Loyalty without truth
is a trail to tyranny.
|
a middle-aged George Washington
|
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Friday, 18 November 2005 at 4h 58m 1s | Proverbs, Chapter 6 | Thanks to the passionate and knowledgeable Mike Malloy, I can
bring you
Biblical scripture from the Proverbs, Chapter 6 verses #16 - #19.
[SOURCE]
There are six things which the LORD hates,
Yes, seven which are an abomination to Him:
Haughty eyes, a lying tongue,
And hands that shed innocent blood.
A heart that devises wicked plans,
Feet that run rapidly to evil,
A false witness who utters lies,
And one who spreads strife among brothers.
By the way, I find the New American Standard Bible much better than the often
cryptic and hard to decipher King James Version.
| Friday, 18 November 2005 at 3h 21m 31s | Supermarket meat may not be so fresh | The source can be found here , Capiltal Hill Blue.
Under little-noted rulings over the last three years, the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration has allowed meat processors to use small amounts of carbon
monoxide to maintain the red color in fresh meat sold in pre-assembled or "case-
ready" packages.
Such packages are airtight containers assembled with the product at meat-
packing plants and are not made to be reopened until they are sold to
consumers. Some packages are marketed for up to 35 days, or 28 days in the case
of ground beef.
Kalsec, a food-and-spice company based in Kalamazoo, Mich., is protesting the
FDA action, saying the carbon-monoxide treatment is an illegal additive to
fresh meat that disguises the freshness of the meat and hides spoilage.
"Color is the indicator consumers use most often to determine if meat is
fresh," said Don Berdahl, Kalsec's vice president. He explained that carbon-
monoxide gas reacts with the pigment of the blood in meat and gives it a deep
red color that can fool shoppers.
The company also charged that the practice is not safe and can hide the growth
of dangerous pathogens like botulinum, salmonella and E. coli.
Kalsec wants the FDA to either rescind its approval of the use of carbon
monoxide or require meat packers to label treated product to alert consumers.
The FDA has not objected to companies using carbon monoxide as a processing aid
in several cases over the last three years, ruling that the gas is in the
category of "substances generally recognized as safe" and so not requiring
complete regulatory review.
Of course the idea is to cut the butcher staff at the stores. My best friend
has been a butcher for the last 15 years. He's told me the whole story of how
the large big box market corporations have turned his profession from one of an
entire staff cutting the meat fresh from the carcasses that came two or three
times a week, into just him and two other shift workers opening pre-packaged,
pre-cut meat in seated containers. Mexican workers in the plants at the border
cost 5 to 10% what the cost of the butcher staff workers cost you see. The
modern butcher has turned into a customer service representative.
So you buy the bright red meat that happens to be 28 days from being cut and
packaged and then put it in the fridge for a day or more before eating it. And
when you get diarrhea or feel slightly ill, did you inaccurately attribute the
illness to ... the flu? This happens more often then you think.
| Friday, 18 November 2005 at 4h 34m 16s | God bless you, Congressman John Murtha | Democratic Congressman John Murtha (D - Pennsylvania) gave a press conference
today introducing his resolution for redeployment of American troops in
Iraq. He is a decorated Vietnam veteran, was in the United States Marine Corps
for 30 years, and has been a Congressmen for 36 years.
Read the full speech here.
Or ... Link to cnn video of speech is here.
Some choice exerpts :
"The war in Iraq is not going as advertised. It is a flawed policy wrapped in
illusion. The American public is way ahead of us. The United States and
coalition troops have done all they can in Iraq, but it is time for a change in
direction. Our military is suffering. The future of our country is at risk. We
cannot continue on the present course. It is evident that continued military
action is not in the best interests of the United States of America, the Iraqi
people or the Persian Gulf Region.
"General Casey said in a September 2005 hearing, "the perception of occupation
in Iraq is a major driving force behind the insurgency." General Abizaid said
on the same date, "Reducing the size and visibility of the coalition forces in
Iraq is part of our counterinsurgency strategy."
...
"We spend more money on Intelligence that all the countries in the world
together, and more on Intelligence than most countries GDP. But the
intelligence concerning Iraq was wrong. It is not a world intelligence failure.
It is a U.S. intelligence failure and the way that intelligence was misused.
...
"The threat posed by terrorism is real, but we have other threats that cannot
be ignored. We must be prepared to face all threats. The future of our military
is at risk. Our military and their families are stretched thin. Many say that
the Army is broken. Some of our troops are on their third deployment.
Recruitment is down, even as our military has lowered its standards. Defense
budgets are being cut. Personnel costs are skyrocketing, particularly in health
care. Choices will have to be made. We cannot allow promises we have made to
our military families in terms of service benefits, in terms of their health
care, to be negotiated away. Procurement programs that ensure our military
dominance cannot be negotiated away. We must be prepared. The war in Iraq has
caused huge shortfalls at our bases in the U.S.
"Much of our ground transportation is worn out and in need of either serous
overhaul or replacement. George Washington said, "To be prepared for war is one
of the most effective means of preserving peace." We must rebuild out Army. Our
deficit is growing out of control. The Director of the Congressional Budget
Office recently admitted to being "terrified" about the budget deficit in the
coming decades. This is the first prolonged war we have fought with three years
of tax cuts, without full mobilization of American industry and without a
draft. The burden of this war has not been shared equally; the military and
their families are shouldering this burden.
...
"I said over a year ago, and now the military and the Administration agrees,
Iraq can not be won "militarily." I said two years ago, the key to progress in
Iraq is to Iraqitize, Internationalize and Energize. I believe the same today.
But I have concluded that the presence of U.S. troops in Iraq is impeding this
progress.
"Our troops have become the primary target of the insurgency. They are untied
against U.S. forces and we have become a catalyst for violence. U.S. troops are
the common enemy of the Sunnis, Saddamists and foreign jihadists. I believe
with a U.S. troop redeployment, the Iraq security forces will be incentivized
to take control. A poll recently conducted shows that over 80% of Iraqis are
strongly opposed to the presence of coalition troops, about 45% of the Iraqi
population believe attacks against American troops are justified. I believe we
need to turn Iraq over to the Iraqis. I believe before the Iraqi elections,
scheduled for mid December, the Iraqi people and the emerging government must
be put on notice that the United States will immediately redeploy. All of Iraq
must know that Iraq is free. Free from United Stated occupation. I believe this
will send a signal to the Sunnis to join the political process for the good of
a "free" Iraq.
"My plan calls:
To immediately redeploy U.S.
troops consistent with the safety of U.S. forces.
To create a quick reaction force
in the region.
To create an over-the-horizon
presence of Marines.
To diplomatically pursue security
and stability in Iraq.
"This war needs to be personalized. As I said before, I have visited with the
severely wounded of this war. They are suffering.
"Because we in Congress are charged with sending our sons and daughters into
battle, it is our responsibility, our obligation, to speak out for them. That's
why I am speaking out.
"Our military has done everything that has been asked of them, the U.S. can not
accomplish anything further in Iraq militarily. It is time to bring them home."
Enough said. Thank you Congressman John Murtha.
| Thursday, 17 November 2005 at 4h 31m 10s | Steven Jones, patriot | You need to go here and read about why Brigham Young physics professor
Steven Jones has a different opinion about why the buildings in New York City
fell on September 11th. Let's just say that I agree.
Also, in support of Steven Jones, go here , a response to a puerile popular mechanics article,
whose writers thought they had a clue merely because (on the 9th page)
they "consulted more than 300 experts and organizations in [this] investigation
into 9/11 conspiracy theories."
Well god damn Junior, seems like they must be legit since they got 300 idiots
out there who can't tell a fact from a press release.
Here's the link to the original popular mechanics article
of which I speak.
| Thursday, 17 November 2005 at 2h 57m 47s | A Funny book is on the market | Thanks to Bill in Portland, Maine on Daily Kos.
America (The Book) has won the Thurber Prize for outstanding
humor writing. From page 162-63: A Who's Who of Political Interviewers:
Tim Russert Holding your own against Russert is a political rite of
passage akin to the Masai teenage-warrior circumcision ritual and only slightly
easier on your penis. But tread carefully: It's early Sunday morning, and he
fact checks.
Chris Matthews Talk, talk, talk. Everywhere you go they expect you to
talk. Not on Hardball. Matthews will deliver the sound waves; all you need to
do is take a page from the guy sitting in the Maxell ad and hang on. As long
as you grunt or nod enough to uphold the minimum body language requirement of
the social contract you just bought yourself a half hour of free television
time. (Caution to asthmatics and those with heart conditions: Carbon dioxide
levels around Matthews can become dangerously high. In the event of a
diatribe, oxygen masks will drop from the ceiling. Help yourself, then help
the children.)
Bill O'Reilly This is the venue for those who could use an immediate
and certain judgment concerning their value as human beings. Are you a man
amongst men whose moral clarity and vision stand unsurpassed or a maggot
feeding upon the flesh of the dying? You will be told within the first minute
of the program. Do not question the judgment. Accept it, and make the
necessary changes.
| Thursday, 17 November 2005 at 1h 11m 44s | Remember Bernie Kerik |
Apparently he took payments from a construction company known to have
ties with
organized crime. Read on ....
Mind you this was the chief of New York Police during Guiliani's time as Mayor,
and was the chief during september 11th. Guiliani advised Bush to appoint
Kerik to be the first head of the Department of Homeland Security, praising him
as "one of the most capable law enforcement experts in the country." Kerik
withdrew when it was discovered that he was hiring an illegal nannie, and that
he oddly mismanaged a lot of funds in the early 90s. He hired known mafioso's
to refurnish his new 1998 apartment.
Uh, well now, only the absolute naive believes that is coincidental. The man
has a saucy history. You can read about it
here -- the source is a gossip column, but
nevertheless the New York magazine would not have printed lies.
So Guiliani's connection (that's who Kerik was by the way) with the mafia is
now on the hot seat? How soon
will "Rudy" Guiliani be seen too as just another corrupt thug with a fake
smile?
Please don mafioso, can I get to be Presidente someday?
That's right. You heard it hear from me first. I knew they were grooming
Bush in 1998. They are grooming Guiliani for 2008.
| Wednesday, 16 November 2005 at 4h 46m 11s | What will it take? | From the gnomic and irrefutable, professor Juan Cole. [SOURCE]
62 percent of Americans believe that Bush is handling Iraq poorly, and 57
percent of Americans say that the Bush administration does not have high
ethical standards.
It makes you wonder what it would take to convince the other 37 percent that
Iraq was going badly. Some 6 or 7 provinces, including that of the capital, are
the scenes of frequent violence, the economy is in shambles, militias have
infiltrated the police and army, looting and sabotage have undercut services
and oil production, thousands of people have died, and now the violence is
spreading to neighboring countries like Jordan. Is it that they do not know
what is going on, or that they are waiting for a civil war or genocide before
they entertain doubts?
Al-Sharq al-Awsat reports a wave of assassinations against prominent physicians
in Baghdad. Five of the most well known physicians in the capital have been
killed in the past few days. The campaign aims at forcing medical personnel to
emigrate. Nearly 3000 physicians have left the country, with 150 killed by
unidentified guerrillas. The Iraqi government has been powerless to stop it.
Indeed. I never thought I'd be alive to see this, the culmination of utter
stupidity blinded by an ideological disconnection with reality, but too damn
proud to be introspective, and thus unable to reassess one's own paradigm.
Ah ha, but watch the tv. The tv speaks the truth. The tv brings you close the
real thing.
| Wednesday, 16 November 2005 at 3h 37m 6s | Another reason why Limbaugh is a pig | Thanks to crooks and Liars [SOURCE 1] [SOURCE 2].
Have you seen this "Adopt a Soldier" program Rush has started? You would figure
that a program targeted for our troops would actually help them in some small
way. Maybe the money would go to some equipment, supplies or anything the
troops could actually use over in Iraq that will help them survive. Here's what
they get for 49.95:
"Support our men and women in uniform by giving a subscription to Rush 24/7 and
the Limbaugh Letter to a member of the US Armed Forces. He or she will receive
unfettered access to Rush 24/7 online as well as every big, colorful issue of
The Limbaugh Letter "
Rush is charging 49.95 for a solider to receive his radio broadcast and
newsletter.
According to the transcript of Rush making the announcement on his show, Rush
says:
I've got an idea for you liberals. Liberals are always out there saying
you "support the troops." Well, then adopt a soldier! Join the Adopt-a-Soldier
program at RushLimbaugh.com if you're a lib and you want to say you support the
troops. This is a great way to prove it.
" Liberals are all self-serving scum, manipulating their mass audience for
personal gain. They have no integrity."
So I suppose he'll castigate the donations organized by "liberals" that
sollicit funds so that urgent supplies get to the soldiers. But then, nothing
like a Limbaugh letter and free online access to Rush's online website to help
console our brave soldiers in Iraq, eh?
| Monday, 14 November 2005 at 20h 51m 9s | Manipulating Intelligence | Thanks to Kevin Drumm. [SOURCE]
MANIPULATING INTELLIGENCE....Did the Bush administration
mislead the country during the runup to the Iraq war? It's true that they
turned out to be wrong about a great many things, but that doesn't answer the
question. It merely begs it. Were they sincerely wrong, or did they
intentionally manipulate the intelligence they presented to the public in order
to mask known weaknesses in their case?
The case for manipulation is pretty strong. It relies on several things,
but I think the most important of them has been the discovery that the
administration deliberately suppressed dissenting views on some of the most
important pieces of evidence that they used to bolster their case for war. For
future reference, here's a list of five key dissents about administration
claims, all of which were circulated before the war but kept under wraps
until after the war:
The Claim: Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, an al-Qaeda prisoner
captured in 2001, was the source of intelligence that Saddam Hussein had
trained al-Qaeda members to use biological and chemical weapons. This
information was used extensively by Colin Powell in his February 2003 speech to
the UN.
What We Know Now: Al-Libi's information was obtained under torture.
Link. As
early as February 2002, the Defense Intelligence Agency circulated a report,
labeled DITSUM No. 044-02, saying that it was "likely this individual is
intentionally misleading the debriefers." Link.
This assessment was hidden from the public until after the war.
The Claim: An Iraqi defector codenamed "Curveball" was the
source of reporting that Saddam Hussein had built a fleet of mobile biowarfare
labs. Curveball's claims of mobile bio labs were repeated by many
administration figures during the runup to war.
What We Know Now: The only American agent to actually meet with
Curveball before the war warned that he appeared to be an alcoholic and was
unreliable. However, his superior in the CIA told him it was best to keep
quiet about this: "Let's keep in mind the fact that this war's going to happen
regardless of what Curveball said or didn't say, and the powers that be
probably aren't terribly interested in whether Curveball knows what he's
talking about." L
ink. This dissent was not made public until 2004, in a response to the SSCI report that was written by Senator
Dianne
Feinstein. Link.
The Claim: Iraq had purchased thousands of aluminum tubes to
act as centrifuges for the creation of bomb grade uranium. Dick Cheney said
they were "irrefutable evidence" of an Iraqi nuclear program and George Bush
cited them in his 2003 State of the Union address.
What We Know Now: Centrifuge experts at the Oak Ridge Office of the
Department of Energy had concluded long before the war that the tubes were
unsuitable for centrifuge work and were probably meant for use in artillery
rockets. The State Department concurred. Link.
Both of these
dissents were omitted from the CIA's declassified National Intelligence
Estimate, released on October 4, 2002. Link.
They were subsequently made public after the war, on July 18, 2003. Link.
The Claim: Saddam Hussein attempted to purchase uranium
yellowcake from Africa as part of his attempt to reconstitute his nuclear
program. President Bush cited this publicly in his 2003 State of the Union
address.
What We Know Now: The primary piece of evidence for this claim was a
document showing that Iraq had signed a contract to buy yellowcake from Niger.
However, the CIA specifically told the White House in October 2002 that
the "reporting was weak" and that they disagreed with the British about the
reliability of this intelligence. Link
. At the same time, the State Department wrote that the documents
were "completely implausible." Link.
Three months later, in January 2003, Alan Foley, head of the CIA's
counterproliferation effort, tried to persuade the White House not to include
the claim in the SOTU because the information wasn't solid enough, but was
overruled. Link.
Five weeks later, the documents were conclusively shown to be forgeries. Link. In July 2003, after the war had ended, CIA Director
George Tenet admitted
publicly that that the claim should never have been made. Link.
The Claim: Saddam Hussein was developing long range aerial
drones capable of attacking the continental United States with chemical or
biological weapons. President Bush made this claim in a speech in October 2002
and Colin Powell repeated it during his speech to the UN in February 2003.
What We Know Now: The Iraqi drones had nowhere near the range to
reach the United States, and Air Force experts also doubted that they were
designed to deliver WMD. However, their dissent was left out of the October
2002 NIE and wasn't made public until July 2003. Link.
This is not a comprehensive list ....
One final word on this: the issue here is not who was right and who was
wrong, or even whether the overall weight of the evidence was sufficient to
justify the war. It would have been perfectly reasonable for the White House
to present all the evidence pro and con and then use that evidence to make the
strongest possible case for war. But that's not what they did. Instead, they
suppressed any evidence that might have thrown doubt on their arguments, making
it impossible for the public to evaluate what they were saying. In fact, by
abusing the classification process to keep these dissents secret, they even
made it impossible for senators who knew
the truth to say anything about it in public.
This is not the way to market a war. It's certainly not the way to market a
war that requires long term support from citizens in a democracy. But that's
how they marketed it anyway.
| Sunday, 13 November 2005 at 0h 42m 15s | Lies and a shameful President | Bush's agenda is to destroy democracy in the
United
States, and
use the
backdrop of war to conceal his real motives. Remember now, he's a war
prezident who hit the "trifecta."
Bullshit.
There never was any WMD.
American troops have used weapons
of mass destruction called "White Phosphorus" and Napalm against the Iraqi
resistance. Do we go to war
against WMD, only to use it ourselves against the "enemy" that is supposed to
have WMD?
Saddam got his original chemical
weapons in the 1980's from United State defense contractors with the connivance
of the Reagan administration. Donald Rumsfeld himself made a trip over to see
Saddam in 1988 to conclude the deals.
President Bush used false evidence
about Saddam's nuclear capabilities, and mentioned Nigerian yellowcake
purchases that he knew was based on forged evidence. He sent then Secretary of
Defense Colin Powell to utter more lies to the United Nations about "mobile"
chemical trailers and aluminum tubes for centrifuges, that were known
falsehoods within the intelligence community. This is why Colin Powell
recently admittedly that his moment before the UN was most shameful experience
in his life. But that's what Bush does Colin you fool. He uses people and
then spits them out like an old beer can.
Ahmed Chalabi is a known liar, who
fled Jordan during the 1980's in the trunk of a car because he was defrauding
the Bank he was heading. He
was the head of a front organization in the United States during the 1990's
called the Iraqi National Congress which got federal funds in order to exist.
Yep, gotta fat 100,000 dollar salary from Uncle Sam so's he can make up shit
and pretend that he is a real rebel leader like Gandhi, Ho Chi Minh, or (even)
George Washington.
Chalabi's lies were used by the administration to justify the invasion of Iraq,
because he was originally supposed to be installed as the mafioso leader of a
newly reborn
Iraq, until he got caught funneling money to various political organzations and
had to flee to ... Iran. Meanwhile, ex-CIA point man Ilyad Allawi is now the
next installation of freedom. But fear not, Chalabi still flies back to the US
to meet with administration leaders so they can discuss his next assignment.
Excuse me ... Bush pulled out the inspectors 3 weeks before they were finished
and had a faked news conference in the Azore Islands declaring he was invading
anyway. He never went back to the UN after the results of the inspection like
Bush said he would do.
Bush is now currently lying about this, saying that Saddam never let the
inspectors in, or that he had no choice. He had a choice, and that choice was
always to invade Iraq no matter what. Stop "playing politics" and "re-writing
history" Mr. President.
The Bush administration refused to listen to the military planners and the
intelligence that wasn't doctored if it disagreed with Ahmed Chalabi's rosy
scenario's. No planning was ever done, and as a result the troops did not have
supplies and the proper organization to conduct a professional operation. But
hey, what's wrong with Halliburton contractors dispatching rotten food when
soldiers can eat some food the Italians shared with them and American
corporations can make billions of profits?
The military protected one agency building in Baghdad from looting. One and
only
one. The Ministry of Oil building. Looting occurred everywhere else,
including the Ministry of Nuclear Science and the Museum of Baghdad. Ammunition
dumps were left unguarded all the way up to Baghdad so the American cameras
could make up a news bit about Iraq being free in less than 3 weeks. All that
ammo eventually got filched and is now being used by the "insurgents." And hey
Wait just one minute, wasn't the war about "Saddam's Nuclear Arsenal" and the
military doesn't have a plan to guard the ministry of Nuclear Science or the
ammo dumps? Are they really this incompetent, or was this only the first
indication of what the real intentions were?
Keep in mind that the invading
troops were not provided with chemical weapons gear. If the administration
(especially Donald Rumsfeld) really believed that Saddam had WMD, wouldn't it
make sense to have the god damn gear -- just in case!!! Are they really this
incompetent, or was this yet another indication of what the real intentions
were?
Bush himself declared in his speech the night before the invasion :
And now I have a message for the Iraqi people. Do not destroy oil wells.
Yep, do not destroy oil wells was the message for the Iraqi
people. Sounds more like a threat. He could have said that America was not
invading Iraq, but was only intervening to establish a free society. He could
have reassured the Iraqi's that his intentions were good. But no. That's not
what he said is it?
Funny how Saddam's old torture
prison Abu Ghraib, is currently being used in similar ways. That's because
they invaded to take control, establish a front government and intall a secret
police network to kill political opponents and union leaders. That's what
happened in nearby Iran when the Shah was put up by and earlier gang of thugs
during the 60s and 70s, much like Saddam was also abetted during the 1980s. If
we were really trying to create democracy in the middle east -- rather than
rigged plebiscites called "elections" -- take a look around at the nearby
states. All of them are either dictatorships or royalist oligarchies. Why
would we enlist autocrats and dictators in the fight to install "freedom" in
the Middle East? Would bank robbers gladly work with the chief of police ,
unless the chief was on the take?
Instead of freedom however, the
Iraqi's get "shock
and awe" because apparently we have to kill and bomb them so that they can be
free.
Tax cuts for the wealthyduring time of war, when we have to borrow from the
Saudi's, Indians, and China with interest? Do you give a rich investor $100,000
so he can hire 9 men for $10,000 and keep $10,000 for himself, or do you just
give the whole 100,000 to the 10 men without the "benevolence" of the boss man
handing out the cash. But isn't it a big assumption that the boss man will
split the take 1 to 9? This is what the fools who hawk "trickle-down"
economics ignore -- that it is god damn wasteful because the rich just get
richer. Even if a few jobs do get created in the process, more jobs get created
when more people have more money because the economy is demand driven. Giving
fat cats and corporations extra cash so they can make more and sell more
completely obviates the reality that you can't sell more products to people who
have less money.
Massive corruption and incompetence in the contracting process. American
corporations are favored, friends of the lobbyist network get lucrative
contracts as "consultants", even though hiring Iraqi's would not only be
cheaper,
but also more effective -- especially when the unemployment rate in Iraq is
between 40 and 60 percent.
Why did Paul Bremer replace Jay
Garner during the first 4 months? Garner wanted to pull out as soon as
possible. Bremer went on to write the Iraqi constitution and build a
political base of repression, while overseeing 14 permanent bases on Iraqi
soil. Do you invade a country to make it a democracy, only to write the
constitution and then install 14 permanent bases?
If we really are fighting them
over there so they won't fight us here, who is they? Would they be the 100,000
Iraqi people who inadvertantly died? Should the non-terrorists respect the
United States when US forces completely destroy their country in the name of
defeating the terrorists?
If we are really fighting a war on
terror, then why did the administration destroy the very CIA operation that was
investigating the funding of the terrorist networks and nuclear proliferation?
This was the operation that involved Valerie Plame, in case you didn't know.
And the "terrorists" that attacked
on September 11th were all Saudi's or Egyptians with Saudi passports allowed
into the United States without any oversight. Then all the Saudi's were allowed
to leave without any interrogation by September 13th on planes. When the FBI
was investigating the "WAMY" charity network, the Bush administration stopped
the investigation because the bin laden family was involved. Brother Marvin
Bush was in charge of an obscure Security Consulting firm that handled the
security operations at the World Trade Center 6 months prior to 9-11. The same
company also handled the airport in NYC. Strange coincidence indeed. The
company was eventually bought out and dissolved by another firm in 2002.
My Conclusion: The terrorists are in the White House. The Bush gang has
been good
friends with the Saudi monarchy and the bin laden's since the 1950's. It's
called Real politik. Install dictators and monarchists to repress dissent over
the resource allocations, and use them as handlers for covert operations. For
instance : Why was the Pakistani minister of Intelligence operations wiring
money to Atta 2 days before September 11th ?
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