Happy Thanksgiving to Kate’s Canadian readers! Here’s hoping that you eat too much and spend some time with the people you care about.
Here are some links I ran across this morning…
- Build a pinhole camera out of Lego
- High fat food can be good for you?
- The French are pigs (I saw this years back when I visited France)
- Billboard cow missing
- Study finds religious belief is harmful to society
- Canada giving $300,000 for the Pakistan quake
- No shirt, no shoes, no pants…
- Peter pays a visit to Brian…
- Clarkson feels picked on
- Lady fined for walking too slowly
- The 400 Initiative (they’re NOT getting MY cheque!)
- The CBC strike is officially over. Whoopee.
- Londong London getting expensive sex-themed park
- Cops after $1M bill counterfeiter
Feel free to add your own tips and trackbacks. Also, don’t forget to vote for your favorite blog (results available here).
Happy Turkey Day, people. 🙂

The CTV is running the “Young Liberal’s from Quebec Strip” again. The Lie-beral’s must be really desperate for votes in Quebec for Pettigrew and Dion in the next election. Not even the new GG can help them there. I also have to strongly disagree with their propaganda purporting that they’re making gains in B.C., nothing more than wishful thinking.
Pals/buddies of Maurice Strong & AdScam Martin, CSL China ships.>>>>>>
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1499873/posts
>>> more
We arrived on the outskirts of Taishi, just as the dirt roads start. There were 30 to 50 men – angry, inebriated, bored men. Most looked like thugs. Some wore military camouflage uniform. Some wore blue uniforms with badges on the shoulders, and one guy had a greyish-mauve uniform with a walkie-talkie. Our taxi driver, who we had hired randomly in a neighbouring village, was called out by the thugs. They screamed at him: “What the fuck are you doing here?”
He knew nothing. He came back in and screamed at us. “Fuck all of you, look now you’ve gotten me into trouble.”
We told him to reverse but by that time it was already too late, the car was encircled. “Don’t go out!,” I screamed, telling everyone to lock their doors. I called a colleague on my mobile, asked him to stay on the phone with me.
The men outside shouted among themselves and those in uniform suddenly left. Those remaining started pushing on the car, screaming at us to get out. They pointed flashlights at us, and when the light hit Mr Lu’s face, it was as if a bomb had gone off. They completely lost it. They pulled him out and bashed him to the ground, kicked him, pulverised him, stomped on his head over and over again. The beating was loud, like the crack of a wooden board, and he was unconscious within 30 seconds.
They continued for 10 minutes. The body of this skinny little man turned to putty between the kicking legs of the rancorous men. This was not about teaching a man a lesson, about scaring me, about preventing access to the village; this was about vengeance – retribution for teaching villagers their legal rights, for agitating, for daring to hide.
They slowed down but never stopped. He lay there – his eye out of its socket, his tongue cut, a stream of blood dropping from his mouth, his body limp, twisted. The ligaments in his neck were broken, so his head lay sideways as if connected to the rest of his body by a rubber band.
We were probably in the car another five to eight minutes. The front windows were open and various men were reaching in to unlock my door. I held my hand tight to the lock. They punched me, twisted my wrist, tried everything possible with a quick grab to get me out. But I wouldn’t let go, and I defended myself while watching Mr Lu get beaten through the window.
Eventually, my translator got out. I followed. They opened my pen, searched my pockets, underwear and socks, asked my translator if his watch could record anything. They asked what we were doing in Taishi. They found my Chinese press pass. “You foreigners you are ruining Taishi,” they screamed. “You write write write so much about what’s happened here that all these businesses have fled the new industrial zone.” >>> more
From comments:
Then it hit me: I’d done absolutely nothing to save Mr Lu. I stood there watching
In other words, up to this point, this writer for the Guardian (what an ironic name) had only thought of brie and cocktails and “sending a message” and “if we just understand the rage” and that BS. Maybe the fact the he led a man to be beaten to death before his eyes and didn’t lift a finger to help may make him realize what the conservatives are warning about.
Or maybe he’ll just go get drunk and sponsor an oh-so-tres-chic “We are the Village” type benefit concert that does nothing but present opportunities for useless parasites like himself to score with cheap dates…
Prayers again!
7 posted on 10/10/2005 8:30:53 AM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies ]
To: aculeus
The same harsh lesson is being learned by the people here as was learned by the 80% majority in Burma, you don’t go up against the socialist thugs. The Guardian blames the “capitalism” of the cities but this is a perverted crony capitalism without freedom and is a grotesque characterization of free enterprise. However, Globalism and Free Trade will be held accountable for a bunch of communist thugs.
Louis Freeh Interview
The Political Teen has video of Louis Freeh�s interview on 60 Minutes, in which Freeh accuses President Bill Clinton of disastrous misconduct after the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia.
Atlas Shrugs has more about the interview.>>>>
Links at LGF>
I took the following quote from the fifth item on your Link list.
————————————————-
�The non-religious, proevolution democracies contradict the dictum that a society cannot enjoy good conditions unless most citizens ardently believe in a moral creator.
�The widely held fear that a Godless citizenry must experience societal disaster is therefore refuted.�
————————————————–
Firstly, I am atheist and have been so since age 14. That’s how old I was when I started to study astronomy and to think. Just like the kid who realized that Santa can’t possibly make it down all the chimneys on earth in only one night … So it can be deduced that no entity can create the universe as a backdrop for the likes of us in six days (and without Home Depot).
HOWEVER .. we are not passed the necessity of a deity to be believed in at least in the USA. Consider the horrors coming from the violence prone deity worshipped by the Muslims. Will the nonreligious Euroweenies have the moral will to combat it? Just take a look at Europe and don’t forget it’s humongous unfunded retirement liability that is a civil war waiting to happen.
The Brits are a nice people, but by the end of this century as things are going … there will be only two kinds of people in England, Muslims and dead gay people.
The arrogance of that study would have us believe that we are moving to the godless Utopia where we can all live like the Eloi in Time Machine (the original). But what of the Morloc (Muslims) who want to eat them? Surely not the gentile of Europe and Britain. Oh well, as long as there is America with it’s devout Christians, we need not worry.
To display the violent and corrupt nature of the US despite it’s religiosity or because of it, as is being asserted, is erroneous.
I suggest that the reason things are the way they are in the USA has more to do with the fact that they are free and that there are a lot of immigrants, poor blacks, white trash and so on in the society and they don’t all fit that well. I would blame societal facts other than religion for most of it. Freedom and capitalism can be messy and crude, but you will find it live societies. Godless, Socialist societies are grey, perverted, dull, and have a short life span. Unless they resort to totalitarianism, then it’s a matter of how much food it the “free world” willing to send.
In the godless Europe, Canada, Britain etc, there is less violent crime, but there is less prosperity for the public at large, less freedom, and a future that looks extremely bleak as the Socialists waste whatever wealth there is and the Morloc move in to replace stock exchanges with Mosques.
Even though I have no religious beliefs myself, I do believe that it’s necessary at this time in history to have some “followers of god” on both sides of the world terror war if there will be the will to fight at all.
The Libs seem oblivious to what will happen to them if the US doesn’t win the war on terror. They should all be helping, but in their arrogance they will sit on the side-line and criticize the USA for saving their assess. What else is new.
I suggest that there will be a social disaster in the socialist regimes long before there will be one in the USA. Wasn’t there a little bit of a social disaster not too long ago in the Soviet Union? I could be wrong, but I think it’s still in a disastrous state, but then what do I know.
Personally, I don’t think that the belief in a creator is necessarily a good thing (nor do I think that it is necessarily a bad thing) but it is more dependant on the morality of the people who in power and the level of convictions that the followers have. Tibet is probably the most peaceful places in the world because of their religious beliefs.
The fact is that Muslim countries have a lot of violent tendencies because their leaders do not have the moral convictions to follow a peaceful and modest lifestyle that the Koran preaches; on the other hand the US has violence problems because there is a misguided belief that (regardless of actions) a person is entitled to eternal salvation.
Now, as an atheist, I think that there is a huge problem with suddenly prescribing atheism to everyone and expecting a utopia. I believe that only a few people can adequately understand the moral implications of atheism; in particular I know that, without the guidance and structure of a religion, the average person could not comprehend why the seven deadly sins, or the ten commandments, were so important.
So you are saying that without the structure of religion that average people would not have the moral compass to maintain a civil society. Except for the above average like yourself of course.
Ye, gods do not weep? Hubris?
>>>>>>
audis: Bill Clinton Tearful Over Lewinsky, Not Khobar
Posted by JustAnotherOkie
On 10/10/2005 11:21:42 AM PDT � 19 replies � 286+ views
Newsmax ^ | Monday, Oct. 10, 2005 11:22 a.m. EDT | NewsMax.com Staff
According to two sources close to former Saudi ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan, ex-president Bill Clinton was on the verge of tears over legal woes brought on by the Monica Lewinsky scandal during a Sept. 1998 meeting with Crown Prince Adbullah – and spent almost no time discussing the Khobar Towers bombing case. The Saudi account backs claims by former FBI Director Louis Freeh, who told CBS’s “60 Minutes” last night that Clinton failed to press Abdullah during the meeting for cooperation in the Khobar case. Interviewed by the New Yorker in May 2001, two Saudi officials noted that Prince…>>>
audis: Bill Clinton Tearful Over Lewinsky, Not Khobar
Posted by JustAnotherOkie
On 10/10/2005 11:21:42 AM PDT � 19 replies � 286+ views
freerepublic.com
“Londong getting expensive sex-themed park”
Heh, Freudian slip?
Quid,
Personal attack on alton is uncalled for. You made no point, just an attack. What is your view on this topic?
I might add the topic that there is more than religion that goes into decided what make a society behave as it does. At this time in human history there is a growing divide in the west between belief in creation and the acceptance of the PROOF of evolution.
It think the point alton was making was that there are certain tenets that provide a conscience and a set of principals upon which to govern the behaviour of a society. To this date religion has being a big player in that effort.
Perhaps we are now evolving beyond the need for magic to explain us, but not everyone is comfortable being left on their own. So for all the rantings on the left about how great it is to not have to rely on a deity, they certainly seem to line up at the union office or the government funding line in an effort to ward off being left on their own.
They simply replace the magic of an caring diety in heaven with the magic of a socialist government in Ottawa.
We have not yet reached a point where we can all live in harmony and the monsters who want us all dead are real and they have a big time deity telling them what to do.
People are more likely to fight for a belief in an all powerful deity than for someone like … say… Paul Martin.
Religion is still useful and is needed by most.
Many people don’t need a god to be well behaved. There are nearly no atheists in prisons anywhere unless they are jailed for their atheism. That is a fact.
“So you are saying that without the structure of religion that average people would not have the moral compass to maintain a civil society. Except for the above average like yourself of course.”
This is not really what I am saying; more of what I am saying is that, of all the people I have seen �Embrace� atheism far less than half of them ever even question the necessity of morals in the absence of a higher being. What I was talking about with prescribing atheism to everyone and expecting a utopia is that when you eliminate the structure and guidance that religion provides for people and don�t replace it with anything you produce a vacuum that will eventually be filled with something; not necessarily something that will be beneficial to those people or society at large.
Don’t worry; be happy. AdScam Martin and Mr. Ed Broadbent are currently, as we speak, in closeted discussions with Sveden, (not Svend), for a used Wolvo. Bruno will be the Chauffeur, gratis on his part, thank you Pierre P. Latte, please.>>>>
Gee,GM bankrupt????????? Martin, please save GM. Call Maurice Strong!!! >>>>>
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9651172
Worries about GM rise after Delphi bankruptcy
One brokerage says risk of automaker filing for bankruptcy now heightened
Reuters
Updated: 11:22 a.m. ET Oct. 10, 2005
DETROIT – General Motors Corp. shares fell sharply Monday on worries about heightened risks for the world�s largest automaker after auto parts maker Delphi Corp. filed for bankruptcy over the weekend.
Delphi is GM�s largest supplier, and the automaker warned that it faced an increased risk of costly supply disruptions after Delphi filed for Chapter 11 protection in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York on Saturday.
One brokerage said the Delphi bankruptcy increased the chances that GM might take the same step, dealers said.
Delphi bonds were quoted 6 percentage points lower in over-the-counter dealings, a trader said, sending ripples through the debt markets.>>> bourque
Last post on GM before it takes its saltsvency!>>>> Kids,who can spell: b-o-n-e-u-s-e-s? >>>> CAW/Delphi can.
BTW, no word from BS and/or Frank yet? >>>>
Delphi proposes bonuses to executives for staying
Mon Oct 10, 2005 2:27 PM ET
Printer Friendly | Email Article | Reprints | RSS
CHICAGO, Oct 10 (Reuters) – Bankrupt auto parts supplier Delphi Corp. (DPH.N: Quote, Profile, Research) plans to offer executives cash and up to a 10 percent stake in a reorganized Delphi as an incentive to stay, while seeking massive concessions from hourly workers.
Delphi’s key employee compensation plan, which requires court approval, also provides for annual cash bonuses to encourage executives to stay through its restructuring, which it plans to complete by mid-2007, Delphi said in court papers.
“As a result of the debtor’s financial performance, many of the company’s incentive-based
compensation programs failed to provide (its) salaried and executive work force with total compensation that is competitive with the industry norm,” Delphi said.
Delphi on Saturday filed the largest bankruptcy in U.S. automotive history, promising substantial U.S. job and plant cuts after failing to obtain wage and benefit concessions from the United Auto Workers or financial aid from former parent General Motors Corp. >>>>
————–BREAKING NEWS—————-
“TERRORIST ACT” AT GEORGIA TECH UNIVERSITY: POLICE
HAPPENED THIS MORNING…….
EXPLOSIVE DEVICE GOES OFF, INJURES ONE; TWO MORE FOUND ON CAMPUS….
HUGE INVESTIGATION ONGOING…
SEE MORE AT:
http://thecanadiansentinel.blogspot.com/2005/10/terrorist-act-at-georgia-tech-bombs.html
“Heh, Freudian slip?”
Gaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!
Duke , alton
I think what got my goat was the arrogance of the post itself. The assertion that religion is only for the unwashed , the average masses that need to be fooled by the exsistence of a deity to control their animal instincts ,but those of us above average ,well we are in on the joke.
And if you think that was a personal attack then your skin is much to thin.
Belgians Horrified at Unicef Smurficide
Belgium is reeling in shock as Unicef bombs the Smurfs. (Hat tip: LGF readers.)
The people of Belgium have been left reeling by the first adult-only episode of the Smurfs, in which the blue-skinned cartoon characters� village is annihilated by warplanes.
The short but chilling film is the work of Unicef, the United Nations Children�s Fund, and is to be broadcast on national television next week as a campaign advertisement. The animation was approved by the family of the Smurfs� late creator, �Peyo�.
Belgian television viewers were given a preview of the 25-second film earlier this week, when it was shown on the main evening news. The reactions ranged from approval to shock and, in the case of small children who saw the episode by accident, wailing terror.
Unicef and the family company, IMPS, which controls all rights to the Smurfs, have stipulated that it is not to be broadcast before the 9pm watershed.
The short film pulls no punches. It opens with the Smurfs dancing, hand-in-hand, around a campfire and singing the Smurf song. Bluebirds flutter past and rabbits gambol around their familiar village of mushroom- shaped houses until, without warning, bombs begin to rain from the sky.
Tiny Smurfs scatter and run in vain from the whistling bombs, before being felled by blast waves and fiery explosions. The final scene shows a scorched and tattered Baby Smurf sobbing inconsolably, surrounded by prone Smurfs.
The final frame bears the message: �Don�t let war affect the lives of children.� >>> LGF
Cream puffs from Scotty; brown envelopes confiscated; pizza by the slice only; free lie detector testes; toy rcmp ossifers for best asskisser; gum-off-your-heels removers; a gold-plated, 100% indexed pension at 30/50 = 85 plus a get-out-of-jail-free pass, or a free coffin (nudge, wink). Courtesy the Librano$$$$$$$$$
Bureaucrats disciplined ahead of Gomery report: Brison
OTTAWA (CP) – The Liberal government has not waited for the sponsorship report of Justice John Gomery to begin disciplining civil servants, says Public Works Minister Scott Brison
Quid,
I do believe there is something retrograde in a mind that must rely on the supernatural, the imaginary, the invisible, the rumour, the magic, the fantasy, the meditative trance, the fear, the self-righteousness, the cult, the judgementalism, the irresponsibility of the belief in a deity who is all powerful and runs it all.
I am always amazed at how so many otherwise very intelligent men and women are prone to fall on their knees whenever they have problem and pray for magic.
I am uncertain about what the actual divide is between accepting the reality of existence and continuing to embrace the paganism of what amounts to voodoo by whatever name you give it.
I will paraphrase one thing I read on Best’s page that was interesting … “historians are authors before they are researchers” and the bible is an informal history book doncha know. In fact the whole story about god and heaven I believe started as a fantasy to calm children when they first learn about death.
Whenever you have a believe-it-or-not scenerio, I choose not. Evidence is what verifies the hard to believe and to this date there isn’t a shred of real evidence that an almighty creator exists.
“Feeling” that it does is no different than the Lefties that “feel” everything they choose to impliment rather than prove it’s a good thing.
“Feelings” are best directed at your family and pets, logic and reason is what is needed to find truths, rality and to run a society and a planet.
Duke
I also have many doubts and for years considered myself agnostic/atheist . But never did I look upon a faithful person as less intelligent than average . In fact I have come to envy that faithfulness . Sure there are many that are overzealous or down right insincere but I do not consider them as your average believer . If you judge all god fearing people by the way that Jerry Falwell or your local Imam behaves then you are being closed minded.
Quid,
I believe I did say “otherwise intelligent men and women” when suggesting that there may be some part of the brain that requireds them to hold a belief in the unbelievable that I am at a loss to understand.
I never meant to imply that only the stupid would have failth. Far from it.
…A university student in Ottawa is proposing what he calls the One Tonne of Gum Challenge to pay off the former head of the Royal Canadian Mint. Chris Rougier is urging Canadians to mail Prime Minister Paul Martin packages of gum so Martin can forward them to Dingwall….
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Features/2005/10/09/pf-1255621.html
…Join in our “One Tonne of Gum Challenge” and have Paul Martin pay David his hush money with plain old chewing gum, instead of a half-million more of our hard-earned cash. So we urge all Canadians to send gum, postage free, in the mail to:
David Dingwall Severance Fund
C/O Paul Martin, Prime Minister
House of Commons
Ottawa, ON K1A 0A6
http://www.stickittohim.com./
From The Independent, Oct. 11: ” Clarke [UK Home Secretary] bans 15 Islamic groups over terror links”
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/politics/article318616.ece
Excerpts:
‘ Fifteen violent Islamic organisations were banned from operating in Britain by the Government yesterday as it prepares to put fresh anti-terror legislation at the heart of its new parliamentary programme.
Many are linked to al-Qa’ida and some are suspected of having supporters living in this country. They include Ansar Al Islam and Ansar Al Sunna, which are linked to the Iraqi insurgency, the Groupe Islamique Combattant Marocain, accused of plotting last year’s Madrid bomb blasts, and organisations that back violent revolution in Kashmir, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Somalia and Uzbekistan…
Mr Clarke also indicated the Islamic organisations Hizb ut-Tahir and al-Muhajiroun, both of which deny being involved in terrorism, would be banned within months. They will be caught under a new offence of ” glorifying” terrorism contained in the new legislation…
[See this NY Times story Oct. 9: “A Call for Islamic Revolt Spreads in Central Asia”, excerpts in Oct.8 “Readers Tips”:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/09/international/asia/09jihad.html?pagewanted=all
The most contentious measure will be a proposal to allow the detention of terrorist suspects for up to 90 days without charge. The move has been requested by the police, but faces strong opposition from opposition parties, lawyers and civil rights groups.
Although Mr Clarke last week defended the plan, Downing Street showed signs of flexibility on the issue yesterday. The Prime Minister’s official spokes- man stressed the powers would only be used in “exceptional” cases…’
Mark
Ottawa
Closer/close to Chretien/Adsgumscam Martin/Maurice Strong & cronies.>>>> LGF
tuesday, october 11, 2005
French UN Representative Held
France�s former representative to the United Nations Security Council has been taken into custody, in the Oil-For-Food investigation.
PARIS (AFP) – Jean-Bernard Merimee, France�s former representative at the UN Security Council, was taken into custody by a judge investigating corruption linked to the Iraqi �oil-for-food� programme.
Merimee, 68, was being questioned over allegations he may have benefited from oil allocations granted under the programme by former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein between 1996 and 2003.
Merimee was France�s UN ambassador from 1991 to 1995. He was then named ambassador to Italy, and from 1999 to 2002 he was a special adviser to UN secretary-general Kofi Annan on European issues.
Five people have already been placed under judicial investigation by judge Philippe Courroye in connection with the �oil-for-food� affair.
They are Serge Boidevaix, former secretary-general at the French foreign ministry; businessman Claude Kaspereit; Bernard Guillet, an adviser to former French interior minister Charles Pasqua; Gilles Munier, head of an Iraqi-French friendship society; and Palestinian journalist Hamida Nana
Mark Steyn has a wonderful article on Paul Martin’s foreign posturing in the Ottawa Citizen, Oct. 11 (not online) and in the Oct. 17 Western Standard: “Telling it like it isn’t”
http://www.westernstandard.ca/website/index.cfm?page=article&article_id=1082
In answer to which I sent him this letter:
‘Dear Mr Steyn,
In your article “Telling it like it isn’t” (Western Standard, Oct. 17) you sensibly ask “Does Canada have a policy on Darfur?” In fact, as is almost always the case, Paul Martin’s government has a “policy” that manages all at once to be utterly political, ineffective, and risible.
In May this year Martin’s government was at risk of losing power through a non-confidence vote in the House of Commons (until the shameless Belinda Stronach defected from the opposition Conservatives for a seat in the Liberal cabinet). An independent Liberal MP, David Kilgour, was demanding that in return for his vote the government do something serious in Darfur such as send troops.
Paul Martin panicked and rapidly promised that Canada would sent around 100 troops to Darfur as advisers to the African Union (AU) peacekeeping mission in Darfur. Kilgour said that number of troops was far too small and that Canadian troops should have a stronger role. Sudan said they would not let Canadian troops into the country. The government said it would send troops anyway. Martin said: “Canada may not be able to single-handedly bring an end to the fighting and bring peace to Darfur, but Canada can do a great deal..” Gross understatement in the first statement, gross overstatement in the second. What silliness.
Kilgour voted against the government which won anyway–see Bouncing Belinda above.
Then in June the government said it would try to send around 100 clapped-out surplus Grizzly armoured personnel carriers, which have been in storage for six years, to the AU forces in Sudan. It just didn’t know how it would get them there. And since Sudan still refused to let Canadian troops in the government suggested the Canadian Forces might train AU troops on the Grizzlies in third countries. Or maybe contracted civilians could provide the training. Or maybe the government would find APCs from other countries and somehow get those to Sudan.
To sum up the policy at that moment: somehow Canada will get some APCs from someone, someway, to the AU troops in Sudan, and somehow train those troops. And then maintain them.
In late July the Department of National Defence announced it was sending the Grizzlies and around 80 Canadian soldiers to Senegal (on the west Coast of Africa, a long war from Darfur, south of Libya and Egypt) where AU troops would be trained on the vehicles.
The Grizzlies had to be sent by sea by commercial vessel–the Canadian Air Force no longer has a serious long-distance airlift capability–and finally arrived in Senegal in September. Canadian troops are at last training AU forces.
How and when the Grizzlies will get to Darfur is still unknown. What is sure is that the Canadian Air Force cannot get them there. And that the Canadian Forces PM Martin promised to send to Darfur in May, as a bribe to get a vote in Parliament, will not go to Sudan. What a Rube Goldberg/Heath Robinson way to give military aid.
I trust that answers your question about Canadian policy in Darfur.’
Mark
Ottawa
http://technoscam.blogspot.com/
More about Adsgumscam Martin’s scamdals.
linked at: newsbeat1.com
Pajamas Media Profile: Richard Fernandez, aka Wretchard the Cat. >>>>
http://pajamasmedia.com/
Does the Furheror think we are going to fall into the same trap they set for us with the Tsunami relief where the funds went where?
Now he is calling for matching funds for the earth quake victims, that the Muslim countries themselves seem to be penny pinching on,( let the west pay the freight for us?)
I want to hear where the Tsunami funds went before I give a nickel. The old Barnam and Bailey adage seems fresh in the Fuehor’s mind when they said “There is a sucker born ever minute), the adage that the Furehor knows too well.
Stephen. Parksville BC ww 2 vet.
The noose is tightening on AdScam Martin’s mentor/paypal Maurice Strong.>>>
Jean-Bernard Merimee
by commissar @ 7:31 pm. Filed under Iraq, Europe & UN
U.N. Mystery Man: Who Is Jean-Bernard Merimee and What�s His Oil-for-Food Tie?
by Claudia Rosett
……
And, on a far bigger scale, there is the question of whether the U.N.-authorized inquiry into Oil-for-Food, led by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, is planning to clarify not only the roles in the scandal of former Under Secretaries-General Maurice Strong, Benon Sevan and now Jean-Bernard Merimee, but their ties to Annan himself – and his knowledge, if any, of their alleged ties to Saddam during their U.N. service. >>> more
http://www.acepilots.com/mt/2005/07/29/jean-bernard-merimee/
This blog is really great. Got to know many things that I’ve never heard.