Saturday, March 15, 2014

Clinton's struggle


http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/mar/14/bill-clinton-struggled-address-islamic-extremism/

I know many will think I am either mentally insane, a fool, or have delusions of grandeur,,, but it really happened,, this is why the information,,, any information on Muslims extremists was very important back then, the 90's, we did not know a heck of a lot about them, not only politically , but information wise as well and deTocqueville spoke of them in the 1800 as well, and I just passed the information on to my friends in DC,, they were scrabbling for any information on Muslims, I did not have a lot but the book Democracy in America was a gem and it still is , deTocqueville wrote about many things,, he was very aware of his world.
See people do not understand,, Our gov't does not know everything,, they have to deal with lots that come up as we go along,,, Muslim Fundamentalism is something we never had to deal with before so we did not know much..You have to understand we are a very very very young country,,, only 400 years old,, look at china,, 5000 thousand,,years old and she kept records to prove it,,the Muslims are thousands of years old as well...WE are the new kid on the block..., ,, ..bjg.



Bill Clinton struggled to address Islamic extremism: documents

As President Clinton campaigned for re-election in 1996, his national security team worried about the political impact of another terrorist bombing against U.S. military forces after the lethal Khobar Towers attack in Saudi Arabia.
Newly released documents Friday showed that Will Wechsler, an aide to then-White House counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke, wrote a memo around July 1996 titled “Political Ramifications of a Third Bombing.”


“Losses from a series of terrorist attacks will begin to be considered politically unacceptable,” Mr. Wechsler wrote. “Political pressure will … sharply increase for the President to change policy and take ‘decisive” action’ … This pressure will need to be confronted by the President at the earliest stage of such a crisis. The least desirable reaction to a third bombing would be for the President to appear to waffle …”
The documents, released by the Clinton presidential library and the National Archives, show that Mr. Clinton’s team struggled with how to respond to the emerging threat of Islamist extremism in the years beforeOsama bin Laden and al Qaeda became known to Americans.
The June 25, 1996, Khobar Towers bombing destroyed a U.S. Air Forcebarracks outside Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, killing 19 servicemen and wounding nearly 400 others. A terrorist group known as Saudi Hezbollahwas blamed for the attack, but FBI and other U.S. officials later concluded that Iran’s Revolutionary Guard played a role in selecting the target and training the perpetrators.
Just months prior to the Khobar Towers bombing, in November 1995, a car bomb killed five U.S. military personnel in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. As the 1996 election approached, the Clinton White House worried about the political domestic impact of a potential “third bombing.”
Mr. Wechsler wrote that there would be political pressure on Mr. Clintoneither for “withdrawing [U.S. forces] from Saudi Arabia (as Reagan did in Lebanon) or taking unconsidered military action (as Carter did inIran).”
That was an apparent reference to President Carter’s ill-fated rescue attempt of the U.S. hostages in Iran in April 1980, a mission in which eight U.S. servicemen died when a helicopter and a military plane collided.
Mr. Wechsler advised Mr. Clarke: “The least desirable reaction to a third bombing would be for the President to appear to waffle, first deciding on what may be perceived as a ‘defensive’ posture (further enhancing security, sending anti-terrorism equipment, continuirig the investigations, etc.) then succumbing to political pressures to ‘do something,’ potentially making matters worse (moving ships into the Gulf without an explicit mission, striking ‘suspected’ terrorists and risking collateral civilian casualties, taking premature actions against Iran or Syria, etc.). Therefore, at the outset of such a crisis, the President should forcefully reject both alternatives. and reaffirm his commitment to a measured, consistent response.”
Mr. Wechsler added, “This course will undoubtedly come at a political cost, but so would the alternatives. The key, however, will be directing the President’s decision-making process away from minutia and toward confronting this issue at the earliest possible stage in the crisis, then ensuring that his decision becomes well understood.”
In another national-security memo, written on Sept. 4, 1996, White House counterterrorism aide Steven Simon posed questions for topClinton administration officials about a recent string of terrorist attacks around the globe carried out by what he called a “diverse range of actors.” He even raised the question of whether the terrorists were winning.
“What can be done to defeat or deter attacks by terrorists who are not driven by a political program, but are motivated by rage?” Mr. Simonasked.
He asked, “Is the offense winning, because the weapons available to it are becoming more potent, especially in terms of their capacity to inflict large numbers of casualties? Although chemical and biological weapons come immediately to mind, high energy chemical explosives, let alone fertilizer, can inflict appalling damage.”
The documents also show there was concern in the Clinton White House that then-Defense Secretary William Perry didn’t want to hold the leadership of U.S. Central Command accountable for inadequate security preparations prior to the Khobar Towers attack.
In a memo on Sept. 18, 1996, White House national security aide James Seaton wrote to fellow staffer Joe Sestak that Mr. Perry apparently didn’t see the need to discipline Gen. J. H. Binford Peay III, commander of U.S. Central Command, for “failures” in the chain of command.


Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/mar/14/bill-clinton-struggled-address-islamic-extremism/#ixzz2w47LOJKW
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MIND CONTROL EXCERPTS FROM


Thought Control
Norseen describes a technology that can literally control one’s thoughts. As he explains in the US News & World Report article, one could possibly even “…begin to manipulate what someone is thinking … before they know it.”22
Robert Duncan, a scientist who worked on projects for the Department of Defense and the CIA, likens this “thought filtering and suppression” capacity to the automated spell check in Microsoft Word, which corrects spelling errors as one types.23 According to Duncan, “…even new thoughts can be suppressed”; moreover, memories can be faded or erased.24
the highlight is mine,, and all of this I have experienced,,,, as I told many,,, no memory,,no crime..
we must build a firewall for the brain..

Why I think we have dumbed down

We have forgotten how to marry brain and hands,, we have forgotten how to make things from scratch.. Industrialization may be the/our downfall for many.

For the few it may be, like Gates, the door to great wealth.  Industry makes all we need and then some,,, We think we need it all, we have lived as large as the Romans and way beyond them and the machine is our slave...
We eat drink and be merry,,,  or tomorrow we all can die. Good consumers.
At the hands of our own success... nuke war,, better and bigger and  an easier way to control the masses in social engineering using mind control...were are we going?

What are we doing, our shortsightedness is going to kill us in the end, we refuse the Keystone pipeline,,,I hope,,,in a way I do not..slashing right through the country,,, refining tar sands a dirty oil,,, full of carbons and it will spew much into the atmosphere ,,like we can afford it,,,

I spoke with the truckers on the road,,, they do not want this oil,,it will gum up everything,,, the US will  sell it to China,, that might be a good thing,, the pollution over there, the destruction of their industry,,, ships , army trucks,, etc,, infrastructure, a economic war from within,,  all done with tarsands oil.  Well that is an interesting thought,,if we see China as the biggest threat in the future,, this will certainly halt some of the threat for a time...and we can get some of the money we paid them back.. One must think of this as a chess game.
Among nation states..
I am watching the" City of Life and Death" the rape of Nanking by the Japanese,ww2, good movie gritty.. to the point about the horrors of war. Nothing pretty about this movie it is indeed ugly.

 Life is more difficult than death.. A line from the movie. Good movie... hell on wheels,,telling it like it is for the people in it.