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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
SOUTH AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
No. NSD327 of 2001
JEREMY JONES
Applicant
FREDRICK TÖBEN
Respondent
From: Captain May captainmay@prodigy.net
Sent: Monday, 4 August 2008 6:19 AM
Subject: Anthrax Attacks -- Assassin Nation
Anthrax Attacks -- Assassin Nation - Bush League Bioterror
By Captain Eric H. May, Military-Political Editor, The Lone Star Iconoclast
After 9/11 and before the passage of the Patriot Act a month later, our great
national terror was the anthrax attacks waged against the mainstream media and
Congress. Democratic Senators Daschle and Leahy, both targeted, had been
well positioned to oppose the Patriot Act on
constitutional grounds, and perhaps lead their party to do the same. The
anthrax attacks changed all that, putting Bush and Cheney in total control.
As with so many things under the Bush administration,
the political reality of what had happened was transparent, but the political
reporting remained vague. The writing was already on the wall for members
of the power elite, and folks were starting to
hide from their duty behind the Voltaire phrase that it was a dangerous thing to
be right when your country was wrong.
Accordingly, the mainstream media pretended not to notice that the worthies who
should have impeded the unconstitutional Bush League power grab had been
threatened with the kind of diseased death that befell several of their
staffers. Congress itself was closed for a week and its offices were taken
over by federal forces in hazmat suits. When staffers finally returned,
they supposed that their sensitive files had been gone over by the FBI,
and that whatever could be used to harm them was now in the possession of the
"unitary executive," as Bush Leaguers began to call their boy George.
Later the same mainstream media didn't report much or investigate at all when
the official story began to fall apart. It turned out that all the
various anthrax spores used in all the various anthrax attacks had originated
from the same batch -- at the Defense Department's biowarfare facility in Fort
Dietrich, Maryland. Nor did hesitant reporters pay much attention when it
turned out that the "Muslim terrorists" said to have sent the poisoned
letters -- promising death to America, death to Israel
and praise to Allah -- were a fabrication by Christians or Jews, a Neocon
"false flag" operation to help the Bush League expand its newfangled
"Global War on Terror."
The mainstream media refused to report all the damning details; the FBI
political police refused to answer questions about them; and our Congress
refused to ask questions, beginning a long slide by all these parties from doing
their duty that continues to this very day, with the sudden appearance of an FBI
solution of the anthrax attacks.
Friday FBI officials somehow kept straight faces as they announced that Dr.
Bruce E. Ivins, an award-winning employee at Fort Dietrich, had become the
focus of their seven-year do-nothing investigation. He was very near to
being formally charged with the crime, they averred. Alas, they added
after a pause, Dr. Ivins had committed suicide rather than face prosecution.
That was too bad, because they really had wanted to tell us the truth of the
anthrax attacks between 9/11 and the Patriot Act -- attacks that had just
happened to help the Bush administration achieve its political goals.
DELETE the PRESS
I have always thought that nonmilitary folks were being a bit too cute with
their pronouncements that military intelligence is an oxymoron. Though the
American officer corps has not frequently profited from the kind of first-rate
minds so prominent in European and especially ancient history, we are no
dummies. The first thing we learned in military intelligence is the last
thing I forget: trust no one.
Using this wise dictum to trust no one, a couple of decades ago I became an Army
specialist in the erstwhile USSR, absorbing its
history, language and literature. I did it all from an abundance of
patriotism and through the generosity of the American taxpayer. Although I
loved the Russian people, generally speaking, I didn't believe a word of the
crap the Russian government was telling its citizens through its official media.
Time has made me older, wiser and sadder. Nowadays I take the same view of
our current government and its official media that I once took of the Soviet
Union's nomenklatura and their vicious apparatchiki -- which
is that they are a self-serving elite who feel free to misinform or murder
others to achieve their political purpose. If there is any truth to be had
in contemporary America, then it must be found in the samizdat of the
Internet.
Those who wish to understand human affairs and national history -- no matter who
the person or what the country -- would do well to look at them with my jaded
perspective. Granted, skepticism and cynicism are dark lenses through
which to perceive the world, but when we wear them, we won't be stunned and
stupefied by the brilliance of official bullshit.
The word for the wise: the FBI attempt to make Bruce E. Ivins the Lee
Harvey Oswald of the anthrax attacks is obscurantism. Rather than
swallowing a shallow "mad scientist" story, consider another: The
Bush League has decided that, in these waning days of his reign, their King
George needs to clean up his mess of dirty operations, and all the king's
men in the FBI are simply wiping up the mess by wiping out a patsy, then you
pronouncing the case closed.
In this day of the Internet, the inquisitive reader can find many parallels to
Dr. Ivins. Below is a list of the "top 10 hits" that I have
observed and written about, often after being contacted by the victims'
families. They are listed according to the date of their assassinations
and can be found in my archives:
Senator Paul Wellstone, October
25, 2002
Rachel Corrie, March 16, 2003
Dr. David Kelly, July 17, 2003
Specialist Alyssa Peterson, September 15, 2003
Margie Schroedinger, September 22, 2003
Specialist Pat Tillman, April 22, 2004
Colonel Ted Westhusing, June 5, 2005
David Rosenbaum, January 6, 2006
General William Odom, May 30, 2008
Tim Russert, June 13, 2008
Captain Eric H. May Is a former Army intelligence and public affairs officer, as
well as a former NBC editorial writer. His essays have appeared in the
Houston Chronicle, the Wall Street Journal and Military Intelligence Magazine.
His homepage is: http://www.spiritone.com/~pazuu/pow-mia/Ghost_Troop_Captain_Eric_H_May.ht
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