News With Adam

"You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you mad." -Aldous Huxley


Sunday, September 14, 2003  

9/11 Pentagon Photo Shows Mystery Engine Part
Official photographs taken at the 9/11 Pentagon crash site show what appears to be part of a small jet engine, but no one seems interested in identifying it. Due to the secrecy surrounding the 9/11 attack on the Pentagon and the lack of evidence that a large passenger jet smashed into the reinforced concrete and stone wall of the massive building, a host of conspiracy theories have cropped up. A photograph from the crash site could easily settle the debate, but no one seems to care.


Map: Hijacked 9/11 Flights and Military Bases

More Evidence Of An Object On WTC2 Boeing?

The Politics of Terror
Analysis of the OK City bombing.


The Oklahoma City Bombing
Were there additional explosive charges and additional bombers?


5 Reasons to Stop US Military Aid to Israel
1 Israel Is Illegally Occupying Palestine
2 Israel Systematically Violates the Human Rights of Palestinians in the Occupied Territories
3 Israel is an Apartheid State
4 US Military Aid to Israel Violates US Law
5 US Military Aid to Israel threatens US Security and Global Stability


'Snooper' powers to fight terror
Telephone companies and internet service providers will be asked to keep records of all user calls and e-mails for a year.
Communication service providers already keep records for between two weeks and six months.

Revealed: new doubts on Blair's Iraq dossier
Dramatic new evidence from the intelligence services casts fresh doubts over Tony Blair's central claim that Iraq continued to produce chemical and biological weapons until the outbreak of war, The Observer can reveal. Newly disclosed Cabinet Office documents show that the Prime Minister's categorical assertion was based only on a single source and was attacked as 'too strong' by a senior intelligence official. The same official attacks the dossier's descriptions of the graphic effects of mustard gas and VX, a nerve agent, as 'grossly misleading'.

Berezovsky alleges murder plot by Kremlin
Dramatic allegations of a Russian-sponsored "murder plot" against Boris Berezovsky, the billionaire businessman and Kremlin opponent, surfaced in a London courtroom on Friday, as his extradition case was formally halted.

Report: Iraq weapons search update late
A scheduled update on any Iraqi weapons of mass destruction is being delayed and the entire report may not be published, The Sunday Times of London reported.

State of Illinois oppressing RFID protestors; Legal action filed
The operators of McCormick Place are violating the constitutionally-protected free speech rights of a national organization committed to protecting consumers from intrusive surveillance by commercial interests by barring the group from distributing leaflets, wearing t-shirts with anti-surveillance messages and speaking to individuals in public areas at the prominent convention center, according to a lawsuit filed in federal district court today. The organization, Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering (CASPIAN), have been denied access to the Grand Concourse at McCormick Place and a park area outside the Grand Concourse during the Electronic Product Code Symposium scheduled to take place at McCormick Place on September 15 through 17, 2003. McCormick Place funded, operated and owned by the government has no legitimate interests in denying free expression in areas that are otherwise open to the general public.

America's hidden battlefield toll: New figures reveal the true number of GIs wounded in Iraq
The true scale of American casualties in Iraq is revealed today by new figures obtained by The Observer, which show that more than 6,000 American servicemen have been evacuated for medical reasons since the beginning of the war, including more than 1,500 American soldiers who have been wounded, many seriously.

Israeli Says Killing Arafat Is an Option
Israel's vice prime minister said killing Yasser Arafat is an option for Israel, as Palestinians on Sunday took to the streets across the West Bank and Gaza Strip promising to protect their leader.

Threat to academic freedom feared
The Faculty Senate at Metropolitan State College of Denver is calling for an investigation into a move by Republican legislators to require Colorado colleges and universities to seek and hire a greater number of conservative faculty. The so-called Academic Bill of Rights also would push for institutions of higher education to provide more classics in the curriculum and more "intellectual pluralism" among campus speakers. The measure, the brainchild of outspoken Los Angeles conservative David Horowitz, was the subject of a June 12 meeting attended by Horowitz, Gov. Bill Owens and several top Republican legislators.

Saddam didn't lie; there are no WMDs, UN inspectors say
The UN's senior weapons inspectors now say they believe Saddam Hussein was telling the truth when he claimed he had no weapons of mass destruction.

Embassy blamed for bombings: Saudis accuse British staff of destabilisation campaign
British embassy staff in Riyadh have been accused by the Saudi Arabian authorities of coordinating a campaign of anti-western terrorist bombings in the kingdom, the Guardian has learned.

Justice Pushes for Looser Subpoena Rules: Bush Administration Wants Subpoena Power That Doesn't Require Approval From Judge or Grand Jury
The Bush administration wants to bring to the war on terror a subpoena power that does not require federal investigators to seek approval from a judge or grand jury. Justice Department officials say use of "administrative subpoenas" would enable the FBI to obtain information that might prevent a terror strike more quickly from records or witnesses. Critics say the extension of power is unnecessary and would permit investigations with no judicial supervision.

The suit alleged that CIA operatives defrauded investors in worldwide racketeering schemes under a pretext of investment in secret, high-yield trading programs.
The 9-day “Vizantia” jury trial (ended on May 15, 2002) has resulted in the award of $8,100,000.00 to Plaintiff. The verdict amount is 27 times the Plaintiff’s $300,000, which was stolen by Bryan’s racketeering enterprise. The suit alleged that CIA operatives defrauded investors in worldwide racketeering schemes under a pretext of investment in secret, high-yield trading programs. The Plaintiff alleged that the Defendants and their co-conspirators systematically misappropriated investors’ funds ($.3 Million from Plaintiff; $6 Million from the Austrian investor; $3.124 Million from the Arizona company PRC, et al.) and financial instruments, such as North Korea’s Foreign Trade Bank Guarantees valued $4.645 Billion; Bulgarian (Slavyany Bank’s) Bills of Exchange worth $100 million, etc. Plaintiff also alleged that the Defendants illegally exchanged Billions of Brazilian, Argentinean and other currencies for USD. (Vizantia-Exclusive, Ltd. v. Kristar, Inc., EyeLand Traders, Ltd., et al., Case #00-71800, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Michigan).

The Pursuit of Steven Hatfill
He says he's a patriot, and some on the front lines of the war against terror sing his praises. But his provocative life and career have kept him at the center of the FBI's frustrating hunt for the anthrax killer.

posted by adam | 9/14/2003 11:05:00 PM
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