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Thread ID: 19035 | Posts: 1 | Started: 2005-07-08
2005-07-08 10:50 | User Profile
SMACK NOVAK
[url]http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-07-07-btk-killings_x.htm[/url]
BTK killer blames 'demon' for murders
[I]WICHITA (AP) ââ¬â Confessed BTK serial killer Dennis Rader made his first public apology for the murders that horrified a community for a quarter-century, blaming a "demon" that got inside him at a young age.
Rader, 60, said his problems began in grade school, with his sexual fantasies that were "just a little bit weirder" than other people's. "Somewhere along the line, someone had to pick something up from me somewhere that there was a problem," he said. "They should have identified it." Rader said he felt for Dale Fox when he saw him cry on television while talking about the 1977 strangulation of Fox's daughter Nancy ââ¬â a crime Rader has admitted ââ¬â and said his own relatives also suffer. "I am going to pay for it with a life sentence. The final victims are my ... family," he said.[/I] ****/ In other words, ââ¬Åwhy didnââ¬â¢t some liberal psychoanalyst save me? Donââ¬â¢t they care about humanity?ââ¬Â Or maybe he is reaching out for exorcism.
Wonder how his ââ¬Ëdemonââ¬â¢ got in there? Could it have been severe childhood sexual abuse? That was found to be the case for Andrea Yates, the Texas mother who drowned her kids and got the death penalty, as I recall.
Observation: Rader accepts his ââ¬Ëlife sentenceââ¬â¢ ââ¬â essential worthlessness. That should be strengthened to ââ¬Åno right to existââ¬Â. Society puts him down like the sick puppy he is.
ââ¬ËFinal victims ââ¬â my familyââ¬â¢. In his head; as if he cared. If his grotesque criminality was, indeed, the result of childhood abuse, revenge would be the motive ââ¬â unconscious, probably, always being a ââ¬Ånice boyââ¬Â in front of his abusers and peers. ââ¬ÅOnce president of his Lutheran churchââ¬Â, USA Today adds.
But this is Kansas, home of Sen. Sam Brownback, who happens to have just been mentioned in connection with inciting instability in Iran:
[url]http://www.originaldissent.com/forums/showthread.php?t=19015[/url] [B] ââ¬ÅClearly, a large number of people in the world are interested in discrediting the Iranian government and the newly elected president, even when they must resort to outright lies or absurdly twisted logic. The MEK, who participated in the Iranian Revolution of 27 years ago but were cut out of power six months later, still harbor fantasies of marching on Tehran and taking over the nation. They have created a shadow government outside of Iran, and have a coterie of aging troops massed near the Iranian border in Iraq with the blessing of the United States government. In an astonishingly effective political coup, they have co-opted a number of American legislators who support them with American taxpayer dollars. Among them are Sen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, Sen. Sam Brownback of Kansas and Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida. The MEK has somehow convinced these American officials that they plan to bring "democracy" to Iran. The fact that they are still on the U.S. government list of terrorist groups, having killed American citizens during the time of the shah, seems not to faze Santorum, Brownback or Ros-Lehtinen.ââ¬Â [/B]
Could all this BTK (ââ¬ÅBind Tortute Killââ¬Â) mass killer hype be part of Sen. Brownbackââ¬â¢s running campaign for re-election on the ââ¬ÅKill Iran, Tooââ¬Â ticket?
Weird thing about the Iran election, condemned as not satisfying the basic requirements of democracy by George W. Bush, as pointed out by W.O. Beeman in ââ¬ÅAnatomy of a Neocon Smearââ¬Â is that NO MATTER WHO WON, a faction that hoped to get the United States to invade Iran to protect Israel WAS DETERMINED TO UNDERMINE IT.
[B] ââ¬ÅAmerican neoconservatives were clearly not to be deprived of their cherished canard that the "mullahs were manipulating the election." Certain that Ahmadinejad's rival, former president Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani, would win, they first denounced his comeback as "due not to popular demand, but to machinations of mullahs," as Danielle Pletka asserted in The New York Times on June 16, before the final voting. Once Ahmadinejad had been declared the surprise victor, the neoconservatives began to denounce him as the candidate of religious leader Ali Khamene'i, claiming that the election was fixed by the clerical establishment. Clearly, the election was to be demonized, whoever won.ââ¬Â (ibid.) [/B]
Speaking of demons, the smear was that Ahmadinejad had been among the Iranian students taking Americans hostage in l978. Ex-hostages were dug up who said he looked like one of the men in the picture, who wasnââ¬â¢t him at all. ââ¬ÅIt was all a lie,ââ¬Â says Beeman.
*/
Threads to eternity
The MEK, as described above, is surely the remnant of Ahmed Chalabiââ¬â¢s old outfit, which links with ââ¬ÅCurveballââ¬Â ââ¬â source of false intelligence on Iraqââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëmobile bio-chemicalââ¬â¢ truck labs, as reported by the NY Timesââ¬â¢ Judith Miller to prove Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. One of the cards in the pack of lies. This thread hung like a proverbial sword in the air over the sharply rising inquiries concerning the Rove-Novak connection in the Valorie (Plame) Wilsonââ¬â¢s case.
Another card in the deck, or pack of lies told to justify war on Iraq, was alleged shipment of yellowcake uranium ore from Niger to Iraq exposed by her husband as not true. And, known to be not true responsible persons, but nevertheless getting included in Secretary of State Colin Powellââ¬â¢s Feb. 2003 speech to the United Nations. This was the high-water mark of deception, blasting apart the integrity of the solemn word of America, as a nation among sovereign nations. It chose the path of lying. There is an eternality to that. The sun will never rise again on America as great. That is the thread of history unfolded and unfolding here.
The one who broke the story that Joseph Wilsonââ¬â¢s wife was CIA and possibly influencing his appointment was Robert Novak, right-wing columnist and regular on major CNN political shows -- Crossfire, Capitol Gang. The whole deal had already been laid out, it says here, and Novakââ¬â¢s broad audience guaranteed that his ââ¬Åtwo sourcesââ¬Â would get quoted widely. In addition, Time magazine ââ¬â its all Time-Warner/AOL, after all ââ¬â is contacted through M. Cooper. This has been publically confirmed to have been Karl Rove, while he lyingly denies what is irrelevant to the main charge. That would be: co-operating with those he knew to be fixing the facts to favor war.
Now, Newsweekââ¬â¢s Michael Isikoff has been brought in to aim Novak like a smoking gun at this administrationââ¬â¢s head ââ¬â or aim Novak and Rove at Americaââ¬â¢s head.
[url]http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8445696/site/newsweek/[/url] \ ââ¬Å[I]The e-mails surrendered by Time Inc., which are largely between Cooper and his editors, show that one of Cooper's sources was White House deputy chief of staff Karl Rove, according to two lawyers who asked not to be identified because they are representing witnesses sympathetic to the White House. Cooper and a Time spokeswoman declined to comment. But in an interview with NEWSWEEK, Rove's lawyer, Robert Luskin, confirmed that Rove had been interviewed by Cooper for the article. It is unclear, however, what passed between Cooper and Rove.ââ¬Â [/I]
Why is Judith Miller taking the fall while Novak goes free? My hunch is that the New York Times fell for a sting operation, designed to achieve exactly what it did: neutralize their vast news/opinion organization by high-level contacts by Rove or someone else which could not be revealed without betraying secrets going back to her connection with Chalabi and ââ¬ÅCurveballââ¬Â. This puts the lie to her posing as champion of free press, conscientiously objecting to a wrong government order.
Now London has been blasted, as if to rub all this off the board.
I donââ¬â¢t think so. These are very significant events.