The Invisible College's LiveJournal
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Below are the 7 most recent journal entries recorded in
The Invisible College's LiveJournal:
Thursday, September 5th, 2002 | 1:27 pm |
| Tuesday, August 20th, 2002 | 4:01 pm |
| Sunday, May 26th, 2002 | 11:01 am |
Pete "Pete was in good shape physically and had a little more than average share of penile endowment. After our swim, we got into bed and had sex. He pinched my buttocks and told me what a 'great one' I had. Sometimes he got very aggressive and it traumatized me. On this occasion he nibbled me all over my body, from head to toe - we were both laughing hysterically, I because I was programmed to be 'congenial'. He liked to have sex in many different positions and was an active participant, unlike Ronald Reagan. He seemed to enjoy showing me how physically strong he was. When I first met him, he would have two of us at the same time, but later on just me, as he said I responded better to him just 'one on one'. He had massage oils that we sometimes during sex also. He loved oral sex and liked for me to bring him just to the edge of orgasm and then back off so he could last longer. I was programmed to have a lot of 'passion' with Pete Wilson." | Tuesday, October 2nd, 2001 | 8:35 am |
"The Columbine-inspired crackdown actually began immediately after the shootings, and it was largely driven by snitches. Several students in Ohio were suspended for contributing to a gothic-themed website. Another Ohio student, nine-year-old martial arts enthusiast Karl Bauman, was kicked out of school for writing 'You will die an honorable death' as part of a class assignment. A South Carolina student was suspended for creating a website criticizing the ROTC with the statement, "They can all eat feces and die!" In Georgia, Antonius Brown, a Stephen King fan, was suspended for writing a private journal entry fantasizing about school violence. Virginia student Kent McNew was kicked out for having blue hair. In Arizona, a 13-year-old was sent to detention for carrying an electronics magazine which included ads for guns. A Utah high school student was suspended for 'gang activity' because he wore a t-shirt indentifying himself as a vegan - someone who doesn't eat meat or consume dairy products. In Virginia, Chris Bullock was arrested and charged with 'threatening to burn or bomb' his school after he wrote a fictional story about a student who announced he had a nuclear bomb strapped to his chest. And in South Carolina, three students who wore black coats to their high school were searched by police and suspended. The police interrogated one student about the chemistry textbook in his bag, implying that it might be used to build a bomb." | Monday, October 1st, 2001 | 6:45 am |
More, my friends...
"Neil Diamond was a Council 'treasure' and they kept him well taken care of. I attended concerts of his to shore him up when he said he wanted and needed me to be there. I got up from my ticketed seat next to my young husband and told him I was going to the restroom during the intermission. Instead I slid backstage with Neil, who was all sweaty, shaking and needing to share the powerful high he was on. He said that all the energy people focused onto him was totally overwhelming him and he said he needed me to ground him out so he could go back on stage. That meant sex and then, as programmed, I told him I loved him and that he was the very best and go out and give them all that he had. I told him if he gave all of himself to the audience who loved him, that they would shower it all back to him. He was always afraid that when he gave so much at performances that he would become depleted but I helped him reframe that belief, so he went back out empowered, not consumed. Then he would snort a couple of lines of cocaine and go back out to the screaming fans, and I returned to my seat next to Craig." | Sunday, September 30th, 2001 | 5:35 pm |
"One of the largest acts of domestic terrorism in U.S. history was the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center in New York City. Until then, the country seemed free from the sort of attacks which occur frequently in the Middle East and parts of Europe. After the bombing, political leaders and establishment media pundits declared that a new era had begun, an era where Americans had to be willing to give up some of their constitutional rights to protect themselves against terrorism.
As it turned out, the FBI was fully aware of the bomb plot before the attack took place. The scheme was hatched by a small group of fundamentalist Muslims who worshipped at a New York mosque led by Omar Abdel Rahman, a blind shiek who had been exiled from Egypt because of anti-government preachings. The group had been infiltrated by Emad Salem, a former Egyptian army intelligence officer who had moved to America and begun working with the FBI.
The FBI began arresting members of the plot within days of the bombing. At the time, federal officials said the break in the case came when one of the terrorists returned a rented van used to transport the bomb to the center to recover his security deposit. But that story quickly broke down when the New York Times revealed that Salem had kept the FBI posted about the bomb plot - and had secretly tape recorded conversations with his FBI handlers. (...)
On the tapes, Salem repeatedly asserts that the FBI has the ability to prevent the bombing. Salem's handlers dissuade him from raising his complaints with higher-ups at the FBI. The plot went forward as planned. When the bombing suspects went to trial, defense attorneys raised Salem's role as an FBI informant. The jury convicted them anyway.
(...)
Government officials have never admitted that they allowed the World Trade Center to be bombed. Despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, they have repeatedly claimed that miscommunications with Salem prevented them from moving in time. This is a laughable defense, given the tapes Salem's conversations with his FBI contacts." | Saturday, September 29th, 2001 | 4:49 pm |
"The Anti-Terrorism Act (1996) dramatically increased the number of politically-oriented domestic surveillance operations. The FBI was working on approximately 100 domestic terrorism investigations before the bombing (Oklahoma City). The number jumped to 900 just two years later. Law enforcement agencies filed charges against suspected militia members in 36 major cases in 22 states between March and December 1996 alone.
Some of the money also went to establish a new organization to help track dissidents, the State/Local Anti-Terrorism Training (SLATT) program. Funding came from a $2 million line item appropriation in the 1996 Anti-Terrorism Act. (...)
Although the FBI defines the term "terrorism" to include all politically-motivated threats and violence, SLATT was clearly created to provide law enforcement officials only with information on the Far Right. The grant application refers to 'individuals adhering to 'patriot' extremist or other domestic terrorist philosophies.' It describes 'extremists' as those who 'identify with one or more of the following philosophies: anti-tax, anti-federal government, anti-state government, anti-authority, anti-world alliances, pro-racial purity, pro-white supremacy, anti-Semitic, and a fear of loss of Constitutional rights... with an equal fear of a one world order.'" |
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