UNSCAM, Video, Cdn. Terrorists PDF, MSM-LPO, Camp Gagetown: Canada's Dirty Little Secret
The Naming of Names
Oil for Food: The List Goes On Claudia Rosett, National Review Online, May 13, 05 -- or here
[. . . . ] According to the report, the list of terrorists named by these Iraqi officials as engaging in this quid pro quo includes βthe Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Abu Abbas, and the Mujahedeen-e Khalq.β
[. . . . ] The regime steered a massive portion of its allocations toward Security Council members that were believed by the Hussein regime to support Iraq in its efforts to lift sanctions β namely, Russia, France, and China.β
Link for names of individuals.
New Survey Finds Huge Gap Between Press and Public on Many Issues Joe Strupp, May 15, 2005
NEW YORK A survey to be released Monday reveals a wide gap on many media issues between a group of journalists and the general public.
[. . . . ] Six in ten among the public feel the media show bias in reporting the news, and 22% say the government should be allowed to censor the press.
[. . . . ] Perhaps the widest gap of all: 8 in 10 journalists said they read blogs, while less than 1 in 10 others do so.
Government already censors the news by subtle but effective purse string methods; Canada is ahead of the US in this area, possibly.
Video: Teach Kids Peace -- Don't miss.
Suspected Canadian Terrorists Aroad -- Download the .pdf
Canada's dirty secret -- Government admits hand in veteran's Agent Orange death May 15, 2005, Greg Weston, Calgary Sun
KINGSTON, Ont. -- Forty years after the American military was allowed to test-bomb a New Brunswick army base with deadly "Agent Orange" herbicide, the Canadian government is finally admitting that veterans are dying as a result of being poisoned.
The Department of National Defence has confirmed that in 1966, U.S. forces doused forested areas of the Gagetown base with the infamous chemical defoliant, testing it for clearing jungle during the Vietnam War.
Since then, Agent Orange has been linked to a horrifying array of cancers, diabetes, respiratory diseases and blindness among U.S. veterans -- not to mention two generations of sick Vietnamese -- and even birth defects in children of vets. [. . . . ]
In a landmark decision, the Department of Veterans Affairs has ruled Sellar's cancer was caused by his exposure to Agent Orange. "The department is aware that Agent Orange was used as a herbicide for defoliation on the training grounds of CFB Gagetown," the confidential memorandum states.
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