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			145 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			2420 lines
		
	
	
		
			145 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
THE EDUCATION OF
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ACONSERVATIVE
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RmiOP.OilVtR
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ABOUT T H E AUTHOR: Dr. Revllo
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Pendleton Oliver, Professor of the Classics
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at the University of Illinois for 32 years, is a
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scholar of International distinction who has
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written articles In four languages for the
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most prestlgous academic publications in
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the United States and Europe.
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During World War 11, Dr. Oliver was
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Director of Research In a highly secret agen
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cy of the War Department, and was cited for
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outstanding service to his country.
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One of the very few academicians who
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has been outspoken In his opposition to the
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progressive defacement of our oivillzation.
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Dr. Oliver has long insisted that the fate of
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his countrymen hangs on their willingness
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to subordinate their doctrinal differences to
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the tough but idealistic solidarity which Is
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the prerequisite of a Majority resurgence.
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SOME QUOTABLE QUOTES FROM
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AMERICA'S DECLINE:
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On the 18th A m e n d m e n t (Prohibition): "Very few Americans, were sufficiently
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sane to perceive that they had repudiated the American conception of government
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and had replaced'lt with the legal principle of the 'dictatorship of the proletariat,'
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which was the"theoretical Justification of the Jews' revolution in Russia."
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On Race: "We must further understand that all races naturally regard themselves
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as superior to ail others. We think Congolds unintelligent, but they feel only con
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tempt for a race so stupid or craven that it fawns on them, gives them votes, lavish
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ly subsidizes them with its own earnings, and even oppresses Its own people to
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curry their favor. W e are a race as are the others. If we attribute to Ourselves a s u 
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periority. Intellectual, moral, or other. In terms of our own standards, we are s i m p 
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ly Indulging in a tautology. The only objective criterion of superiority, a m o n g h u m a n
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races as a m o n g all other species. Is biological; the strong survive, the weak perish.
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The superior race of mankind today is the one that will emerge victorious-whether
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by its technology or Its f e c u n d l t y - f r o m the pro){|mate struggle for life on an over
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crowded planet."
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AMERICA'S DECLINE
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Order No. 1007-$a.50 376 pp., pb.
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pius$1.60 for postage and handling. ORDER FROIM:
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LIBERTY BELL PUBLICATIONS, Box 21, Reedy WV 25270 USA
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Liberty Bell
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ISSN: 0145 -7667 SINGT.K COPY $5.(M)
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Heretical Verities
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Mathemalical Themes in Physical Description
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Reviewed by
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Professor Ben KTiegh
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page 33
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ALSO IN THIS ISSUE:
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Professor R.P. Oliver
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POSTSCRIPTS:
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KILLING KENNEDY
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page 1
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"The Mountain Has Fallen..."
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hy Winston Smith
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Page 45
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Letters to the Editor
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page 47.
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VOL. 20 - NO. 2 OCTOBER 1992
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Voice Of Thinking Americans
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LIBERTY BELL
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The magazine for Thinking Americans, has been published monthly since
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September 1973 by Liberty Bell Publications. Editorial office: P.O. Box 21 Reedy
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WV 25270 USA. Phone: 304-927-4486.
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Manuscripts conforming to our editorial policy are always welcome and may
 | 
						||
be submitted on IBM-, Apple //e-, or Apple/Madntosh-compatible diskette, or in
 | 
						||
double-spaced, neatly typed format. Manuscripts can not be returned unless
 | 
						||
accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelope. Manuscripts accepted for
 | 
						||
publication become the property of Liberty Bell Publications.
 | 
						||
© Copyright 1991
 | 
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by Liberty Bell Publications.
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Pennission granted to quote in whole or part any article except those subject to
 | 
						||
author's copyright. Proper source, address and subscription Intormation must be
 | 
						||
given.
 | 
						||
ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
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						||
SAMPLE COPY $ 5 00
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						||
THIRD CLASS-BULK RATE-USA only ' $ 4 o ' o o
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FIRST CLASS-USA $50'oo
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FIRST CLASS-all other countries lL.!l!".'.$6o!oo
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AIR MAIL-Europe, South America .!!$70.00
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Middle East, Far East, South Africa $75.00
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Sample Copy $ 6.50
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BULK COPIES FOR DISTRIBUTION:
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						||
10 copies $ 22.00
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50 copies ; $ 90.00
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100 copies $150.00
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500 copies $600.00
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1000 copies '. $900.00
 | 
						||
FREEDOM OF SPEECH — FREEDOM OF THOUGHT
 | 
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FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
 | 
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The editor/publisher of Liberty Bell (ioe$ not necessarily agree with each and
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every article in this magazine, nor does he subscribe to all conclusions arrived at
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by various writers; however, he does endeavor to permit the exposure of ideas
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suppressed by the controlled news media of this country.
 | 
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It is, therefore, in the best tradition of America and of free men everywhere
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that Liberty Bell strives to give free reign to ideas, for ultimately it is ideas which
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rule the world and determine both the content and structure of our Western
 | 
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culture.
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We believe that we can and will change our society for the better. We
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declare our long-held view that no institution or governnient created by men, for
 | 
						||
men, is inviolable, incorruptible, and not subject to evolution, change, or replace
 | 
						||
ment by the will of an informed people.
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To this we dedicate our lives and our work. No effort will be spared and no
 | 
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idea will be allowed to go unexpressed if we think it will benefit the Thinking
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People, not only of America, but the entire world.
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George P. Dietz, Editor & Publisher
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KILLING KENNEDY
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Given the interest that readers of Liberty BellhzYC expressed in my
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article in the July issue, pp. 1-12, I now reluctantly return to the
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hackneyed subject of the assassination of Jackanapes Kennedy in
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Dallas on 22 November 1963, to clarify two points that I mentioned
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obiter in July.
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I
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M y article dealt with the T^merican Medical Association, which
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had mobilized two squads of tame physicians to discredit the widely
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shown cinema "J.F.K." and an almost concurrently published book by
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one of the physicians who had been on duty in the Parkland Hospital
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in Dallas when Kennedy s body was brought into the hospital. It was
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a desperate attempt to cover up the patent absurdity of the report on
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the assassination that had been contrived by a commission over which
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presided Earl Warren, one of the participants in the conspiracy that
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						||
had expunged a President who had become a political liability.
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The book in question is JFK: Conspiracy of Silence, by Dr, Charles
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A . Crenshaw, assisted by Jens K. Hansen, a professional writer and
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Vice Chairman of a Research Foundation, and J. Gary Shaw, the
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director of the J F K Assassination Information Center in Dallas,
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published in N e w York by the New American Library (a subsidiary of
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Penguin Books) in April 1992.
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T h e core of the book is the personal observations of D r .
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Crenshaw, then a man of thirty, who, although subject to his seniors,
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could be described, by analogy to military practice, as the executive
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officer of the hospital, since he was in charge of interns (among whom,
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by the way, his insistence on absolute accuracy gained him a reputation as
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a martinet) and of the treatment of persons critically injured in accidents
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or by gunfire. H e was on duty when the bodies of Kennedy and of
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Oswald, the supposed assassin, were brought to the Parkland Hospital
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and he witnessed everything that was done medically while the bodies
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Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 1
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were in the hospital, participating himself in much of the work. H i s
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account is printed in a distinguishing typeface (Helvetica).
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M r . Shaw supplied, from the data accumulated in the
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Assassination Information Center over a period of twenty-seven
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years, the information concerning events o f which D r . Crenshaw
 | 
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had no personal knowledge, which are succinctly summarized in
 | 
						||
strict chronological order and limited to essentials.' M r . Hansen's
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						||
contribution, I suppose, was stylistic, so I think h i m responsible for
 | 
						||
the passages in which the writing descends to crude journalese.
 | 
						||
The book cannot in any sense be regarded as inspired by the "right
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wing." D r . Crenshaw, who is now Clinical Professor o f Surgery at the
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University of Texas's Southwestern Medical School and Director of
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						||
the Department of Surgery in the affiliated Smith Hospital in Fort
 | 
						||
Worth, is undoubtedly a highly skilled physician and surgeon, but his
 | 
						||
political naivet^ is astonishing, almost astounding, when one
 | 
						||
remembers that he, by the time that Oswald was dead, was i n a
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						||
position to knowxhax. the assassination of Kennedy had been contrived
 | 
						||
by some part of the government in Washington. Nevertheless, even
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today, he denounces "extreme [!] political factions, like the John Birch
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Society," and reports that, on the morning of 22 November he was
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1. He, for example, does not mention the reports that the corpse, pre
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sumably Kennedy's, was taken to the Walter Eeed Hospital i n Wash
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ington before it was transferred to the naval hospital i n Bethesda.
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						||
There had obviously been hanky-panky after the corpse left Dallas, i f
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its condition when it reached the hospital in Bethesda was truthfully
 | 
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reported, and it does not really matter where the mischief was done.
 | 
						||
Nothing categorically excludes a possible substitution of cadavers, but
 | 
						||
an attempt to patch up the corpse to conceal vital evidence is much
 | 
						||
more likely. A t Bethesda the physicians who conducted a rather per
 | 
						||
functory autopsy found the entry wound of a bullet i n Kennedy's back,
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thus ostensibly showing that he had been shot from the rear—but by a
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bullet from a comparatively low-powered gun, since there was no corre
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sponding exit wound i n his chest—unless, of course, the enchanted bul
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let climbed up and exited from his throat, where the entry wound ob
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						||
served i n Dallas had been enlarged to make it appear an exit wound.
 | 
						||
Kennedy's back had not been inspected i n Dallas, since, i n the absence
 | 
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of bleeding and an exit wound i n the chest, there was no reason to
 | 
						||
suppose there was a wound there. M r . Shaw does not speculate about
 | 
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the possibility that the wound i n the back was added when the cadaver
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was worked over i n Washington to provide some indication that Ken
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nedy had been shot from the rear by that poor, lorn critter, Oswald, as
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the official cover-up required.
 | 
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2 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
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(and presumably still is) shocked by a full-page article in a newspaper
 | 
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that "viciously attacked the integrity of President Kennedy" and
 | 
						||
described h i m as a Communist and traitor. Unless he is referring to
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						||
some handbill or fugitive publication that has not come to m y
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attention, he must have in mind the full-page paid advertisement that
 | 
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appeared that morning in the Dallas Morning News and occupied page
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14 of the first.section, an advertisement of which a drastically reduced
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photograph appears on an adjacent page herewith. T h e big
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advertisement did not expHcidy make the charges remembered by D r .
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Crenshaw, but implied them in a series of questions which are here
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reprinted on pages 5 and 6.
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Evidendy M r . Shaw neglected to tell D r . Crenshaw that, although
 | 
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the advertisement, which was entirely correct in its implication, was
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paid for by patriotic Americans In Dallas, that was done on the
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initiative o f an ambiguous Individual who Is suspected of having been
 | 
						||
an agent provocateur. It would thus have been a preparation for an
 | 
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assassination that could be blamed on patriotic Americans, as was
 | 
						||
obviously part of the original plan.
 | 
						||
D r . Crenshaw thinks that Kennedy was so generally disliked i n
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Dallas because he "came across [I.e., was regarded] as royalty with his
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money, his llfest)'le, his family, and his charisma." H e does not even
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guess why Dallas was selected as the site for the assassination, and he
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thinks Kennedy could have been assassinated just as well In Chicago or
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anywhere else.
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That so Intelligent a man as D r . Crenshaw could believe all that
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even today Is an emphatic lesson for everyone who still hopes to break
 | 
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somehow the stupor o f the A m e r i c a n populace as Jt is herded to
 | 
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the precipice over w h i c h nations and races disappear from
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history.
 | 
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D r . Crenshaw is on solid ground when he explains, on the basis of
 | 
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his own knowledge, why he and the other medical men who knew
 | 
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what had happened at Parkland Hospital so long condoned by their
 | 
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silence the lies that were imposed on the public. A physician Is
 | 
						||
particularly dependent on his reputation for survival in a highly
 | 
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competitive profession, and had he or any other physician disclosed
 | 
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what he knew about the assassination, he would have been deluged i n
 | 
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slime from the Jews' llepapers and boob-tubes, excommunicated from
 | 
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Liberty Belli October 1992 — 3
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WELCOME MR. KENNEDY
 | 
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TO DALLAS.,.
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. . . A C ! f ^ , " 7 I 7 . ; , j I , < I I " " ' >"<>• >">rnpf iV.rir, tilti.M V.M i-il A e l . J I - * C*-iifT.ll.. *jj^<;ti^ it ^.Wk . I f A .
 | 
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. . . A C I T Y lui u.t...*k - - . t i M t hirttU'i^t^u it.,.^v „ M » * . i . - j k t ; . . . . p . « i u . i ,
 | 
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. . . A C I T Y I . p . „ p , . v „ p n , V , , . i . . J . ; - . M t ' , i « I. ^ . . r « . n U i i t " H i . F . w i i n ^ "
 | 
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. . . A CITY w , u . „ ^ , ..J 1.1,„ . . J I , „ i , n _ . . — , „ ^ „ ^ . , , ,1,,
 | 
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MR. KENNEDY, J . l p l l . " n l . i i l i o n i o n t h . p.rio(your.dmWil..lion, Ih. S I . U D . p . H m . n l . l l . Mlyor
 | 
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of Q i l l . l , tht D I I I M City C o u n t i l . . n d m . m b . r l o( yout p . t l y . w . ( . . . . I h i o l m , . n J A m . l l c J - l K W i n , c l l l i . u o l D . l l . l
 | 
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ilill h * v i , IhiDugK * C o n i f l i u l i o n largely I g n o i . d by you. [ U f i g M lo * d d r * l i ow gfi»v*nc«l. )o q u t i l l o h you, lo d i l 
 | 
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* g r * i wUh you. *nd (o crilicii* you.
 | 
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In *»»f)!iig iKil c o n i l l l u i l o n u l n g d l . wlih to a l l y o u publicly l U following q u e i i l o i . i - i n d t . t f , i^untioiK of p » f * m o u n f
 | 
						||
I m p o r l i n c . . n J I n l . r . i l l o all l i . t p . o p l a l . . . r y w b . l . - w l i l c h w . Iluvl you v i l U n l w . r . . .'lo public, w l l h o u l l o p h l l l t y .
 | 
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TTi«J« qutvtlom * r » :
 | 
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WHY i t furnlnq tHhar i n l i . A m e r l c a n or C o m m u n i l l l c , of b o l h . d e i p l i a incf »Al«d U.S. for.Ign *Id, S U I «
 | 
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LUJJ. D i p a r l m s n l policy, a n / y o u r own I v y J o w e r pfonouncamanft?
 | 
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WU\I do y o u i . y w . h a , , bulll a "wall of f f o . d o m " a i o u n d C u b a w l i . n l U r . i l no f r a . d o m In C u b a l o d a y ? Bacaula
 | 
						||
° ' policy, Ihoulandi of C o b a n i fiave baan impilioned, ara ilarving and baing pafiacuiad—wlffi ffioutandj
 | 
						||
alfaady m u f d e r e d .and Ihouvandl m o i a aw,»HIng a,«culIon a n d . In addition. Iha ant'„a population of a l m o l l 7,W»,000
 | 
						||
C u b a n l at* living In llai-ary.
 | 
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WHY ' " M * P P ' < " " ' "•'•"I «nJ corn l o our anemlai v h . n you Inow lha C o m m u n l l l
 | 
						||
. l l i ' - L loldiari "Iravtl on Ihalr l l o m a c l i i " (uil ai ouM do7 Communlil loldlari ara dally wounding and/or llinng
 | 
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A m t i l c a n l o l d l a r l In Soulk Ylaf N a m , 1 1 1
 | 
						||
WUV did y o u h o i l , l a l u l a and a n U r l a I n Tito - M o l c o w ' i Tioian H o i i a - l u l l a i k o i l lima a f l a r o u f ' i w o r n
 | 
						||
- ' ' ' anemy, Kkrujlicliav, embraced lha Yugoilav diclalor at a great kafo and leader of Commonlim?
 | 
						||
WHY " • " ' " r f . / a c o g n l l l o n and u n d . r . l a n d i n g for Y u g o l l a v i a , Poland, Hungary, a n d
 | 
						||
WHY ':""''»'''' "=V'" °"' °' ''' P TM ' " * " ' " ' V « ° *^«!on Dollar, of aid Into If, ultra
 | 
						||
' " ' lalfitl govarnmenf?
 | 
						||
WHY a " '^•I' °' 'V . f ' f l y Pfal<ed almoit avary ona of your J.i.ilcla, and announced that
 | 
						||
i U J J . Ike parly will andoila and lupporl your ra-alccllon in H M ? 1 1 r
 | 
						||
WHY ! ! . " * ^""".i "-^^ "^""f ' i l ' " " O p e r a t i o n A b o l I t i o n " - t k . m o v l . b y H i . H o u i .
 | 
						||
i U J J . Commillee on Un-Amarican A c l i . i l l e l e.pollng Communilm in AmeileaJ
 | 
						||
WHY \""y"' " P " " ' I I I « ' y ° " r b r o l k . r Bobby, tka A l l o r n e y General, lo go l o f l on C o m m u n l i l i , fellow.
 | 
						||
>'ll'' L" "''<'' p a " " : i l l " 9 (•Im lo p e r i a c u l . l o y . l A m e r i c a n , » k o c r i l i c i . . you,your
 | 
						||
admimitration, and your laadenklp? , j ' ^ ^ f i T " *
 | 
						||
WHY •"*.''°."'"JT v",* "nT''^ ^ ' s ' " " " ' . ' P i l ' ° f iHal fact liiat Arg.nlina k a ,
 | 
						||
J l L L L i fi,t laiiad almoit « 0 Million Dollar! of American private properly?
 | 
						||
w.,
 | 
						||
h"*- '^Si^fP'^' " °' " " " ^ ' ' l " « • D E M A N D aniwer, to tkaie gueitloni, and w , want
 | 
						||
th«m N O W .
 | 
						||
THE A M E R I C A N F A C T - F I N D I N G COMMITTEE
 | 
						||
" ^ n U B o f f l l l o l e d o n J n o n - p o r - l i l b n j r o u p of c i l i r a n i wlio wllfi f r u f k "
 | 
						||
BERNARD WEISSMAN,
 | 
						||
Ckalrman
 | 
						||
• P.O. Bot l ; 9 2 - D a l l a i 21, T a . a , ,
 | 
						||
lave you i c r a p p e d Ike M o n r o e Doelrlne In favor of tke "Splr'it of M o l c o w " ?
 | 
						||
4 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
M R . K E N N E D Y , despite the contentions on the part of your
 | 
						||
adminstration, the State Department, the Mayor of Dallas, the Dallas
 | 
						||
City Council, and members of your party, we free-thinking and
 | 
						||
American-thinking citizens of Dallas still have, through a Constitution
 | 
						||
largely ignored by you, the right to address our grievances, to
 | 
						||
question you, to disagree with you, and to criticize you.
 | 
						||
In asserting this constitutional right, we wish to ask you
 | 
						||
publicly the following questions—indeed, questions of paramount
 | 
						||
importance and interest to all free people everywhere—which we
 | 
						||
trust you will answer...in public, without sophistry. These questions
 | 
						||
are:
 | 
						||
\AAHV ^^^''^ America turning either anti-American or
 | 
						||
VV n Y Communistic, or both, despite increased U . S . for
 | 
						||
eign aid. State Department policy, and your own Ivy-Tower pro
 | 
						||
nouncements?
 | 
						||
\AAI-4V ^^y^ ^® ^ave built a "wall of f r e e d o m "
 | 
						||
VV n Y around C u b a when there is no freedom in C u b a
 | 
						||
today? Because of your policy, thousands of Cubans have
 | 
						||
been imprisoned, are starving and being persecuted—with
 | 
						||
thousands already murdered and thousands more awaiting exe
 | 
						||
cution and, in addition, the entire population of almost
 | 
						||
7,000,000 C u b a n s are living in slavery.
 | 
						||
\ A / U V ^^^^ y^*^ approved the sale of wheat and corn to
 | 
						||
VV r l Y our enemies when you know the Communist sol
 | 
						||
diers "travel on their stomachs" just as ours do? Communist
 | 
						||
soldiers are daily wounding and/or killing American soldiers in
 | 
						||
South Vietnam.
 | 
						||
\AAHV '^^^ y^*^ ^^'"^'^ ^"^^ entertain Tito—Moscow's
 | 
						||
VV M Y Trojan Horse—just a short time after our sworn
 | 
						||
enemy, Khrushchev, embraced the Yugoslav dictator as a great
 | 
						||
hero and leader of C o m m u n i s m ?
 | 
						||
\ A / H V ^^"^^ urged greater aid, comfort, recognition,
 | 
						||
" " r l Y and understanding for Yugoslavia, Poland, Hung
 | 
						||
ary, and other Communist countries, while turning your back on
 | 
						||
the pleas of Hungarians, East German, Cuban and other anti
 | 
						||
Communist freedom fighters?
 | 
						||
Liberty Belli October 1992 — 5'
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
\A/L_|Y ^'^ Cambodia kick the U.S. out of its country after
 | 
						||
' ' we poured nearly 400 Million Dollars of aid into its
 | 
						||
ultra-leftist government?
 | 
						||
U V A L j Y has Gus Hall, head of the U.S. Communist Party,
 | 
						||
' ' praised almost every one of your policies and an
 | 
						||
nounced that the party will endorse and support your re-election
 | 
						||
in 1964?
 | 
						||
W H Y ^ ^ ^ ^ banned the showing at U.S. military
 | 
						||
bases of the film "Operation Abolition"—the movie
 | 
						||
by the House Committee on Un-American Activities exposing
 | 
						||
Communism in America?
 | 
						||
\ A / L _ | Y ^^^^ ordered or permitted your brother Bobby,
 | 
						||
' ' ' the Attorney General, to go soft on Communists,
 | 
						||
fellow-travelers, and ultra-leftists in America, while permitting
 | 
						||
him to persecute loyal Americans who criticize you, your admin
 | 
						||
istration, and your leadership?
 | 
						||
W H Y ^'^^ '"^ °^ continuing to give eco
 | 
						||
* ' ' ' nomic aid to Argentina, in spite of the fact that Ar
 | 
						||
gentina has just seized almost 400 Million Dollars of American
 | 
						||
private property?
 | 
						||
W H Y Foreign Policy of the United States degen
 | 
						||
' ' ' erated to the point that the C.I.A. is arranging
 | 
						||
coups and having staunch Anti-Communist Allies of the U.S.
 | 
						||
bloodily exterminated?
 | 
						||
W H Y '^^^^ scrapped the Monroe Doctrine in favor of
 | 
						||
the "Spirit of Moscow"?
 | 
						||
MR. KENNEDY, as citizens of these United State of America,
 | 
						||
we DEMAND answers to these questions, and we want them NOw!
 | 
						||
6 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
the occupation that was his only livelihood, reduced with his wife
 | 
						||
and child to indigence, and, if that did not suffice, murdered (probably
 | 
						||
suicided by a competent technician from the Secret Service, F.B.I., or
 | 
						||
C.IA.)^ D r . Crenshaw begins by showing us the grinding routine of a
 | 
						||
resident surgeon in Parkland, which was not an ordinary hospital but
 | 
						||
instead an "academic hospital," operating in' conjunction with the
 | 
						||
Southwestern Medical School and devoted to teaching and research.
 | 
						||
Two members o f its staff have won the Nobel Prize in Medicine, and
 | 
						||
D r , Crenshaw himself, i n his first year at Parkland, "made medical
 | 
						||
history" with research directed by D r . Shires which discovered "that
 | 
						||
death from haemorrhagic shock (blood loss) can be due primarily to
 | 
						||
the body's adjunctive depletion o f salt water into the cells." T w o
 | 
						||
other physicians discovered a means of averting irreparable damage to
 | 
						||
the kidneys of a patient i n trauma—a "medical breakthrough" so
 | 
						||
important that, i n the opinion of persons competent to judge, it
 | 
						||
deserved a Nobel Prize.
 | 
						||
A t the time o f the assassination, D r . Crenshaw was i n charge o f
 | 
						||
the four "trauma rooms" i n the hospital, to which persons who had
 | 
						||
been smashed up i n automobile accidents or critically wounded by
 | 
						||
gunfire were brought from all over the area around Dallas, since the
 | 
						||
hospital was specially equipped to treat such cases. It is sometimes
 | 
						||
2. In this. Dr. Crenshaw is absolutely correct. Immediately after the
 | 
						||
assassination, when the information that appeared in the censored
 | 
						||
press made it seem certain that Oswald had killed both Kennedy and a
 | 
						||
policeman named Tippet, it was nevertheless obvious to anyone who
 | 
						||
considered the question objectively that the assassination had been the
 | 
						||
work of a conspiracy that had used Oswald as its tool. I accordingly
 | 
						||
stated that fact publicly i n an issue of American Opinion, and since I
 | 
						||
had participated in the foundation of the John Birch Society and was a
 | 
						||
member of its National Council, my statement attracted attention; dis
 | 
						||
eased pus spurted from almost every editorial office in the country and
 | 
						||
was lapped up by millions of nitwits. Cf. America's Decline, pp. 163 f.
 | 
						||
Since the Warren Commission ascertained that I had no personal
 | 
						||
knowledge of the facts and had only reasoned from published informa
 | 
						||
tion, it was not thought necessary to murder me. The episode was an
 | 
						||
unpleasant experience, but I now regret it only because it preserved
 | 
						||
the Birch Society by forcing the panic-stricken Welcher to face facts.
 | 
						||
Had I remained silent, the Birch business would probably have disinte
 | 
						||
grated in 1964 or 1965, and I would not have had to resign from it in
 | 
						||
1966, after I succeeded in discovering who then controlled it and super
 | 
						||
vised Robert Welch.
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 7
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
forgotten that .Governor Connally o f Texas, who was riding with
 | 
						||
Kennedy, was critically wounded by a bullet that entered his chest and
 | 
						||
pa.'iscd through his body (and so necessarily had been fired by a
 | 
						||
marksman ahead oi xh.e. automobile). H e was treated in a "trauma
 | 
						||
room" o f Parkland by a second surgical- team, but D r . Crenshaw was
 | 
						||
told in detail what was done. It is his opinion chat i f Connally had
 | 
						||
been taken to any other hospital, he would have died. As it was, he
 | 
						||
survived and recovered from his wounds, but was politically ruined by
 | 
						||
his enemy, Lyndon Johnson, who had acquired the powers of the
 | 
						||
Presidency.,
 | 
						||
D r . Crenshaw gives an orderly and precise account, sometimes
 | 
						||
minute by minute, o f what happened in the Parkland Hospital while
 | 
						||
the bodies of Kennedy and, later, Oswald were there. H i s report makes
 | 
						||
obvious how muzzy, incomplete, and evasive was the story told by
 | 
						||
the three physicians who obediently recited for the Medical
 | 
						||
Association and tried to bolster Earl Warren's hoax by such
 | 
						||
disingenuous claims as that they had been too busy to notice
 | 
						||
whether or not the bullet that entered Kennedy's throat and the
 | 
						||
bullet that blew part of his brain out of the back of his skull had
 | 
						||
come from behind him.
 | 
						||
For the details o f the condition of the body and the efforts o f the
 | 
						||
physicians, see D r . Crenshaw's book, and see the book also for a listing
 | 
						||
of important but long suppressed contributory evidence about the
 | 
						||
assassination, presumably compiled by M r . Shaw.^ I shall here call
 | 
						||
attention only to points that clarify or correct what I reported in my
 | 
						||
article.
 | 
						||
3. He reports ascertained facts, but you should appraise them criti
 | 
						||
cally. Identifications made by persons not personally acquainted with
 | 
						||
the person identified are notoriously inconclusive when not corrobo
 | 
						||
rated by other evidence. As for the puzzling report by Rubenstein's
 | 
						||
former employee, Rose Cheramie, in Louisiana, remember that expert
 | 
						||
technicians planning an assassination in Dallas might well have taken
 | 
						||
the precaution of providing evidence of a seemingly independent con
 | 
						||
spiracy (e.g., by agents of Castro) that could be used to cover up their
 | 
						||
own, if something went wrong. The young woman, who seems to have
 | 
						||
been known only by what was probably a "professional" name, may
 | 
						||
have invented the story she told two days before the assassination.
 | 
						||
That she was in some way implicated is shown by the fact that it was
 | 
						||
deemed expedient to murder her later.
 | 
						||
8 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
Kennedy, for all practical purposes, died instantly when the
 | 
						||
assassin's second bullet destroyed the entire right half o f his brain.
 | 
						||
W h e n he was brought into the hospital, "the entire right hemisphere
 | 
						||
of his brain was missing, beginning at the hairline and extending all
 | 
						||
the way behind his right ear. Pieces of skull that had not been blown away
 | 
						||
were hanging by blood-matted hair." D r . Crenshaw and the other
 | 
						||
physicians knew, of course, that Kennedy was dead, but the action of the
 | 
						||
heart had not entirely ceased, and they made an effort to keep alive, not
 | 
						||
Kennedy, but his corpse. H a d they succeeded, they would have
 | 
						||
performed a medical miracle and produced a living but mindless hulk of
 | 
						||
insentient tissue, somediing much more horrible than a zombie.
 | 
						||
Jacqueline Kennedy did not wander in incipient hysteria
 | 
						||
around the room while the physicians worked. She was doubtless
 | 
						||
shocked, but she never lost self-control and remained composed at
 | 
						||
all times. A t D r . Crenshaw's suggestion, she left the room before
 | 
						||
the efforts to preserve a semblance of life i n her husband's body
 | 
						||
began and waited outside the room until she accompanied the priest
 | 
						||
who had been summoned to administer the rite o f extreme
 | 
						||
unction.^
 | 
						||
T h e disturbance i n the trauma room was occasioned, not by
 | 
						||
Jacqueline Kennedy, but by an agent of the Secret Service, who ran about,
 | 
						||
4. If I remember correctly, there is on record the remarkable instance
 | 
						||
of a man who survived a bullet that had passed through his head from
 | 
						||
one temple to the other, but had not destroyed any large or vital part
 | 
						||
of the brain. I feel certain that there would have been no precedent for
 | 
						||
maintenance of life in Kennedy's corpse, but I have not tried to go
 | 
						||
through the pertinent medical textbooks. This fact evidently gave rise
 | 
						||
to a theory about the assassination of which I had not heard before I
 | 
						||
saw it mentioned by Dr. Crenshaw: that Kennedy's cadaver is still kept
 | 
						||
obscenely alive in some subterranean vault under the Parkland Hospi
 | 
						||
tal!
 | 
						||
5. Despite her composure, Dr. Crenshaw, who seems to have had a
 | 
						||
kind of sentimental admiration of the Kennedys, was convinced by her
 | 
						||
conduct that she was really consumed with grief and love for her hus
 | 
						||
band. That is not impossible. The terrible finality of death excites
 | 
						||
strong emotions, belated regret for what can never come again, and an
 | 
						||
awed perception of the insignificance and evanescence of all human
 | 
						||
hfe. When Mrs. Kennedy returned with the priest, she kissed the big
 | 
						||
toe of one of Kennedy's feet, thus grotesquely imitating what obhgatory
 | 
						||
etiquette had required of a concubine or odalisque of the Sultan of
 | 
						||
Turkey when summoned to serve her lord.
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 9
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
"waving a cocked and ready-to-fire .38 caliber pistol." H e may have
 | 
						||
been distraught, as he seemed to be, or he may have been detailed to make
 | 
						||
certain that Kennedy could not live or that agents of the F.B.I, were not
 | 
						||
allowed to see the wounds. H e was persuaded to withdraw. There was an
 | 
						||
unexplained hostility, between the Secret Service and the F.B.I. As
 | 
						||
Kennedy's body was being brought into the hospital, an agent of the
 | 
						||
Secret Service, armed with a sub-machine gun, used his weapon as a
 | 
						||
club to smash the face o f an agent o f the F.B.I., perhaps because the
 | 
						||
latter had wanted to accompany the body to the trauma room.
 | 
						||
When Kennedy was officially pronounced dead, the agents o f die
 | 
						||
Secret Service did not rash away with the wheeled table on which the
 | 
						||
body lay, presumably to have it packed for shipment elsewhere, as the
 | 
						||
American Medical Association's physicians implied in their recitation. O n
 | 
						||
the contrary, a bronze coffin (not the wooden one in which the body was
 | 
						||
delivered i n Bethesda) had been obtained, and Kennedy's body was
 | 
						||
properly and decendy placed in it by the hospital's staff. The trouble arose
 | 
						||
when the physicians and then the Dallas County Coroner, Dr. Ead Rose,
 | 
						||
tried to prevent removal of the body before the requirements of the laws
 | 
						||
of Texas had been met, as could have been done, D r . Rose esrimated, in
 | 
						||
three-quarters of an hour. The Secret Service men were determined to
 | 
						||
prevent such examinadon of the body. They used their guns to intimidate
 | 
						||
the physicians, and finally their chief, a man named Kellerman, raised his
 | 
						||
sub- machinegun, pointed it at D r . Rose's chest, and promised to
 | 
						||
pull the trigger i f he did nor step aside. T h e thug's cohorts were
 | 
						||
ready to draw their guns from their holsters. D r . Crenshaw was
 | 
						||
convinced that they would have murdered D r . Rose and then
 | 
						||
killed all the witnesses, had D r . Rose not yielded to their violence.
 | 
						||
A Justice of the Peace named W a r d , either intimidated by the
 | 
						||
gunmen or politically corrupt, signed a lying certificate that an
 | 
						||
autopsy had been performed and an inquest held before the body
 | 
						||
6. Obviously not a .38 Colt Cobra, the weapon preferred for shoulder
 | 
						||
holsters, but presumably a revolver. The word 'pistol' is ambiguous,
 | 
						||
but .38 caliber automatic pistols Were rare, and the .358 and .40 had
 | 
						||
not yet been introduced. The numerous agents of the Secret Service
 | 
						||
and F.B.I, at the hospital appear to have been armed with .38 or .45
 | 
						||
caliber weapons that they carried in holsters at their hips, partly con
 | 
						||
cealed by the coat-tails of their fashionable suits. Some also carried
 | 
						||
sub-machineguns.
 | 
						||
10 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
was removed. T h e Warren Commission,, however, did not dare to, us.e
 | 
						||
that blatant falsification.
 | 
						||
It is n o w virtually certain that one o f the principals i n the.
 | 
						||
assassination was a petty crook named Lyndon Johnson, who,,
 | 
						||
doubdess counselled by his wife, a wealthy Jewess, had slithered up to
 | 
						||
the post of V i c e President^ The death o f Kennedy saved h i m from loss
 | 
						||
of that position in 1964^ and boosted h i m into the Presidency,, a
 | 
						||
position which he managed to retain until 1968. It is not remarkable
 | 
						||
that the Secret Service men guarded h i m sedulously, even the night
 | 
						||
before the assassination, when the men detailed to guard Kennedy
 | 
						||
went out on a glorious drunk.
 | 
						||
While Johnson was flying to Washington widi Kennedy's corpse, he
 | 
						||
was informed from Washington (i.e., by McGeorge Bundy or Commander
 | 
						||
Hallet in the White House) that "no conspiracy" was concerned in the
 | 
						||
assassination—^diis at a time when no investigation had been made (Osv^ald
 | 
						||
had just been arrested and was being questioned, but denied that he was the
 | 
						||
assassin). Obviously, Johnson was being informed that the high command
 | 
						||
had decided to make the assassination the work of a 'loner'—and had
 | 
						||
probably also decided that Oswald was a suitable patsy and rnust be
 | 
						||
eliminated before he had a chance to make a formal statement.
 | 
						||
The morning after the assassination, Johnson, apparently not
 | 
						||
trusting the efficiency of the conspiracy's agents and itching with
 | 
						||
7. The best characterization of Johnson is A Texas Looks at Lyndon, by
 | 
						||
J. Evatts Haley, a real Texan, and published by his Palo Duro Press,
 | 
						||
Canyon, Texas, in 1964. It is said that about two million copies of this
 | 
						||
book were sold, but, so far as I know, it is now out-of-print. It is to be
 | 
						||
regretted that the book was not revised i n a second edition which
 | 
						||
would have included the crook's disgusting performances in the White
 | 
						||
House.
 | 
						||
8. On the pohtical situation in November 1963, see the appendix below.
 | 
						||
9. Oswald prudently refused to make a statement before he had a law
 | 
						||
yer to advise him. It is probable that he was also awaiting instructions
 | 
						||
from his employers, who may or may not have been agents of the F.B.I.
 | 
						||
He was in touch with a local agent of that organization named Hosty,
 | 
						||
and about two weeks before the assassination had left with the Special
 | 
						||
Agent in Charge in Dallas a memorandum or report that was torn up
 | 
						||
and flushed down a sewer after the event. He was in any case acting
 | 
						||
for some covert agency of the Federal government. There is an unsub
 | 
						||
stantiated but not implausible theory that he was thus employed while
 | 
						||
in Russia. However that may be, it is likely that his activities on behalf
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell / October 1992 — 11
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
worry lest crucial facts be somehow ascertained and divulged,
 | 
						||
telephoned Captain W i l l Fritz, chief of the homicide detail of the
 | 
						||
Dallas police, and ordered h i m to stop all investigation o f the
 | 
						||
assassination. It is proof of the distance we have descended into
 | 
						||
dictatorship while the boobs were led to believe that the parts of the
 | 
						||
Constitution that had not been rescinded in 1865 were still in
 | 
						||
effect, that Captain Fritz d i d not reply, " Y o u have no
 | 
						||
Constitutional authority to otder me to violate the laws o f Texas,
 | 
						||
you son-of-a-bltch." Instead he obeyed, and told his friends, "When
 | 
						||
the President o f the U n i t e d States called, what could I do?"
 | 
						||
The Dallas police, however, did continue to interrdgate Oswald
 | 
						||
and arraigned him, not for the assassination of Kennedy, but for the
 | 
						||
murder o f a policeman. Tippet, who was killed shortly after the
 | 
						||
assassination for reasons still unknown.
 | 
						||
When Oswald, still barely alive, was brought to the Parkland
 | 
						||
Hospital and physicians were trying to save his life,^° Johnson himself
 | 
						||
had D r . Crenshaw, who was in charge, called to the telephone, and
 | 
						||
of Fidel Castro's Soviet outpost in Cuba were carried out while he was
 | 
						||
in the employ of some agency of the government in Washington, and
 | 
						||
that he was directed to make his attempt to murder General Edwin A.
 | 
						||
Walker, the most prominent anti-Communist in Dallas, (Had the at
 | 
						||
tempt succeeded, it could have been argued that American patriots in
 | 
						||
Dallas assassinated Kennedy in revenge for the murder of Walker.) His
 | 
						||
role in the assassination, like that of Rubenstein, alias Ruby, with
 | 
						||
whom he seems to have acted in concert, is still undetermined. A possi
 | 
						||
ble element in the puzzle is the fact that the C.I.A. is legally forbidden
 | 
						||
to operate within the United States, so that its domestic agents com
 | 
						||
monly operate as, and may actually be, agents of the F.B.I. All these
 | 
						||
speculations may seem far-fetched to persons who have no knowledge
 | 
						||
of the secret operations of intelligence agencies.
 | 
						||
10. As is well known, Oswald, while handcuffed between two detec
 | 
						||
tives, was murdered by a gangster from Chicago named Jacob
 | 
						||
Rubenstein, alias Jack Ruby, who thus acquired the distinction of
 | 
						||
being the first man to commit murder while being photographed by
 | 
						||
several television cameras. Rubenstein, who operated night clubs in
 | 
						||
Dallas, had been associated with Oswald in some transactions of which
 | 
						||
the nature is still uncertain. He had a criminal record and was a paid
 | 
						||
employee of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, but Earl Warren nat
 | 
						||
urally covered up for him in his report. Rubenstein had obviously been
 | 
						||
instriacted to eliminate Oswald before he could make a formal statement.
 | 
						||
12 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
told him that he, the new President, wanted a "deathbed confession"
 | 
						||
of guilt from Oswald, and that his agent, a typical thug from the Secret
 | 
						||
Service, sartorially disguised in then fashionable clothing that
 | 
						||
emphasized the impressive pistol In his holster, was waiting to take
 | 
						||
that confession. The confession, needed to bolster the propaganda that
 | 
						||
Oswald was the real assassin, would doubtless have been faked in some
 | 
						||
way, but Oswald died soon after Johnson's telephone call, and the
 | 
						||
frustrated thug with his gun departed.
 | 
						||
The only alternative to taking the nervous crook's telephone calls
 | 
						||
as tantamount to a confession of guilt is a desperate hypothesis that
 | 
						||
Johnson was impersonated on the telephone by some other member o f
 | 
						||
the conspiracy.
 | 
						||
M r . Shaw believes that J. Edgar Hoover withheld evidence
 | 
						||
obtained by his Bureau because he was a friend o f Lyndon Johnson.
 | 
						||
Informed opinion in Washington was to the effect that Hoover
 | 
						||
withheld incriminating evidence to prevent Johnson and "Bobby Sox"
 | 
						||
Kennedy from retiring h i m as head of the F.B.I. After Johnson was
 | 
						||
elected In November 1964, he replaced Kennedy with a Jew,
 | 
						||
Katzenbach, who had been officially Deputy Attorney General and, i n
 | 
						||
all likelihood, actually Kennedy's supervisor, but Hoover remained the
 | 
						||
Director of the F.B.I, until his death i n 1972. T h e evidence that he
 | 
						||
used to protect himself by political blackmail has not been revealed. It
 | 
						||
may be disclosed in 2039, when the files sealed by order of Lyndon
 | 
						||
In Dr. Crenshaw's opinion, it might have been possible to save Oswald's
 | 
						||
life, if, within three minutes after he was shot, he had been given the
 | 
						||
treatment he received in the trauma room at Parkland; that, of course,
 | 
						||
would not have been possible, and the delay of fifteen minutes made
 | 
						||
death inevitable. Had Oswald lived, Johnson and his fellow conspirators
 | 
						||
would have had to devise some means of silencing him before he could
 | 
						||
talk. Mr. Shaw's summary does not mention the significant fact that
 | 
						||
Rubenstein in prison evidently decided to disclose some of the crucial
 | 
						||
facts to a female journalist, Dorothy Kilgallen, who delightedly told her
 | 
						||
friends that she was going to "blow sky high" the official story of the
 | 
						||
assassination, but was murdered before she could do so. Rubenstein was
 | 
						||
eliminated soon thereafter; the oflicial story was that he had died of
 | 
						||
sudden cancer. It has been estimated that a total of some forty to fifty
 | 
						||
persons, witnesses to one or another crucial incident, were murdered to
 | 
						||
prevent them fi-om contradicting the Warren Report. There are still
 | 
						||
many naively opinionated Americans who refuse to understand the
 | 
						||
character of the government that rules them.
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell / October 1992 — 13
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Johnson may be opened^—-if, at that time, die rulers o f the territoiy
 | 
						||
that is n o w the U n i t e d States arc intcresred in events o f what will then
 | 
						||
be a dead past.
 | 
						||
II
 | 
						||
In my article I indicated the major motive for the assassination o f
 | 
						||
Kennedy: the need to abort the growing dissatisfaction of the
 | 
						||
American people with a government that was obviously acting in the
 | 
						||
interests of our enemies, the masters of C o m m u n i s t Russia—a
 | 
						||
dissatisfaction that had been brought close to the boiling point by the
 | 
						||
Indignation Meetings held throughout the country, which were
 | 
						||
sponsored by patriotic Americans in Dallas.
 | 
						||
This purpose was achieved and the pro-American movement
 | 
						||
liquidated by the assassination, followed by a spectacular funeral for
 | 
						||
which the A r m y detachment had been diligently rehearsed in advance
 | 
						||
and at w h i c h Jacqueline K e n n e d y gave a brilliant performance. A
 | 
						||
well-contrived deluge o f wildly irrational bathos in the press and over
 | 
						||
television sufficed to reduce the majority o f Americans to the status o f
 | 
						||
savages w h o beat their breasts and h o w l w h e n their big chief dies.
 | 
						||
Very many—perhaps the majority of anti-Communists exposed
 | 
						||
themselves as p o l t r o o n s . O n the m o r n i n g o f the twenty-second o f
 | 
						||
November they had talked loudly of impeaching "that son-of-a-bitch"
 | 
						||
for high treason. T h a t aft:ernoon they should have said, or at least
 | 
						||
thought, " G o o d riddance!" But the next day they were tearfully
 | 
						||
protesting they had always respected and loved "our martyred
 | 
						||
President" and had only differed from h i m about some minor matters
 | 
						||
o f p o l i c y , as was permissible i n " o u r great d e m o c r a c y . " T h e y were a
 | 
						||
nauseating spectacle.
 | 
						||
T h e assassination o f Kennedy was thus a crucial event in American
 | 
						||
history, canceling what was the last reasonable hope that the American
 | 
						||
people could escape the d o o m prepared for them by their implacable
 | 
						||
enemies.
 | 
						||
Various other motives have been suggested, all o f which are trivial
 | 
						||
in comparison with what was accomplished. I did mention in my
 | 
						||
article the least nugatory^, a report that has been widely current i n
 | 
						||
" r i g h t - w i n g " circles i n recent years. I quote it f r o m w h a t is p r o b a b l y
 | 
						||
the last issue o f Racial Loyalty ( M a y 1 9 9 2 ) , w h i c h quotes the C a n a d i a n
 | 
						||
Intelligence Service, which in turn cited other sources:
 | 
						||
14 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
Kennedy...bypassed the Jewish Federal Reserve and issued
 | 
						||
government notes...as did President Abraham Lincoln a hundred
 | 
						||
years earlier and for which he, too, paid the ultimate price. ... On
 | 
						||
June 30, 1965, Kennedy signed Executive Order No. 11110, and
 | 
						||
further amended E.O. No. 10289 of September 19, 1952, thereby
 | 
						||
giving the President authority to issue the currency. He thereupon
 | 
						||
ordered the Issue of $4,292,893,875.00. This was almost ten times
 | 
						||
as much as the $450,000,000.00 ["greenbacks"] printed by Lincoln
 | 
						||
during the Civil War. He evidently forced the then Secretary of tfte
 | 
						||
Treasury, C. Douglas Dillon, another name-changing Jew
 | 
						||
(LapowskI?), to sign the United States notes. Shortly
 | 
						||
thereafter...Kennedy paid the ultimate price and was shot, as was
 | 
						||
Lincoln.... The first thing President Johnson did when he flew back
 | 
						||
to Washington was to reverse this order.
 | 
						||
N o w E x e c u t i v e O r d e r N o . 11110 is i n d e x e d i n the Federal Register
 | 
						||
as p e r t a i n i n g to treasury notes a n d silver certificates, a n d the reported
 | 
						||
tenor of it was quite plausible. It was even possible, though unlikely,
 | 
						||
that the amount mentioned had been printed, although not put into
 | 
						||
circulation.'' The report therefore was not invalidated by a mistake
 | 
						||
about Kennedy's intent and about the effect of Lincoln's issue of
 | 
						||
'greenbacks.'
 | 
						||
It must be remembered that i n the autumn of 1963, Kennedy's
 | 
						||
popularity had been greatly impaired and he could not have been
 | 
						||
reelected in 1964 without some heroic efforr to regain the favor he had
 | 
						||
lost. (See the appendix below). It w o u l d have been reasonable for h i m
 | 
						||
to try some spectacular manoeuvre that w o u l d be c o m m e n d e d by
 | 
						||
many of the intelligent Americans w h o m his conduct in office had
 | 
						||
alienated and angered-—especially a manoeuvre that seemed to avert
 | 
						||
national bankruptcy and to limit the looting of the country by the
 | 
						||
Federal Reserve. H i s administration, furthermore, was riddled by
 | 
						||
fighting for p o w e r w i t h i n it, a n d such a n order, even i f never carried
 | 
						||
out, would have sufficed to intimidate some factions.
 | 
						||
1. A mistake about the issuance of the notes was facilitated by the fact
 | 
						||
that part of Lincoln's issue of'greenbacks' was never withdrawn, and a
 | 
						||
very small part of that part is kept in circulation, as required by law.
 | 
						||
When the pieces of paper are worn out, they are replaced by freshly
 | 
						||
printed notes, which, of course, are signed by the Secretary of the
 | 
						||
Treasury in office at the time.
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 15
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
T h e r e appeared Co be a real rift within the organization o f our
 | 
						||
rulers (as distinct from dissent simulated to entertain the populace). A
 | 
						||
coirespondent kindly informs me that he clearly remembers that, not
 | 
						||
long before Kennedy was expunged, Eisenhower appea:red on
 | 
						||
television irately to denounce Kennedy for plans to tamper with the
 | 
						||
sacrosanct Federal Reserve, going so far as to regret that he had not
 | 
						||
campaigned for N i x o n and thus assured his election in place'of
 | 
						||
Kennedy. Since I almost never watch the Jews' picture-shows, I did
 | 
						||
not see that program. I do have vague recollections o f very adverse
 | 
						||
criticism o f Kennedy by rhe Super-Sheeny, Avraham ben FJazar, alias
 | 
						||
Dr. Henry Kissinger, who was probably the Jewish satrap in charge of
 | 
						||
supervising the government in Washington. This seemed to indicate
 | 
						||
an internal struggle among our rulers, possibly a struggle between two
 | 
						||
factions of the ruling race.
 | 
						||
The issue, which still divides the "right-wing," can by
 | 
						||
summarized, i f stripped to its barest essentials. Money in the strict
 | 
						||
sense of the word appears to have been an Aryan invention made in
 | 
						||
the seventh century b . c , when coins replaced barter in commercial
 | 
						||
transactions. It consisted of coins of gold, silver, and electrum (an alloy
 | 
						||
of the rwo), with tokens of bronze and copper for fractions of a coin o f
 | 
						||
2. The real name of Kissinger was disclosed by the Supreme Rabbinic
 | 
						||
Court of America when he was excommunicated from Jewry on 20
 | 
						||
Jun6 1976. The real reason for the excommunication has not been dis
 | 
						||
closed, and it would be a waste of time to consider conjectural explana
 | 
						||
tions.
 | 
						||
3. We must remember that although God's Race presents a united
 | 
						||
front against our race, which they both despise and hate, there are
 | 
						||
often violent disagreements about the expediency of some policy and
 | 
						||
consequently frequent, i f not constant, quarrels between factions
 | 
						||
within the Self-Chosen People. For a good example, see Lenni Brem
 | 
						||
mer, The Iron Wall: Zionist Revisionism from Jabotinsky to Shamir
 | 
						||
(London, Zed Books, 1984). Needless to say, the "revisionism" men
 | 
						||
tioned i n the title has nothing to do with the "revisionism" of honest
 | 
						||
historians who are now trying to expose the Jews' great Holohoax. Z i 
 | 
						||
onist "revisionism" deals with changes i n policies for putting and keep
 | 
						||
ing the goyim i n their servile place. Breramer particularly reprehends
 | 
						||
Shamir and his party of Zionists for attempts to enter into a mihtary
 | 
						||
alliance with Adolf Hitler to expedite his "ultimate solution" of the
 | 
						||
Jewish problem in Germany by ti-ansferring the Jews i n Germany to
 | 
						||
Palestine. Cf. Liberty Bell, March 1991, pp. 1-3; April-May 1991, pp.
 | 
						||
108-114. f J >
 | 
						||
16 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
precious metals. It was supplemented by credit, that is to say, promises
 | 
						||
to pay a specified number of coins at a specified date or on demand.
 | 
						||
The precious metals thereafiier served as a fixed measure of value.
 | 
						||
In rhe later M i d d l e Ages, when coins of precious metal were stored
 | 
						||
with goldsmiths (most of them Sheenies) for safe-keeping, the
 | 
						||
goldsmiths issued certificates of deposit for money stored with them,
 | 
						||
and soon learned that they could issue many more certificates than the
 | 
						||
gold they had on hand, since only a fraction of the certificates would
 | 
						||
be brought for redemption at any one time. W i t h unimportant and
 | 
						||
ephemeral exceptions, the basis of all currency was coins of precious
 | 
						||
metal, and financial crises were caused by the issue of more certificates
 | 
						||
of deposit (bank notes) than the coins available to redeem them. The
 | 
						||
first serious attempt to replace the precious metals was made by the
 | 
						||
criminals of the French Revolution, who issued assignats i n such
 | 
						||
quantities that the paper became worthless. The papet money issued
 | 
						||
by the Continental Congress during the American Revolution coined
 | 
						||
only the phrase " N o t worth a Continental" and gave an impressive
 | 
						||
lesson in the use of currency that could be printed and multiplied by
 | 
						||
legislatures with the dishonesty that is normal in democracies.
 | 
						||
The Constitution, therefore, contemplated only the issue of coins
 | 
						||
of precious metals, and until the Northern states attacked the
 | 
						||
Confederacy in 1861, the currency consisted o f precious metals and
 | 
						||
the notes issued by private banks, tedeemable on demand in real
 | 
						||
money, which were in general use because the weight of any fairly large
 | 
						||
sum of money (gold or silver) was more than an individual could
 | 
						||
conveniently carry on his person.
 | 
						||
Since the latter part of the Nineteenth Century Americans have been
 | 
						||
faced with a choice between several kinds of currency, viz.; (a) gold coins
 | 
						||
and bank or treasury notes certifying that their face value in coins were on
 | 
						||
deposit and could be obtained on demand; (b) coins of both gold and
 | 
						||
silver issued on some fixed ratio of value between the two and similarly
 | 
						||
represented by bank or treasury notes; (c) the National Banks' paper
 | 
						||
currency based on debt, i.e., government bonds held by banks that collect
 | 
						||
interest on them, the bonds, however, being theorerically exchangeable for
 | 
						||
real money, so that the paper currency could likewise be converted to real
 | 
						||
money when desired; (d) 'greenbacks,' i.e., fiat "money," paper currency
 | 
						||
representing no real money and having value only by unconstitutional
 | 
						||
~, Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 17
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
legislation compelling individuals to accept it in the payment of aJl
 | 
						||
debts, but having the advantage that the Federal governmentican issue
 | 
						||
them instead of borrowing from banks and paying interest to them; (e)
 | 
						||
the present system, perfected after Kennedy's time, whereby the
 | 
						||
Federal Reserve issues notes that are actually greenbacks' but collects
 | 
						||
interest on them as though they represented real money.
 | 
						||
Americans who hope to regain po.ssession of the country that once
 | 
						||
was theirs recognize, of course, that (e) is simply an outrageous system
 | 
						||
for exploiting slaves, but they differ greatly about the expediency of (a),
 | 
						||
(b), (c), and (d). That debate is irrelevant to our interests here, where
 | 
						||
we need only to consider Kennedy's reported intent to resort to (d) on
 | 
						||
a large scale, as was done by Lincoln's administration in 1862.
 | 
						||
Abraham Lincoln, a shrewd backwoods politician though not
 | 
						||
without some principles,'^ was put in the White House by a scabrous
 | 
						||
gang of hate-crazed fanatics or degenerates, such as Thaddeus Stevens,
 | 
						||
and a pack of politicians greedy for loot, who called themselves the
 | 
						||
Republican Party, having stolen even their name from the American
 | 
						||
Republican Party, which the Abolitionists had been used to disrupt.
 | 
						||
Lincoln, who is reported to have said that he was bought and sold
 | 
						||
several times at the Republican convention that nominated h i m , came
 | 
						||
to Washington knowing that his function was to destroy the American
 | 
						||
Constitution, for which he had little respect, and to end the American
 | 
						||
Republic by attacking the South.
 | 
						||
Part of the deal was that he was to make a scabrous politician
 | 
						||
named Salmon P. Chase the Secretary of the Treasury in the interests
 | 
						||
of the then great banking house of Jay Cooke, who ensured Chase's
 | 
						||
obedience by giving him for "expenses" $100,000 (in real money; the
 | 
						||
4, The "Great Emancipator" seems to have had one real principle, dis
 | 
						||
like of niggers, whom he wished to export from American territory. In
 | 
						||
the "emancipation proclamation" he made provision for shipping the
 | 
						||
niggers back to Africa or some more convenient place in the Caribbean
 | 
						||
or Central America, and he did export at least five thousand of them to
 | 
						||
Haiti. That is the number exported, at a cost of $50.00 a head, under
 | 
						||
contract by Leonard Jerome, a financier, thought to have been partly
 | 
						||
Jewish, whose daughter married Lord Randolph Churchill and became
 | 
						||
the mother of the notorious Winston Churchill. On Lincoln's character,
 | 
						||
see especially the article by Sam G. Dickson, "Shattering the Icon of
 | 
						||
Abraham Lincoln," in the Journal of Historical Review, VII (1986), pp.
 | 
						||
319-344.
 | 
						||
18 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
equivalent of at least $20,000,000 in the Federal Reserve's pieces o f
 | 
						||
printed paper that the W h i t e Slaves now use as a substitute for
 | 
						||
money). In return, Chase gave Cooke's banking house the extremely
 | 
						||
lucrative monopoly of underwriting the entire Federal debt. N o one
 | 
						||
objected because everyone was delighted when Chase began to deface
 | 
						||
our currency with the silly motto, "In G o d W e Trust."^
 | 
						||
Chase suspended payment in specie (i.e., real money) at the Treasury,
 | 
						||
and the banks in the Northern states had to do likewise. W i t h the way
 | 
						||
dius prepared, Lincoln, in 1862, obtained Congressional permission for
 | 
						||
Chase to issue $150,000,000 worth of paper currency which was made
 | 
						||
legal tender in open violation of the Constitution (whicli the suckers
 | 
						||
thought still in force), and after that first splurge it was easy to increase the
 | 
						||
fiat currency by increments of $150,000,000 every few months.
 | 
						||
Was this, as naive persons believe, a threat to the banking interests
 | 
						||
headed by Cooke? Far from it. T h e enormous cost of the invasion and
 | 
						||
conquest of the South was more than could be conveniently absorbed
 | 
						||
by credit from Cooke, Rothschild, and associates. The 'greenbacks'
 | 
						||
were simply preparation for two brilliant coups de bourse.
 | 
						||
First, the looters gained control of most of the independent banks
 | 
						||
in the United States by inaugurating the bizarre scheme of basing
 | 
						||
currency on debt. As explained by D r . Murray Rothbard, "Cooke and
 | 
						||
Chase then managed to use the virtual Republican monopoly in
 | 
						||
Congress during the war to transform the American commercial
 | 
						||
banking system from a relatively free market to a National' Banking
 | 
						||
System centralized under W a l l Street control. A crucial aspect of this
 | 
						||
system was that national banks could only expand credit in proportion
 | 
						||
to the Federal bonds they owned—bonds which they could only buy
 | 
						||
from Jay Cooke." Neat, wasn't it?
 | 
						||
Second, in addition to destabilizing the independent banks and
 | 
						||
thus bringing them under the control of Cooke and the Rothschilds,
 | 
						||
the 'greenbacks' provided the financiers with gorgeous loot. It nmst be
 | 
						||
temembered that in the 1860s, the Northern Americans, although
 | 
						||
crazed with homicidal righteousness, were not so befuddled that they
 | 
						||
would have tolerated the present system, by which the international
 | 
						||
bankers, through their Federal Reserve swindle, issue 'greenbacks' and
 | 
						||
5. Cf. Liberty Bell, September 1984, pp. 2-3, 6.
 | 
						||
6. MoneyWorld, Winter 1988, p. 24.
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 19
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
(iiilcct cumulative interest on them. The 'greenbacks' had to be issued as
 | 
						||
I leasury Notes, which the populace, crazed by their unholy war, were
 | 
						||
I'orccd to accept as legal tender, and which were not even backed by a
 | 
						||
pledge they would ever be redeemed in money. Naturally, the tesult wa.s
 | 
						||
that there were three quite difFcrcnt kinds o f currency; intrinsically
 | 
						||
worthless 'greenbacks,' the notes of private banks which promised
 | 
						||
redemption in real money (gold or silvei-) and might be so redeemed after
 | 
						||
the end of the war, and gold and silver coins, which had intrinsic value
 | 
						||
and were obviously safe and preferable to paper notes, so that cautiou.s
 | 
						||
persons invested their savings in them. As was to be expected, the
 | 
						||
'greenbacks' rapidly depreciated in value. The Southerners defended
 | 
						||
themselves effectively until they were finally overcome by attririon, and
 | 
						||
the outcome of the Northern states' war of aggression remained doubtEil
 | 
						||
until 1865. H a d the South succeeded in defending its independence, the
 | 
						||
'grcenbacb' would have become worthless, and they soon dropped to
 | 
						||
fractions of their face value in real money, i.e., gold and silver. Their value
 | 
						||
eventually fell to 35'}-. The conspirators bought the trash wholesale, and
 | 
						||
when paper for which they had paid $0.35 was eventually redeemed for
 | 
						||
$1.00 in real money, they realized a modest profit-—^modest by the
 | 
						||
standards of international finance.
 | 
						||
In 1963, the boobs had not yet been completely reduced to their
 | 
						||
present statms as a helpless and enslaved proletariat. Although the American
 | 
						||
Ix:nin, soon after he began ihc systematic destruction of America in 1933,
 | 
						||
had forbidden his subjects to have gold money, they were still permitted to
 | 
						||
own silver coins that had intrinsic value, and which were also represented by
 | 
						||
silver certificates issued by the Treasury and still honestly redeemed on
 | 
						||
demand in 1963. Their mastets intended, of course, to take those bits of real
 | 
						||
money from dicm, but the procedure by which that was to be done may
 | 
						||
not have been definitely determined. Furthermore, the publication of
 | 
						||
Gertude Coogan's The Money Creators in 1935 and several books derived
 | 
						||
from it had permitted any literate person to understand the Federal Reserve
 | 
						||
swindle,*^ but almost no one understood the great 'greenback' coup in
 | 
						||
7. Some business men foresaw that the enormous quantity of trading
 | 
						||
stamps i n circulation could never be redeemed i n money. One man, who
 | 
						||
dealt i n player pianos, each of wWch sold for several thousand dollars,
 | 
						||
offered his customers a 15% discount for payment in real money, i.e., sil
 | 
						||
ver, since the American serfs were forbidden to possess gold.
 | 
						||
20 — LibeHy Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
Lincoln's day, which was not mentioned even in college courses in
 | 
						||
(censored) American History.
 | 
						||
The time was ripe, therefore, for a new 'greenback' swindle, which
 | 
						||
could also be used to revive the waning popularity of Jackanapes. The
 | 
						||
widely circulated report, which I quoted from Racial Loyaliy above, was
 | 
						||
endreiy plausible. A n d everyone knew, of course, of the sinister Exccurive
 | 
						||
Orders by which preparations have been made for the impositions of a
 | 
						||
Lenin-style dictatorship whenever it is deemed expedient to beat the White
 | 
						||
boobs into their styes. (What may be the worst of these. Executive Order
 | 
						||
12l48, issued by Jimmy "thejctk" Carter on 20 July 1979, is reproduced
 | 
						||
in Rill, with apposite commentary, in a special twelve-page supplement to
 | 
						||
the Spotlight xh-ax was distributed widi the issue dated 25 May 1992).
 | 
						||
The apparently documented attribution of an Executive Order for
 | 
						||
fiat currency to Kennedy was so plausible that many intelligent
 | 
						||
Americans, ignoring the more obvious motive for the highly successftil
 | 
						||
assassination that 1 have mentioned above, leaped to the conclusiori that
 | 
						||
Kennedy had been assassinated to prevent the issuance o f currency on
 | 
						||
which the country would not have to pay usury to the Federal Reserve.
 | 
						||
A n d the supposed purport of Executive Order 11110 is mentioned in the
 | 
						||
campaign speeches of the American candidate for the Presidency, Colonel
 | 
						||
James "Bo" G r i a , who, although you would never know it fi-om the
 | 
						||
Jcwspapers and boob tubes, is on the ballot in some twenty states as the
 | 
						||
candidate of a Populist Party and could receive 'write-in' votes in all but
 | 
						||
seven of the remaining stares. In his speeches he elaborates on what he
 | 
						||
said in Called to Serve, that Kennedy "prepared his own death warrant"
 | 
						||
because, inter alia, "he actually minted [!] non-debt money."
 | 
						||
8. The quotation comes from p. 512. In my review of Colonel Gritz's
 | 
						||
Called to Serve in Libery Bell, May 1992, I noted that his book contains
 | 
						||
a perceptive critique of the official lies about the assassinations of both
 | 
						||
Kennedys and what appeared to be an attempt to assassinate Reagan.
 | 
						||
This section (pp. 512-553) is well worth reading, and you will find it
 | 
						||
worthwhile to take a magnifying glass and read the document? photo
 | 
						||
graphed on the seventh, ninth, and eleventh unnumbered pages that
 | 
						||
follow p. 554, I wish Colonel Gritz could have had the benefit of Dr.
 | 
						||
Crenshaw's book, but he leaves no doubt but that the evidence for con
 | 
						||
spiratorial dirty work in all those incidents is overwhelming and incon
 | 
						||
trovertible. (There is a slight discrepancy between what is said about
 | 
						||
the position of Oswald at the time of the assassination on p. 525 and
 | 
						||
the statement on p. 531, resulting from an unresolved conflict i n evi
 | 
						||
dence.) M y i-eview warns you to discount the author's naiVe acceptance
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 21
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Unfortunately, the plausible report is a hoax. The person vs'ho
 | 
						||
contrived it was ingenious. H e gave the numbers of [executive Orders
 | 
						||
chst did deaJ with currency, and he provided the seemingly precise
 | 
						||
figure of $4,292,893,815,00 as the amount o f greenhacb'autliorized
 | 
						||
by Kennedy.^ •
 | 
						||
Executive Order 10289, is.sucd by Sheeny Truman, 17 September
 | 
						||
1951, consists o f three long sections, called "paragraphs," each
 | 
						||
containing a number of "subparagraphs." All authori/.c the Secretary of
 | 
						||
the Treasury to perform specified functions without further
 | 
						||
authorization from the President, Paragraph 1, which has eight
 | 
						||
subparagraphs, (a) to (h), deals exclusively with the collection o f
 | 
						||
customs duties, port duties, American yachts, and hospital ships.
 | 
						||
Paragraph 2 has three subparagraphs pertaining to currency: (c)
 | 
						||
authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury "to issue rules- and regulations
 | 
						||
(with respect to silver bullion) tiecessary or proper to carr)' out the
 | 
						||
of Judaeo-Communist propaganda about the loveliness of "democracy,"
 | 
						||
the horrors of "Fascism," and the Satanic work of "Hitler's mad dogs,"
 | 
						||
which gravely becloud his inferences; in addition, he, like Dr.
 | 
						||
Crenshaw, has a sentimentally uncritical admiration of Kennedy, But
 | 
						||
when he discusses the mechanics of the assassinations, he speaks as
 | 
						||
an expert. He has used all the weapons employed in such work; he has
 | 
						||
himself killed many men and observed the killing of many others. He
 | 
						||
knows, better than any phy-sician, how men react to the bullets that
 | 
						||
b'll them, and he knows how to organize covert operations and am
 | 
						||
bushes. I am sure that i f Colonel Gritz and his Green Berets had dis
 | 
						||
posed of Kennedy, they would have done a perfect job and left nothing
 | 
						||
for Earl Warren to cover up. His scenario of the assassination of Jacka
 | 
						||
napes is more complex than my summary account, which, using
 | 
						||
Occam's razor, I reduced to the bare essentials, and incorporates much
 | 
						||
cogent evidence that I did not mention. — I wish we could hope that
 | 
						||
Colonel Gritz, a true American and a national hero, would win a num
 | 
						||
ber of Electoral votes i n November. Needless to say, i f there were any
 | 
						||
chance whatsoever of his attaining the Presidency, we would have al
 | 
						||
ready had another "puzzling" assassination, covered up in what has
 | 
						||
become the Occupation Government's habitual way.
 | 
						||
9. In what follows, I am deeply indebted to Dr. Walter P. Claussen,
 | 
						||
who generously undertook research i n libraries in which I no longer
 | 
						||
have the stamina to work, and who had the patience to look through the
 | 
						||
enormous and numerous volumes, consisting principally of congealed
 | 
						||
hogwash, of the Federal Register and its derivatives to find the text of
 | 
						||
the Executive Orders and of Congressional legislation relative to them.
 | 
						||
22 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
purposes" of §1805 of the Internal Rcvnue Code, (d) authorizes him
 | 
						||
"to issue regulations prescribing the conditions under which gold may
 | 
						||
be acquired and held, transported, melted or treated, imported,
 | 
						||
exported, or earmarked for certain purposes." (f) authorizes h i m "to
 | 
						||
investigate, regulate, or prohibit, by means of licenses or otherwise, the
 | 
						||
acquisition, Importation, exportation, or transportation of silver and o f
 | 
						||
contracts or other arrangements made with respect thereto, and to
 | 
						||
require the filing of reports in connection therewith."
 | 
						||
T o give 3'-ou an example o f the incoherence o f many Executive
 | 
						||
Orders, I remark that (e), sandwiched between (d) and (f), denls with
 | 
						||
the anchorage and movement of vessels In American ports
 | 
						||
This order was first amended to affect currency by Kennedy's
 | 
						||
Order 11110, 4 June 1963, of which §1 added to the first paragraph
 | 
						||
of 10289 (which had nothing to do with currency) a subparagraph (j)
 | 
						||
which authorized the Secretary of the Treasury "to issue silver
 | 
						||
certificates against any silver bullion, silver, or standard silver dollars In
 | 
						||
the Treasury not then held for redemption o f any outstanding silver
 | 
						||
certificates, to prescribe the denomination of such silver certificates,
 | 
						||
and to coin standard silver dollars and subsidiary silver currency for
 | 
						||
their redemption.
 | 
						||
Not a word about greenbacks'!'^
 | 
						||
Kennedy's executive order is to be understood In connection with
 | 
						||
the Public Law 88-36 o f the same date, 4 June 1963, found on p. 66
 | 
						||
of the Congressional Record and expounded at some length on pp.
 | 
						||
678-686. Silver certificates for $5.00 and $10.00 had already been
 | 
						||
replaced by Federal Reserve notes, but certificates for $1.00 and $2.00,
 | 
						||
redeemable In real money, remained In circulation. The net effect o f
 | 
						||
the Act of 4 June 1963 was to provide for the gradual'replacement o f
 | 
						||
all silver certificates with notes of the Fedetal Reserve—a replacement
 | 
						||
which, It was said, would not devalue the.dollar or be Inflationary
 | 
						||
10. §2 revoked subparagraphs (b) and (c) of Paragraph 2 of 1028J.
 | 
						||
11. And so, needless to say, it was not revoked by Johnson after the
 | 
						||
assassination made him President. Kennedy's last Executive Order
 | 
						||
11127, 9 November 1963, concerned a strike on the Flori,da East Coast
 | 
						||
Railway. Johnson's first orders were 11128, giving Federal employees a
 | 
						||
holiday on Monday, 25 November; 11129, extolling Kennedy and re
 | 
						||
naming the Atlantic Missile Range i n his honor; and 11130, appointing
 | 
						||
the WaiTen Commission,
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 23
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
because the Federal Reserves notes were chcorerically backed by
 | 
						||
suppositious reserve o f ' 2 5 % gold (which no lowly American could
 | 
						||
obtain)-and actually based on die Federal debt, i.e., bonds on which
 | 
						||
the taxpayers pay interest to the Federal Reserve! This law, however,
 | 
						||
still permitted the boobs to have bits of real money, half-dollars,
 | 
						||
quarters, and dimes o f alloyed silver.
 | 
						||
(At this point we must bear in mind a fundamental distinction.
 | 
						||
Real money, silver coins and certificates that .such coins are on deposit
 | 
						||
in the 'i'rcasury, naturally create no public debt. The international
 | 
						||
bankers who own the Federal Reserve operate their swindle by printing
 | 
						||
Fedctal Reser\'e notes and using them to obtain interest-bearing
 | 
						||
g o v e r n m e n t bonds,- and the interest is then p a i d by more
 | 
						||
interest-bearing bonds, so that the interest is really compounded each
 | 
						||
year. A n d no matter how grievously the taxpaying animals are afflicted,
 | 
						||
the inevitable result of the swindle mu.st eventually be bankruptcy o f
 | 
						||
the Federal governmment and domestic chaos.)
 | 
						||
Now Kennedy's Executive Order 11110, by authorizing the
 | 
						||
Secrctar)' of the Treasury to continue i.ssuing silver certificates and
 | 
						||
minting silver coins, including silver dollars, could be construed as
 | 
						||
countering the Act of Congress of the same date, for, on its face, it
 | 
						||
certainly docs not; conform to the policy of gradually taking silver
 | 
						||
certificates and silver dollars from the boobs. If that was his purpose, it
 | 
						||
was certainly commendable. But we mast note that the actual issuance
 | 
						||
of real money was left to the discretion of the Sectetary of the
 | 
						||
Treasury, a. Jew who called himself Dillon, and one cannot be certain,
 | 
						||
of the intended effect of the order without a detailed knowledge of the
 | 
						||
secret tensions and intrigues within the Administration.
 | 
						||
The final despoilment o f the boobs was effected by Johnson on 22
 | 
						||
July 1965 with the Coinage Act, Public Law 89-91 (pp. 270-275,
 | 
						||
2299-2313), which, coated with a lot of persiflage about a need to
 | 
						||
"conserve" silver, instructed' the Treasuiy gradually to replace the bits
 | 
						||
of real, money still in the hands of the boobs with counterfeits made of
 | 
						||
copper and nickel.
 | 
						||
That did' it. That enablfed: the: Den- of Thieves in the Capitol to
 | 
						||
steal ad libitum from every American who owned bonds, had' a.
 | 
						||
pension or insurance, or any equity payable in, dbllars, while
 | 
						||
squandering the revenue they extorted from taxpayers to drive the
 | 
						||
2i — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
country into banruptcy so that the consortium o f international
 | 
						||
bankers, Jews and their White stooges, could multiply their
 | 
						||
worthless 'greenbacks' while collecting usury for them. The
 | 
						||
American boobs were at last launched on the last stage of their
 | 
						||
toboggan slide into the ecological niche prepared for them, where
 | 
						||
taxpaying animals will be raised in pens, likq their intellectual peers,
 | 
						||
thoroughly domesticated cows.
 | 
						||
Such are the facts about the fiction that credited Jackanapes
 | 
						||
with the issuance of usury-free 'greenbacks.' The contriver of the
 | 
						||
hoax was, as I have said, clever. I do not k n o w his motive. H e
 | 
						||
may have been one of the fairly numerous "right-wingers" who
 | 
						||
think that such hoaxes will enable them to attract a following
 | 
						||
and become "leaders," or who imagine that a clever hoax will
 | 
						||
call the boobs' attention to some crucial fact, such as the Federal
 | 
						||
Reserve's great swindle.^^ They do not perceive—or perhaps do
 | 
						||
not care—what damage they do to the cause they presumably
 | 
						||
wish to further.
 | 
						||
APPENDIX
 | 
						||
The political situation in November 1963 may be summarized as
 | 
						||
follows. Kennedy would probably demand to be renominated by his
 | 
						||
"Democratic" Party, but would jettison Johnson, whom he disliked
 | 
						||
12. There will be an intermediate stage i n which each animal Vflll be
 | 
						||
given a computer card, such as is now being tried out and perfected in
 | 
						||
Southest Asia and elsewhere, whTch will record their serial numbers,
 | 
						||
their vital statistics, and the credit they are each week allowed for
 | 
						||
work, from which will be deducted the 'cost' of the trinkets they will be
 | 
						||
allowed to Tsuy.' When it is discovered that the cards oan be lost, the
 | 
						||
data will be imprinted on their skulls with radioactive particles, which
 | 
						||
will have the same function as the 'chips' in your computer.
 | 
						||
13. One of the most audacious hoaxes was devised when the tilthy
 | 
						||
mongrel called Eisenhower was President. The hoaxer printed letter
 | 
						||
heads of a Mamie Stover Foundation, headed by the Communist l i ' k e
 | 
						||
on the Supreme Court, Felix Frankfurter, and sent out on that letter
 | 
						||
head form letters that solicited contributions to establish a memorial
 | 
						||
for the mulatta who was Eisenhower's mother. The hoaxer thought
 | 
						||
that a good way to call public attention to the fact that "dear old Ike"
 | 
						||
was part nigger (as well as part Jew). Although he covered his track so
 | 
						||
well that the F.B.I, could find no valid evidence against him, he very
 | 
						||
seriously embarrassed the publisher with whom he was then associated.
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 25
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
and perhaps hated/ and replace h i m w i t h a less despicable candidate.
 | 
						||
In any event, it was most unlikely that Kennedy would be reelected In
 | 
						||
1964.
 | 
						||
Kennedy had been elected In I960 by a very narrow margin (less
 | 
						||
then two-tenths of one percent o f the popular vote) over Richard
 | 
						||
Nixon, and had owed chat election to his wit, youthful appearance,
 | 
						||
and visage that many women thought handsome. H e may have owed
 | 
						||
that narrow margin specifically to Nixon's blunder in engaging in
 | 
						||
debates with h i m over television. Kennedy's cosmeticians made him
 | 
						||
seem more youthful than he was, and his ready wit enabled h i m to give
 | 
						||
immediate replies, often sophistry or mere verbiage, but he had the
 | 
						||
advantage that even persons who perceived something wrong with his
 | 
						||
answer did not have time to think about it before they had to watch
 | 
						||
and listen to what followed. N o one ever thought N i x o n handsome,
 | 
						||
but his cosmeticians made him seem older than he really was, and the
 | 
						||
producers of the show manipulated the lighting to his disadvantage.
 | 
						||
H e was a man who does not think quickly and who considers every
 | 
						||
statement before he utters It, so that he appeared hesitant and
 | 
						||
embarrassed."^
 | 
						||
Kennedy In office quickly lost much of his narrow margin of
 | 
						||
populariry. For one thing, he was of Irish ancestry, the first president
 | 
						||
since Herbert Hoover who was not sanctified by a large admixture of
 | 
						||
Another hoax involved quotations from a book supposedly written by a
 | 
						||
Jew, but of which no trace could be found. W h e n the hoaxer was con
 | 
						||
fi-onted w i t h this fact, he defended h i m s e l f by pleading that " A n y stick
 | 
						||
is good enough to beat a Jew." H e evidently could not understand that
 | 
						||
a stick that breaks i n one's h a n d is not only useless, but dangerous
 | 
						||
and likely to wound the h a n d that wields it. To the extent that he was
 | 
						||
believed by persons on our side, he had done—unintentionally I hope—•
 | 
						||
the work of an agent provocateur.
 | 
						||
1. The antagonism between the two m e n was so notorious that some
 | 
						||
months after the assassination a wag on the staff of one of the small
 | 
						||
'off-beat' newspapers that "intellectuals" enjoy, devised an obscenely l u 
 | 
						||
dicrous account of the way i n which Johnson, whose sexual proclivities
 | 
						||
were well known, abused Kennedy's corpse when it was on the air
 | 
						||
plane en route to Washington.
 | 
						||
2. A t the request of some stalwart Republicans, I witnessed on televi
 | 
						||
sion a debate between Kennedy and Nixon. When the show was over, I
 | 
						||
told my hosts, "Gentlemen, you have just lost an election."
 | 
						||
26 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
Jewish ichor in his veins, and consequently the jewspapers were not
 | 
						||
zealous in protecting his reputation. H i s betrayal o f the and-Castro
 | 
						||
Cubans was not outweighed by an obviously phoney 'confrontation'
 | 
						||
with the Soviets.^ H i s cheap grandstand ploy when he visited Berlin
 | 
						||
and made the patently absurd statement, "Ich bin ein Berliner,"
 | 
						||
seemed contemptible to many. His shipment of American troops to
 | 
						||
Vietnam in preparation for another fake "war," such as the one In
 | 
						||
Korea i n which so many American lives had been wasted to disgrace
 | 
						||
the United States, alarmed even persons who had no conception of the
 | 
						||
Judaeo-Communisr conspiratorial drive for "One W o r l d , " and he was
 | 
						||
considered responsible for the assassination of the Americans'
 | 
						||
supposed ally, N g o D i n h D i e m , which was so badly managed that It
 | 
						||
quickly became apparent that It was the work o f "our" C.I.A. There
 | 
						||
was great sympathy for the widow, Madame N h u , a very attractive and
 | 
						||
highly intelligent Oriental woman, during the twerity days chat elapsed
 | 
						||
between the C I . A . ' s murder o f her husband and its deletion o f
 | 
						||
Jackanapes Kennedy In Dallas.
 | 
						||
Kennedy's boyish charm was evanescent. H e , like all of his clan,
 | 
						||
was wealthy, but the wealth has been acquired by his father, a parvenu
 | 
						||
enriched by financing bootleggers during the Prohibition Era, and his
 | 
						||
superfically civilized manners often wore thin and revealed a
 | 
						||
"low-brow, shanty-Irish politician from Boston." His notorious
 | 
						||
3. K h r u s h e v obligingly h a d a few rockets, or cardboard models of them,
 | 
						||
loaded on a ship for Americans to photograph from the air, but i t was
 | 
						||
soon known from reconnaissance flights over Cuba that all of the bal
 | 
						||
listic missiles with nuclear warheads, which had a range of about 1800
 | 
						||
miles, were still i n place and ready for action against the United
 | 
						||
States, only ninety miles away.
 | 
						||
4. One of the last American journalists, Westbrook Pegler, with whom
 | 
						||
I am proud to have been associated, sent a public telegram of condo
 | 
						||
lence to Madame N h u : "Please accept my sad apology for the murder of
 | 
						||
your husband and your bi-other-in-law by the corrupt, Pro-Communist
 | 
						||
government of the United States, probably directed by the Central In
 | 
						||
telligence Agency. ... The President is an uncouth double-crosser and
 | 
						||
his treachery to Senator M c C a r t h y was a betrayal comparable to the
 | 
						||
kiss of Judas. We, too, are having a revolution attended by bloodshed
 | 
						||
i n the Southern States which the Kennedys' Communist henchmen fo
 | 
						||
mented. Loyal American generals and others in the Pentagon may yet
 | 
						||
mount a coup and storm the White House. ... You have won many
 | 
						||
friends in the United States whose unspoken support may hearten you
 | 
						||
in this dark hour."
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 27
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
philandering was widely di,sapproved and a tape recording of his
 | 
						||
session i n bed with one of his numerous females was in circulation. H e
 | 
						||
scnmed, at best, a lascivious playboy. Jacqueline Kennedy and Princess
 | 
						||
RadziwiU were nototious leaders of what was called the "Jet Set,"
 | 
						||
among whom "[marital] faithfulness was simply not playing the
 | 
						||
game." Jacqueline's cruises on the yacht of the Onassis whom she later
 | 
						||
married aroused comment, but Americans especially disapproved o f
 | 
						||
her widely reported affaire w i t h her husband's brother, Robert
 | 
						||
Kennedy, known as "Bobby Sox," whom the C.I.A. deleted some years
 | 
						||
later, but not in time to save the life of the two brothers' common
 | 
						||
playgirl, an actress known as M a r i l y n M o n r o e . T h e regime o f
 | 
						||
"beatified adultery" was freely reported in the press and gossip
 | 
						||
magazines under such headlines as "The Night Jackie Almost Lost Her
 | 
						||
Husband." M a n y Americans disapproved of the "Jet Set" and their
 | 
						||
morals. A n d , furthermore, it was reported that, despite all that
 | 
						||
fashionable permi,ssivcne,s,s, Jack and Jackie hated each other. That
 | 
						||
gave rise to the quip that circulated in Washington immediately after
 | 
						||
the assassination: "Christmas has come early this year. Jacqueline
 | 
						||
already has her present, a Jack-in-the box." A widely circulated booklet
 | 
						||
of cartoons portrayed the Kennedy clan as avian raptores, e.g., Mrs.
 | 
						||
Kennedy was portrayed as a chicken hawk, called the "high-flying
 | 
						||
Jackie bird," whose cry was "Gimme! Gimme!"
 | 
						||
The Kennedys' notorious 'lifestyle' alienated many Americans who
 | 
						||
had no perception of political realities.
 | 
						||
5, I use this unfortunately polysemous word i n the sense in which it is
 | 
						||
most commonly used today, i.e., as a literary allusion to Ariosto's Or
 | 
						||
lando furioso. The word i n its less common but etymologically correct
 | 
						||
sense would imply that Kennedy was a homosexual, and that certainly
 | 
						||
was not the case. According to the then prevalent gossip, he appears to
 | 
						||
have been compulsively concupiscent, and to have been like the hero of
 | 
						||
Choderlos de Laolos's Liaisons dangereuses, who lost interest i n a
 | 
						||
woman soon after he seduced her, but prided himself on the number of
 | 
						||
his seductions. It is doubtful, however, whether any of Kennedy's
 | 
						||
bedmates needed to be seduced.
 | 
						||
6. For a report on the tenor of life in the White House, see the article
 | 
						||
by A . F . Canwell, "Those White House Guests," i n American Opinion,
 | 
						||
December 1963, pp. 43-49. He distinguishes between the "Jet Set", who
 | 
						||
were wealthy, profligate, and thoughtless, and the "Rat Pack," which
 | 
						||
consisted of Communists (Jews and traitors), thieves, and degenerates
 | 
						||
who hated Americans.
 | 
						||
Kennedy's domestic policies alarmed intelligent Americans. He
 | 
						||
sent hordes o f vicious goons, dressed as Federal Marshals, into
 | 
						||
Louisiana and Arkansas to pollute American universities with niggers.
 | 
						||
H e appointed his brother, Robert, Attorney General and so head of
 | 
						||
i, . 1 the Department of Justice, a post for v/hich he had no qualifications,
 | 
						||
I and Robert ("Bobby Sox") used his authority over J. Edgar Hoover to
 | 
						||
I • begin to fill the F.B.I, with thugs, many with criminal records, known
 | 
						||
as "Bobby's Boys." They were detested by the older agents, who had
 | 
						||
some pride and belief in the integrity of the F.B.I. If you asked a
 | 
						||
veteran agent with whom you were acquainted about "Bobby's Boys,"
 | 
						||
he usually made a grimace of pain and disgust and replied, "Well, I'll
 | 
						||
be able to retire in another two (or three or four) years."
 | 
						||
Kennedy's foreign policy, based on a supposed "cold war" with the
 | 
						||
Soviets, always resulted in another Communist triumph, most
 | 
						||
' commonly because "Foreign A i d " (and the C.I.A.) had been used to
 | 
						||
I overthrow civilized or semi-civilized governments and replace them
 | 
						||
j with barbarous outposts of the Soviets' ever more formidable military
 | 
						||
machine. Americans capable of distinguishing between a politician's
 | 
						||
screen of verbiage and his acts asked the questions that were posed, the
 | 
						||
very morning of the assassination, in the advertisement of which the
 | 
						||
essential patt is reprinted on pages X X X f above.
 | 
						||
(In 1983 there were a great many Americans who had not been
 | 
						||
narcotized by the Jews' press and schools, and who remembered what
 | 
						||
the United States had once been. Most of them have died in the
 | 
						||
almost thirty years that have passed since the assassination, and have
 | 
						||
been largely replaced by typical products of the tax-supported
 | 
						||
boob-hatcheries.)
 | 
						||
For these various reasons Kennedy had become unpopular in
 | 
						||
i many circles before the Indignation Meetings throughout the country,
 | 
						||
organized by patriotic Americans in Dallas, awakened bitter
 | 
						||
\t at his stripping of our A i r Force to supply our latest and
 | 
						||
[ best aircraft to the Communists in Yugoslavia.''
 | 
						||
(!•'• 7. It is not impossible that these planes are still in service and are
 | 
						||
[ being used i n the slaughter in Hertzogovina, Croatia, and Slovenia
 | 
						||
now i n progress. Serbia is, of course, still controlled by the Commu
 | 
						||
; nists put i n power by Tito, and it is not a coincidence that their acts
 | 
						||
were endorsed publicly by the notorious Holohoaxer, Wiesenthal, and
 | 
						||
i some of his fellow tribesmen.
 | 
						||
28 — LibeHy Bell / October 1992 Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 29
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
I do not know whether moral or political considerations were
 | 
						||
paramount in the mind of the senior physician at Parkland Hospital
 | 
						||
who echoed the sentiments of many Americans when, on the morning
 | 
						||
of the assassination, he was asked whether he would go to see Kennedy
 | 
						||
parade through the streets o f Dallas, and replied, by a prophetic
 | 
						||
coincidence, that he would see "that son-of-a-bitch" only i f he came to
 | 
						||
the back door of the hospital (i.e., in an ambulance, as Kennedy was
 | 
						||
brought that very afternoon).
 | 
						||
In November 1963 it seemed highly unlikely that Kennedy could
 | 
						||
devise anything to regain the popular approval he had lost, and the
 | 
						||
"Republican" faction was anticipating an almost certain victory in
 | 
						||
1964. W h a t was much worse, there was a rising tide of American
 | 
						||
patriotism which had to be stopped—and was stopped by the simple
 | 
						||
device of putting a bullet through Kennedy s skull.
 | 
						||
ADDENDUM
 | 
						||
Since the foregoing was written, the issue of the Journal of the
 | 
						||
American Medical Association for 7 October has come to hand. The cover
 | 
						||
reproduces a portait, drawn with mediocre skill,, of a hairy hook-nosed
 | 
						||
man in an Oriental costume, sitting with his hands on his thighs. It is
 | 
						||
entided "The Praying Jew," and a full page of the magazine is devoted to
 | 
						||
a lavish encomium o f Moyshe Shagal, known as Chagall, and his
 | 
						||
wonderful paintings, usually "crowded with colorful images that obey
 | 
						||
neither the laws o f space nor those of time." Chagall's incoherent
 | 
						||
parodies of art, like the daubs of his fellow Sheeny, Picasso, are
 | 
						||
collected by wealthy suckers who are devoid of an aesthetic sense.
 | 
						||
T h e cover is therefore appropriate for an issue in which the
 | 
						||
Medical Association continues to certify the truth of Earl Warren's
 | 
						||
famous hoax. The editor, D r . Chades D . Lundberg, loudly proclaims
 | 
						||
again (pp. 1736-1738) that there is no possible doubt whatever that
 | 
						||
the Watren Report is ultimate truth. (He admits, incidentally, that the
 | 
						||
autopsy on the body delivered at Bethesda disclosed no evidence of the
 | 
						||
severe and potentially fatal Addison's disease from which Kennedy was
 | 
						||
known to have been suffering, but he offers no explanation of a fact
 | 
						||
that is medically incredible.)
 | 
						||
In the articles I discussed above, I noted that D r . Pierre Fink, the
 | 
						||
only trained forensic pathologist present at the autopsy, had not been
 | 
						||
consulted, and that precautions had been taken to discredit his
 | 
						||
30 — LibeHy Bell / October 1992
 | 
						||
restiinony as unreliable, should he dissent. The Medical Association
 | 
						||
sent a D r . Dennis L . Brco to Switzerland to interview D r . Fink, who
 | 
						||
decided to sing in the chorus and was rewarded with three large
 | 
						||
photographs of his withered countenace and five pages of flattety (pp.
 | 
						||
1748-1754), embodying his a.ssertion that the autopsy in Bethesda
 | 
						||
confirmed the transcendental verity of the Warren Report, which
 | 
						||
proved, for all eternity, that "Lee Harvey Oswald, a political fanatic
 | 
						||
and the lone gunman" assassinated Kennedy all by his lonesome.
 | 
						||
The disgrace of the Medical Association is somewhat alleviated by
 | 
						||
the publication (pp. 1681-1684) of letters from six alert physicians
 | 
						||
who refused to be bluffed by Dr. Lundberg and his chorus, and who
 | 
						||
pointed out fallacies and inconsistencies in the official fiction. I wish I
 | 
						||
could quote all of them, for each pointed out some damning
 | 
						||
discrepancies in the testimony in Warren's hoax, but I dare not add
 | 
						||
much to an article that is already excessively long. I can only heartily
 | 
						||
congratulate D r . Wayne S. Smith o f the School for Advanced
 | 
						||
International Studies of the Johns Hopkins University for his cogent
 | 
						||
letter, which begins by remarking, apropos of the articles in the earlier
 | 
						||
issue of the Medical Association's Journal, "I do not recall ever having
 | 
						||
seen so many erroneous statements in so few pages." H e concludes his
 | 
						||
able critique with a fact that is conclusive in itself
 | 
						||
The articles note that panels of experts, basing their analysis
 | 
						||
on the autopsy photographs and roentgenograms, have
 | 
						||
consistently upheld the Warren Report. Yes, but the two naval
 | 
						||
medical technicians who took those roentgenograms and photos
 | 
						||
have now revealed (in a press conference on May 29) that the
 | 
						||
photos and roentgenograms sent to the Warren Commission and
 | 
						||
examined by all subsequent panels were not the ones they took.
 | 
						||
They are fakes! So much for the conclusions of the panels of
 | 
						||
experts and the irrefutable nature of the evidence.
 | 
						||
A n d so much for frantic effotts to repair a thoroughly demolished
 | 
						||
imposture on the public! The British expert. D r . Cyril Wecht, who
 | 
						||
made a thorough study of the the Warren Report, concluded that
 | 
						||
libraries should put the twenty-six volumes in the fiction section of
 | 
						||
their stacks, alongside Huckleberry Finn Gulliver's Travels. I suggest
 | 
						||
that the poisonous trash should be shelved with "Hitler's Diaries" and
 | 
						||
the "Diary of Anne Frank." •
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 31
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
FOR MY LEGIONARIES. Th« L*-j:on,ir/ Mov.n.ont in Romn
 | 
						||
n n corninor'> known a j tl,e Iro" C.ij;irtJ, - porlLips the oldp.-t r.nti
 | 
						||
Corpmurtiet movement in the world, still afiya—wa& loanded by
 | 
						||
rkirnmiu O.xiroJ.nu in 1 ° , ' - f oi My Loy<onJnos iJ'J3 pp , pn
 | 
						||
?o "0 4 J,1 "bO for (w-jtago A hDndlinfi). Codrnanu't stsir.ng wotk, is a
 | 
						||
complete and Authoritative account of the ideals ^nd principles of
 | 
						||
the Legfonary Movement wtiich shaped the character of young Ro
 | 
						||
mart!an$ before WWII. Control ov^r the c;omrtunlc$tton$ m^dia and
 | 
						||
the normal channels of book distribution by our Internatfonal ene
 | 
						||
mies maK^e it impo$sibl0 to reach the broad market thi$ grtiqu^
 | 
						||
book deserves. We are certain that For My Legionaries wilt soon
 | 
						||
bfioomo a coll^tof$ itom. JU$ took af$o prwid^fe the 'ml$$bg :
 | 
						||
pieces' of the drastically censored The Suhide vf Butofm by Prince i
 | 
						||
M, Sturd?a; the ideritity of those who masterminded Borpania's.take
 | 
						||
over and Wtio are noW ertfiaged trt partying out th$ same program in
 | 
						||
tho U^$. Witt no longor be \Jnkrtown to youv fSofehenitsyn woyfcf ^ - i
 | 
						||
p$ar to have not slightest inklir^ ot who conqiwr^ His countiyr'-- i
 | 
						||
e.G.) FOfi W IBGtOmmS, Ofder #Q6003, shgle copy $1Q.OO, 3
 | 
						||
cop,f.& $25 .-^0, 5 copies $35 00
 | 
						||
THE ANTI-HUMby D. Bacu (307 pp., hb. $7.00 + $1.50
 | 
						||
for postage & handling) describes what V/as done to the young men
 | 
						||
whorn Corneilu 2. Opdreanu, the founder of the Ugbnary Move
 | 
						||
ment in ftemanlai inspired, Wh^n seVen years after his bfljtai mUr* :
 | 
						||
der, Romania was delivered to the Bolsheviks, They were subjected i
 | 
						||
to what is tho most fully dooumontod "Pavtoviart ^xpertmeAf on a \
 | 
						||
large number oi human bangs, it fs likely that the same techniques :
 | 
						||
ware i^od on many Amerioan prisonar* in Koroa and Vietnam, f/ja ;
 | 
						||
Anti-Humans is a well-written document of great historical and psy- \
 | 
						||
ohological importano<fr, fl$adin^ it wilt ba ar> amotional exportenca
 | 
						||
you will not forget. sequel to Orwell's f S a 4 " ~ R , S , H . searing
 | 
						||
expos6 of Red bestialityP — O r . A J . App). ANTI-HUKfANS,
 | 
						||
Order #01013, Single copy $7.00» 3 for $15.00, 5 for $20.00,
 | 
						||
Por po$f90e and handftng add; On domestic orders, $i>50 fori
 | 
						||
orders under $10.00, 15% of order total for orders over $10.00. On
 | 
						||
orc{$r$ from abroad, $2.00 or 20% fospootivaty. Sample oopy of our i
 | 
						||
monthly magazine Uberty Bell and copy of our huge book list con
 | 
						||
taining hundreds of "eye-Openers;" $5.00, Subscription for 12 hard-;
 | 
						||
hitting, fact-packed issues $35.00 (U.S. only)+ Order from:
 | 
						||
LIBERTY BELL PUBLICATIONS
 | 
						||
Box 21, Reedy WV 25270 USA
 | 
						||
32 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
HERETICAL VERITIES:
 | 
						||
Mathematical Themes in Physical Description
 | 
						||
reviewed by
 | 
						||
Professor Ben Kriegh
 | 
						||
T h e readers o f Liberty Bell are w e l l aware o f "establishment"
 | 
						||
orthodoxy i n s u c h fields as history, sociology, economics, etc. B u t ,
 | 
						||
they may be surprised to learn that there is a similar "establishment"
 | 
						||
orthodoxy (perhaps it should be called "politically correct thinking")
 | 
						||
in the hard sciences, particularly in Physics and to some extent in'
 | 
						||
M a t h e m a t i c s . T h e ogre b e h i n d this o r t h o d o x y i n physics is the
 | 
						||
so-called theory of relativity.
 | 
						||
T h e point is dramatically illustrated i n a remarkable book by
 | 
						||
T h o m a s E . P h i p p s , Jr., HERETICAL VERITIES: Mathematical Themes
 | 
						||
in Physical Description, (Classic N d n f i c t i o n L i b r a r y , B o x 926, U r b a n a ,
 | 
						||
Illinois 61801). M r Phipps studied nuclear physics at Harvard, a n d
 | 
						||
w o r k e d i n various research groups in^ the N a v y D e p a r t m e n t , the
 | 
						||
Pentagon, a n d Department o f Defense. In his book o f some 630 pages
 | 
						||
of text, much of which requires of the reader a^substantial background
 | 
						||
in physics and mathematics, he undertakes the rather startling task, o f
 | 
						||
examining in detail some of the logical and practical difficulties
 | 
						||
inherent in Einstein's special theory of relativity and then shows how
 | 
						||
those difficulties might be overcome by laying the groundwork for
 | 
						||
what he calls a "true theory of relativity."
 | 
						||
In M r . P h i p p s ' words, " T h e purpose o f thls>book is ... to develop
 | 
						||
alternative physics leading to confrontations w i t h existing theory,
 | 
						||
resolvable by experiment." I n particular he is referring to Einstein's
 | 
						||
special theory of relativity which he terms "the holiest of holies." In
 | 
						||
addition, he Introduces a profound modification of the equations
 | 
						||
w h i c h are at the foundation of electromagnetic theory (Maxwell's
 | 
						||
equations), a n d suggests some n e w Ideas In the field o f mathematics,
 | 
						||
while chastising both physicists and mathematicians for their failure to
 | 
						||
teject theories w h i c h lead' to illogical Impasses and seek logically sound
 | 
						||
alternatives.
 | 
						||
M r . Phipps writes, "Increasingly, physics has come to depend' on:
 | 
						||
mathematics. T h e mathematlzation- o f physics has gone ridiculously
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 33
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
coo far. The subject has been taken over by unfrocked mathematicians
 | 
						||
as their 'private property'. Traditionally, the fresh breeze of amateur
 | 
						||
criticism is required ro expose big mistakes (the failure of theory to
 | 
						||
conform to observation). Mathematically honed experts, though
 | 
						||
bounteously provided with imagination, seem to have what in music is
 | 
						||
called a 'tin ear' for physical description. Innovative physics is a calling,
 | 
						||
not a profession. It requires a special ralent—call it intuition—not
 | 
						||
among constitutionally guaranteed rights of the citizen. Nevertheless,
 | 
						||
people who lack this talent fill the literature with wonderful
 | 
						||
imaginings-—their mathematical hobby horses clattering and neighing off
 | 
						||
key and out of tune, stampeding after each fad, producing such a
 | 
						||
thunderous cacophony that any real 'signal' present is sure to be drowned
 | 
						||
out and the signaler trampled beyond archaeological excavation."
 | 
						||
W h i l e M r . Phipps' work is too significant to be dismissed lighdy
 | 
						||
by the theoretical physicist, even the nontechnical reader can grasp its
 | 
						||
significance with the aid of a little preliminary groundwork. To
 | 
						||
prepare the way, we need to review briefly,the classic motivation for
 | 
						||
the theoretical physicist, a task which M r . Phipps includes in the
 | 
						||
beginning sections of his book.
 | 
						||
The goal of the theoretical physicist is to find mathematical
 | 
						||
equations which describe natural events as accurately as possible and
 | 
						||
substantiated by experimental observation. For example, Sir Isaac
 | 
						||
Newton found that the equation F = kmM/r"^ describes the
 | 
						||
gravitational force of attraction between two masses, m and M , at a
 | 
						||
distance r from each other, where k is a consrant determined by
 | 
						||
experiment. 5uch a formula is said to describe a physical law.
 | 
						||
However, the physicist seeks more than the mere expression of a
 | 
						||
physical law as a mathematical formula. His description of a physical
 | 
						||
law should be as "universal" as possible. That is, if the law is properly
 | 
						||
described, the description (formula) should be independent of the
 | 
						||
reference frame; i.e., it should be the same for someone on a rotating
 | 
						||
earth as it is for an astronaut in a spaceship or for someone on the
 | 
						||
nloon. W h e n a formula reflects this property, it is said to be invariant
 | 
						||
under a transformation, from one reference frame to another. O n the
 | 
						||
other hand, i f a formula transforms in such a way that each of its terms
 | 
						||
is altered in the same way, the formula is said to be covariant These
 | 
						||
34 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
two concept.')' play an' important role in M r . Phipps' demonstration of
 | 
						||
inadequacies in Einstein's theory of'relativity and in the development
 | 
						||
of his own new approach to relativity.
 | 
						||
There are several types of reference frames, For example, one
 | 
						||
frame might be related to another by a translation, that is, a change
 | 
						||
from one reference, poin't?, or origin,, to another reference point. O r ,
 | 
						||
one frame might be speeding away from another (where the observer is
 | 
						||
located) with a constant velocity; or it may be accelerating or rotating
 | 
						||
relative to the observer's reference frame.
 | 
						||
Sometimes, the formulation of a physical law is invariant under a
 | 
						||
transformation from the observer's reference frame to another which is
 | 
						||
moving with a constant velocity relative to the observer, but is not
 | 
						||
invariant under a transformation to an accelerating frame (it might be
 | 
						||
covariant, for example, or neither invariant nor covariant). W h e n this
 | 
						||
occurs the physicist should feel that the expression of the natural law is
 | 
						||
inadequate and seek a new f o r m u l a t i o n that w i l l be more
 | 
						||
comprehensive, that is, that will remain invariant under a wider class
 | 
						||
or group of transformations.
 | 
						||
When'Einstein put forth his special theory of relativity in 1905, It
 | 
						||
appeared to explain certain physical phenomena that Newtonian
 | 
						||
mechanics could not explain, e.g., the advance of the perihelion of
 | 
						||
Mercury, For that reason, relativity rapidly became accepted, after
 | 
						||
several years, as a great advance in physics, even though it created
 | 
						||
logical paradoxes. Furthermore, it abandoned the classical physics
 | 
						||
concept of seeking descriptions of physical laws that were invariant
 | 
						||
under transformations, with the contention that since all physical
 | 
						||
relations wete relative the best that could be hoped for was that
 | 
						||
physical laws could only transform covariantly.
 | 
						||
In his Introdtiction, M r . Phipps demonstrates "the central role the
 | 
						||
invariants play in the physical description." It is therefore of primary
 | 
						||
importance to correcdy identify the invariants of kinematics, for
 | 
						||
example. Because of the overwhelming importance Einstein's theory
 | 
						||
gives to covariance, it might appear that thete are no invariants i n
 | 
						||
relativity. But, as M r . Phipps shows, both "proper time" intervals and
 | 
						||
"proper space" intervals are invariant in the special theory. W h y , then,
 | 
						||
docs the relativist not seek invariant formulation of the laws of nature?
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 85
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
M r . Phipps' answer is that "manifestly .invariant formulation o f
 | 
						||
physical laws has never so much as crossed the mind of the special
 | 
						||
relativist ... all relativists have chosen the path, of covariance. ... The
 | 
						||
reason (is that they) have incorrectly identified the invariants o f
 | 
						||
kinematics. Having chosen the wrong invariants, the relativists need a
 | 
						||
compensatory mistake at the methodological level—and this is
 | 
						||
provided by the ideology of covariance." As M r . Phipps shows, "proper
 | 
						||
time" intervals and "proper space" intervals are not suitable invariants
 | 
						||
on which to base kinematics. Instead, M r , Phipps' development of
 | 
						||
kinematics is based on the invariance under arbitrary changes o f state
 | 
						||
of relative motion of object length and particle proper time:
 | 
						||
While some physicists questioned the validity of the assumptions
 | 
						||
of relativity because o f the paradoxes which arose, they seemed to be
 | 
						||
overwhelrned, by the mathematical theoretical physicists who often
 | 
						||
tried to explain away paradoxes with arguments which often ignored
 | 
						||
the details of logic or which led.to more obscure paradoxical situations.
 | 
						||
In order to understand M r . Phipps's criticism of relativity and his
 | 
						||
proposed remedy, we need to understand the principles which provide
 | 
						||
the basis for:his ideas. T o begin, he realizes that there is often a
 | 
						||
vagueness or confusion arising from poorly stated concepts or
 | 
						||
definitions and that some problems in an existing theory originate in
 | 
						||
semantics.. Accordingly, he is meticulous with definitions of such terms
 | 
						||
as inertial system, covariance, invariance, field, etc. Then, as suggested
 | 
						||
by the foregoing discussion, he has stated his guiding principles. They
 | 
						||
are: •
 | 
						||
(1) SUCCESSIVE APPROXIMATIONS. Theoretical physical
 | 
						||
science is the mathematical description of nature which is never final
 | 
						||
or exact but is a progressive process typically achieved through a
 | 
						||
succession of ever more finely honed approximations.
 | 
						||
, (2) FORM INVARIANCE. The aim of fundamental physics is the
 | 
						||
discovery.of ^mathematical relationships that rigorously preserve their
 | 
						||
forms under an ever wider class of reinterpretations of the physical
 | 
						||
meanings of their symbols.
 | 
						||
(3) COVERING THEORY. A theory is sought to Insure the
 | 
						||
adequacy of parametrization (the variables in terms of which the
 | 
						||
fundamental equations are stated). Whenever difficulties arise in
 | 
						||
36 — Liberty Bell / October 1992
 | 
						||
applying the form invariance principle, one should suspect the
 | 
						||
inadequacy o f the parametrization and examine the operational
 | 
						||
procedures by w h i c h the symbols o f the theory are defined and then
 | 
						||
determine, consistent w i t h the form invariance principle, a suitable
 | 
						||
"covering theoiy" that yields all the results of the uiLsatisfactory theor>'
 | 
						||
from w h i c h one starts and w h i c h also yields additional results subject
 | 
						||
to observational resting.
 | 
						||
W i t h these principles in mind we shall .see how he applies them in
 | 
						||
tackling some of the problems of the theoiy of relativity.
 | 
						||
To illustrate the type of difficulties which the special theory of
 | 
						||
relativity encounters, M r . Phipps cites the Ehrenfest Paradox. One of
 | 
						||
the results predicted by relativity is the so-called Lorentz contraction of
 | 
						||
a rigid rod or measuring stick moving in the direction of its length.
 | 
						||
When informed of this consequence of the theory, Paul Ehrenfest, a
 | 
						||
German physicist, posed a quastion (Phys. Zeits. 10, 918 (1909)).
 | 
						||
Consider a citcular disc rotating about an axis perpendicular to the
 | 
						||
disc through its centet. Each small segment of the rim of the disc
 | 
						||
constitutes an idealized rigid rod which should undergo a Lorentz
 | 
						||
contraction when set in motion. Therefore, what happens to the disc?
 | 
						||
Does the rim contract?
 | 
						||
So fragile is the theory of relativity that, accotding to M r . Phipps,
 | 
						||
at least six different "explanations" of the paradox have been offered by
 | 
						||
the physicists. Some said the disc buckles'into the third dimension.
 | 
						||
Others said the geometry of the disk becomes non-Euclidian, i.e., its
 | 
						||
flat space becomes curved. (But how can a curvature of space arise in a
 | 
						||
flat space?) Still others said it cannot contract. In fact, this contention
 | 
						||
indicates that the Lorentz contraction is not as universal as claimed.
 | 
						||
M r . Phipps says, "The Ehrenfest paradox suggests that since the
 | 
						||
Lorentz contracrion of extended structures cannot occur universally, it
 | 
						||
may not occur at all." Indeed, this is one point which leads M r . Phipps
 | 
						||
into a reevaluation of premises upon which relativity theory is based.
 | 
						||
This illustration is but one o f several which M r . Phipps discusses
 | 
						||
in illustrating his contention that paradoxes or logical inconsistencies
 | 
						||
arising from relativity theory are usually explained away by
 | 
						||
"explanations" that give rise to other paradoxes. H e asks, "Should not
 | 
						||
any theory that lives by logic be allowed to die by it?" H e continues
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 37
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
with the observation that "The type of mind to which contemporary
 | 
						||
relativity appeals is characterized as 'ancient Greek/ a type well
 | 
						||
represented among us today, particularly in academia. T h e ancient
 | 
						||
Greeks were giants; they could readily have stood on each others
 | 
						||
shoulders had they had a clear inkling o f the humbling idea o f
 | 
						||
'progress/ But they believed i n the stroke of genius, the leap to 'truth'
 | 
						||
with minimal need to crib from observation. They had plenty o f time
 | 
						||
to make it work i f it were going to work. It didn't for them and it
 | 
						||
won't for us."
 | 
						||
A second illustration o f the problems which arise within the scope
 | 
						||
of Einstein's theory of relativity concerns Maxwell's equations which
 | 
						||
are the foundation o f electromagnetic theory. In M r . Phlpps' words,
 | 
						||
"they are considered sacrosanct because they are an elegandy compact
 | 
						||
mathematical summation of everything about electromagnetism that
 | 
						||
had been observed In the laboratory during the previous half
 | 
						||
century..." (The equations led to the discovery o f electromagnetic
 | 
						||
waves.) Unfortunately, two o f the four equations proved to be
 | 
						||
noninvariant under a Galilean transformation, a troublesome fact for
 | 
						||
the relativists because this meant that the equations were valid only in
 | 
						||
a "preferred" absolute reference frame.
 | 
						||
According to Phlpps, only one physicist, Heinrich Hertz
 | 
						||
(German) realized that If Maxwell's equations were not Invariant
 | 
						||
under a Galilean transformation, and If a relativity of some type was an
 | 
						||
experimental fact, then Maxwell's equations were in conflict with
 | 
						||
experimental fact and needed to be changed. Hertz then discovered the
 | 
						||
modifications needed to make Maxwell's equations Invariant under a
 | 
						||
Galilean transformation and published his own version of Maxwell's
 | 
						||
theory. In fact. It was Hertz who saw that Maxwell's equations implied
 | 
						||
the existence of a wave equation, hence the physical existence of
 | 
						||
electromagnetic waves, and confirmed this prediction in the
 | 
						||
laboratory. It is one of the sad stories of science that Hertz's discovery
 | 
						||
of electromagnetic waves elevated Maxwell's equations to a position of
 | 
						||
deification in the minds o f other physicists who chose to Ignore
 | 
						||
Hertz's own Improvements on them.
 | 
						||
The correction to Maxwell's equations discovered by Hertz was
 | 
						||
really a simple matter of reparametrizing the equations, I.e., changing
 | 
						||
38 — Liberty Bell / October 1992 ~
 | 
						||
one of the variables, a process M r . Phipps shows in detail. He further
 | 
						||
illustrates the strange logic o f the "establishment" physicists by noting,
 | 
						||
"When Maxwell's equations made definite numerical predictions that
 | 
						||
were experimentally disconfirmed, the interpretation that led to this
 | 
						||
result was discarded and the equations preserved. W h e n Hertz made
 | 
						||
definite numerical predictions that were experimentally disconfirmed,
 | 
						||
nobody thought of preserving his equations and discarding his (ether
 | 
						||
based) interpretation that led to this result." Yet, Hertz's equations are
 | 
						||
far more significant than Maxwell's because they provide a "covering"
 | 
						||
theory that Includes the valid results of Maxwell's theory while
 | 
						||
extending that theory to include invariance under Galilean
 | 
						||
transformations.
 | 
						||
These examples are but two of several which M r . Phipps discusses
 | 
						||
in detail. H e writes, "...the terrible cost to physics that relativity's
 | 
						||
narrow channelization of the human Imagination has exacted in terms
 | 
						||
of lost gains and missed oppottunitles for alternative development" is
 | 
						||
like "the dominance of a single species that kills off all others..." H e
 | 
						||
continues, "Newton's third law the equality of action and reaction
 | 
						||
throughout the universe Is one of the grandest conceptions of the
 | 
						||
human mind... It can be said that no physicist has ever gone into a
 | 
						||
laboratory and failed to confirm Newton's third law. That is, there
 | 
						||
exists not a shred of evidence against it." Yet, "The third law has long
 | 
						||
since been junked by theorists, ... because the failure of Maxwell's
 | 
						||
equations ... to exhibit Galilean invariance, and related peculiarities o f
 | 
						||
the Lorentz force law. Introduced into physics velocity-dependent and
 | 
						||
delayed-acting forces, which caused action-reaction force vectors to
 | 
						||
become theoretically nonparallel, thereby 'disproving' Newton's third
 | 
						||
law. ... From start to finish, nobody contemplated the alternative that
 | 
						||
Newton's third law and empiricism are still and eternally right, and
 | 
						||
that the disability of Maxwell's equations In respect to first order
 | 
						||
Galilean Invariance, the shrinkage of the mechanical invariance group
 | 
						||
ushered i n by special relatlvit)', etc., are all parts of one grand unified
 | 
						||
package properly labeled D E F I C I E N T T H E O R Y . "
 | 
						||
M r . Phipps' discussion "has emphasized the sabotage of physics
 | 
						||
wrought by space-time symmetry and the Lorentz transformation, ...
 | 
						||
they have destroyed freedom o f concept ... In respect to distant
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell / October 1992 — 39
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
simultaneity. ... In short, relativity has swept through physics like a
 | 
						||
forest fire, leaving only blackened stumps of concepts. By cutting off
 | 
						||
physics from its past, it has left it without a future. ... Can physics, as
 | 
						||
a social enterprise, ever recover from the holocaust of 1905?"
 | 
						||
Up to this point, we have considered some of the problems
 | 
						||
inherenr in Einstein's theory of relativity. Mr. Phipps does not intend
 | 
						||
to "suggest that there are no valid consequences of the theory. Instead,
 | 
						||
he is suggesting that the theory is not well founded on observational
 | 
						||
concepts. Furthermore, he is not content with merely pointing out
 | 
						||
flaws in the theory; he offers a viable alternative which we shall now
 | 
						||
examine briefly.
 | 
						||
In accordance with his stated guiding principles, M r . Phipps
 | 
						||
suspects that the paradoxes of relativity and the failure of Maxwell's
 | 
						||
equations to be invariant under Galilean transformations indicates
 | 
						||
deficiencies in the foundational concepts of the theory. He therefore
 | 
						||
goes back to examine the principles on which relativity if founded,
 | 
						||
with the intention of investigating their logical consistency, uniqueness
 | 
						||
(are there other possible alternatives?) and the parametrization of its
 | 
						||
equations. The consequences of his investigation are truly surprising.
 | 
						||
In order to convey the significance of his ideas, we shall have to
 | 
						||
use a litde mathematical symbolism, primarily to provide a basis for a
 | 
						||
"visual" comparison of his ideas with those of relativity theory. In Mr.
 | 
						||
Phipps' words, "Let us review the situation with respect to Einstein's
 | 
						||
theory. Because of the overweening significance it accords to
 | 
						||
covariance, one might suppose that theory contains no invariants. Not
 | 
						||
so. Both timelike ("proper time" interval), dT, and spacelike ("proper
 | 
						||
space" interval, dS, invariants are present in the special theory. Given
 | 
						||
this information the attentive reader ... will ask at once why the
 | 
						||
relativist does not seek invariant formulations of the laws of nature,
 | 
						||
i.e., expressions having the functional form F(dT,dS) = 0 ."
 | 
						||
The mathematical expression for the Einsteinian invariants are, for
 | 
						||
the "proper time" interval
 | 
						||
(dT)^ = (dt)2 - {(dx)2 + {dyf + (dz)2}/c2
 | 
						||
and for the "proper space" interval,
 | 
						||
(dS)^ = (dx)^ + (dy)^ + (dz)^ - c^(dt)^.
 | 
						||
40 — Liberty Bell / October 1992
 | 
						||
(The quantities appearing in these equations designate "infinitesimal
 | 
						||
differences" or differentials between the space time coordinates of two
 | 
						||
points on the worldline (trajectory) of a single particle.)
 | 
						||
Mr. Phipps proceeds with the observation that "The central
 | 
						||
problem of kinematics overlooked by Einstein and his followers is how
 | 
						||
to transfer the metric standard ... from S (a Galilean inertial system) to
 | 
						||
S' (a Galilean inertial system in motion relative to S) while
 | 
						||
maintaining its integrity as a metric standard. ... He (Einstein) missed
 | 
						||
a tempo through deriving coordinate transformation equations before
 | 
						||
specifying a means of calibtating coordinate axes in relative motion. ...
 | 
						||
The resulting motion group omitted the acceleration essential for
 | 
						||
intersystem transfer of material metric standards ... an omission fatal to
 | 
						||
both logic and physics."
 | 
						||
(As far as I can ascertain, Mr. Phipps gives the first kinematic
 | 
						||
definition of "inertial system" as "any material collective all constituent
 | 
						||
parts of which share the same state of motion and in undergoing any
 | 
						||
changes of state do so at equal proper times." For example, a train
 | 
						||
speeding down a straight track would represent an "inertial system,"
 | 
						||
but a rotating disc would not. He then defines a Galilean inertial
 | 
						||
system as "any closed (inertial) system in which Newton's mechanical
 | 
						||
equations are valid to first order in all velocity dimensional
 | 
						||
parameters." These concepts have an important bearing on the
 | 
						||
consequences of Mr. Phipps' version of relativity.)
 | 
						||
Mr. Phipps continues with an extensive argument to show that
 | 
						||
observational evidence supports the physical invariance of dT but not
 | 
						||
dS. His analysis leads to the conclusion that object length must be an
 | 
						||
invariant under arbitrary changes of state of relative motion. This
 | 
						||
surprising result is a significant departure from Einsteinian relativity
 | 
						||
which predicts the contraction of length in the direction of motion.
 | 
						||
He says, "The choice of objects rather than events as the basic
 | 
						||
descriptive elements of kinematics is no accidental feature, but will
 | 
						||
turn out to be perhaps our most profound departure from the Einstein I
 | 
						||
world formulation." It is significant that in Phipps' system, the
 | 
						||
Ehrenfest paradox disappears.
 | 
						||
Thus, as a result of his deliberations, Mr. Phipps postulates, "the
 | 
						||
invariants of kinematics for arbitrary physically permissible relative
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 41
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
motions are object length and particle proper time." The mathematical
 | 
						||
expressions are, for object length,
 | 
						||
{cLf = {ckf + {dyf + {dL)\
 | 
						||
and for particle proper time,
 | 
						||
(dT)^ = {Ckf - {{Ckf + {Cfyf + {dLfVc"- _
 | 
						||
where <^ denotes the differential o f a quantity delimited by points
 | 
						||
lying on two separate particle trajectories. Note that care must be
 | 
						||
taken to distinguish between "the length of an object" and "the dis
 | 
						||
tance between events." For example, one of M r . Phipps' theorems is
 | 
						||
"The length or distance o f separation between two events is invariant
 | 
						||
under inertial transformations i f and only i f the events are simulta
 | 
						||
neous."
 | 
						||
Relative simultaneity is an important part of Einsteinian
 | 
						||
relativity, so naturally it comes under the scrutiny of M r . Phipps.
 | 
						||
H e says, "Having discarded the metric half of Einstein's kinematics,
 | 
						||
we must reappraise all his deductions" including "his most famous'
 | 
						||
qualitative perception, the relativity of simultaneity. ... According
 | 
						||
to this perception as quantified by the equations of the Lorentz
 | 
						||
transformation, the synchronization o f distant clocks cannot be so
 | 
						||
defined as to be an invariant property for all inertial observers. Such
 | 
						||
a sweeping claim of-impotence invites refutation by
 | 
						||
counterexample, of w h i c h only one need be given." A n d give a
 | 
						||
counterexample he does, by what he calls the V*transport method
 | 
						||
(which is too elaborate to be detailed here). In so doing, he gives
 | 
						||
meaning to "distant simultaneity of events" a concept not realizable
 | 
						||
in Einsteinian theory.
 | 
						||
Einstein rejected all environmental effects on the propagation of
 | 
						||
light in a vacuum, a simplistic view which leads to complexities in the
 | 
						||
treatment of matter (notably, the Lorentz contraction). M r . Phipps
 | 
						||
takes the opposite view, postulating simple matter (length invariance)
 | 
						||
and complicated light (environmentally influenced). The two
 | 
						||
theoretical approaches, he contends, submit to crucial experimental
 | 
						||
testing which, in the final analysis, determines the viability of any
 | 
						||
theory. As a result of this approach, M r . Phipps shows that the speed of
 | 
						||
light is not always constant! H e calls this "the most important single
 | 
						||
theoretical result" j n his book. (Recall that the cornerstone of
 | 
						||
Einsteinian relativity is the assumed constancy of the speed of light.)
 | 
						||
42 — LiheHy Bell t October 1992
 | 
						||
One other significant consequence of M r . Phipps' theory
 | 
						||
shotild be mentioned. Ic concerns the "twin paradox" of Einsteinian
 | 
						||
theory. Suppose a stationaty observer on earth has a twin who
 | 
						||
boards a spaceship and travels away from earth at nearly the speed
 | 
						||
of light and then returns after an earth time lapse of, say, twenty
 | 
						||
years. Einsteinian relativity predicts that because a clock going with
 | 
						||
the "travelling twin" slows down, he will not age as fast as the "stay
 | 
						||
at h o m e " t w i n . B u t , s i n c e r e l a t i v e m o t i o n is c o n s i d e r e d
 | 
						||
symmetrical, the "travelling twin" might be considered stationary
 | 
						||
while the "stay at home" twin, along with the earth and the solar
 | 
						||
system, is travelling away at gteat speed. In that case, the "stay at
 | 
						||
home" twin should "return" younger than his "travelling"
 | 
						||
councetpart. So, which is it to be?
 | 
						||
N o w it has been confirmed by various laboratoty experiments
 | 
						||
that a group o f radioactive mesons moving in a circidar orbit at
 | 
						||
high speed decay much more slowly than a group maintained "at
 | 
						||
rest." That is, the stationary group decays 29 times faster than the
 | 
						||
moving group. This phenomenon indicates that the slowing of a
 | 
						||
clock i n motion relative to a stationary one must be an experimental
 | 
						||
fact. (This tesult apparently has been confirmed by flying a clock in
 | 
						||
a jet for a length of time and finding that it actually does slow
 | 
						||
down.) Hence Einstein's prediction is confirmed. Yet the theoiy
 | 
						||
must be deficient since it docs not explain away the symmetrical
 | 
						||
relationship between the relatively moving systems. The deficiency
 | 
						||
appears to be in the theory's failure to properly define "inertial
 | 
						||
systems."
 | 
						||
W i t h i n the context of his definition of "inertial system," and as
 | 
						||
a consequence of his definition of "distant simultaneity" M r . Phipps
 | 
						||
concludes that all "genuinely inertial clocks go at the same rate."
 | 
						||
Hence, i f the "traveling" twin is in an Inertial system, his clock will
 | 
						||
be going at the same late as that of the "stay at home" twin and
 | 
						||
when he returns home, he will be at the same age as his "stay at
 | 
						||
home" counterpart. But, does this conclusion contradict the
 | 
						||
expetimental evidence? N o , because, as M r . Phipps concludes,
 | 
						||
noninertial clocks go slower than inettlal clocks, a fact supported by
 | 
						||
the meson experiment, and one which telatlvlsts have failed to
 | 
						||
LiheHy Bell I October 1992 — 43
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
identify because they failed to distinguish between inertial and
 | 
						||
noninertial systems. (Refer back to M r . Phipps' definition of "inertial
 | 
						||
frame".) It turns out that a reference frame associated with a rotating
 | 
						||
(or orbiting) object is not an inertial frame. Thus, i f the "traveling"
 | 
						||
twin tcould journey to a distant star and return without accelaration,
 | 
						||
his age would remain the same as that of his "stay at home" twin.
 | 
						||
(From the practical point of view, one can orbit the earth at only a
 | 
						||
fixed speed far less than that o f light, so we would not be able to
 | 
						||
detect a difference in aging between astronauts and earthbounders.)
 | 
						||
A substantial portion o f M r . Phipps' book is devoted to the
 | 
						||
development of the mathematical consequences of his basic ideas.
 | 
						||
There are detailed discussions o f experiments on which he relies to
 | 
						||
support his thesis, which amounts to a new approach to the theory o f
 | 
						||
relativity, one which is not plagued by the logical difficulties inherent
 | 
						||
in Einsteinian relativity. Moreover, M r . Phipps' theory is a "covering
 | 
						||
theory" of relativity in the sense that valid consequences of Einsteinian
 | 
						||
relativity are preserved i n the new approach.
 | 
						||
There are several chapters devoted to the development of some
 | 
						||
original ideas i n mathematics which may prove to be useful i n
 | 
						||
extending the theoretical results further. However, there are certain
 | 
						||
points in his mathematical discussion which need clarification, i f
 | 
						||
unfortunate misunderstandings are to be avoided.
 | 
						||
It is an unfortunate fact of life that the community of physicists,
 | 
						||
for the most part, are so taken with Einsteinian relativity that they do
 | 
						||
not appear interested in exploring new approaches. It is clear that M r .
 | 
						||
Phipps has encountered great difficulty In having his case heard.
 | 
						||
Nevertheless, i n the final analysis, the test of any theory is how well it
 | 
						||
conforms to experimental fact as well as to logic. In that sense, M r .
 | 
						||
Phipps' theory seems far more coherent than Einstein's and, in time, I
 | 
						||
believe M r . Phipps will be vindicated. "I love it!" •
 | 
						||
44 — LiheHy Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
''The Mountain Has Fallen....''
 | 
						||
hy Winston Smith
 | 
						||
On August 16th, 1992, a giant departed from among
 | 
						||
us w h e n Robert M i l e s d i e d at the age of 67, three months
 | 
						||
to the d a y after the death of his beloved wife, Dorothy.
 | 
						||
The gap which he has left i n our ranks will not easily be
 | 
						||
filled.
 | 
						||
For over forty years. Bob Miles played a leading role i n
 | 
						||
the White resistance movement i n North America, his cour
 | 
						||
age and vision earning h i m worldwide renown among every
 | 
						||
friend and foe alike of Aryan man. Bob endured repeated as
 | 
						||
sault; a life of grim poverty and unremitting hardship; six
 | 
						||
years of false imprisonment on perjured testimony i n the
 | 
						||
worst hellhole of America's prison system as w e l l as a dis
 | 
						||
graceful attempt i n 1987 to imprison h i m yet again on bogus
 | 
						||
sedition charges; decades of spying and harassment; the i m 
 | 
						||
prisonment and murder of friends and family members; and
 | 
						||
an avalanche of media abuse and defamation without parallel
 | 
						||
in the annals of gutter journalism.
 | 
						||
They never broke him. Bob Miles met and overcame
 | 
						||
every attack, every ordeal which this evil regime inflicted on
 | 
						||
him, and he d i d so with a calm courage, a quiet dignity, and
 | 
						||
an irrepressible charm ai-id humor which, more than anything
 | 
						||
else Bob d i d or said or wrote, drove the Jews and their lick
 | 
						||
spittle lackeys i n the United States government to enraged
 | 
						||
distraction.
 | 
						||
Bob Miles clearly understood something which many in
 | 
						||
our movement have lost sight of, which is that death is no big
 | 
						||
deal. It is an inevitable fact of existence, to be accepted philo
 | 
						||
sophically and met with dignity when the time comes. Wliat
 | 
						||
matters is h o w one lives, what one leaves behind i n the w a y
 | 
						||
of accumulated knowledge, experience, and moral example.
 | 
						||
For all of us today and for comrades of the future, role mod
 | 
						||
els don't come any stronger or more admirable than Bob
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 45
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Miles. More than any White racial nationalist patriot in con
 | 
						||
temporary times. Bob lived his simple, powerful philosophy,
 | 
						||
which he sometimes referred to by the Irish Gaehc name of
 | 
						||
Sinn Fein, " O u r s e l v e s A l o n e . " T o B o b i t w a s a l l v e r y
 | 
						||
straightforward. Aryan man is the pinnacle of God's cre
 | 
						||
ation; we d o n ' t need a n y t h i n g w h i c h any other race or c u l 
 | 
						||
•ture can offer us i n exchange for admixture. A l l that is nec
 | 
						||
essary to preserve our race and ensure a future for our seed
 | 
						||
among the stars is a simple recognition of who we are, and
 | 
						||
the spiritual willpower to "just say n o " to every poisoned
 | 
						||
chalice, every rotten sweetmeat of which the Jew urges us
 | 
						||
to partake.
 | 
						||
Bob understood the one basic principle which holds the
 | 
						||
key to our entire struggle, yet which seems so incredibly diffi
 | 
						||
cult for many of us to crasp; which, indeed, some of us never
 | 
						||
succeed i n grasping. The Jews are not the problem, nor are the
 | 
						||
blacks or the Hispanics or the politicians or the interntational
 | 
						||
bankers or the Communists or any other grouping of our ra
 | 
						||
cial adversaries. WE are the problem. O u r weakness, our lazi
 | 
						||
ness, our profound moral cowardice, our craven unwilling
 | 
						||
ness to place our physical bodies and our creature comforts at
 | 
						||
risk, as Bob himself d i d without fear or hesitation. W h e n we
 | 
						||
look i n a mirror, there we see our enemy. But if we look hard
 | 
						||
enough, we can see Bob Miles standing behind us, a smile on
 | 
						||
his face and his hand on our shoulder to guide and uplift and
 | 
						||
strengthen us, as ever he d i d when he was with us here i n
 | 
						||
life.
 | 
						||
In ancient Celtic times, when a High King of Tara died,
 | 
						||
messengers were despatched in swift chariots riding the
 | 
						||
length and breadtli of all Ireland, from Anh-im i n the north to
 | 
						||
Kerry in the southwest. A t each village and crossroads and
 | 
						||
castle they came to, these couriers cried out, "The Mountain
 | 
						||
has fallen!" O u r mountain has fallen, but his spirit lives on,
 | 
						||
and it is strong.
 | 
						||
46 — LibeHy Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
LETTERS
 | 
						||
to the
 | 
						||
EDITOR
 | 
						||
RE:, Further U p d a t e on North Idaho; A
 | 
						||
Peep Through the Keyhole of the New
 | 
						||
World Order.
 | 
						||
Dear Editor:
 | 
						||
Having followed Bo Gritz's and
 | 
						||
Jack McLamb's respective accounts
 | 
						||
about the murderous atrocities
 | 
						||
committed on the Weaver family, I have another report for your
 | 
						||
readers. Bo Gritz announced that an eyewitness came forward and
 | 
						||
gave h i m a sworn affidavit which confirmed Weaver's statement
 | 
						||
about what h a p p e n e d . G r i t z is g o i n g to have the witness take a
 | 
						||
polygraph exam.
 | 
						||
The 14-year-old boy, Samuel, was shot i n the arm. The shot
 | 
						||
spun h i m around screaming and crying i n pain as he started run
 | 
						||
ning back toward the cabin. The Marshals then shot h i m in the
 | 
						||
back with automatic weapons fire. The boy was hit FOUR times in
 | 
						||
the back! H e fell dead along w i t h his dog, also shot in the back.
 | 
						||
Only machine-gun fire could hit the boy i n the back four times be
 | 
						||
fore he fell dead.
 | 
						||
The next afternoon, both Weaver and Harris were wounded by
 | 
						||
sniper fire after going out to a shed to pray over the boy's body. A s tliey
 | 
						||
scrambled through the door of the cabin, a government sniper shot
 | 
						||
Vicki Weaver between the eyes from 50 feet away! The Marshals have
 | 
						||
even admitted ttiis. It was a non-white American who saw every fea
 | 
						||
ture on her face when he pulled the trigger of a .308 sniper rifle, proba
 | 
						||
b l y even seeing the baby i n her arms. The 10 and 16 year old girls
 | 
						||
watched this happen. This was the giris' testimony. The shot blew
 | 
						||
Vicki's brain out. The girls dressed their mother's body with herbs and
 | 
						||
placed it under the kitchen table where she laid for the next 10 days.
 | 
						||
The family didn't have enough water to cleanse her body for burial.
 | 
						||
The new eyewitness stated that he saw Marshal Deagan shot
 | 
						||
twice from behind and then shot in the back of the head.
 | 
						||
Sarah, the 16 year o l d girl, gave a statement to the Spokane pa
 | 
						||
pers. I quote her: "They'd come on real late at night and say, ' M r s .
 | 
						||
Weaver, how's the baby, M r s . Weaver?' " A l s o , 'Good morning
 | 
						||
Randall. H o w ' d you sleep? We're having pancakes. What are you
 | 
						||
having?'" The Marshals did this knowing that Vicki was dead and
 | 
						||
laying inside the cabin with the children. They even named the
 | 
						||
military compound " C a m p V i c k i . " A l l this after the government
 | 
						||
knew Vicki's head was b l o w n off and her body was still inside the
 | 
						||
cabin w i t h the children. They used loudspeakers late at night to
 | 
						||
torture them psychologically.
 | 
						||
This means that T H E M A R S H A L S A N D G O V E R N M E N T
 | 
						||
AGENTS DELIBERATELY TORMENTED THE CHILDREN WITH
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 47
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
T H E I R DEAD MOTHER'S BODY!
 | 
						||
Have you ever heard of such a cruel, inhumane, and disgust
 | 
						||
ing act as this? They taunted the family whose mother laid dead
 | 
						||
under the kitchen table, i n f u l l v i e w of the children, for 10 days
 | 
						||
with a 10 month o l d baby girl to feed, without her mother.
 | 
						||
If this isn't tyranny, what is? The Weaver f a m i l y has no re
 | 
						||
course against the monsters who murdered these two innocents.
 | 
						||
Have you seen the pictures of those thugs who pointed their ma
 | 
						||
chine-guns at Bo Gritz's back? Beasts. H o w would you react if you
 | 
						||
saw your mother's brains blown out?
 | 
						||
N o w the U.S. Attorney has indicted the 10 month old baby and
 | 
						||
the two girls for aiding and abetting murder. They have literally
 | 
						||
charged a 10 m o n t h old baby girl w i t h murder! Is this insanity or
 | 
						||
what? Do I detect the hand of Judah behind this insane fury of
 | 
						||
frenzied hatred? Could this happen in America?
 | 
						||
It is tyranny, nothing else. Absolute tyranny. What does the
 | 
						||
Declaration of Independence and the underpinnings of the Consti
 | 
						||
tution say about tyranny? It is our duty, and n o w i t is time.
 | 
						||
The shot that murdered V i c k i Weaver is the opening r o u n d of
 | 
						||
what y o u k n o w must happen. A r e you ready?
 | 
						||
Publicus Prudentls
 | 
						||
ea» «
 | 
						||
Dear Landsmann;
 | 
						||
I don't know if tlie media has been carrying the news nationwide,
 | 
						||
so I'll mention a bit of background. Last month a white cop shot and
 | 
						||
killed a Dominican druggie during a violent struggle. Naturally this
 | 
						||
was used as an excuse for another riot by colored vermin. The black
 | 
						||
racist mayor of Jew York rushed to the scene to commiserate with the
 | 
						||
family of the druggie and to promise them that the guilty policeman
 | 
						||
w o u l d be punished just the w a y Bush promised that tlie four cops
 | 
						||
who beat Rodney K i n g would be punished, no matter what local
 | 
						||
courts found. Unlike Bush, Dinkins could not overrule the Grand Jury
 | 
						||
which found the policeman irmocent of all charges of murder, but he
 | 
						||
could and d i d use city money, stolen from whites via taxation, to fly
 | 
						||
the druggie back to Dominica and to fly his family there (and back)
 | 
						||
for his funeral. The N Y C cops, smarting under Dinkins black racist
 | 
						||
badmouthing, then held an off duty demonstration at City Hall where
 | 
						||
some cops had a few beers and got a little noisy and rowdy. A minor
 | 
						||
affair, but the Jewsmedia were aghast! Some 10,000 cops, mostly
 | 
						||
white, had dared to protest a black racist media campaign! After a pe
 | 
						||
riod of shock that white pigs would dare assert themselves, the
 | 
						||
Jewsmedia pulled themselves together to start their usual hate cam
 | 
						||
paign and demand the policemen be punished for their temerity. Peo
 | 
						||
ple here have polarized along racial lines. Coloreds support
 | 
						||
48 — LibeHy Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
Dinkins while whites generally support the cops.
 | 
						||
There is a lot of talk about how blacks are the main victims of
 | 
						||
black crime. This is true, but it doesn't stop blacks and other col
 | 
						||
oreds from nearly unanimous support of colored criminals. To col
 | 
						||
oreds, law and civilization are alien things imposed upon them b y
 | 
						||
white police, and revulsion against these thirigs is universal.
 | 
						||
In this case, investigation proved that colored witnesses deliber
 | 
						||
ately lied about the k i l l i n g h o p i n g to spark a riot so they could do
 | 
						||
their drugs freely in a "liberated" area. Tliis is mayor Dinkins constit
 | 
						||
uency and he is acting in accordance with their desire when he prom
 | 
						||
ises to punish white cops, make the police force majority colored, and
 | 
						||
set u p a civilian review board staffed by liberals and colored racists to
 | 
						||
further cripple such law enforcement as remains i n N Y C .
 | 
						||
White police, however, have found a deadly way to strike
 | 
						||
back. The N Y C government exists m a i n l y to collect revenue for
 | 
						||
Jewish usurers. One of the ways they get it is through use of fines
 | 
						||
to rob people. Out-of-towners may not k n o w it, but simply parking
 | 
						||
in the wrong spot can cost them a $200 fine. Police steal your car and
 | 
						||
hold it for ransom. To get back at Dinkins, police have slowed down
 | 
						||
or stopped issuing summons. This will cut into the Jews' income
 | 
						||
stream and thus should produce results in short order.
 | 
						||
Another famous incident i n this area is the A m y Fisher case.
 | 
						||
A m y is an under-age Jewish prostitute who used her sex to exploit
 | 
						||
various men and make them do what she wanted. She was suppos
 | 
						||
edly having an affair with a white man and decided to kill his wife
 | 
						||
because she was i n her way. After trying to get various men to do
 | 
						||
her dirty work, she shot the wife i n the face. The wife was crippled
 | 
						||
but didn't die and A m y was arrested and charged with attempted
 | 
						||
murder. N o w I don't k n o w what the facts are of this case except
 | 
						||
that A m y is proven to have done the shooting. 1 can, however,
 | 
						||
pretty well predict the outcome of the case. A m y is a member of
 | 
						||
three over-privileged minorities: she is Jewish, female, and a
 | 
						||
minor. The husband of the injured woman is a white man, a mem
 | 
						||
ber of the lowest class of Americans. H i s wife is a white woman, al
 | 
						||
most as l o w i n status. It can thus be taken for granted that the
 | 
						||
J e w / L i b e r a l (in)justice system a n d the Jewsmedia w i l l try to get
 | 
						||
A m y off and punish the white husband and wife.
 | 
						||
I hate the murdering thief. Bush, with a passion but the vile
 | 
						||
Clinton and his evil, Jewish wife is no improvement. The one can
 | 
						||
didate who stands out since the attempted murder of Randy
 | 
						||
Weaver i n Idaho is "Bo" Gritz. It is clearly the intervention by
 | 
						||
Gritz that prevented the murder of Weaver and his whole family
 | 
						||
by Federal marshals. Gritz's action i n arriving on the scene and fac
 | 
						||
ing the Federal murder gang shows that his medals i n Vietnam
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 49
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
were no fluke. This is virtually the first time I can remember that
 | 
						||
any politician stood u p to the Feds while they were making an "ex
 | 
						||
ample" of a white daring to resist Jewish policies. A s in N Y C , the
 | 
						||
white public i n the area actually dared to protest rather than taking
 | 
						||
their beating quietly as usual. But too many whites seem to be
 | 
						||
happy that Weaver was just arrested rather than murdered like his
 | 
						||
wife and child. The Feds plan to send Weaver to jail for life and his
 | 
						||
under-age children too! N o t only should Weaver and the others at
 | 
						||
tacked by the Federal murder gang be released with apologies,
 | 
						||
they should be awarded millions in compensation and the seven
 | 
						||
marshals and the officials who sent them should be tried for mur
 | 
						||
der. If Randy Weaver and his friends and family are sent to jail and
 | 
						||
the marshals who murdered his wife and child are not punished,
 | 
						||
whites should riot i nevery city and town in America. What! Are
 | 
						||
blacks to be allowed to b u r n d o w n entire cities i n racist temper tan
 | 
						||
trums while whites suffer oppression and murder i n silence?
 | 
						||
The Jewsmedia have been denouncing the N Y C police demon
 | 
						||
stration for blocking traffic, and rowdiness. What they should have
 | 
						||
done was b u m Grade Mansion to the ground and tar and feather, the
 | 
						||
racist Dinkins and his moronic staff. That is the sort of things colored
 | 
						||
mobs have been doing with impunity. Don't white have equal rights?
 | 
						||
PS: The unspeakable Jew, Congress thief Weiss, died last week
 | 
						||
of a "heart attack." Every faggot on the lower east and west sides
 | 
						||
of Manhattan was i n tears over him. A n d well they should be!
 | 
						||
A I D S has probably spread to most of them. Weiss was the author
 | 
						||
of the N Y C " G u n C o n t r o l " l a w that disarmed the public a n d
 | 
						||
turned N Y C over to armed criminals. H e was also the creator of
 | 
						||
the idea of a " C i v i l i a n Review Board" which seems to have been
 | 
						||
designed to cripple the police so criminals could operate more
 | 
						||
freely. This was necessary so that the colored morons could steal
 | 
						||
enough money to buy drugs which guess who was selling tliem.
 | 
						||
Sincerely
 | 
						||
S.R., New York State
 | 
						||
««*
 | 
						||
Dear Mr. Dletz:
 | 
						||
In tlie July issue of Liberty Bell there is an article b y G.S. from N e w
 | 
						||
Mexico. I'm p....d off again at some jerk writing i n Liberhj Bell trying to
 | 
						||
tell me not to listen to rock-n-roU music. Let me tell you G.S., rock-n-roll
 | 
						||
is not a "monstrous music fad," i f s been around since the fifties and
 | 
						||
will probably continue well into tlie next century.
 | 
						||
A t first, rock-n-roll was nigger music until Elvis came along and
 | 
						||
made it popular with White people. Since then, the niggers have been
 | 
						||
all but driven out of rock-n-roll, with a couple of exceptions. Whether
 | 
						||
you like it or not, G.S., rock is now White man's music.
 | 
						||
SO — LiheHy Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
N o w , G.S., you think rock music fills my head "with Satanism
 | 
						||
and individualism." Welt, if Satanism is against Christianity, then I
 | 
						||
must be satanic. I have absolute total contempt for Christians and
 | 
						||
Christianity. If listening to rock-n-roll helps destroy Christianity,
 | 
						||
then I'm turning my stereo up! You're right about individuahsm. 1
 | 
						||
am a rare individual, a National Socialist i n the heart of Nigger
 | 
						||
land. If I wasn't an individual thinker, 1 wouldn't have been able to
 | 
						||
take the pressure of parents, preachers, tcaclicrs, and the jewsme
 | 
						||
dia to think and act like the rest of the herd. I wouldn't be racially
 | 
						||
aware and I w o u l d n ' t be reading Liberty Bell. I'm enough of an i n 
 | 
						||
d i v i d u a l to pick and choose w h i c h rock bands 1 want to listen to
 | 
						||
and which ones I don't want to listen to.
 | 
						||
W h e n I Hsten to Metallica or V a n H a l e n or Bad Company I get
 | 
						||
fired up! The music makes me feel good. W h e n I go to a rock con
 | 
						||
cert I see a couple of niggers or gooks and thousands of White peo
 | 
						||
ple. Nice percentage.
 | 
						||
I thought by waiting a month before writing this letter my
 | 
						||
anger at G,S. and other anti-rockers w o u l d have subsided; it hasn't.
 | 
						||
So what do y o u d i g , G.S., Card W ? Is Charlie Pride your favorite
 | 
						||
musician? Maybe Liberachi is more your type? Perhaps the b i g
 | 
						||
band sound of Benny Goodman is your preference? H o w about
 | 
						||
Bach or Beethoven performed b y the N e w York Philharmonic, con
 | 
						||
ducted by Leonard Bernstein? So, y o u anti-rockers, get the point
 | 
						||
I'm h-ying to make? N o t h i n g is black or white, bad or good, i n the
 | 
						||
music industry today. If it was u p to me, I w o u l d outlaw jazz,
 | 
						||
disco, and rap. This is the most un-White music yet recorded. I a m
 | 
						||
not saying that rock-n-roll is all good, but it's not all bad either.
 | 
						||
There are many tunes that get airplay that are pro-White or anti
 | 
						||
government, just listen to the lyrics. I ' m sure a Skin reader c o u l d
 | 
						||
send in lyrics from Skrewdriver, N o Remorse, Bound for Glory,
 | 
						||
Haken Kreuz, or the M i d - T o w n Boot Boys that would silence the
 | 
						||
pens of these a n t i - r o c k e r s (1 d o n ' t have a n y tunes f r o m these
 | 
						||
groups). So, all of you old people that don't like rock-n-roll, don't
 | 
						||
listen to it. But don't tell me to get off m y rock!
 | 
						||
Sleg Hell!
 | 
						||
W.J.C., Connecticut
 | 
						||
«**
 | 
						||
Gentlemen:
 | 
						||
Greetings...I am writing this letter for I am in dire need of your
 | 
						||
help. I am currently confined in Z.O.G.'s military prison. I have
 | 
						||
been i n this particular prison for two and a half years. During this
 | 
						||
time I have seen 1500 people come and go. Yet even so, there is one
 | 
						||
thing incessantly common amongst the many young Aryans which
 | 
						||
arrive here. ZOG has f i n a l l y i m b e d d e d a message of u n i t y a n d
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — SI
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
equality into the minds of these impressionable young men. Tlie guilt
 | 
						||
complex instilled upon them since childhood is rcenforced here.
 | 
						||
The establishment here offers some type of program to every
 | 
						||
minority imaginable. A l l that is except the most deserving "minor
 | 
						||
ity" of all—the vanishing White M a n ! Whites here had to take this
 | 
						||
discriminating institution to court in the hopes of being allotted the
 | 
						||
same privileges given to the "oppressed" minorities. Of course, the
 | 
						||
government sided with itself.
 | 
						||
• That is w h y we're asking the help of your organization. If the
 | 
						||
government won't help us in being proud of our heritage, then we
 | 
						||
need to fii\ others, such as yourself, that w i l l . Unfortunately, sol
 | 
						||
diers sentenced to confmement here are stripped of all "pay and a l 
 | 
						||
lowances," thus leaving us devoid of money. The need to educate
 | 
						||
these y o u n g A r y a n s , as w e l l as older A r y a n s , still exists however;
 | 
						||
and if anything, it becomes more urgent with each passing year.
 | 
						||
Some of the men coming to us are unaware of basic facts such
 | 
						||
as the usurious "Federal Reserve System", and the "Kosher Food
 | 
						||
Racket".
 | 
						||
We're currently receiving reading materials from contributors
 | 
						||
like the Noontide Press and Church of the Creator. We fully under
 | 
						||
stand our undesirable position, and do not wish to become too bur
 | 
						||
densome to any one of the fine, patriotic groups which assist in our
 | 
						||
education by giving us literature. Obviously, it is not the want of
 | 
						||
the White m a n to ask for a "handout". It is better, however, to ask
 | 
						||
for help than to leave a potential source of information left u n 
 | 
						||
tapped.
 | 
						||
Please help us i n our quest for complete racial awareness by
 | 
						||
sending any publications you can—Imperfect copies, damaged ma
 | 
						||
terials, or just plain overstocks—the condition does not matter. Ra
 | 
						||
cial awareness does!
 | 
						||
Our thirst for this knowledge of the plots and plagues facing
 | 
						||
the beautiful White Race today is unquenchable. I assure y o u , sir,
 | 
						||
that any and all materials you are able to send to us w i l l be readily
 | 
						||
absorbed by many. With this knowledge we will become better
 | 
						||
prepared for the upcoming troubles ahead.
 | 
						||
Sincerely,
 | 
						||
Shannon G. Michael, Box #75242
 | 
						||
Drawer 'A', Ft. Leavenworth KS 66027-7140
 | 
						||
*a «
 | 
						||
Dear Mr. Dletz
 | 
						||
It seems to me that the tables can easily be himed on those who
 | 
						||
enjoy talking about " H u m a n Rights," M y suggestion is that Whites
 | 
						||
begin to vigorously advance the concept of Hunmn Rights Number One
 | 
						||
(the most basic of all h u m a n rights)—The right to live i n a society
 | 
						||
52 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
comprised of, and dctcrmincxi by, O N E ' S O W N P E O P L E .
 | 
						||
E.H., Washington DC
 | 
						||
w» «
 | 
						||
Dear Georgo:
 | 
						||
H a v i n g f i n i s h e d m y first r e a d i n g of the September Liberty
 | 
						||
Bell—as always, it was excellent—I feel compelled to offer this re
 | 
						||
sponse to a fellow L.B. reader's not-so-prudent remarks concerning
 | 
						||
the Christian Identity faith.
 | 
						||
In one of his two September letters to the editor. P u b l i c
 | 
						||
Prudentis referred to Identity as "a creeping cancer" and labeled
 | 
						||
the religion's adherents "ignorant" white "dupes." N o w I myself
 | 
						||
a m not a believer i n the Identity doctrine, nor am I a Christian of
 | 
						||
any sort or variety, but I am nonetheless offended when any of my
 | 
						||
Brothers are p u b l i c l y insulted. To refer to Identity Christians as
 | 
						||
"dupes" is to insult the majority of the best leaders and soldiers our
 | 
						||
race has produced i n the last twenty years. If one feels the need to i n 
 | 
						||
tellectually oppose a religion then so be it. But when the religion
 | 
						||
being argued is the religion of such stout-hearted men as Robert Mat
 | 
						||
thews, Gordon and Yorie Kahl, Randy Weaver, Ernst Ziindel, Robert
 | 
						||
Miles, William Potter Gale, Richard Butler, and countless others, I be
 | 
						||
lieve the argument should be put forth with due respect.
 | 
						||
Furthermore, whether we like it or not, the White militia
 | 
						||
needed to fight w h e n at last the s t o r m breaks w i l l be made u p
 | 
						||
largely of Identity Christian patriots. We are hardly in a position
 | 
						||
where we can afford to risk any further factionalism w i t h i n the
 | 
						||
White Right. If a White man is i n favor of an all-White homeland, a
 | 
						||
Folkstate, and is w i l l i n g to sacrifice all for the folkstate, and con
 | 
						||
ducts himself in an honorable fashion, then that man is my Brother
 | 
						||
no matter how much we may differ i n other areas.
 | 
						||
A s responsible Aryans we would be wise, to avoid further dissen
 | 
						||
sion, by adopting a policy of respectful speech when addressing or re
 | 
						||
ferring to fellow K i n d r e d regardless of h o w strongly we may feel
 | 
						||
concerning their personal beliefs. To do otherwise would make hon
 | 
						||
est and productive interaction impossible.
 | 
						||
PS: I am glad to inform you that I w i l l soon be economically
 | 
						||
able to p u l l m y o w n weight. I am n o w receiving a donated sub
 | 
						||
scription which provides me with much high quality food for
 | 
						||
thought. Being in prison, I cannot reach the type of funds I would
 | 
						||
like to contribute. Please accept $10 bimonthly starting later this
 | 
						||
month as m y subscription dues.
 | 
						||
For Race Nation
 | 
						||
J.B., Bellefbnte, PA
 | 
						||
« » «•
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 53
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Racial Greetings,
 | 
						||
I am a White, racially conscious female. I read about your organi
 | 
						||
zation in Now the Tnith and it said to write to you for a catalogue of
 | 
						||
books, etc. I would appreciate it if you could send me one.
 | 
						||
If there is anyone i n your organization or anyone y o u k n o w
 | 
						||
who would like to correspond with a White Power Chelsea, please
 | 
						||
forward m y address to them.
 | 
						||
White Proud
 | 
						||
C.L.W., British Columbia
 | 
						||
«««
 | 
						||
Dear Landsmann:
 | 
						||
I was disturbed to see the violent letter and accusations against
 | 
						||
" B o " G r i t z i n the recent Liberty Bell [see L i b e r t y Bell, September,
 | 
						||
page 37]. So what if Gritz pinned on a marshal's badge arid took a
 | 
						||
deputizing oath? He previously took the oath of a commissioned
 | 
						||
officer in the U S A r m y , which is a much more serious matter. N e i 
 | 
						||
ther the A r m y nor the Marshals Service are inherently evil. It de
 | 
						||
pends on what use they are put to and how their members behave.
 | 
						||
I am not among those who are thrilled by the surrender of
 | 
						||
Weaver and his family, but what alternative was there? The normal
 | 
						||
practice of the Feds i n these sieges is to b u m tlie building and kill ev
 | 
						||
eryone inside, especially if one of the police has been killed. This is
 | 
						||
what was done at Whitbey Island, Annendale, and, to be fair, at the
 | 
						||
siege of the Symbionese Liberation gang, and the Philadelphia Move
 | 
						||
cult. This is what would have been done at the Weaver house as well
 | 
						||
had not Gritz intervened. N o otlier candidate even mentioned the trag
 | 
						||
edy; Gritz took a big chance appearing at the scene because the Feds are
 | 
						||
looking for the opportunity to kill h i m too, and the confusion and gun
 | 
						||
fire at the site provided a good chance to do so. The only thing that pre
 | 
						||
vented the planned murder of Weaver and the rest of his family was the
 | 
						||
glare of publicity upon the planned crime and that is what Gritz's inter
 | 
						||
vention provided. Thus, I can hardly see his action in getting Weaver to
 | 
						||
surrender as anything but defusing the confrontation.
 | 
						||
The surrender of Weaver and Harris is a victory i n that their
 | 
						||
planned murders were aborted. The Jew flunky government cleariy
 | 
						||
intents to jail them for the rest of their lives. There are only two ways
 | 
						||
this can be prevented. First by having enough political, financial and
 | 
						||
inilitary power to force the government to back down. This is no op
 | 
						||
tion. Whites have no power in this Jew owned country whatever. We
 | 
						||
are lower than p i g tracks. A l l financial and political power is i n the
 | 
						||
hands of the Jew. There are not even 200 Whites in this whole counby
 | 
						||
willing to fight government racism with arms. Whites even tremble at
 | 
						||
defending themselves from nigger mobs! Thus, the only chance for
 | 
						||
Weaver and Harris is to bring a glare of publicity on the frame-up trial
 | 
						||
54 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
the Fcxls arc planning. Naturally, die Jcwsmcdia will black out the trial
 | 
						||
the same way they are blacking out Bo Gritz's candidacy, so it remains
 | 
						||
to be seen if the feeble White nationalist movement can muster enough
 | 
						||
outrage to bypass the media monopoly and make die Feds' crime a na
 | 
						||
tional issue. Tliis wasn't done in the trial of Gordon Kahl's son and his
 | 
						||
friends, who got 120 years i n prison merely for being targets when the
 | 
						||
Feds opened fire at a police roadblock.
 | 
						||
The things the government is doing are outrageous by any
 | 
						||
standard of law or justice. The Jew control over their American cat
 | 
						||
tle depends on their keeping hidden and not openly oppressing
 | 
						||
their victims enough to stir u p real hostility.
 | 
						||
If the pathetic white nationalist movement can reach enough of
 | 
						||
the public w i t h the facts of this outrageous government action, the
 | 
						||
Zionist Occupation Government w i l l have to back d o w n and let
 | 
						||
the Weavers and Harris go. We w i l l see if this can be done, and this
 | 
						||
should be our agenda for the immediate fubjre.
 | 
						||
As for horror and the warriors of our race, non-stop hate pro
 | 
						||
paganda has turned them against their o w n race and people. In
 | 
						||
W W II Americans had no trouble w i t h murdering SS prisoners, ci
 | 
						||
vilians and P O W s after the war, They were just told such people
 | 
						||
were evil and must be destroyed. A whole bunch of imaginary
 | 
						||
crimes were concocted and b l a m e d o n the designated victims to
 | 
						||
stir hatred against them. Y o u saw it again i n the Gulf War where
 | 
						||
Americans massacred fleeing Irakis on the roads, and buried alive
 | 
						||
thousands of Irakis trying to surrender. They then went home with
 | 
						||
a clear conscience and the public received them with cheers!
 | 
						||
The A m e r i c a n people accepted that Hussein was evil to take
 | 
						||
over his lost province of Kuwait but that Bush was virtuous i n i n 
 | 
						||
vading Panama! Such nonsense simply strengthens the conclusion
 | 
						||
that average people have no critical faciliries and that we Ameri
 | 
						||
cans lost control of our country w h e n w e permitted alien Jews to
 | 
						||
come i n and steal our country and buy u p its media. N o w we are
 | 
						||
paying for our weakness and foolishness, and the cost will mount
 | 
						||
constantly until there is a change. Right now the main change we
 | 
						||
can make is to embarrass the Jew government by spreading the
 | 
						||
truth about their murder plot against Randy Weaver and keeping
 | 
						||
them from railroading him and Harris into prison for life.
 | 
						||
Sincerely, S.R., New York State
 | 
						||
» w«
 | 
						||
Dear George:
 | 
						||
I feel compelled to respond to the letter tliat appeared i n the
 | 
						||
S e p t e m b e r i s s u e of Liberty Bell o v e r the n a m e of " P u b l i c u s
 | 
						||
Prudentis" which was highly critical of Bo Gritz for methods he al
 | 
						||
legedly used in saving lives of the surviving members of the Randy
 | 
						||
Liberty Bell I October 1992 — 65
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
 | 
						||
Weaver household in Idaho. Either Mr. Prudent has a very fertile
 | 
						||
imagination or is, himself, a highly placed federal functionary.
 | 
						||
H o w else could he have been i n a position to witiiess behavior that
 | 
						||
others closest to the scene were unable to see?
 | 
						||
Because I had friends near the Weaver siege line throughout the
 | 
						||
entire affair I was able to receive first hand reports from the area on a
 | 
						||
regular basis. M y friends, Identity Christians who were also ac
 | 
						||
quainted w i t h the Weavers, had nothing but praise for the w a y i n
 | 
						||
which Bo Gritz and Jack McLamb defused the murderous situation. I
 | 
						||
can agree with M r . Prudent to the extent that sooner or later many of
 | 
						||
us may be forced to face our maker for unpopular beliefs but, hope
 | 
						||
fully, the issues wiW be clear and the women and children will be well
 | 
						||
to the rear. D y i n g as glorious A r y a n warriors for a worthwhile cause
 | 
						||
is one thing, but to expect or, indeed, allow wounded men, teen-age
 | 
						||
girls and a nursing baby to be murdered by a hyped u p mob of brain
 | 
						||
washed law enforcement officers for no good reason is quite another.
 | 
						||
I don't k n o w who is representing himself as M r . Prudent but
 | 
						||
his message is one I hear all too often: This or that White patriot is
 | 
						||
a liar, a crook, an opportunist, a profiteer, a traitor, a con man, a
 | 
						||
CIA agent, a spy or, if nothing else, just a plain old son of a bitch.
 | 
						||
To all such destructive criticism I say, " D a m n the torpedoes, full
 | 
						||
speed ahead." W e must stop g i v i n g aid and comfort to the enemy
 | 
						||
by publicly criticizing our own, would-be leadership and by
 | 
						||
spreading damaging rumor and innuendo among ourselves.
 | 
						||
Whatever else may be his faults. Bo Gritz is making a valuable
 | 
						||
contribution to the cause by reaching thousands of people with a
 | 
						||
message that needs to be told. If and when we ever get our o w n act
 | 
						||
together then will be the time to take care of crooks, opportunists and
 | 
						||
traitors, if indeed they do exist. But for now, we must seek reconcilia
 | 
						||
tion and solidarity among ourselves. We must adopt the rule, if we
 | 
						||
can't say sometliing good about another White man, lef s not say any
 | 
						||
t h i n g at a l l . W e must stop fighting each other and concentrate on
 | 
						||
fighting an enemy who demonstrates daily that he is one hell of a lot
 | 
						||
smarter, better organized and more determined than we are.
 | 
						||
For a lesson o n h o w to do it, I strongly urge everyone to read
 | 
						||
Ivor Benson's book, The Zionist Factor. In it he describes a group of
 | 
						||
people who have their o w n racial religion; do not air their dirty
 | 
						||
laundry i n public; train, try, educate and discipline their own, and
 | 
						||
generally set themselves apart from the rest of humanity. We could
 | 
						||
learn a few^ lessons f r o m a people w h o place success above every
 | 
						||
thing else i n life. Unless we succeed i n learning h o w to work to
 | 
						||
gether, we w i l l die as a race. If we die as a race, then civilization
 | 
						||
will die with us.
 | 
						||
^ ^ ^ ^ Sincerely, J.M., West Virginia
 | 
						||
56 — Liberty Bell I October 1992
 | 
						||
KEEP THE LIBERTY BELL RINGING!
 | 
						||
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 | 
						||
can spare on a regular—monthly or quarterly-basis. Whether it is
 | 
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						||
will be used in our common struggle. If you are a businessman,
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						||
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pense-and we need and use many of these here every month
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						||
and win be gratefully accepted as donations .
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						||
Your donations wilt help us spread the Message of Liberty and
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						||
White Survival throughout the land, by making available additional
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copies of our printed material to fellow Whites who do not yet know
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what is in store for them.
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						||
Order our pampWets, booklets, and, most Importantly, our
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shown on the inside front cover of every issue of Liberty Bell.
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• Pass along your copy of Liberty Bell, and copies of reprints you
 | 
						||
obtained from us, to friends and acquaintances who may be on our
 | 
						||
"wave length," and urge them to contact us for more of the same.
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						||
Carry on the fight to free our White people from the shackles of
 | 
						||
alien domination, even if you can only join our ranks in spirit. You
 | 
						||
can provide for this by bequest. The following are suggested forms
 | 
						||
of bequests which you may include in your Last Will and Testament:
 | 
						||
1.1 bequeath to Mr. George P. Dietz, as Trustee for Liberty Bell
 | 
						||
Publications, P.O. Box 21, Reedy WV 25270 USA, the sum of $ , . .
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						||
for general purposes.
 | 
						||
2.1 bequeath to Mr. George P. Dietz, as Trustee for Liberty Bell
 | 
						||
Publications. P.O. Box 21, Reedy WV 25270 USA, the following
 | 
						||
described property for general purposes.
 | 
						||
DO YOUR PART TODAY-HELP FREE OUR WHITE
 | 
						||
RACE FROM ALIEN DOMINA TION! |