There are 3 messages in this issue.
Topics in this digest:
1. Long Live The 9/11 Conspiracy! || 9/11 Cover-up is National News
From: "smacko" <smacko9@comcast.net>
2. Name that tune
From: "norgesen" <norgeson@hotmail.com>
3. The Body Eclectic (Part One)
From: "norgesen" <norgeson@hotmail.com>
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Message: 1
Date: Wed, 29 Mar 2006 15:43:17 -0800
From: "smacko" <smacko9@comcast.net>
Subject: Long Live The 9/11 Conspiracy! || 9/11 Cover-up is National News
Long Live The 9/11 Conspiracy!
Anyone still care about the heap of disturbing, unsolved questions surrounding Our Great Tragedy?
By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist
Wednesday, March 29, 2006
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2006/03/29/notes032906.DTL
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9/11 Cover-up is National News
By 911wasInsideJob
Mar 28, 2006
http://www.tpmcafe.com/node/28341
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Message: 2
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2006 10:20:43 -0500
From: "norgesen" <norgeson@hotmail.com>
Subject: Name that tune
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Name that tune
Fingerprints, fingerprints,
Where are you now, my fingerprints? - Leonard Cohen
Remember Magnolia? Most people who do probably still don't know what they saw. Those frogs - where'd that come from? Even The Guardian could say, "This scene does successfully manage to shock the audience, but possibly only because it makes no sense whatsoever." But of course it did: an audience member had earlier disrupted the gameshow What Do Kids Know? by holding up a sign that read simply "Exodus 8:2." Of course it took looking up the reference to get it: "If you refuse to let them go, I will plague your whole country with frogs." So it required some work, and interest, to find the sense. And if you didn't get the frogs, you'd likely have also missed The History of Freemasonry on contestant Stanley's bookshelf, the Masonic symbols adorning the television studio, the conspicuous Masonic ring on the finger of the producer who consoles his paedophilic host Jimmy Gator, or the significance of Gator's farewell, "We met upon the level and we're parting on the square." Far from being meaningless, Magnolia is one of the most meaningful of American films, for those with the semiotic skillset to decode it.
Remember Michael Meiring? If not, you can find several entries beneath his name on the subject index. It took an effort to understand Magnolia, and it would have taken an effort to get the Meiring story too, if it had ever been permitted to find its domestic audience in the US news market. It certainly has a cinematic breadth, including an unsatisfying third act: An American national in the Phillipines: a "treasure hunter" who's both a conspicuous evangelical Christian and an alleged weapons dealer with ties to both the al Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf and the CIA, which he winkingly calls "Christ in Action." During a wave of terror bombings Meiring is wounded when one explodes prematurely in his hotel room, and he becomes the chief suspect. Then days later, an FBI team plucks him from his hospital bed and flies him stateside, as local authorities bewail his evasion of justice and America's harbouring a suspected terrorist.
It just doesn't make sense. But of course it does, once you know what kind of world it is that you're trying to parse. The Meiring affair may be crazy-making, but don't say it doesn't make sense. Because there's an intelligence at work here, too. And the consequences of its discordant reality are just too much for an embedded media to bear telling us the story.
And now, in Bolivia, another weird tale. Two hotels bombed, two dead and two arrested, one a US national. And like Meiring, something out of a film: "Lestat Claudius de Orleans y Montevideo," also known as "Triston Jay Amero," a self-professed "Wiccan High Priest" obsessed with explosives, who was passing himself off in La Paz as a Saudi lawyer. As "Gouda" posted on the RI board, Amero is the author of a number of occult book reviews, including The Satanic Bible and The Necronomicon ("If you want to have a copy of a powerful - but dangerous - book in your possession, I recommend this book wholehartedly").
Bolivian authorities appear confused about what they have on their hands. The initial presumption was the bombings must have been politically motivated. Then, when faced with "Lestat Claudius de Orleans y Montevideo," perhaps religion. But when is it ever one or the other?
"There is a battle against terrorism and the government of the United States is sending Americans to do terrorism in Bolivia," said Evo Morales. "A US citizen placing bombs in hotels. What is happening?"
These things don't direct themselves.
http://rigorousintuition.blogspot.com/2006/03/name-that-tune.html
~~~
Jeff said...
From Reuters:
Bolivia's Morales irks US with bombing remarks
LA PAZ, Bolivia (Reuters) - The U.S. Embassy in La Paz expressed concern on Thursday over a suggestion by Bolivian President Evo Morales that Washington was involved in hotel bombings that killed two people earlier this week.
..
Local media reported the man had mental health problems. He asked at a court hearing in La Paz on Thursday to have a psychiatric examination before being transferred from police custody to a high-security prison as ordered by a judge.
Police said on Wednesday he had admitted to the bombings but he told the court he was innocent.
"I didn't do anything. I'm innocent and I want a doctor to give me a psychological and psychiatric test," he told the court, adding he was not a "religious fanatic" as some media reports speculated.
..
Et in Arcadia ego said...
Jeff said: "Local media reported the man had mental health problems. He asked at a court hearing in La Paz on Thursday to have a psychiatric examination before being transferred from police custody to a high-security prison as ordered by a judge."
The dovetailing between this post and your Sirhan of yesterday becomes very apparent with this information. It sounds like they've made some progress since Sirhan's Glory Days.
Cheers Jeff,
D
..
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Message: 3
Date: Thu, 30 Mar 2006 10:49:00 -0500
From: "norgesen" <norgeson@hotmail.com>
Subject: The Body Eclectic (Part One)
Tuesday, March 28, 2006
The Body Eclectic (Part One)
Let's get together to fight this Holy Armagiddyon (One Love!)
So when the Man comes there will be no, no doom (One Song!)
Have pity on those whose chances grows t'inner
There ain't no hiding place from the Father of Creation - Bob Marley
An occasional guilty pleasure of mine is lurking on Democratic Underground's board of liberal "skeptics" of the Amazing Randi school. Some fascinating glimpses there of a kind of orphaned rationalism running scared. For instance, proudly alerting a moderator on the posting of CNN's Charlie Sheen poll results. ("I hate reading what passes for logic - It must be fun to live in their world.") My current favourite comment is this one:
I rue the day that the woo-woos discovered the term "quantum physics." It's become their catch-all phrase that they can apply to anything in order to imbue whatever idiocy they're on about with a veneer of scientific validity.
Naturally, skeptics who pride themselves on their scientific method would like to keep the "woo-woos" in Newtonian blinders, because the science has turned uncomfortably weird for those who mean to interpret the world by it. Quantum physics challenges, both in fact and by metaphor, too many assumptions of their classical method. Even 20th Century giants of mind without a stake in keeping the woo-woos down on the tinfoil farm abhored its inclination to demolish commonsense. Einstein called it, disparagingly, "spooky action at a distance", and even Schr�dinger regretted ever having let his cat out of the box. ("I do not like it, and I am sorry I ever had anything to do with it.")
Niels Bohr, on the other hand, said "Anyone who is not shocked by quantum theory has not understood it." Since my McCoy-like disclosure goes something like I'm a blogger, Jim, not a theoretical physicist, I can't pretend that I understand it. That's the price of a humanities education, though I'm trying to make up for it. But science isn't the first, the only, nor even the best way to encounter the world. And while I find the implications of the physics shocking, I'm not surprised by them, since I'd already drawn the provisional conclusion that the universe is one damn weird place.
Whatever it is we do that gets labelled "conspiracy theory" needs to be interdisciplinary, because power, which is our real subject, is itself boundary-defying. Politics, we know, is a category of insufficent weight to account for the rulers of this world. "Deep Politics" is better, though while the depth may be right, the breadth is too narrow. Wherever there are means to power there will be attempts made by the already powerful to restrict access, reclassify knowledge and extend their own authority by secrecy and disinformation. And there are means to power everywhere, even in what was until recently, and is still popularly, regarded as the interstellar void. Because they are all aspects of the same power.
To my understanding, this is the significance of Zero Point: the subatomic is not best imagined as discrete, bouncing billiard balls, but as an ocean of quantum energy in perpetual flux. Einstein's "spooky action" doesn't actually happen at a true distance, but it's no less spooky, since at the quantum level Everything is Connected. (As Becker and Selden wrote 20 years ago in The Body Electric, "Every time you use your toaster, the fields around it perturb charged particles in the farthest galaxies ever so slightly.")
If the quantum flux could be tapped it would be a source of unimaginable power, able to bend space-time to the speed of thought and defy gravity, which Soviet physicist Andrei Sakharov first suggested was not a force in its own right but rather a residual effect of zero point fluctuations caused by the presence of matter, or rather greater densities of charge. As we've seen, the ever-spooky Hal Puthoff, formerly of the NSA and naval intelligence, moved from SRI's remote viewing program into to zero point research. Puthoff claims "the evidence is pretty solid" that something is already happening, beyond theory, in the black budget world. (Free and virtually limitless energy might be alright for some, think the some with a means to power. As I wrote in January, "If the G-Engines are coming, they've probably already arrived. And they're not meant for the likes of us.")
But the implications of zero point extend further than its energy applications, no matter how revolutionary, to consciousness itself: back to Puthoff's remote viewing research and beyond.
Despite statistical results which far exceeded chance, the CIA was determined to stamp "failure" upon remote viewing, and even military occultist Michael Aquino felt compelled to call it an"eyeball roller". It's often better, for those who guard power's secrets, to be popularized as miserable failures. And the secret of remote viewing, and it's power, is not the projection of sight, but the connectedness of the viewer, at the level of quanta and code, to everything else in the universe.
Lynne McTaggart writes in The Field that Puthoff, considering how remote viewing might be possible, saw that it "argued strongly [for] a quantum, nonlocal effect":
With practice, people could enlarge their brain's receiving mechanisms to gain access to information stored in the Zero Point Field. This giant cryptogram, continually encoded with every atom in the universe, held all the information of the world - every sight and sound and smell. When remote viewers were "seeing" a particular scene, their minds weren't actually somehow transported to the scene. What they were seeing was the information that [had been] encoded in quantum fluctuation.... In a sense, the field allowed us to hold the whole universe inside us. Those good at remote viewing weren't seeing anything invisible to all the rest of us. All they were doing was dampening down the other distractions.
Hold the universe inside us. Imagine what would happen if the woo-woos ever found out about that. Imagine if those with the will to power already have.
http://rigorousintuition.blogspot.com/2006/03/body-eclectic-part-one_28.html
..
Anonymous said...
I like the Tart/Targ/Puthoff/Bigelow nexus, segwaying nicely into the NSA and remote viewing, Sheldrake's fields, and the NIDS studies of how some of these theories might be applied to bizzare phenomena here in "reality".
"I came up with a term for it," says Col. John Alexander, a retired Army intelligence officer who still works on classified projects with Los Alamos National Laboratory and remains an adviser to NATO organizations. "I called it a pre-cognitive sentient intelligence. It certainly seemed to be intelligent, and it seemed to know what we were going to do even before we did it."
----+
a.. The Military-Occult Complex, ritual abuse/mind control, and "High Weirdness"
a.. Jackson 5.0
a.. Life and Life Only
a.. "Grave Mysteries" (Part Two)
a.. What Lies Beneath
a.. "Grave Mysteries" (Part One)
a.. The gods must be crazy
a.. There Is No More Firmament
a.. "No man sees my face and lives"
a.. Full Spectral Dominance (Part Two)
a.. Solitary monsters
a.. Full Spectral Dominance (Part One)
a.. Space Cadets
a.. Bad Medicine (Part Two)
a.. Estimate of the Situation
a.. Bad Medicine (Part One)
a.. Down the Scole Hole
a.. Distractions, or something else?
a.. "I wish that hadn't happened"
a.. Spirit of the Beehive
a.. "And your little dog, too"
a.. Correspondence and sanctuary (Part Two)
a.. Correspondence and sanctuary (Part One)
a.. The Fearless Vampire Killers
a.. Weird Tales
a.. Carlucci's spellcheck
a.. The Higher Coincidence
a.. American Leviathan (Part Two)
a.. American Leviathan (Part One)
a.. Look out, kid
a.. Pimp My Scooter
a.. The Top of My Head
a.. Into the black
a.. If you go out in the woods
a.. Shadows and Fog
a.. It's all in your mind
a.. Phantoms, Daemons and Finders
a.. "Birth pangs of a new order"
a.. "Before the apex stone is fitted"
a.. The Colour out of Space
a.. Bill Bennett and the Great White Brotherhood
a.. "You can't go home again"
a.. "Did I just say that out loud?"
a.. What do kids know?
a.. On the job, on the square
a.. The Liminal State of the Nation
a.. Nine Angles of Separation
a.. Doom Days
a.. Seeing things, saying things
a.. Who's screening who?
a.. The Mystery Man
a.. "liberate tutemae"
a.. It's enough to make you paranoid
a.. Interview with Jackie McGauley (Part Two)
a.. MI5 and the Welsh paedophile ring
a.. How big is your rabbit hole?
a.. Interview with Jackie McGauley (Part One)
a.. Fireworks and Inaugurations
a.. Last exit to Ponchatoula
a.. Interview with Kathleen Sullivan (Part 4)
a.. The Firm
a.. Bless the beasts and children
a.. Far Away, So Close
a.. Don't worry, it's just the news
a.. "Hope you guess my name"
a.. America's Dog Star Days
a.. Latter Day Sinners
a.. "A working class hero is something to be"
a.. A tale of two prophets
a.. Dunblane update: Police involved in paedophile ring
a.. Debunking and debugging
a.. A few good mind-controlled men?
a.. No time to think
a.. "Prophet Yahweh" stands and delivers?
a.. Gosch case implicates CIA, US officials: Iowa TV
a.. That which survives
a.. Who shall I say is calling?
a.. "A moment of weakness and temporary insanity"
a.. "No Way!" and "Yeah - so what?"
a.. Eye of Horus, Part One
a.. Dark horse and dead cattle
a.. "From beyond the stars"
a.. The sheep look up
a.. Welcome back to Atlanta
a.. Babyland
a.. The Black Lodge, Part Two
a.. The Black Lodge, Part One
a.. Walpurgisnacht
a.. The Candy Man Did
a.. Same as it ever was
a.. "Some people call me Maurice"
a.. "Knowing I live in a dark age
a.. Back to the Presidio
a.. "It's all in the egg"
a.. Noreen Gosch: "If this is it, we're in the final days."
a.. What's up is down. What isn't, is.
a.. Don't look now
a.. "It looks more like a war zone"
a.. Who done it?
a.. "She was always surprised they never found those bodies..."
a.. Henry: Portrait of a Bush supporter
a.. Is it the future yet?
a.. "This latest maniac"
a.. It's all about "them"
a.. The Art of the Lab Room Floor
a.. The "Day of Declaration"
a.. The Banality of the Weird
a.. Interview with Kathleen Sullivan (Part Three)
a.. Interview with Kathleen Sullivan (Part Two)
a.. Jeff Gannon's Inner Child?
a.. The Going Got Weird
a.. The Great Satan
a.. Interview with Kathleen Sullivan (Part One)
a.. Crazy Yes. But Crazy Enough to Be True?
a.. America's Condition Greene
a.. Stirring the White House Honey Pot
a.. Hell, Frozen Over
a.. The Occult History of the National Security State
a.. Things to Come: the Merlin Project
a.. "Enter into Evil"
a.. From MindWar to FoxNews
a.. Dick Cheney's Other Big Secret
a.. Why Do People Say such Terrible Things about the Bush Family?
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