sure,there are links at bot not working found here
http://www.timboucher.com/journal/2009/06/26/michael-jackson-occult-paranormal-weird-posts/
--- In oneworldlove@yahoogroups.com, BETH <beth4freedom@...> wrote:
>
> May I send this to a friend?
>
> It is people with concern, not credentials who will change the world.    WAKAN TANKA WITH TIKKUN OLAM
> Box 94Â Â 2586 Commercial Drive Vancouver B.C. V5NÂ 4C2 Canada MITABUYE OYASIN =All My Relations
>
> --- On Wed, 7/15/09, mjb1905 mjb1905@... wrote:
>
> From: mjb1905 mjb1905@...
> Subject: [oneworldlove] Michael Jackson, Mind Control Victim?
> To: arubyrogers@yahoogroups.com, oneworldlove@yahoogroups.com, forum_for_disclosures@yahoogroups.com
> Received: Wednesday, July 15, 2009, 3:57 PM
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> by TMBCHR ?
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> Michael Jackson, Mind Control Victim?
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> Â
>
> While we're on the topic of magicians, I'd like to go back to this whole
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> thing about Michael Jackson having a 'personal magician'. I mean, I know
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> the dude is weird, but let’s just say that doesn’t
>
> necessarily justify having a person who travels around with you acting
>
> as your not tongue-in-cheek personal magician. I mean, this guy also
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> 'controls' interviews with Jackson and even speaks on his behalf
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> sometimes.
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> Â
>
> This character seems to go by the name of Majestic Magnificent, or
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> Majestik Magnificent with a 'k' at the end. and he's also been spotted
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> as 'Majestic the Magnificent. ' An article on the Austin Chronicle goes
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> into more investigative depth on the subject. No record seems to exist
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> of Majestic as a professional magician besides a mention in a blog in
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> 2003. Also that year, Majestic/k intervened during a BBC interview with
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> Jackson's dad:
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>
>
> Majestik then says he will cancel the interview if another question is
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> asked about Michael Jackson's nose.
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> Â
>
> Theroux asks Mr Jackson if he wishes his son had a partner.
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> Â
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> When he describes partner as 'boyfriend or girlfriend', Majestik says:
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> 'What are you trying to say, that Michael's gay?'
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> Â
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> Majestik says the question is disrespectful to Joe Jackson, who later
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> says 'we don't believe in gays. I can't stand them.' Mr Jackson then
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> calls an end to the interview.
>
> In another interview, Majestic/k says that before being Jackson's
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> personal magician, he was Muhammad Ali's. Supposedly Majestic/k has been
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> affiliated with Jackson since at least 1993.
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> Â
>
> And yet so little is known about him. It's extremely suspicious.
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> Â
>
> Also extraordinarily weird is that Majestic/k is reportedly part of the
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> reason that Jackson is now using Louis Farrakhan’s Nation of
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> Islam as personal bodyguards. I'll have to look into this more, but this
>
> site says both Majestic and the Nation were brought in by Jermaine
>
> Jackson. One of the first tidbits I found about this aspect of the story
>
> actually comes from a Saturday Night Live Weekend Update transcript:
>
>
>
> According to Magnificent Majestic, Michael Jackson's personal magician,
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> the purpose of Michael's recent meetings with the nation of Islam is to
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> insure that nobody is taking advantage of him financially. So
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> don’t worry everyone -
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> Â
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> Â Michael Jackson's personal magician is ensuring that nobody is
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> taking advantage of him financially.
>
> At first I just thought Jackson having a personal assistant was
>
> hilarious. Now I'm beginning to wonder if there's not more to it than
>
> meets the eye. Let's examine some more of the facts. First of all,
>
> Jackson is currently involved in an extremely public trial over child
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> sex abuse. Jackson has maintained his innocence throughout. Regular
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> readers of sites like Rigorous Intuition ought to be standing up and
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> taking notice at this point. The author of that site, Jeff Wells,
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> frequently delves into far out stories about ritual child abuse, and
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> also blackmailing powerful public figures by forcing them into
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> compromising situations.
>
> Â
>
> I know it's a pretty far-out leap for most 'normal' people, but could
>
> Majestic Magnificent be more than just a 'magician' -
>
> Â
>
> Â could he also be some sort of CIA Monarch mind-control handler for
>
> Jackson? Is there any possibility that Michael Jackson is actually a
>
> victim of or 'asset' of some occult-intelligence organization? I
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> personally have a hard time believing that Jackson is a pedophile
>
> Â
>
> Â (check out my archetypal analysis of him and his Peter Pan myth) -
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> Â
>
> although if he had alternate personalities covered by layers of trauma,
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> he might not even know about it himself. Or, conversely he might have
>
> figured it out, and trying to overcome it, and reclaim his lost
>
> innocence is what drove him into the whole Peter Pan fantasy to begin
>
> with. Maybe it's all an attempt by Jackson to reclaim his inner
>
> 'Paperboy'. I know I'm a bit of a weirdo, but for some reason, it's more
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> plausible to me that Jackson is a split-personality mind-control asset
>
> gone haywire than just a celebrity freak who likes to fool around with
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> little boys. Maybe that's just a more 'fun' and less creepy explanation
>
> though. Who knows.
>
> Anyway, the question of Jackson's involvement with the CIA was first
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> raised to me by Garrett. He tracked down a link to the CIA through
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> Jackson's close personal friend Uri Geller (who I have another story
>
> about in a minute).
>
> Â
>
> Â An article on the Scotsman explains a possible Geller-CIA link:
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>
>
> Ronson began his journey into the US armyâ€'s heart of cerebral
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> darkness in London, where he got a tip from Uri Geller - the psychic
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> famed for bending spoons on TV in the 1970s. 'Under Clinton, the
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> nuttiness was at the fringes but the dynamic changed when the Bushes got
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> into power and it felt like the nuttiness was now at the core of
>
> things,' Ronson tells me at his Soho club. 'So I started asking around
>
> and then I heard about remote viewers and psychic spies and, right here
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> on the roof terrace in this building, Uri Geller told me that he'd been
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> ËÅ"re-activated. '
>
> Â
>
> I ask why the US military might have brought Geller back in from the
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> cold. The simple answer is that Geller once belonged to an unofficial
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> unit of psychic spies, formed in the 1970s to read the future and
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> conduct experiments into the supernatural for the US military.
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> Geller’s tip led Ronson to Glenn Wheaton, a retired sergeant
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> and former Special Forces psychic spy who confirmed that the military
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> funded this unofficial unit. There was more to the psychics, however,
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> than trying to â€Å"remotely access� Soviet weapons plans or
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> predict China’s next move. They were looking at new forms of
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> warfare, including walking through walls, adopting a cloak of
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> invisibility, even stopping an animal’s heartbeat by staring
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> at it.
>
> The guy in this quote, Jon Ronson is the author of the new book, The Men
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> Who Stare At Goats which is making a bit of a splash among fringe
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> counter-cultural groups. Many other sources seem to connect Uri Geller
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> to working for both the CIA, FBI, KGB and Mossad at various points in
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> his career. Even a seemingly official site of his says:
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>
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> Mike worked out that Uri would very likely be happy to help out Uncle
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> Sam if Uncle Sam helped out Uri. And another thing; he may not have been
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> representing CIA policy exactly, but Mike was seriously interested in
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> the possibilities of psychic spying, and of Uri doing a little work from
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> the outside looking in at the KGB’s building in Mexico City. All
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> in all, he seems to have concluded, Uri Geller was a useful asset to the
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> CIA. Not only that, but Mike was fascinated by the fact that the Jimmy
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> Carter, who was due to move into the White House in January, appeared to
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> be a fan of the paranormal. Could Geller be used to eat away at those
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> surrounding Carter and help bring about funding for an official
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> paranormal programme at the CIA?
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> Interesting factoid: Michael Jackson’s 1995 album HIStory
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> included a song called â€Å"Tabloid Junkie� one of the opening
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> lines of which is:
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>
>
> Speculate to break the one you hate
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> Circulate the lie you confiscate
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> Assassinate and mutilate
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> As the hounding media in hysteria
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> Who’s the next for you to resurrect
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> Jfk exposed the cia
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> Truth be told the grassy knoll
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> As the blackmail story in all your glory
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> I know this doesn’t â€Å"prove� anything, but it seems
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> noteworthy that Jackson mentions exposing the CIA in a line on a popular
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> record. And shortly thereafter talks about blackmail. The weirdest part
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> is I didn’t even know this before I started writing this post.
>
> WHOA! This is even weirder. Apparently also on that album is a song
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> called â€Å"D.S.� the opening lyrics of which are:
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>
>
> They wanna get my ass
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> Dead or alive
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> You know he really tried to take me
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> Down by surprise
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> I bet he missioned with the CIA
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> He don’t do half what he say
>
> Don Standdon is a cold man
>
> Don Standdon is a cold man
>
> Don Standdon is a cold man
>
> Don Standdon is a cold man
>
> There is also a theory circulating online about this song - that
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> it’s actually about a District Attorney from Santa Barbara county
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> named Thomas Sneddon. This article claims that the Don Standdon
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> mentioned above is actually â€Å"Dom S. Sheldon� which when
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> sung sounds like â€Å"ThomaS Sneddon�. Apparently Sneddon has
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> been trying to build a case against Jackson since the 1990’s.
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> Other lyrics sites online also confirm the â€Å"Dom Sheldon�
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> interpretation, and some even say outright â€Å"Tom Sneddon.�
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> I’m also curious about this later line in the song:
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>
>
> Does he send letters to the FBI?
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> Did he say to either do it or die?
>
> Was Sneddon trying to blackmail Jackson with the child abuse stuff, and
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> then Jackson didn’t go for it, so Sneddon launched his trap? To
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> me, the picture looks more and more like Jackson began trying to
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> â€Å"out� CIA agents in this album. Whether it was real or
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> imagined, it’s an extremely creepy connection worth investigating
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> more. I don’t actually have or know that album much at all. But
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> if anybody could offer a more detailed reading of it with this theory in
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> mind, I’d love to read it. Majestic Magnificent seems to have
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> come on the seen shortly before Jackson released this album. Was he a
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> last ditch effort by the CIA to send somebody in to reign Jackson in
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> again to their control? Maybe that’s a flawed direction of
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> research - especially in light of the information about the Nation of
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> Islam acting as bodyguards for Jackson. Why would Jackson hire basically
>
> an ideological para-military force for protection? Who’s he
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> afraid of? This shit just gets
>
> deeper and deeper.
>
> UPDATE!
>
> Thanks to some responses to a posting I did about this on the Rigorous
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> Intuition Forum, I tracked down a very very interesting connection. Let
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> me give you a little background information first before we go on. After
>
> 9/11, there was a benefit concert somewhere near Washington, which
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> Michael Jackson was invited to play. An LA Times article explains that
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> Jackson was looking for a place to stay during this time period:
>
>
>
> Jackson’s visit came about as a result of a call from â€Å"a
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> friend from the White House,� Coe said. The call came from David
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> Kuo, deputy director of the Office of Faith-Based Initiatives, who
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> helped put together the United We Stand concert. When Kuo learned that
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> Jackson needed a place to stay, he thought of Cedars.
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> â€Å"It’s a private unknown place that offers anonymity in a
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> peaceful environment,� he said. â€Å"Part of the whole
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> Fellowship belief is you can help people who are down and out by helping
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> people who are up and out.�
>
> The place they are referring to is called Cedars. It is the headquarters
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> of a behind-the-scenes Christian Reconstructionist group called the
>
> Fellowship, also known as the International Foundation. Wayne
>
> Madsen’s article, Christian Mafia Part II has more about the
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> Fellowship and their dealings. But let’s look first at what they
>
> say about this place called Cedars. First and foremost we have this
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> absolutely juicy tidbit:
>
>
>
> According to a senior Pentagon official, the Cedars had been used as a
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> CIA safe house prior to the Fellowship’s purchase of the
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> estate.
>
> Now, I don’t know how the CIA works, but I do know that
>
> expression: â€Å"Once a company man, always a company man,�
>
> and I suspect the same goes for their locations, though they get
>
> shuffled around through various front groups. A simple real life
>
> example: a friend of mine used to be a minor player in the Miami club
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> scene some years back. He helped run various venues, and worked behind
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> the scenes as a promoter. He told me stories about what happens to clubs
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> where bad shit goes down - like a shooting or other high profile crime.
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> Everybody gets freaked out and stops going there. So the clubs close
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> down. The real owners go through all the paper-work to sell the club,
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> put it under â€Å"new� ownership and management and then
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> re-open it. But it’s all just sleight-of-hand. No real change has
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> been made except in public perception - the only kind of change that
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> actually seems to matter.
>
> Another article has some interesting information about the
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> Fellowship’s other activities:
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>
>
> The Fellowship (Getter’s preferred label for the group) also
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> has brought several notorious, right-wing Latin American generals to
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> Washington for prayer meetings � men connected to the
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> torture of civilians and CIA-linked death squads.
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> Well, as long as they’re only praying, right? Whew! What a
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> relief!
>
>
>
> Getter quotes the group’s long-time leader, Doug Coe, 73, as
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> saying that its mission is to establish a â€Å"family of
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> friends� around the world by spreading the word of Jesus to
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> powerful people: â€Å"The people that are involved in this
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> association . . . are the worst and the best. Some are total despots.
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> Some are totally religious. You can find what you want to find.�
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> And a supporting quote from the LA Times article:
>
>
>
> Coe said the group’s mission is to create a worldwide
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> â€Å"family of friends� by spreading the words of Jesus to
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> those in power. He believes that people of every
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> religionâ€"including Muslims, Jews and Hindusâ€"are swayed by
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> Jesus. If he can change leaders’ hearts, he said, then the
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> benefits will flow naturally to the oppressed and underprivileged.
>
> So, was Michael Jackson’s stay with this group â€Å"purely a
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> matter of convenience� or was there more going on here? Just who
>
> was that guy who invited Michael to stay there again? The Madsen article
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> explains:
>
>
>
> According to a September 27, 2002 Los Angeles Times article by Lisa
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> Getter, Jackson’s stay at the Cedars was arranged through
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> David Kuo, George W. Bush’s White House director of the
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> Office of Faith-based Initiatives. Kuo, a former CIA employee who
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> co-wrote a book with Ralph Reed, had been Executive Director of the
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> Center for Effective Compassion, founded in 1995 by Arianna Huffington
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> and Marvin Olasky. Olasky is a Jewish convert to evangelical
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> Christianity, a major Christian reconstructionist proponent, and an
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> ardent supporter of George W. Bush. Kuo also previously worked for the
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> Christian Coalition and Senator John Ashcroft.
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> And there we have it. We started out with magicians and end up with
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> plans by Christians to institute theocracy in America. Just what are
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> Jackson’s religious views, I’m trying to figure out.
>
> I’ve heard he’s a Jehovah’s witness, but I also
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> just read he denounced his faith in 1987. Here’s a more elaborate
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> article on whether or not he still is one. I guess I’m just
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> wondering what he’s doing staying with Christian
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> Reconstructionists one day, and cozying up to the Nation of Islam the
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> next. This just gets deeper and deeper still…
>
> ALSO check out my follow-up article to this, The Pied Piper of
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> Neverland!
>
> - END -
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>
>
> ASSOCIATED CONTENT @TMBCHR (Auto-Generated)
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>
>
> Michael Jackson Occult Paranormal Weird Posts
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> Michael Jackson’s Magician
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> Jackson’s Bloodbath
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> Notes: Romance Regenerates
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> Magician Helps Golfer Win
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