced that the imperial family
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was =alive=. It appeared to me that the Bolsheviks had shot
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someone in the room in order to =simulate= the murder of the
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imperial family..." [8]
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There's a lot more. These (above) have been just a few examples
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of why so many do not believe supposed DNA evidence that the
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remains of the Tsar and members of his family have truly been
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found. "Science" is only as good as the scientist, and even
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scientists can be hoodwinked -- for example, by faked data and
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evidence.
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---------------------------<< Notes >>---------------------------
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[1] "Eighty years after death of Russia's last czar, burial."
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AP, 7/15/98.
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[2] Ibid.
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[3] "Last Tsar's burial splits family, State and Church." London
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Telegraph, Electronic Edition, 7/15/98.
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[4] *The File on the Tsar* by Anthony Summers & Tom Mangold. New
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York: Harper & Row, 1976. ISBN: 0-06-012807-0.
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[5] "U.S. Aided Rescue Of Czar Nicholas, British Hint." UPI,
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12/13/70.
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[6] Summers & Mangold. op. cit.
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[7] Summers & Mangold. op. cit.
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[8] qtd. in Summers & Mangold. op. cit.
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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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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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