Gontrol
VAGUE 18-19 Programming Phemonena and Conspiracy Theory
Other/Tom Vague/VAGUE 18-19 Programming Phemonena and Conspiracy Theory.pdf
?
T
o
la
a
)
THE SHOY IS OVER. THE AADIENCE
GET UP TO LEAVE THEIR SEdTS.
TIHE TO COLLECT THEIR COATS
AND GO HOHE. THEY TURN ROUND..
NO HORE COATS AND NO IIORE HOIIE.
( Rozanov )
I
o
_a
o
a
a
l
a
t
t
t
,
t
t
I
a
a
t,
I
ffiBFIE
-rl
ar
o
q>
tO
a
ta
.a
a
i.-
"a.
.(l(D
a
r-'
)
4a
itr
dr't
ot
(D
a
a
t
'rl.'t
aO.
lo'
a
'.'
Oa
rt.
.of
Gj
rat't.
l';i
a
)o
O.
-t
,-
I
cAliTr
1l01lE
t
It t'
Lr' t
?
Or
a
o
rs
ilorni
1 nne
iasE
a.
long-
ite.
on
such
d
is,
been cons
goo=dt
f
'.t m
ar is 1n
aga a.
star
ot
th e pa r a rap
I
rl
e en ce o r t hb e
IL
That
e
lg
C
E1 ar i s n is
wri
It '} Udif
O
yc
at-
eJe
se b e cau S
)ism a n e WID e
1a gi a r i sed
ught
unt
o
a
Eh
risk of prosecut ion is ever present
However, do not a11ow this to Oeter
you fro.m
A few
consequence of which is thSt tlttI
-
C
'.9
.h
D
a
a
tr).
-tq.Lng aPPear
i- the consEant reapp..4in.. Ir nn" same half -baked
ideas with a succession of increas
thou-ing1y sEuPid names' It
spect
sandSlof .,vears t.o deve
-jP-- 'aP rndev neoole
The
rZdical innovatrons ev
resut is that theY ge
,'t*:r.l?:;i;;
;.i':
lor
for a
- TBlcktratklng
- the lalb
O
monrerrL
moment
-. a
i6tE centurY we find thaL
. .d:l::ilff$::";'::?::i3::'"'
: ; " i ri :. ;!t ;. l' :;;:i: :ii l.:: :i:il1
highlY advanced
we can discern a
form of Proto-modalrnism '
Plasiarism was also P
arlv weli-u"Ed bY Lautremo
D,,"issall &46-?0) . Simi 1ar
both sEYle an
'
ti
ent.
ble i
Tz
.t'
a'o
t
t
|D
a
a.
a
a
.ol
rEFUlin- avo i d in g coPYr i ght
infrinsemenl is to take the idea/
r11.
and spiriC of a text without
it word for. '
actually plagiarising
examPles of
word. 0ne of the best
this ls Orve11's r1984r, which is
a straight re-write of Zarnyatinrs
tWEt. Anyone with a seeious inte-rest jn neo-plagiarism shoula sp1$a'
some time ctmparing these 2.te+.
In tlle area of PoPular muslc I
a
?
=':;r?'l l";1.il';;:' :f; :: I t"' ..t
-,
t:iP!f
i}.{t
the.'tuhi
f ;H disguised'
H';i
",'
EUY 5.1, -?
1977 Iis
:since
iI
Br,
-e devil'
fo 1agdi s
or
cat l- on.
do is
se. En t husi
:
"
) . Thi s is Plagiarism
t its best, wiEh no redeeming
actors such as a clever change of
ontext.
In short, plagiarism saveE
improves results
t.ime and effort,
on
and shows consirierlBie iniative
ihe indiviliral plagiarthe
evolutionary tool it is
sC,
1
vo rk
p
dernands of
deal
e
a1
'naterial
Selection of
1S the onlY challenge
o
To selec t the very best
one must be a gerrius.
.4i
TOM VAGUE
i',r
)
I
.: ,
o(bo
r.i'\
. >r,
\.\j
l"!.
. .
.;
corne
agdt
I'I.AR WIEIT
\rEEREALL
C,ANSTIE
TIIIITT}€I AI{D
rrfn€s l<rlraG
MY YYOII.Y & E
?i1G@HY T IHt
oaDqe am
EXT Of clx
THEIR PRICE...
a
DDil
NEE
THE ONLY
FREE CHOIC'E
IEI TIIE RE|TI-
USAL TOPAY
XIER€SNJG' (D COIE
rux ato![ lT ,{lT
}IC'V RrcXI rcU AIf TO SIEAL
&q(s, ct^luR€ ls EVERE
a@Y s Bnl*cltr
CI.ITLNE?LEH]
na (fx c"s.oo.TY r orf nGr r€rPs
=lL ^U
DC Oltelsl
.oEcr flsr
['
GNrc6ffi
ENS THE TYRANNICAL GRIP G'THE O,D n,EGTME
ffi
I,.ANGTIAGE OT TT}IAL IXSSENT
R.EB,AIN T'BOM CiIE ACT!O \f,,tIICH IqS NATURE IvTO\IES
HIM. (ILMARX)
o+r$lElL I sLPFos€ lrs
il lril
e.Cx E nf CetOSlO.'l€ '
NO IH€I€ S O.LY A
GOAaO C.i Ar€ r{ S
T.6I A'{OITCR AO@V
AEAILC CTDN LIIS
@ lrcx lo MY R-EE
fFFfiI
4
wcRr,D sIrcuLD BE DEsrnoYED
A.lirD_PM,IgII UTIERUT TITAN TII.AT A FREE MAN SIICILD
'
tC, HXT It' E
STRATEGY OF REFUSAL
nryffim
u
o
e
t
t
f
e
e
r
atlon among
inediated by inages , more
6n capital to such a degree
nDvs
s rn Roon
the
rst.thing in
,
Video**$e
:-{-:.r : a'
of accunulation that'it becornes
an ioage - it is a VIDE0 DNA
GESTALT.
The Videodrone is
h
d ebo
u
n
tne
i
are aspects of, each otner
o
aDtennae, ariels in
at- u
motes in the ey
ever. aPpear
itsel f S
gnl ,Lhe
,ton
chi
er].e
p
f
.?
e 4lrd
ys ard ,
hey k
fa7
,
e
e
(
(
(
rg you: all the photonic vido-dna nolecules in the Specacle areron some subliminal
ubatonic level,rvorking in
cllaboration and always have
een.They are spectacular:omi.c structures,but ultim:e1y they are forms of infothe ce11s in a
=ation,like
unan brain or the mass media
advertisef print,billboard
ents, sound, vision,media-inae realities,disinformation,
ropaganda,the cathode ray
ube or the valves,filaments
nd silicon chi.ps in a teleision.Any. single molecule is
F rthing more than a mol'ecu1e;
: ut a1l- the Video-DNA,taken
s a Gestalt,consLitute the
pectacular-Videodrome itself
..an ordered evolving unity
f niseries
E
There is an innense quantitY
f inportant contetuwrary
henonena that reaain conpeteTy unchaTTenged - to be
eaTistic, conpTeteTy unnotced - by radicaT critique.n
Chris Shutes - tOn the
overty of BerkeTey Lifet.)
he Videodrome:Video-spectac1ar kno*1edge is capital
ntensified knonledge - capia1 noving beyond its accunuation into an image - an
volving video-simulcrum of
tself r pur€ anti-matter . This
rocess has caused perceptons of reality to Bo through
hanges,ad justments, they are
nce again being re-distorted
of a vast
b y the insertion
n ew mediational system into
a n already nulti-plexed,antih istorically
accumulated
aze of spectacular mediat lons.In the context of these
c hanges,the relationship
of
i nformation to spectacular
ociety and alienated nature
h as to be rethought - a ner^r
p raxis is needed.
I t is clear that the phenomis
e non of self-organization
to living matter,
D ot limited
b ut also occurs in certain
tmate nergy, chemical,social,
t and neta-image geist
e rial
c ystens vhich contain sinila r dynamic quantum properti. es.The Spectacular Videorome is one of these systtrsrit releases a form of
ideo-dna electro-Eagnetic
ulse or spectacular-cornrBoity field;and everything
n the post-nodernity is
ravn to its event horizon
nd then goes into the Specac1e.
rdiss11 these systens are
pative sEructures I in that
hey break donn other aystens
n the process of netabolisn
r recuperation,so creating
n1y the appearance of entrpy/change.The frequencies,
ID
E
pulses,falsely revelatory
er Eerely a question of the
subversion of social relations
states of stimulus,production
or roaking radical cha'nges in
and consumption released by
everyday life. Everything is
Ehese Spectacular feeding
being dravn, inch by inch, tofrenzies;come at you through
r+ards the nev spectacular event
subliminal visual and sonic
horizon,the coming soon infornpavlovian triggers,for which
ation babylon/babe1/babble,the
there is no absolute defense,
image syndrome,the dna videosome always gets through ih
drome.
this hyno-trigger siren son8.
The technology of the VideoThe Spectacular control impdrome is interphasing vith the
lants are usually superficial
nervous systen thruf a variety
grafts,but. the general selfof devices - becoming Dore
valorised confusion generated
fused, joined. . .synbiosis. It
by marginal false contestatcan be seen in the medical
ions,makds any ritualistic
data bases,nonitoring rnilitary
furious negation or refusal
experinents at Porton Doun,
superficlal and counterfeitdiagnostic and treatlnent machist,because of the prigognic
(precise?Ed. )1eve1s of coEpines - thernired
video-dna vorld is
beconing
upr to the
lexity involved; since the
video-spectacular turbulence
brain-nerve conplex vith the
invention of new sensing
of phenomena , event , eubryonic
pre-situation congeal , harden,
devices and psycho-perceptinto dead
crystallise,petrify
ua1 systens;the Spectacle is
pre-history(history
beginning
scranbling and resequencing
in
uith its self-realisation
itself rrith neu sinultanietthe Easses of individuaLs r*ho
ies and Juxtapositions.There
create connunity as an ongoing are also reconbinant changes
situation in their own strugg- going on vithin the social,
uith the rise of nulti-nation1es, dialectics, decodings and
als,zaibatsu
or corporate
self /social realisations) .
I Lifers t
t itself,
A11 dissipative structures
, the vid
inte11along with artificlal
have the phenonena characterigence,cyber-space and gene
istic of life - self renewal,
pro8raEEes.......
adaption, evolution and(idiotsentient cunning)conscioustSpectacuTar conaodity society
ness;in light of which it beis a phase in aodern capitaTcomes obvious that the Spect:I
isa and it js Eore a nisery
I
ac1e, instead of steady-state
than
a conspiragy.'
recuperation,has been going
(llichel
Prigent - a critigue
through an evolutionary jump
Of .CALL IT SLEEP")
and replacing its whole self
. . .1t 's now possible to alier
organization.
the genetic code lrith a virus
The components of the Videowhich works parasitically by
drome are nainframes,minis,
lnserting its genetic code inmicros and personal computers,
to the nucleus of the ce1l,so
cathode ray tubes, printers,
that the ceLl starts using the
cashpoints
copiers , automated
code to make oore viruses; so
automatons, I replicants r, point'
that the ce11 just incorporatof sale sensors,celebreties
es the viral dna code into its
like slow-t.alking vietcong
own,naking lt go into hibervith cyclops eyes and vires
n6tion like a control-iEperahanging out of holes in their
tive sublininally inserted
chests, antennae, ariels, survtrigger,and then 5 or 10 years
eillance technology,copper
later or 1ess, trigger into preand fibre-optic wires,remote
coded acti.on. It t s very simple,
sensing devices , robots , calclike this the Videodrome is
ulators, hackers, integrated
atteEpting to recuperate everychi.ps - bio and silicon',softone by their own video-genetic
ware rhardwarernass-data storcodes. . .
ages, tapes, discs, diagnostic
equipment - a babb1e,babe1,
babylop of appropriate/Spectac- nReconbinant DNA for profit or
ularly appropriated langupges,
genetic engineering is finding
ju-ju speak,telephones,mbdens,
rrev uses in productionrvhile
telexes, progranning phenonena,
the groving infTuence of psychoterniltals,nicro-wave relays,
biology proaises greater socja-l
radio, cable, cancer/tumour incontrol . . .'
ducing video-spectacular optics, (Phil llaiTer -t And yet it noves,
satellites,switching
and routthe realisation and suppressjon
ing systens,the semaphore of
of technoTogy and science,.)
social connunication systems,
visual body languages,the tran- ...the struggle purely over the
scieving and routing of opera- Deans of p,roduction,the dignity
tions,the exteriorized appear- of labour,the industrial workance of revolutionary conversers of the vorLd,rnost elenents
ations,the shifts of Capifal
at l{apping are all pre-history;
thrur 'the el"ectronic plasna of a history lost or virally.inthe video-dna.
filtrated
by the niseries of
The terrain is really changed,
the deconposition of unions,
t
it s pure programming phenomena leftisn and the divlsion of 1aband infornation; it is no long- our.The necessity of the Yideo-
7
urslist s r aenioti.clarra'rEy Eh-oakers, iEaSif j"ed groletarians, lnteractivl s;.s, inacilvistF deactl vated
activists rlar.srcho-rlot quantl'f iera,trotakytat dialectlcal nat€rlg1ist astrologyrthe nev fuellnJected veraion of TonY Cl1ff,
cosoic theoreticians renbodif icationa of the Yideodrooe.$ecoastruction3, the involuntartlY
deconstructed ,8as bl11 s , eleetrlncoherence of
icitY btlla,thi
intellectuals,nesL btrllders'
Perlnanent hlbernators' niche
nakers and the queue Yaltisg to
Join the llst.
'The oaderorzrtror of the ald
vorld advances LaPlacab!Y behlnd the 'dlssiaulations of tfie
spectacle of econonic decoaPostLf on., .a'pseudo-dlaTogue tiat
doainates tlre relations of alJenated daiTY life and tlre Pseudocooaunication that develoPs
tiere: 'the deTuge of vords
tlrat govers over everY siogle
aspect of realitY.'
(lliTttaro Spencer - 'The SPectdcle Af Econoaic DecoaPosi t'i on
in Britain'.)
n
i
But l{arx,for instance,reallsed
that there is a cunning of history,rherebY dialectical countgrbiasrs such as 'coonunitYt
ere possible,because tmaterial-.r
sociiL history vhich 1e realised i.n coBEunities or aasenblies'
is aaking lts ovn juoP.
'ffiese orgealsations j IIrLse
Deooteras'. LettlRishtlSocial
crat ic / Har x'tst7 Lentntst {Anarch ist are not tota!7Y iaadeguatc
both theoreticaTTY lnd Prtctica17y ta deal rith rlfaf Js
dilferent in tie l!Iit*rlcaIfY
unprecedented sltuat'ioD viiclr
,r, tfta tI(.'
is nov deveToqlng
-'Priface
or Post(Dave Yise scrJpt to trre Certas sdition
of 'suaners'.)
la latarnatioaal retYork of
hackera 1l Srotlng; Yhole
ratlona ccn.be rlPPed off their rePresaii{e econosie*
collapeett -,sr'nce their tqtal
econolles ean be eluulatdd
aad diiplayedt on so&e el;etron:lc lnPut /outPut detlce' - '
a$6 be oore real thair the reel
thing. National boundarl'es are.
*
'becornlgg PorouE anil'erodLng
anYruhere
be
ln
can
everyuh-re
the Yideodron€'aE tran8nation*
al data flous Penetr6te 8nd
dlsrupt bordere. Nattons and
, theLr eecurlty !ystctrs'becone
llluelone ae nultl-Batlotal
enterprlsee buY Pieccg Pf the
' globeil.ndustrlal eaPlouagg and
,: Eabotage escalate atril hachers
loot at rardoq llke t[t€rnst' tonal vandalsrg!vlng fhe tnfo*
rsational ProceBg Esne ccacrete
reeulte. tJapplng is another
atgn of the JunP of hlstorY'
of theee changes; aYaIr fron'
the niaery of unlonn(thlch are
6 unios of aieeries)torards I :
the exploslve eoergeace of -''
conrunitY or aaseoblY; vhict.li
involveg indlviduals fron L"
every background coubinilg '
€-'
toSether into a cotltrIunlty geiat/geBtalt - lt 18 '-n
rio
there in every atrlke.rlot
of aabotage, hack-in,lnterver .:
iortroccupstion rnass cesenbll:-::
vildcat action - everY alt.u-:o
ation. . . the sPirlt vont be r !'
denied .
C'C
'A change in historY ls alter:c
lr trre Iast analYsis'Droughthe
sDout by a change ln ,deast e
even thou gh a change ln Tdeahr,
,lght bring lnto PlaY Eateris
fotcee viJch reinforced thatla
change, or have aateriaT cor'iL
quences rhTch are Jnstrurefltnr
ln realislftg thdt clranger orEC
have saterial conaequences fha
beysnd Yhaf re Joagined.'
iie
('Ibe Pfeasure TendaocYt - S1
'Desire ?aIue and Ihe PleasulYi
Tendancy: Further theses f'.he
ht
of the copaodity as a eocl.alPt
relation constant 7y ga!.ns lnst
calresjorl;teads torYardg tfie 'rt
point of absofut€ reificatio.
of tlte uor ld . '
Lr
(Danlel Denevert - Theory of C
oiseryr aisery of theorY*') rl.
lo
JA77 hunan activitY
has becoih
subordinate lo the Productiot.o
and consuaPtion of comnoditit
(lttchel Prigenc - A critiquetd
'CALL IT SLEEPT .)
i:
:h
The Videodrone is vhere the l.
nedlun and the message uergeic
but there has been a divorcerc
betveen eight and iuslght ul.te
the dlseoiutlon of T.Y.0.D. !j
to 11fe and the disaolutlon d1
l"ife into T.V.0.D. lle 1lve 1et
the video-dna hyperreal, 1n dr
univeree everyrhere strelg,elFI
;i
similar to the orlglnal here thlngs are dupliceted hPt
th61r orn appearance, theLr :r
double - the Eateriallaed
3r
iuage. The Yldeodroae 18 theg
realiaatXon of the lnage of !
Leviathan 1n Hobbea; a-oega-I
ltan composed of a vast congr6
8at,1on of alienated lndlvtdue
ala.Here at the eYent horiaore
T
the distinctions bet,*cen
cauge and effect,betveen acE-t
1ve and paasive,betveen sub- td
Ject and obJectrbetveen ends t
an{ means,betveen the real a
a,ld the hyperreal,betveen th€(
Context and the content,bet- r
Yeen the oeanLng and the nodet
converge - held in replicate t
in video-dna.
tThe aanage@ent'a77ovs' us1
Lo consure to the rhYtht ofl
auzak. )
(Ntck Srandt - 'lliner ConfIJcts, llajar Coatradictions'
8 PX' MORD IAL VIDEODROI'| E-GET frgC DY,
aConfusiortt ar deliberately
aanoeutring as to create lt,
has f ar a long tjlre been the
practic€ af Stares,rhea they
fear a caning of confrontation.r
(Lou Forsyth - preface to
'On Terrarisn')
dn the Yj-deodrome,Production
.pnd consumPtion are giving
*ayrchanglng,t0 the proteinic
,FoEeRt of connectlons'contact'
:olrtinuity, feedback and the
generalised interface that
r Bobs vith the specLecular
totality.
. Television increaginglY uses
'.Boundtrack mixes of fluide'
t-eIect r onic s, heart beats r relay's
,Iand breathing.
The Videodrome tries to make
.-the complexity of its net,vork of power and contr+l
for our nlnds
too difficult
and imaginations to SraaP *
e( You t re not doi ng so bad
yoursel f . Ed ) ethis leads to conspiracY
theory,nhich vhen faced rrith
advanced technology; is Yet
another aspect of thinking
the iopossible totality of
the contenporary world systen
...but it also has e neg,ati.ve
;ide shich is sel.f-aegatiug
' zaranoid teclrnophotia,
Adverrs like all sPectacular
reifi ca ti ons and r:eaLisations
move toHards a false'Ea.terialityrbecause they have no true
naterial forrn and the maaerial
political'economy of ca,p!ta1
is incteasingly. breaking dovn
the false seperetion betveen
it6e1f and the Videodiose, BS
it shi fts into the interzone
betueen the phenomenologi,cal
Advertisemente,1ike aI1 cther
anci t he social .
media,the nediatiofls of the
Advertiseeerts are . exceLtrient
Videodrcme are a spect&cu1ar
$pectacular Dat*rial because
genet.ic, code for the $utation
they have a universal qual/translation/Spectacular deity and vivacity as a recogtournement of the real lnto
nisable form deepite ttre fact
the hy perreal ; they are the
that the spectacular vXdeosubfiminal assauLt of the g,endrome transmits throug,h techetic SpectacuLar*Yideodrqne
nical media vith uutti*leve1pulse; the i.nserLion of the
1ed and erbliminal contents
social commodity circadian
(that is differenr &essages
rhythms into those of the eubabout differene producEs/
consci-ous.
i dentif ic ations /cornnod-ities ),
Advertisements are everylrhere,
and this reinforces the aub'
t hey have become embedded in
liminal as ve11 as the con.s*
the social €nvironment and
cious expef,imental signifitheir constant presence is a
cance of advertising.
reinforcenent and an inevit'
Obvi.ously ads as p{rt of the
abLe part of everyonetg daiLy
spectacular-commodit.y f ie1d
survival; even if you block
have the initial
function to
out most forms of mediated
se11 thlng,s to us, to Bet us
external stieulii. trying to
to coasume,but. .as part o.f.. ehe
inplant post-hypnotic spec, Spactacular Yideodrome they
tacBLar suggestions betrreefl
have a deeper function, in
Ehe layers of your cerebra-lrvhich they displ ace art r
c0rtexi the images,the specreligion aqd the spectacle
tacular spores posted all
of revolt - they create
bver our environment are lnBtructu.res ctf sublininal
*scapable. Pervading al"1
neaning, psycho-i deologies
Eedia,but limlted to none
'advertising foros a vast supvhich trigBer and reinforce
the douinant ideoloBy..-.,-,
erluninal topography and sub*
adYert,i6e[ents iruplant,,nore
LioinaLieed super-strucEore,
than juBt consuEptioni they
like social :pheronones - an
are part of a structure in
Augchwitz of cofisunption,in
nhich objects and people are
nhich vork uakes you free to
interchangeable, they sel I us
consEme.
ourselYea il Room 1O1,;
Advert.isenents are sinple
spectacular-videodrome ideoAdyertisiBg in the Spectacle
logies, they can incorporat.e
develops an apparent I y autonanythi,ng;(and sarIIe,people i.n
omous exist.ence with Lhe
the marginal'pop-muzakt
ever-present immense subl i m-si.gn up quick
sPectacle'cant
inal influercei continually
enoug.h),even
rea,hrso,rb
crltireinforcing and reflexively
cism
of
themseLaee,
because
spectacular=
the
actlvatin.g
they are iliagipat:ilre atructvideodrome triggers.
ur, es and -becauee , f,hby ref er
The very Exictence of adverts
to it devoid of content.
gives thec a mi*etic reafity
The yhole speciacuLa,E-conno:
that litrks then to our ovn
d ity
system of advertising
lives; siace in the Spectacle,
is part of the great recupevery aapect contains all as*
€rator l The Videodion.e - ir
Fecte - and the subliminal
r*i1l sork otr a,Dy Eet€rtal at
iasertions of the spectapular*
sI1;it nill ',bounce back' f,rqo
coEuodity field and the'h61111lars
adverti$iirg restrictl$r
cinogenic visual and audioto prevgnt 'exceaa sp€Ctsale;
Yideo*
sonic ef,fects of the
the subversions of 00 and
drorerqnsure ne live out rioISe
of itts bf6ic funcritiques
of thoEe images,they cortstltlike
this one;,preeise*
ct*on
ute a r*or1d constantlY exPer*
1y because o:f the: r*:ay it
ienced as rea1.
hollowe sui historical *aanThe ad $orld and those dead
ing f 1,96 structures,suspendsouls traPPed in it or the
ing then in tineless ,selfSpectacle of Prino.rdial Videor
reflexive inertib....here
drore,becoses SeeBinglY sePercoEeB the reign/rain of the
ate froE the material Pediua - big damage,the, visual- fa11rrhether it I s the television
out The Video.d'rome,
screer;the page or the serebral But -it can be negated aad
corLex,all of vhich carry the
decoded * 1'Thro'u!h the creat.spectacular videodrone like a
ion of ongoing situations.
host body.
*EERS COI{E
THE SUBLIfir Ndf,S
ls .1 subJect i s p.e.6efited hti th
set of choices. TH\Y ARE ALL
.ctlD. Urtder tle cir"cuBstances
ie suD.ject consciously chooE'
, s r+,ftar ire or she feeLs is the
esser evil. ?he aio of the
ontroTTer i's to keep the ten. Eion surrounding t}le ciroice af,
'er high level, s0 thet no aJt,1;rnacrve ciojces outside tho.se
u-roposed are offered qr pel.c*
ived. ft js the eguivalent of
ocking soaeore ia a oenfal
ox t the per fect enviranoent .
vance one suclt cboice is. aade,
lrthe next set of 'cioices' can
i € pre.sented. ,4s long aS the
s5hoices are reguT6ted - fiat
rls the subject or subject popat.l ation percieves ttat j..t-ias
onNLY the set of choices presntrred - THE OUTCOME fS dLSg
orEGULATgD... jt js ilrport€nt
that you * th€ victin - feel
het there is no caus'e and
ffect -jn tlis wor]d' siaply
tuflF0nr{l?f0il. Fras here on in
'.here vi71 be no lelease fron
lre tension, onLy an escalatt!ng series of crises...
7 Pr oduct i o n, Con su&ptioa, $icu tnation, Ex c i r a t i on ' StiouJ at I oa ,
.ro.lr av in g, P r o d u c t ian r0onsunption
.)
'Lonnie
UoTfe - taken fron
t Ciries 0f I-1 luslon'.)
E
'*'e did as we vere told to
1o...': MiTJigraa's 37 at the
slhicago Institute of Psycho-
ology.
ir
?idvertsienents are part of
:he video-dna(idiot-sentient)
leoiurge; another aspect o'f
:he video-dna hyperreal, of
:he spectacular-cultural
etorces cum spectacular*com*
esodity field moulding and
[teflecting the alienations
5f our lives today in the
dpectacle or primodial Vid*
lreodrome.
.
9
!:.i.:t.1.:'-i
.: t:- I . _: :.'
i]\" sp E cT Ac II LA R H PE j'-*
Y
iziilz""':::ii,
ii:i:.;;;
a f luid state so a.s to poss-
r umGru(l i i. }
the erc l,isive vaiue iy their
sii,nuiatei f eeling of being
vised videodrome inage ovet-
r.ro!; that big Llack motorvtdeo-dna counodity'
iu;,J.ants careening Under you
;;' ;;; i o"i nith incontroiliaughter feeLing like
"ifl
Si Uif6aet on
at,"-er.t:.l"g.f
ultimately le.thal and tunour
inducingras al1 vi:deo-$Pect'acular opti.cal events are.
The Spectacle is the death
instinct-,the Videodrome is
Death TVilt killed Brian
af Iiverl valie,we rer-ognise
sr!r..{i!.t! enewy; Efte e9ldi{6dit'y,
ryho kr'orys so tlreIJ hav t.a seea
a r Fr ,-.qt glance u'or.'th r'n3'
fr'. r, ? I aiia obvious,rvlrif, on
iro, .6-,,rt,trry it is.5ro'fu77 af
Televi.Sion is the uain ueans
sucrai relalion
'l'cac.Le of
iness Lritirout consequence.
inetion of soc.te ry t,f i'int.lrnIfi"t,ns..n '', rrtit.cli oe.ao'!rii-r'ir. ' ' " ' i.iof arly boosted equival.ent
elrone it,ai7'*hiiittir;:i*r,-t'"
as pretex!"
1" the commodity
Sqects:a.uIar -Hype i: t!fE'-da€au'
:
in: th,e pursuit of , beaLin8. .of
u+"ryor"-.1se,the ecst'acl
1
s9enfa11 :deeooposed thtng; ' '"r,
rhich. ftroa'ts glouing..'...
:
enity'Icnoring'possibly
{6f}i ffEOn:D:,,S-t?C-f gfy $f .,f,,f/g
i&ation v'1th iuxuiy,the
gener8,'*s sribliu! nai ovirit j*r' laE j iii. and t):: s'hype
leads re ii cra,,:;,[-t"r15.ir-
pro"otes and annihilates
iesi.re and provolres it again
a""i." ."n i.".,
;;;;;;u-ii.[
f et-
likarr .
song a^bout lria-n Jan-es,he vasone of ttle RoII ing Stones...l
a proffer-ed offering to SpecVideodrone'
ff*rm..-- lffi$g i'pri ve thlan'"des cri.Ption
ffiffff#Kffi#ff #tr trHFtrr
The Vide
is the
"9s4h " I pe*. rhat' ]jt".Ett]
iuIf iiled.
,,,, t*{r.*ina
specEacular
the char nel hou se of spectBcular sub 1iminaL lanBuaBB.
Take you f ,fooln
have bee n rebui 1t; the decor
uPdated, ( vid€o r hi-f i. r.,conputer
el trig gers, hallucino
, genic rtr ansmiss ions...);
but
the fani. liar to rture chamber
is the a
HE VIDEODROME
OLINS DEA TH TV .- Just 'wa-t& it
,'colLapsi ng n,ew
The uors t thfngt l.n the vorld
is not b uria1",a 1iv€, deathr by
drowning ,'firerB rian Jones
stri L i DB., inpalen ent
but the
Videodro me,- th
Room 101 - that is the uers't
thing'in ,th9 uo r1d.
rr.:irrr jrrri reinforcing
its ordn
ttre object( BrandX,
i.i; riiri ior:*sli.s
only ever d
l,;r'*Lext' * & d,*q.of ;.a, 'spectg'cu.ta,r
.,ir;irr.] r.rrr ;r:l* ;
_
r d * fl {} -{}r n * m * e,t""sd e rau.,r,lrd,i v:e r s t o n
, .; ,, ,: ,,.,
.
r.'
l"-FS{:t:a.:,J,Le{, $,f:ype summons usr
:
r)-t",,t*' ,d j"f f e*-tr*mE. j.ate . between,
iiu i" tr"* fa i r+*.1. -y C i scri-rfrinatei."
:";r h. lrpnu;*,,i.* faselnaeion be-
'
11
T-.i"t*r?:t l'nIse]-y *anpeti,ng '
.
I..ri,",inri* * f r*p*&,facular hypg, r
,il;, t,'itilrtr}r. t.11ft i..t iuSi OnS of the
iilS,.';".tt*l*
updat'€',
odrome
protuo-
:
',,
]
ii,,ii rrirtes under fhe s'bectac$i*s.i il'ppL'r.s.trf,j*.ns js a, unirty
*q"'
.
i-#fiy #*;#ilff#* sSCICIETY OF THE
,i ffFtr"j?'d {;f- # ' }
j*;rli.: ** s;*'rrr{r" r;h*},:* -
:'
$W#trffi ffi#
*fB H*k ffi .y,dtP ffi
-* F"ru
--%*ryffi fu d d&fu
fdeology: This is the system
of video-spectacular
representations. controlling,
iq the
all individuals
to the activiEies fixed by the structure
of the Videodrome.
dicuive than addiction s
# ffiff ffytrffi{s
I f'lG
ff$E SUBI/ff' SIOIV OFII,'D
erfeitisD:
Ihe misu.c,
out nemcnt / su"b yers'i un
ing fron a coifusir,B
,sn,tf a spittacular
tv br the r|etoirner.'
Cronin -'Ripttrt
\ct. l' )
T,,|i;A.;r,da.
d(j*e{rr-L
OAT
*.:! il r,r i' r,r.Af :d$m i'i .t
:.r
F:*.!1 . ,- '
,
r. l;'
3:u,s:!j:ii:&;:i:$.il e,p,q& 4,4, o li;,:erf.r !.ii.!, l.,.:.,., ...
edited'blocks of rnages'
and'
;i
s-ound,:t;.p,c1ca.l'v p*,*:':fi.uI i ; ine' ''
e.l rCrt'Cr't:Up'g- { i li n i t-i r..1 ,. .. .'',t\
thrr, vi.Sil tlr,;rl:g* "arL i i .r r,s:;
r
mrtled at you,tl.at
come ideologies
crr
uming that decodj:r.
cr y about to unrlergo a
nental chanpe,mani f est's
e individua]
as a funtal chanpe in his J':fe
u reyer-sc thi perspect f power bv returning
t,.
ur,e'1,{,f e er}el:gi,e'5.,,g 1 4'l:e |
r& and coa,s,rraj.nt;:1 , ' ':i
L t'A:tiE G[:ff;-f,f;{f .{00ff. ,
:
i ,,: i', Lre
rituij ui11 p,-n(tra1r' .' :.,"
through Ehe Vl i)1.!r-01,.1 i ' :
mat iorlaJ., sper t acuJEr. I :(
ogical shel, uhic'h rs rm;
serted.
'r.strucied
.{s i-I.,e" U* : -_ :. ,.oj:
*[',ef u,',u.,','.".,r,, ,,.*o:.d
;fr;;-,;j'i;;;.;:,,.
and, rt
;h;
h.{r n ,
j.x.
<1irtt
itt
i
i.,.:.:.,,r:,r i:t.i.r:,r
.1-!,rtc,;l,.ery1 r,1,*ftiti*tl{l8:}trqu!.t,he.-
:
: r,il
iijXl
.:
FI.ST'RES,)
Ifl:;
i *r'r &1'
:;fhe ,r*hire.,,litit:ti.da;tlr':;l:ii**iiii#rlite :1 "' :r :'t'
"
' t::'
,*r"1.u'rt.r lo ti
irrdustrial
l
'
a m,.,8 u,r.r,,: u:g,hs, d e y,e 1r:ope
t. ' 11"
:'':
*Iior,hi,a,*,,t,t:Ur- ei'ihl"
r.,:#f.i"
i';i't-'. tl.1'l': l,t"'n i,Er: f'e:i t .,tiheoif y of",':::Sril ti; Li
l,iiir 6ir'ctr;- a',,.,o'*,e{.q,[:,,,:ienp. -,
..,.1j,-'']
:'i
l*.n'
ueron( der rve/'detour/Ji
'ior;si e,ousn*,...}Ii'il*i,;;il;;..i.. ,. ., ,,,,,,i:inr*itl"' : t':':'"i ir !'rrr i {'l ;
d: .::
reversa 1 /d e t ou rrr€rlr€D I
relied heavily on LalrPders, tape and sound cut chr:iq ues,l .tutt.:,,th1:*,i:;x.a;s',. :"
a recoding of the Videos t rearment of behavi , rfication;
except that
I r wanced to use sublimt ri dger . i :rpu1ies, inserfor hi:. wr. perpetuated
y . ,'}Ie .e,. i;;t f'a il ,:ril*:beri:{,!:t;pii::::
,bitua. sp, tacularqicai acs ciations'
' ; with counterfeit
ist
t
r
iq
e {,,,+,of
1i,1,,-t,.,f'l:*,}i;::11
].a
'.;, ,;', ,:,.:,
1,,i1.iupu'rr.;";-.;.;;;qtrg
:
', t. .,,::,"'....fu'
rter
c' :the
h,?' ddecoder.
eC:o4,e{,.i;,;;,rr:,ii,:ri:;r:i::i:..,;;..:;flljil,,i;u,iililii..
. '
11s;
l l'l *
:
:,
,, , i ,
Srnce ctre Videodf one is.: i,.1
.'A., ,,' u,,i.; . ,, e i..
, '"' :Sli:t
.)
'.
:'.
Ir
totrl
vi,
environtnent
a "th.e"'d'err
::
r c firrlii!-:i:it:ta:*d-:ef:l:t"t
dialeat
decoddr,the
* '
,the
'tir:ieenc
J*torrstr ritiop,the. detorrr ne.
t iriit
.,i
.,
}
it "
IIet':
. ', ".,;i,:*:i.1:.lf
:,..,,r*l:,.::,i
-.'
'tl:, l'' :tt :'Ie:ll,
I
lrt i i i,r
:
sulr'
i.
al:
t\q,;
ri
i'
a
it tl
q
tii e
r ht,
liat I
'L
,.t;i;f gi | 'i ', ; ,,;iutt,u:f,,1l,,.,:l::i:
. rst techn^r.
i, ' nas fof.
ll(::3r ulil:
:ividual to ii * vhat
il;\:1iUr.,,
..g on wel l enou,
io
a.i i
,.:tr.; ,i.'.,,,) | '. :',,.
I machine,not to trans- :t:,.11.,!.tr.c1i5,q,,,,l,ii:,.1&e C:ljrr:Llq.L.f,u4:f-!:O,.fl::::i::.:,.,.:r:;
:he V rdeo.drome, but to
,hove fcrrs nn.l then trvi:,q
t]
ulate its Darginal re':*.:
.,, .ri{r rthe;.rde|od&X.1itrtii:!91""f.:h,^E-!t.en,l
.,.
hei:. :iler:od**x.'ii}iiH#illl#.$i*i{ii& r enri
nships to onetg ovn
..i. r, pl..,y:sis""r ,r.e.rr..i.i:+r:y,:frs,, r.
'-qeogfi,r:r:'
::_::: f :t:ldrlrrlne'':
like ait tni other
. m"-','.'t.r,a; spit't'r*xil*ll$T'ual,i.,r.r'
' acular pimps, philosop::1i]:-or
y:codinq as dr 1: i rn&. involves " ;r ,rilr, ,, i;ii:i#*;Il'i':;l*{;;",,;
pundlts, poI iticos, pop
r.u":!:investiqat ion ,!ii..,.
.ir:.,.. ;;,r,i:Fiiiil.
,,,,,{:tt:,}.,sn:si
,,,ri:pti. *;,;;'dtii*$l:"{';##
*.,;;'dlijfi,$[".;ff
I.tl;'the,i",i:l:ys;1nves!1::tlDn.
i5:i$#H;;;;;
il!##H;;;;
, poets and piofessi.onal
.tr[il'?.:iib.b:$[;T;,
..urbgl ,Easi - the ,rr, r, ...pf
rs.rn,.
bf
:rr.e
r,ers.:
itecrure and the enviiohment..'..' ii.'=tS:o:l,H;;.fq.,F_il'$f#H;fiil:i"
df
4g,:,;*-;9;,,:$a:t,r'g:$*lli di €:{ ft gil,li
lsively unprCdict6ble..
1-.-ll"I..,.,"., . is'i
,:t::rc:$ns.s,ris.ll-s, ertottonq.l
-": psychd
::":---;,;.::-';u;s,r.,r,*.,L,a:ixig,,,*^,,.,,
,t*''-"'1'l ,'anc
rr:*iii.ns Lhd,li:pq.f.ed:"b"if].,,f
pposedly be.ing rebellit he rr$rl!*.flii'i:,.,.it,i.t**,lpa;.rnrirohrd.rit"L
.'idl;..6#"i h nt:r
,99
l.!.9-e-:
:S ecause society is.ueanL
:seog.raph.y , r : r t. a..i,_.
' '"
;_.i;
l:""11_s.4
:;,,:.;i,l'I;T?;ii.;":.tr,[f
fr]'l
: lr based on ita ability
,.i eq.,:+,r**$rrffi,,;,#*+;...,yi{'r}e,,'r.,,*"r#,."1rir.:irr111:,";i*.'iil;fi$;';""'s.'t".#ifiFr,*fifl*grni:s.r,
edict the future;chaos.
*::::i:!r.ir" 'l':r' t I r'r r l ' j,r req.ir,.?ar'#s"g.s: relffigagi{.'g}hi ps,
rdness rriIl reuedy vid"o ,.:,:1,:t#:S,gir:frg*:
litj{,i,*1*{,"ia'*,i.
i*.",*tfiil#*ff,iin';;ffS.ffiffi$if;;i;
gical conditioning by
events;r;i.otaroccuDaltr.ns,
'*grif,d
rrLl (,.^^'jl*i.i,*.
* So
. r,.U.1Ii&;',:*::'Si*49..1.r-Ul\A
-.i.u*nLr.
Pe
&Si!r-!"N a s5Deci!ii&*!;tr*ii
:.: I i.ng the sleCping avake
a:, :s.1cm$il i'er*;l'lli t:-iri! Siiiltrrd I t s, i ., E
',*:fid;.:;S:
i'i';-.
bur
IStilke
€iH*'s{;q.
:'4,1 I :.iiS:tr:,i & 1'# t-,pi!;
contenLs,.dialeeti.ca.L iump: ;,
:":'* sB*ii*i$"acular
irii'i"
i:.,V,
.so.ti#'u6me
i.s .,a,r s,*cr,tti.g
h,Et j::d.*.e,q,g:*i:.,
'-bifi"itr-;Tt
buI v I vtrs e*lI,**liimposes
pllI 1L l; r L surv)vgs
tqlli!*!l.!lttluuses
:,::,-.r,:il:::r*i..,:ii!i:r:;:....-:!r{11;::i:r:r:;':,j:;:i.1.;::-.
; a ri tual , a pure nega .wllI farL'tasttcal'li :"Er'anbf.rn:
:virl
rsr.;
t)c(.,u.""1:A
is ur
sur\
1 :.6,si,q !. a:-d,i ;+:1i1 $'r
grr,.
:f .l el r
;hq sper tacr.rl;ri"iela.Eio:nsn,; (
L\
t,,r,
s(
) p:r, erf;.em,;rst.
iuud(.c
rlistic disruption of
ln" tnose 3reas'. "'
'
(,r de lr:s ) (,rrs of n..rn t l.tt: t u:
-ganisation of appear.I.t i.s I iie unle6gh{:n.g.' of' vr. : i .:
,, rs r;,.t I rr r rr i,t.r ab-*"ii:nr,a
which leavqs your neuJ.y
d.srlt',,
reativitie'Sirin.va.n't:v..
tl.r. .,t.., rt t,r r:.! r\r,_ tl,e_,_tr,k,
'ered.. backbone, eho-qe
ne:s
a9src,1.g;r1i;44g.1...p.1,i;1.$g.gr
desife.
i.hich' i.fi.rriogr
.ness
iiiiii
h,me.
t .decoders in fhe spindrit tlnE, Ltre deco:de.i 1t.h"e' p*,,
umn,the deep brain,,
geog.llphr if d.e-cont.ra!'I i'n;,
;edIy Capable of seizl.ng
rleproq :,,1;rn..i r,,', dAcrjdi rg'":.nr,,
rl consciousness; bu!
c rr.,Ar r. ; i dir:"rst.rC ng*,r,Cha,,
f
,
::.,
I
i,r.'its,
:
r
.
r:.r.t
g;
m11
:
a, :,i
q-
^
. .
ii
.
.
.
r n d ev e 1
o,ped re.p1i c a t i o n
s spbctacufarized"'or
rcularly subv.eii'ed inr'.
)ectBcie of rivolt"
:
15
L',Ll
llr\llr
7-
r'
C
Fa
How to Stop Being a SPectator
Without Joining ln
You do not need to leave Your
room. Remain sitting at Your table
and listen. Do not even listen,
simply wait. Do not even wait, be
quite still and solitary. The world
will freely offer itself to you to be
unmasked, it has no choice, it will
roll in ecstasY at Your feet'
Fronz Kofkt
ffil
,ffi
k,.
$'\t'
=m
$,
'f i!.
;l
,-)
-{.4
' .^i...t'
I
*---.T-fr[--
- *tL,-
.:
-..
.
i i=trul,
I
a
a
ANGEROUS
Furious
mother
attacks
TIME$
By MIRR0R REPORIER
A POLICE Yrnda
squed olliccr woke up
to lind his ncr*'rports
cer pcrched on pilcr
CINEMAS ha'
stepped up securir
following near.riots ;
hundreds of teenage
llghting for ringsii
seats .t 0he fil
Rocky IV.
t
Policc were ealled
cinemas in Bradfor.
ofbricks...rndrll
four whecls missing.
Halifax end Hudder
Thc thlcvcr hr field
efter s€ats we
cvcn lcretehed thc smashed
end refres
word "sorry" on thc
bonnet of Constrblc ment kiosks robbed.
Chris llirct'r 17,500
clr.
Chrlr, who liver ln
Campion Wey, Sw
ton, Yorks, seid: "I
lerrned my hsson I
hard wey, end
I've fitted en el
system end w
locking nuts to
ctr.
DHss lnffildl?T
offices
"But
rincc
happened romc ol
I
othcr officcrs h
becn pullin3 my leg."
rtt*:** [hn't
[jtr1T],".l,We'lg ngt Nim l*H;rilffi'{
oexrns
;#Sj:iffiCrl
sii,'#'::;##s#
'rwulAlul
tho
;rt
;;:';li.#;;.;if,.Ii
lan
-uonh
End Rod. Hrm'
r,usuLANcEMEN
Ar-slltrnt--rmbllance
t<r rficr olrriirrr 5d rrrv ts6p Bettlng bcatcn up tnChlql
prunhca flnccr
Ven-- Creveld thert' bcctme'
rvrllrl
:.'*[i]ffi **'x*f'1.'8,$H$'m,fr,m#:iury#.ffi
ifr ffi fr
itfu,t*;i"ffiF;ll H$ffiffir'tffiH'H{ H"*. they,t uerne
!,e$d.r.hrrr dry,
i;T]ffii
lti=r+rtiEr,*fitIffi fl""':tr^rt,i.:i'f,ii1$:'X$il{lfrt-;*,%n*rr6drnaa
i}ilet[ffiH#-T#dr{i'i,**:n"'ffi1'ui"'*H;95.dfri.5,
cilr*
did',u p., rh. fu$ auft..l c6ls lllilll
"h-l t
3rr
-. Ggpecl8uy tt nlght.
Tti<tcrthrrn Skillcentr'
#*:Y.:ff#riv' '":olre.u d.y
i3*-yd.vmi,,a AIDS MAN CHARGED ffi,.T*i,l!#d'
bcforc
lqn" *,.**., rr,
#,H#,flIfr
'
.
who sprt in the facc"";il;;
of two- pqlio
r.n Hibbea" srb h.t
r'.:::'.*;:iff:;i: oriiifi,
-rr.y r.pr dti". c
#S'ffiT'xx
*;.1;.:f"ff;-lt
H*S'iJ,S'*T
[H,,i:t"]irrk[i
Strirrli. ir.l, div. I
rftnt,
tut thc* *trc d
d
what 6f;*ffiX, ll,r.S
"ourt-i,i
ycsterday on
Michigan,"ip""i"a-ii
r ciarge of
esrauliwitti intent io-murder rn
casc.
r
police called rn unprecedenred
Richards spat tt the otficers durug
ArfiStriOJ c"rr-n ii?
!d luftCh k nnnidt{. ;
::, ,_ :'##:T:,'J#:;ffi::1J"ff'oi"[. "*f,:
Anf,l'effme continued spitfing"at enyore who nmt
'-- . -' . .
signs stolen nerrhim.
A vrr,LAGE"s rnti+rime crm.
Porridge victim
t}.:,,iHS
tlllS_q.111n;yl rtri
fffi",;*.{lll"lo!
p1on_1g
f!q"^I:I
B:[floff#Sdi'#;#Iffi.'iHi
*,, d'"o"y't:;ti,u*,f;iH #.Tli.t*mt
.{x
rqlltt$'lrom
roedside a'.l.cl 30. vus ln cnllcz: con' rro' grtcinl
-sr'(l'
thrt-thc
(i,tron rn io';lii' i;;ilt
ltrfl.
firn
lh.
thc
fa-llin;
tnto
r'nto
irfiel
:'czr-:.oi
cz:-::oa
rchcme
ofgrnlser of thc
orgrnlser
Thc
9*tf
-1n91 -tl.rl't
-6fritt{rh.--Xcsi,
-Filni
-Ui rchcme
cr . boiling- rc- po-d,-e. :*tl
it n 6.40
r.m. - mrll
in
-VeSterday: .'I
"'l'l)e top htlf ' c{ [.ls hECy rtinl rr r rtitrnt'cntirc
rjavis. seid
rm
:
to a-niryy. i tr-1ve-oneiea e ef OO F'::s. subrner-s*
- -.k-..qr.i
rplkestnln s. : --E.:'.ll\r f:,:l
':e*;rni'for tie prosecutlon of
plill ls susp.a:a
:he gtrlpril'
zeii rtolea
:rcsts.
A night of mob violenee agaill... and at
one point pdlice are foreed to puII out
2OOO invade rnillionaire's empty
Raiders'
blazing
J0TSAl,[D t00TIIit{G SONG OF Arreven$!
GAiIG
,F"rrrPstead honme for giant party
rI{D loY BY
ilPREADTNII{GLAT
RIOfERS
TIF(
A
Dozrtl
tLaL,
crT
I
[ro
1 wHOOptNG
Wesr
|UNGER OF ANARCHY.SEEI{
lndians sant Oh,
What A Beautilul torn.
ln3 as thcy suryeyed
tlre riot wreckage ycs.
ce ls Called tYorsil.Yd
ooli:'i'Ji':ry. iill
11
lontay.
250 Seized ln Londonas
EI
tsil
tlon of tha communlttr
mourncd th! ylctims ot
thc ulolanor.
And th.y ,c.r.d .nd
a Doocd
pollc. rill fir.-
de.llnt rlth ltc
lncn
Durnt-ou-t olrt llttrTint
r rtr.toh o{ rord nlolnrficd Ityh.m tltr.
firemen Battle Blazes
L
ByR.X.APPI.EJT.
Bile cop nun
i-r=tl.tte.il.til
*rr.oox. Saorday, July ll
I
-Urben
rsqls
ts enrptcd itr e d@ citics
rhls 614
ftd
end
Guly
hst
EiSit
I
I lr ptrccacn and firemrntogbt to
tbeands ol 3rurt!r, Ursf rnd
o e rrnprge d ri$iDt, htrfuS
!t
-t
,-ffig.
r Gmrament spoklslnrn $id &c
SEr!c6, dEch crEC rs 6c atist vroiacc arcrd itr U
Dr rcte
by far thc rotst tadeta- E
h.
F'. q* io cdtrE ciri6'ftlt! hGia3
Erl:r."
ha tr.of rloopcNotE*tui€
tluen twicc
'I'WO child car thievrt
rarr drxrrt a nrotorbike-
policenran-then delibcr-.
ately rcversed ovcr hinr.
I)c Bill F reeman. 36. o(
Sllu'lcy. hear tsirmingharn. wus badly cut altd
bruiscrt. Hc was hit wht'n
he tried to shp ilte
thirvcs ill Small Hetrth
Brrrninslrartr.
nRESISilILE
.A DRMR *bo rammcd
o, oi.u.r
atola thourrn.ll at
'.oei.3
ot Th. 3xt
a.rly yarta.day ial
!.lfnad fiarn
Tho rrllrrt, orllfi
thailsrluar tla Srfrdon Aotaen Group,
twmpad ea tix rrr
.rnt b tt uflrrbara torn etd
g.bbod prp.B l|r..h
hrl b..n .rroepa.t qt
lh.. docr.t.p. Dtl
Ilrol.td.,r
Th'.. lro.l.. ht.'
thrarn rara oJad ta
a llaranj taraS.r
rlr.fa th.y toun l lta
9To.r !.rnllrt;
50 arrests after
West End rampage
O TROUBLE continueal in
Lawless Btitain late last night
with more thu 50 .arrests in
London's West End. Prot6ters,
shouting anal singing, walkcd
along pavements with arms
linked. Oth€rs rode around on
bik6 aalorned with flags.
a Amund 300 pmple roamed
Trafalgar Square
and
Lelcester Square before going
on to Whitehall. Ihirty-six
IEople eere charged at Row
Stret and 16 at Eochesier
Row.
O Datly Erpr$ photogmpher
Mike Lreridge ms thrertcned with an6t and thcn
kicked on thc ahkle by a
polie ollicer as he tmk thcse
picture of alrests. Loveridge
was ln St Martin's Lsn€ &fter
covering the royal premlere ot
the Ra.bra Streisand film
-r*entl
drtv crr. lD Crlm?t
told
Pad. Itllnols,
Dolic?: "rt tclt F Bood
ilta Dltrtni lDc iret or
I JEt @uld. t tkP. '
A GANG of 50 yout
and children
as yotrng as three
stoned two fir
engines in Bootle
night as adult
watched.
OIVtOSON, lttscked bY mob
People I WtuV'ffiff';';i iriil'*i,"l.i*irn
'=lfrl[i,,*r
t ;:ili:liitil",lit::
r- II fft"r"LW"";,'
Y,A!"*l*":" y^:,:"* S..llit" i[;l*:;%'"i
iiil il'"ilid'" manis
m6n
iS
i:fifr,r1g"?;
tZ.Xli,X $rr!i
---^
fi:,ei
.r ii;-.i
:,,iHiLi.1i"r1"fi
|
tn'i,riino'i
forg- |
-
ffi'"'L#-:,1"i.,:1"6'H::
i:.1"":'
. - ::iot, IIe. reporter
I
a"::i"^, i:"'-*u_.^_:y^
parked
on a garoge i::^"
hall Station.
Th-
sloshed
i l1#ii;qii*fti
':ritriedtorescuc:---.--.-lgnL8'-alabout8p.m.'Ietfe8
l'fi#ii"%#'fnfri'.r:;tr #X*jrlr;:ili
facc, temporarrll
temporaril
L..ar.
-bcncath a
_
o,, ,,X,':lj:',i,,,.r;,"u. II -:7Vandals pour 6+.*tl*h"mraisil*.'iri"'i#dl-';j:In','S1'j1il'i,',1,i" ::ljll.ilftti;:i{","il. I
-, , ) |
;-il-i;',iii4.ffit;; ;['i:'g;i-rl"xilti:1l I raintstripper #r.i,#il!,*:r
amobotriiorscr'
;.
,,*lllti:#i,iiH I over four cars ,,{",1ilm"e;:l'. TJ
brinrt. I -. .
entilts.
s.iilei
&pFr
ffi ,n
"r'it
H. feared the vehi-
: : mi*h. r,e ser
The ringleadcr, o\er
lix leet ta-ll
ii-rl uith
uiiri rhat
barraSe
bliud
"Chr
brrnded me, l'm
blinded
r'm blind.
cuu*d
causd to both erttintrs.
I
@.r
Fu'td EDt
tlave ltrey taken Ey I
Sub Oflicer l{aih.r c
".-"-T-d:_tb.
c'.tdhJir.strshediris"."ffi*#,".iH[*,*'"*t.i-uotii".aih...ii,"'
e4
tu
rE
e&.
maliCtOus
iItt!
.d*rL(ue'
.,oked like orargti.
[erues you right lotffiil;
ol
straying oul
iffirs
tlUinos, Iuck lace Ia$;##
at
atdd.-d'
n \est Berlin, after a demonstration against the Tripoli bombing, they did a o
tit better than in London: almo$ etery shop & restaurant window in'the city's
vealthy Kufurstendomm wds smashed. Therefiasn't enough ghss in all the
'loziers in the city put together to mend all the broken windows.
e
I
Ugliness down
on 'the Farm'
f.* i
i1
Tottenham rioter said to a New Society journalist, ..Don't write an1, of
that
rap about unemployment and all that. We just don't give a shit, that's all".
-ffi%i.it@Effim.irek
.vents o, Iast nitht's
tenhan riot
started
rlicr in the dat
Tb.
trm.s, accordxrt b
pol.c,
mbr lnil
1d.6,
rDd k
,drctt's sds mdl
.t ToikDBE yilr.c rBli.D.
tu rptsd is dG la crb
DE D.don\tr.dor o!6id.
toat.ohsD oobcc 6rrdon by
rhut S Fopl. rho Bboua
.bE. l.bkh $. dEAcd.
30 Fi
ho Fll..E.D.ru.d
b rD b.d.nt.t
Brodt.kr rrrD Bkk.
ML\slt6
tLo*o.r
Btrcl <rr, lDlulDa zn ,,nrccr. rho rs u\.n
to Moo.ritlds trr. H6pikt.
pm rurthc. hetlna h.ld
on Rroad{at.r l:rm 6tatc
to vhl.h pll.r ar. nol lbdtcd. k d.r ot H.iEaGt
(;nDl. sDd
Coub.il, k.d.
!h. 6bt. s rosth lad.r
M^ Dollr f,itrlD,.iorD r.Fe
metrr.s
ol (h. f,6a
l!&n AuDdlDa Conr.!.u.o
rpts2l ,or 6h.
k.Flo
-Thcy
or.bL sld bt.r...
ll x.6 b
sld
bk
td
rords tbc, r.rd
€.{5 pE: PoU.c oud
b
MoEDa Plds!(,
Wibo
aad Tb. Ar.o!.,
lld.
by bo!d6 rDd
ttgulkd
Crc oe.rF(rol b6h
aurDd rnd Ea oo trr..
AtkEpl B.d. t st r butldtnt oD trE on th.6bk.
ni.c .r.*r uBU. h dal
hh lL
9-gr pD )ouths Idh ni\rild
t.oD !.rosu1,s o( th..!U!..
slFharl.t
s.a alltht b
(;nfrin Ro.d Poll..mrn cut,.8 knour brund S(rdl
ef.l[ rro,u'.bcr{lnshors blaCkS,
kl
Dto
B.od$alr!
l,re
,"1i,:;!!:'ii",tr:l; !,i."$:ri
says I ory
d.l.Ddinr 6r.hen troh mis.
Tort ilP
d.\ a-!h.y
ttahr rqprr- nlGlff_Bl\(,
E3il.t blrr.. .libFq. H. Hrrr.! Prq.ao' srrrt toda,
di6-bk. rt !!
Nortb Mjddle that b. rould se. {hc timc
E! a6p&al
comins
rli
rr-i
,
pD: G.E .rplo\ion h Eould ha\."t." to k d.ptor.d
10.:0
on hr,ton
..,!+.- tu4
to
"rr..r.
"oo-'- .rr. r.ts.r.d hls dem.Dd ru,
,;;a ' '-''
-;;;-Jn;'i,.;"
ro, N.r I dhr..,,h_
;;ii.; iarrb rod l,al16r^Ei
.xr
r.!,.116
rrrroo.
hi;i; - j;; '.p!.uri,,D
r,rh a Fibr.
.dBp.uq.roD
a.,i; ,*;;i;;1.-i.;a!r,;;
or htr..a s000 a.d
,rr,c
- f,'ffifd
fi,
i];:ilX
L:;X:l
EhDrormcnt
r.:i
,i,.,.,, ro ubur.s
"?,i,e,,ii..
Johd F.Mott
6..q.r.
{^ xrnrn iirr-. s[brcu'ouco9lotEal
,o. tbc
6.i rEi$ rooth
.," l"qld
dor k t!D'.hrrro..',n'.r
,".#*f;Tri}*,,'tiIi jr.rj:,."*"#r*.
;; ;;;:;
+-*s#
q- **lsl
'ffi
and 2l prisons (depending on-which figures you a,ccept) involved invarying a.g...s"f ;a-isturba;
841 gaol places (iust tnder 2v_n of the total) are destloyed. There are'r.r""."t-..""po,;il';ti;
26 remaining uncaptured at the time of g-oing to q.$, Virtually the whole of f.l,irt-fi.y"-f.iroi
Bexhill, on the Sussex .oaj!is I3ts9d to the ground. It began as
lcrowd of OO prisonerJcoirlion
BSffiEU!:'*Rlt*Etuxs:ffi
.- ilt
".'+''
l\
t*
<ll
'{'
F
:*a ,
fff#ff WffiiriPA
$$ffiffi
Police hit by pstrol [omfis
rl'*,*:;*i:iL
on lhe
mob went
rcm-
g"-s",ii-.".r,r''.Jil" :j$l^f"*l,lltgi,$i ,,J}f,[,"H,,f*f;*,1:li ff]ffi,,, uas s,abbed ,o
ru:Tn;..',t"r:;fi T,6ffi
wele injure(l as so:cer P(,
,*,:
r#I f1;,liinti iiJlr
conk
nf"',lmf;t
to th.. ground.
crvrlrans wpre .A gang of 150 youths 1- woman found the A pollce sDokesman
.s.veral
aso
hurt JIrd .l? p(,ot,le hcn_ran_offink,
lhe near-' aclo ln Lorriship Lane. said 'IhLs looks lrke i
h.v Highfields area.
b-v
verearest',rl
verearestr,(i.
near_ the sccne
sc|ne of last
last verysinlstprneurlo,.i^.verysinist+rncwriornlon.
flrea. Ieav_
leav- near
I
lnq
rils ran riot ln Leiceshr
a triil
At midnlcht oolice dcscribpdureicenias;r,:ha-
of smashed Sundav s riot ln whie h a
mer)t ln thc troubl| hoie
shop windows and dam- _!
otrc
_
Hcirifoilem"n'G aEcd cars
ftom n.igllbouring Not.
Polree rn riot p62y *"*
thghamshlre uere callnd rushcd to thcscr.iic
intohelp..
Highfictds *r. it"
'
jl
il:,l
".n-
,*.',j,i?llll ","1*'
lL"r,'J'llt' Umf:f
game agarn.t!. ri()rs in rhe r"it"ir,"riJi
l$t-.Crp
xrDY.
ofl-iverpool.
'I)t,RlNG lhc dryrirlc wc
'rcrc tlrlking lo .luv(ntus
(upporlc6,
swopptng hats
rod wc crcn bought a scarl
o[l sornc o[ thc I talian [ans.
'Wc wcrc argurng with
rircnr. bul jus( about footl,ill. sorr of ribbing, but il
u'as all very fricndly and it
ccrtarnly wasn't cauring
Jn) lr(,ublc.
'Thcn during thc day l
]cwcllcr's shop was broken
Into lr the lown so thc
ixrlrc. trscd this as an cx_
!_Lr:c to comc I nto thc
rqurrcs and stan cBckrng
rl rrlls. Thc 8crJ mood
a round llrc town was first
hrt,ls6 1ru the Bctgrrn
3rlicc.
'Thc grorrnd u.as ln a
.rrl 51316 At onc pornt
,Jrrrrn5 rhc sccond halI I
la.r!lt tgalnst a crash
a.lrrrCr ind tl tUSt
. rrrmhlcd urrdrrnerth' nte
Errrlrcr. whcn thc llghtrng
stafled. mc and my matct
rrn to thc brck ofrhc stlnd
r nti .lumpcd onto thc roof
r)l a hul ro gct out of thc
*'ry Thc rmf Just gaw
way and wc [e!l strrrghl
through ir.
'Thcrc rould ncver hove
bccn rhis outrdge i/ th.
grourul hod been in o ttc.eat
stotc lt tould netcr hoyg
hopltcncd tf thc nutlrciltict
hod got thcir act togcth,,r.
'Thc trouhlc startcd wlth
about 50 to 70 Lrvcrpool
li_n\ chlrgtng tl,r ltalrans
rl tcr a rcn year old latJ had
bccn bcatcn !p. A[lcr thal.
onll about 50 [ans wcrc
fighting rnc lrrlrans Thc
rcsr wcrc lrghting Ihc
qrlicc.
'I irc trrrtr;rl chargc ucnt
Ihruugh thc rrtrrldlc rrf thc
l!rracc und tt w;rsn't rcally
\Crr,ru( up Unrr Ihcn. but
rhcn lhc riot p()licc staned
nrrrvrng in frr)rn rhc nitch
rnLl fr,-m thc brck of rhc
stlnd. Thcrc was murdcr
on wrth thc polrcc attackrng pcoplc all around rh.
ground.
Sorng wlth hcnor storics
aboul how bad rhc CRS
was and so on.
'Ltverpss/
/sa5 \ e4t tntt)
the Juyentut ?nl-lorutc be_
(outa \o mony hod beea
po<'Acl into tie l.tverpool
,Disgust'
'Whcn thcy wcrc trying
(o tct oul onto rhc oitch
thc riot polrcc wouldn.r lcr
thcm gct ou(. Thcrc was r
,cncc eround thc pitch rnd
pcoplc could only 8cr
rhrough e small cxit. lf
'lf
clubs arc brrncd
to male up for thc l,,st
ten'acg$
aDoul rnt roducing irlcntrry
[ut t[s
'lt's alrcady f2.20 ro gct
rn and thcv are talkinp
carOs ncrt ycar. T}cv.ll
probahlv maLc us pry ihc
)U pcnc. f(,r tlrc pncc oflhc
card(
thc ruthffitles hrvc tlcir
'Optate'
toughcr mcrsurcs. ihc
disestcrs will only gct
'Up our wal.football is
rhc opiarc of rhc pcoolc.
'lt'r litc rt grrdford. If
ho6e.
'Wc drdn't tnowanyone
had dicd unrrl hatf iimc.
and peoplc srtrrcd wrlkrn3
oul tn dtsgust.
'Afrer rhe initirl troubk
cvcryrhing calmed down.
Somc of thc fans had our
thcir banncn owr ih.
lcncc sr thc front of thc
tcrraccs. Thc policc mow4
rn and srrrtcd tcaring thcm
oownJuil lor thc ackc ofrr
Thcn thcre wag murdcr cn
il8!r lI
'Nr,* thcy !rc eirllrng l()r
natronill \crvrcc to cr)01c
bael rnd a/l thar rrro_
Thtn you crn rcullr \rll
pcoplc. Cive thcnr u riflc ro
do thc yob proprrly
'Thcy trcat you lrke
anrmals-Liverpool l-not.
brll Club have ncrer grvcn
a lucl
about tharr
supportcrs. Whcn we
playcd in Parrs last rcar
thcy drscouragcd fans liorn
0n t[s
rcvc n uc
thcrc had bccn an clcctrt
fencc it would havc ben
cvcn wone
wry rnd forcc through cvcn
-
from Europc ncxt ycar, tlrc
Sales w,ll probably go up
When vou'. e gnt n,,th,ng
lo do. anJ no moncV. it
bccoms rhc bc-all 'end
cnd-a I I
'You rc trc.atcd lrkc
cattlc. I scd to go ro awty
matchcs. In a car tt's al-
right, bur irs rcrriblc il you
go ()n thc coachcs, so I
don't rcally t'ilhcr now. lf
)()u sr.p oft rhc lcrb you
8ct ir lr.krng \4'hcn I was
l{ I got l.ickc.tt by a polrcc
hor!c rn lhc btck ot thc
hcf,d .[ N1)lltn[:hanr-it
lnrxkcd ntc out
'Last rc.rr,rn th( *av
bacl fr,rm Romc rhcy
irJppcd us.rll.rr f)orcrand
rc,l rchcJ rrcrvr,nc !on!rng
oll
th< [crrr.
draggrng
6x,rplc .rrrrund Onc eoach
gor a policc cscon all thc
way from Dovcr back to
Livcrpool. lr was all jusl ro
riot
908$ 0ll
rrusrcd to to up thc
motorway",'
'Thcrc yrrc Nazis ar thc
mrtch. I pickcd uo r
Brirish N rrionrl prrty icrf.
l€r rn thc around. But thc
Chclscr !upponc6 wcrc
-
thcrc, largcly bceurc if
Liverpool won. thcn
Chclsa would Ict tnto thc
UEFA cup nc.i year.
'Thcrc'r going io bc bad
blood bctwccn lralian and
Eritrsh pcoplc for yern ro
comc. It'r ell down ro
neticnalism.
'lt'r.lwrysthc umcfq
intcrnatiorul mstch6. you
h!vc an urxJcrlyrng curi.nt
ol natlonelism
'Ilrt ycar, wc wrc in
Romc rnd 8ob p.irlcy.
thcn rhc Lrvcrpool
say lo cvcryonc clse. manage r. rriri: "l:st tir.,c I
"\lc'vc
got all thcsc wss hcrc I wer drivnt e
anrmals. thcy can't ba trnl"r'
The puf,llt prosecutor, M
Pierre Schmit told the court:
"The behavloor of the English
fans would be unbelievable in
,ny countr!'. These PeoPle
crerted violence. theft and
dcstructinn.
"shopkeepcls were stricken
witt feer; Luxrpbour3 became
e city under siege. The forces of
lrw and ordcr couldn't coPe.
'roops 'to pat down rioters
APELDOOBN: Convictdeoon be frclns I weeklongF
sentence of tialntng DutcLI'.
rlot pollce, r P-ollce sPok* q
Dutch soccer hoollgans maYf,
man sald yesterday.
Ulder e plan devised bY ;
r
tq.o Police Academy oStL
soccer hoollgang rrc to'
rlot pollce tralnees ln
of belng flned or ren
gaol, recordlng to ! sp
Vau Loch
mau, Illr Petef
Fmtball's accumulated profits arc not being tfueatened by players putting in
Ita&yrn pay ris€s and record transfer fees but by the ldt*irdc
rg lobbed from the terraces. For example, the profits of Manchester
.TD's are down from 12 million in '83 to a mere qubrter of a million today
; foo-tball hmliganism that is responsible for this falling rate of profit and th€l
of evidence to suggest that the schizoid praxis of much football
is becomirg less so as it merges with more tangible cxpressions of class
as inner<ity riots and strikes. a .There a3 yartualy
no vaolence at SPorts
cYentr an thc US.
And at'i rare to tlnd
a phone box that
Yiolanae,
Ser in tlw
Strents
doe3ntt work.t
Jonathan King, the Sun
Bj D.vU S. Bllrr rrd
tl.4..r
hdA
.EIIISBUBGH, Pr.
nesrive lf,orld
(APi
'icricr-Avictcry celebretion
crploded $nday night into a rampagp of destruc-
tion, looting rnd ser-inthe streets.
Ncrrme! rcpfit d tro rP
Par.d lrslulb - romc o{
thcm ia full vies of buldrc&
yho ch*rcd ttr€ sstrilartt
-
Pittsburgh
C,oes Wild
-ln Orgy
cle polieeucn rrid Adng
th. disturbalct rhich Lft
ti€ do\rntown lrca i! shrmbla.
l[orc t}en lltr parronr
?rrc idur.d ead 0 otlrrl
rere errutcd in tbc rclcc,
wlibh eruptcd rttcl .o !.tiErted lltr,mpouldintothc
&watown arca.
ftcre res lcrtt.Ir{rhoot'
displays of pub[c lommrlitrg, Dudity and drinkirs.
At the hcight of thc mcbo
r policc desk rrgcrrt arid
hc had calls rrporti[g rbout
e dozcn repcs. But officials
denicd todsy that tEy lad
h8, fut only oE r?ct d
such r€ports.
duagcd. f,orc tDeo r3rcu
"This bn't . riot. li'r r
goddamu or8y," r Dotorty-
rouDdirg. Hudradr o[ cr-
Codoas ceurcd bY ffcnclr
dtcn rcrc Eir*al63lrn'
$ots.
At lcert I rtorcr rcnr lot.dlldt)dODrlrti.
clrr ucrc oval|.b.trDd ild itt
torDa cala barrold.
cf,t$, I0 fiRM
OUH POTICE
SOCCER NEWS
British Rail, it was rcportcd y6tdd.y, hrvc cmploycc
r tcrm of psychologists who yiII E.ycl to rnd from
footbdl m.tchcr in ordcr to obsryc h@ligru in tction.
Ovcr thc l.tt fortnkht oberycG hrvc rlrcrdy trrvclled
to two malchca tnd in both ctrcs h.vc rctumcd with
ovcryhclming ryidcne torhowthat thc movcmcnt of
thc tnir rcmchow rimuhtcs thc cx rct rnd ir r.sponsiblc for ! !rcrt fl@d of rcxuel cnergy which is thcE
sblim.tcd in vudalism. Mqsus uc bcing takcn ro
chugc thc rhythm of thc tnir. It ir bclicvld thrt thc
tradition..l chu<ha?ooh is no longcr comprtiblc vith
today's yout!. Expcrimcnts hrvc bccn qricd out to
sltcr thc rhythm of thc tnin to chu{hu{hr<ha-p@h.
But thc rcslts hrvc rc fu provcd to bc nc8.tivc. It ij
belicwd thrt thc linsl p@h i! thc qitical sund.nd
cfforts uc bcing medc to cndicatc it from thc noisc
of thc cnginc.
Ovct r smplc of tcn cho*n h@titans thcrc is ovcrwhclming cyidcncc to rhow that th. bonc atructurc of
ccrtsin cl.scr is sch thtt hmliganism is tllc result.
Allcgrtions thrt it m.y hrvc htd tnythint to do yith
borcdom h.ye bccn fl.tly dcnicd ls "rb$rd" by thc
Ccmu hmligan speirlin, Dr.A.Ucution: "No corchtion qn bc found bctwcctr the leck of powcr ovcr
thcir livcs ud thc y.nddirm - 3incc it hs bccn cst.E
lishcd thrt sch p@plc don't f,rnt rny pomr, nor. ind@d, u thcy crprblc of dctcminirt thcir om livcs."
Dr.ALicnation, it rill bc rcmcmbcred, ms thc doctq
eho v{ bc.tcn to dath .ftcr thc Wett H.m - Ascnrl
metch hd ycu.
So fu, British Re.0 hrvc Eponcd l0 psychologisrs
ud hooligan cxpcrts mising or fcrcd dad, A spokesmu i3kcd tbc rwful qucstion, "Whrt do thc$ pcoplc
wut? Why do thcy tcar thc trrirs to picccs?" Hc wcnt
on to blamc frmilics a not prcridint thc propcr disciplinc. ''ThcE should bc tnining in the homes, thc
shoob, thc frctories rnd thc officcs". A hrcligen who
vas {ked his opinion of this commcnt m.dc rudc
noilcs rnd spat profusly.
YcEtcrd.y wc spoke with r pmnncl manager for r
larSe computcr firm in the Midlands, Mr.Hbem: "Everything h6 bcen given thry kids - good wrgcs, f.ctory
clubs, di!rcothcqucs, wcckcnds frcc. This sccminSly isn't
cnough. Thtr Lids hrvc got it irto thi silly tittlc hcads ,
thrt cvcrytiing wc giyc thcm is jud 8 bribc to make
th.m kccp quict .bout thc w.y wc trc.t thcm. That's
dl thc thtnks wc 8ct for thc cduqtion rnd sryiccs we
providc out of thc goodncs of our hcarts. Thcrc's
dcfinitcly no tntitudc left in thc vorld." Mr.llirem's
collcaguc, Mr-Fircm, eid woricdly. in rccollcction of
thc riots of '81 , "Supposirs thcs h@l.i8tns forgot
thcir pctty rcgional differences - shcrc would it all
cnd? Supposing thcy all gq togcticr rnd........-."
OCCET
CIGGIE Girls are
1" sets ilnt N jaiied-
,ffr?ia CEttfl torug
ssault
CHELSEA football sup-
r was dragged scream-
PRETTY Karen Allday
spent four days lockcd rn
a police cell . . . after she
was caught lrghting up rn
a train's No Smoking
01l 0ueB]l
Polrce boarded the trarn
arrest€d Karen, u'llo TWO lesbran punks
The police hrd to clerr the and
was later bailed.
B'ho threw eggs at
rblic gallery of frlends end But the case came up the
Queen on her
who shouted and whrle she was on holiday
tour
of New Zealand
Mlehael Ar' Wllen she reported to po-
Pore rt Judge
on her return, the)
vte when he ennounced the Iice
Io(.ked her rn the cells
was sentenced, and
ficem as she was led
out of the dock.
scuffled wrth police of-
Several other people were
thrown out of the
eourt. in Aucklsnd, after yellin€ "shame on
you at the Judge.
Solottered
Thorbv and Leyland
poseu as crowd control
officeE as the Queen
u,a!,ed to a crowd of
sch&olchildren on her
tour in February.
The pair, protestinS about
Maori rights, hurled
several rau' eggs, one
of *,hich splettered
over the Queen's pink
coat and wss mopped
up by Prince Philip.
carrlaS(r.
20 -was involved
and struggling to the tnKaren,
a furious row u,tth
of the old Bailey yester- other passengers u hen
lit a cigarette on a
ay efter being geoled for she
from Upminster to
fe for rlotous behaviour train
Barklng, Essex.
assault.
attack
Leyland screamed rs she
were vesterdav
jailedfor sii
months each.
nce. Kevin Whitton. e for lbur days.
Karen, of l,ancing, Sus Spiky-haired Ann Marie
- year - old
tller from scx,
uas grven a condt
2t, rnd Deboovdon. was found guiltS tronal dlscharge b] Thorby,
mh t*1land, 22. hrd
maglstratesthe eEtqs tn thetr bras
dir (he common law of' llarkrng
D^1,^o.1,d
K2ren
r'a.
bf^E
rha..r.^L
n--
The girls said it was not
an attack on the Queen
pereonaliy. but agatnst
the office of soverergn.
But Judge Alan Lawson
said it was a cleer,'preplanned atlack on the
Queen in her officiel
capacity.
Bed Samaritan
iESCUER larh, Ella,
?eltbd a hearl vbli,B
,,.ho collnpted b llv
tlrcct
.1a1, Ce
llr Po.hc,, Plt
/ton -Jltc,.
souli
C?b@n CoaTt
l--J.,-.,-)^.
iH
)k+
t*
'Baped? Burgled?
r Bun0uer ?
r
fl
'ed
)m
)n.
ith
of
)n-
tc
h.
il
Whynot
Gall thb
tc
h
u
rC
sa
r-'
)l
police
t.
h
tf
lf
I
:
THE P0LICE Tel,9
Stress in
A ttAN. Hclcd .ln t&o
.bt r rplicc cffq
.r.r ohrrfcd rlth
d.utlDg thc BooT l
oo[ra bc.rd yat riby,
. ts.
.ltc Hck rB ro
- ravrlr thG rclc d tbc
tom of,.
Doot w
Lcds Corty Courl m
toLL
Eut ttG c$srgc rlrl:r3l
,ohn M&EbsU, 5?, ru
lhrm olt o!.s Drgldntc!' aolrt - alotra
xlth otbcr chrat6 oa
ar&ultlnt tEue.
No, Mr. MaEhttr L
auhS W6t Ao*rhlt.
ullce lc as$ul{ fmratd mt eurl lmrironDa[t
Tbct lcry thc rlhau
Uooa.
Glosh
un M.tlhrll. t.tIE
.l GLtt. told tlc corDtY
murt- bc sa! tttrotod
rltcr bc tat to L.d!
to l@& lor thre d Db
drErbtcrs tlcgtd to
Lrvc bca rhopliftbg.
marnage
theory on
mas,sacre
Detectlver tn Comwell belleve
marital rtrera may have driven
a lormer policeman to 4garsacre
hk cntire 0amlly.
They are convlnced that Lllyearold Mr Colln Glll rhot dead
hlr vtfe, Ilnda, aged 8E, and aonr
Stepheq ated 1?, Robert sged 16,
Davld. aged nlne and Dorlen,
aged two; before turning the gun
on himself.
I}IE BIRMINGIIATI POST,
IHt RSDAY, APRIL 2.0. lgSO
Drml( PCig
hic on
drffi
4N off-duty policeman
got so drunk he
thought people taking
money from a ban[
cashpoint maehine were
robbers.
As their- car pulled .away
.in a Madrid street. h-e
opene.d fire with his
revolver-killing a 3?ger and seriously
year-old woman passen-
i woulding enother.
?he policeinan was taken
awey to sober up in a
medical centre.
xrw3 rxD
tooaY, !HUnSDAY, JUXE 19,
tca
'iott
I BLAIED!
permissive I at-efeO,
BLAHED: video diet
of sex and violence
life that leads to rape
who fail at disciplinr
Top po ti Geman Hast
C'
F
an
c,
=
our m0ral sickness
-Epr{uFffi
s
i3iiil
i*#lH.:"&t'
ilil
.the
d -Vlct =
video _
a
xnreill,g:*i
ff"srm"-*",
H#ffiffi
inner
",1",1"Tr1}
olenCe,
cglLaD6e
=
d;r_T*i". ""e"riJ **H#*#il}J :
:
atgtude
that have con- XiJiarl
'rg$;5m;*9,?HP'iittltr*?*E
HA::.
"r***
#*HJffi
#rmgd Tr# Hf"ilHffi, ffiffi*"ffiio
BATTIIGROUI{D: pottcc nor tecc rccrrcc
ooEtsbularv @k6
his out' rtg"HP:
-sr1'""^s
Mr Thatcher *'i,jtrel
t"r #|f.*-frff* "
tiEEE- ,R:"^S,*g
rv
"ffiFrHffiSG
Why riot officers need plastic bullets l'nH'Nmtrr
FOIJCE .D_Ut- b. rble to
llr slr8lB out the &
rHi*""m H;FEJ*ry}fr
ffffim
ffi+^-"T.].,S'iBfu:ffid
s.lffi*-rfr?-: $ffi;ffi*ffi
S#Sffi
ffi#-{B.# ffi-EH"ff
sui I
baton DuDd' Ud
Of ldqlta
,hhh .E me
Er
'
ffiryTjx,
ffiffiffi",#
;E- i-l _ .. *ffigp#-Ff*ffiffi.
trat*f;Fg,*
:-fi;'*$;i;S{_:l
!.q rar".i to #ery!r%.?Jfn*".,**
r,
.ffi;ffi.qfr
.]f--:mf
r.
L* J ffi-ffi_s
;ilt''il;:.',,kil;i'il; [ffi
B?
;lid;"jli. frip-;: Str
H*J${IE
,* ffi;LHE
ry*
-LlEt !tly. th.r€for,
e vauoue&tert-'*rf
dirtu@d coo ttc noti-.
rr";he *t qir'iG i"r.t
"6iI*nil;;;;ryD"*rilHE#"H"-".t fi"J""ffi
SrirIIlEsgm&
'THe suN, Tucsaay. octoucr 8. te!5
Iffi
BUILETS
ly-":E'^#q-fSE
drl oder 8bo t IB 8 r
NEXT IT'S GAS AilD
l, rtcHlEL FTELoER
Eiil
.
I nys.
iJ._ffi,*
- - -"-- UV
LLL
a
*lifl;ffi$Sai;,*,r,n,ru
..
*fl:iHLI.",liIr,i,,::*"lg:,T',.J,LJF*?.,'j,,,U lF,: *T*r,f. rt'r,. 1"r"""a, knesrtrct erritod rtotera- -
dt,tldvqtrm
risht to D6Ea@ rt
e Ultod Eith rodrl itlr
rerred a,
vbetbs th.y
tb.y a
ru
tbadd'
r'.:dr.-l*'* II ii:#,t$d
$:#,t$#r-i#
sn#i::1tf,rhlt
l
+?'rfr *1llx!h"lji
u,To.*o'"l " i'.:#:::*:"-:
";*r..".g::,'.
d
|ffiffiil
Fffiffilm*q''y*lffiI?ffi
I
-.o::..*
.. #n:,ftr"r:"r"+*, Iiil-#i{:*++J*Jl[gid,.ffi,."S# ffi**.
I
ffiJ*Fjffiiffi ld*-ffi lffigm
.LAIY
YOBS JUS
DMt tuf.rdotE
vldaabyIEDaq!
uvE otF cRtftiE'
FOLICE "union" boss Lcs Curtir lest nishr
rngrily_ blestcd cleims thet policcmc" *cri"ii
D!:mc.to.7 Britein'r rtvrgc rpric of riotint.
re,sard. rncidents like the death of Tottenha-m mother
uynrhra
^
Jarrett- did not GAUSE the riots, but provided
the ExcusE,
t
Attock.d
Grcnl
.. And he added thst each flashpoint area cohlained
pcrrot
.yir:;ii;g:"
tne backs Ol "1("i1"111,ryfrL;i:'#':,",'-""":19,.";
the rchhunitv.,,
Mr Cudrs chai.n.n .r
Rtof wAs
PUNNED
IIKE WAR
-
the Polr.e Fd€rrhon ako
Ard i€ idded b t!€rlv
lasnea s,irrl,:siriiii'i.ilii
;3i.;;.1.;';'"""1ii'"-':?3: . y; c*;;,*y"2.a,=r_
nrJS;ll::f
*,txo
;-t,'; ;t:.;.i.1:..;;:i,i
-n. ,,
?*..", ,n.
i;
1".,r:"-':":o
"iifi:: P;of,?:.
;,';.a,i, --1,.i3"'.,.1' A::fX-':-::
r,n,!,'" '":Lo'-'..pi;Li.
justi.ffc8tion tor Sa r:ro
fl:i; ,^t'".;r,i: j:i
dtn?g .. i.:t.
;;";,qr
,{.";":l
Altoc*cr - - -Curlis
He sa,d mobs " drunk
wrth vLolence" should
b.
m€t bv plaslrc buI!!s ani
jf
j-'=-::: j'Plii:
Mr Curlis sinsled our
Totrenhams Be r.i.
cranl. L€mb€rh's Ted
KnrEht and the CLC.
Paul BoatenE es the Mi,.
trcal opDorrilnisrs
He B.arned lhemr " Do
nol elpecr u5 lo so .n
ke.prnr the l!d on !o.j.
c?uldron. YoJ b.€E.d the
!r!ra::o. i. th. ,ii.i
tn(
$;
J
N
H
or!
mh
lcro
O
ita
Ei
hoo
n€l
BIE
n
!b
to
)h
at
SIUTN
\
,t
)
)
.t'r,.)
I
\
,1
\,\
)
"\
::'r..']
s,
r:l
(
(
t
.l
d
t
(
:+
t
d
UFT'O
1+2 BUFFO 1+2 BUITO 1+2
BIIITCI 1+2
t
*
\
Spettur.11lfr q,imw
Amazing Tales of Political Pranks
and Anarchic BuffoonerY
$flHfifl&'
SELECTED HIGHLIGIITS FROI'{ 'BUFFO' 1+2 .
AFTERIJORD BY LARRY
LAW. LOOK OUT FOR
'iBUFFO 3t-tI/ALL NEW
STORIES-WHICH LARRY
TELLS ME IS COMING
SOON.
IFantasy will destroY Pqwer.
Laughtei will burY Yor."
Rome qraf f it.i, "1978
eurusr
ln the beginning
Easter High Mas.s, 1950.
Notre Dame CathLdral.
Just before the High Mass, a
sma11 group of Lettrists,
including one who had previously
intended to be ordained,slipped
unobserved into the back of the
cathedral.In a side room they
'it
-l'
.GooDMoRNINGBRITAIN'stARTslstFEBRUARY6.00om.9.Eom.l
caught, gagged, s't'gipped and
bound one of the priests. The
ex-catholic i Lettrist put on
t"he priest s veStments and ,
jgst before the. service was
alout to begin,ascended the
afeps to the main pulpi-t.
A momentts respectful silence.
ttBrothers, God is deadt',he said;
and began benignly to discuss
the implications of this concluslon. Several ninutes passed
.before the congregation actually
registered what was happening.
He managed to escape out of the
ca"t.heilral but Ehe congregation
caught up with him on the quais
where they proceeded to try to
lynch him. The Lettrist, a1as,
was forced to sgrrender to the
police in order to save hi,s
I
Chrl,stopher Grav
rLeavins the 20!h Cqnlurll
D6tournement
Subversion - the devaluation
and re-use of present and past
cultural production,destroying
its message while hijacking
its inpact.
rThe most effective way of
attacking vice Is to expose
it to ridicule.People can put
up with rebukes but they cannot bear being laughed at;
they are prepared to be wicked
but they dislike appearing
ridiculous. rl
Moliere
26
i:'l*
Big Brother
r*atching us I postef
subverted to read I
'The Guardian i" Bl
Brother I .
Sonetimes paintinS
out letters can be
nore effective, aa
in Ehis Conservatl,ve
Party election
poster which orig!oa1ly read'BRITAIN'S
I
neck.
Posters f.or the ultra-right
wing presidential carididate
George Wallace carried the
messaBe,ttln your heart you
know hets right{r. The nost
common graffiti
addition in
the convenient space belon
these words wasrttBut in your
guts you know hets nutsrr.
Thei Guardian
lc
ON THE RIGHT TRACI,
DONT TURN BACK' .
Graffiti
itself
can be subverted with good effect,
witness the down-to-earth
commenE added to sectarian
graffiti
in Belfast.
(
THERE wu stunned ilisbelief rt the Wdes
TUC organised 'Right to lVork Rally'in
Cldiff on Saturday when an anarchist
rtrblled frcm the crowd and hurled r custard pie at their diety on the stage-Tony
Benn. It wrs almost worse thur pieing the
Pope it the Vatican. So geat waa the
shoek of the rssembled [,efte baeks, that
our comnde was able to deliver r short
rpeech along the lines of 'Fuck the Bight
to lfork'befole being penonhandled eway
by rtewrds. After this, and a brief lingerwrgging from tlp law, he made a hasty
exit from the scene of the outrage. . .
was just as well because by the time
I*fties recoverBd consciousness, thet
were looking urnoyed. Af0er this bri{
highlight the pathetic' rdly droned o{
rending everyone back to sleep with if
'No retura to the 30's'. . .'Most reactionart
Tory govemment sincc. . .'garbage.
FREEDOU
2nd Oct.1982
Elections--VOTE EARLY.
VOTE OFTEN.
Belfast Graffi-ti
Shortly before the official
launch of the Social Democratic
Party a meeting was organized
to form a branch of the new SDP
in Kent.The meetiog, attracted
support from all sorts of organizations including the ultraright wing Freedom Association.
Alas,when the good people of
Kent arrived at the hal1 they
found out t.he person organizi-ng the meetlngI was 'of anarchist persuasion .
Time Out 27.2.81 .
----and theelectod
Representative Tim Moore sPonsored a resolution in the
Texas House of RePresentatives
in Austen,Texas calling on the
House to commend Albert de
for hii unselfish service
Salvo
to rhis countrY,his state and
his communityr
'The resolution
stated that tthis comPassionate
gentlemanrs dedi-cation and
devoti.on to his work has enabled the weak and the lonelY
throughout the nation to
achieve and maintain a new
degree of concern for their
future.He has been officiallY
recognized bY the state of
Massachusetts for his noted
activlties and unconventional
techniques involving PoPulation control and aPPlied PsYchologyr.The resolution was Passed unanimouslY. RePresentative
Hoore then revealed that he
had only tabled the notion to
show how the leglslature Passes
bi11s and resolutions often
vithout reading them or understanding what theY saY.
Albert de Salvo was the Boston
Strangler.
1T No-. 106
"Supposing one daY trucks
through the citY
travelled
announcing,tThe War in VietNam is overl Within 2 mlnutes
everybody would be calling
their mothers, 'HeY ,Mom I The
Warts overIt Nixon would have
to go on TV to reassure the
american people that the War
was sti11 on.tt
Jerry Rubin,1.97O,
During the May riprising irr Paris
in 1968 students and Young workers occupied the Sorbonne and
the Odeon and barricaded the
surrounding streets against the
CRS. The of .f icial
p.aramilitary
Communist Party was less than
impressed " When the slogan TNEVER
WORKr appeared on the facade of
the Sorbonne the Cornmunist PartY
daily newspaper 'L'Humanite' bemoaned the defacement of the
buil-ding and wondered how such
A SENIOB race relatlone edvlser to thc Pollce Federa.'
tlon epologlsed prlvately last
nlght to hls eolleagues for
reiertlng to coloured peoPle
rs [lg-nogg during r conference debete.
lnspector Peter Jobngon,
from l)urhrm" made the reDark'\hetr he was belng
qlestlorcd sbout crlme ptevetrtlole D.tten. Delegntes et
the colrfirenee lD Scarborough lrld rfterrards that
they could not belleve what
they hrd herrd.
Ilrspector Johnsotr, ln anrswer tc r questlon from
the foors sald that' .he
worted ld communlty rrita'
tlons. Ee tdded : " I wag iln
8 worllng party tht w.s
deallng wlth our coloured
vier+s could have so easilY von
over 16,000 students.
The Sor:bonne set uP an occuPation committee and 1ts Presses flooded Paris wi-th revolutlonary posters and 1eaf1ets.
The Odeon was the venue of a
non-stoP discussi-on.When the
CRS used CS gas and riot batons
in an attempt to clear the
streets and occuPied biuldings
the students and Young workers
fought back r.rith cobblestones
and petrol bombs.
The Communist PartY General
Secretary George Marchais said
of the
that the activities
students had no revolutionarY
The students arere
validity.
not members of the Communist
told
Party and, Marchais
rLIHumanite t,the Communist
Party is 'the onlY revolutionary party' .
A FOLICY of con-
in
tainment
Ulster
'was the "passport to
failure," said former
NATO chief General
Sir lValter Walker
when he spoke to the
Surrey branch ofThe
Monday Club. at
Camberley"s Civic
FIall on Thursday.
"The key to success is clcrr -
hold and dominate." hc
declared.
Thc'gcncral crllcd for e
brethren, or'nlg-nogs." Then
he reallsed what he had sald"
"citizcn army" equippcd with
.F[r Leslle Curtls, the fed'
sizc of crickrl balls to protecr
and sat down
eratlbn's chrlrman, tebuked
hlm lmmedlately, and sald
tbat such e remark should
not have been mrde errd 'in
no rrag rePresenk the vlews
miniature neutron bombs lhe
Britarn from the advancc of
world Communism.
Calbcrley f,are
llth Peb."tq?7
ol the-Pollee Federatlon."
Straight from the horse's
mouth.
was at the 1963
!{ay Day demonstration in
?
Queen s Park, Glasgow to address
the Glasgow Labour Movement on
the theme of the demonstiatir:n:
[]
Hugh Gaitskell
'NO TO POLARISIT Gaitskell
was
known to be a suppcrter of
american bases on the Clyde
and as he worked his way round
lr
!
CHAPPLE ANB
E
h
TT{E FAITHFUL
.d
a
IPE cntlr,ely posslble thtt
slcctrlel&n FRANK
t.o explaining the necessity of
such bases he was inE.errupted
He
by heckling and cat-ca11s.
said his critics were t secret
members of the Comnunist Party
Russiar who
and ttools of
should a11 tgo back to Moscowt.
Finally he lost control and
started to scream abuse at his
of
audience. Faci-ng a crowd
thousands he shouted, t You t re t
nothing I You I re just peanuts I
Only the police and stewards
saved him as hundreds rushed
forward to storm the platform.
Stuart Christie
'ThE Chri-stie File'
?
CIIAFPLF. ciralrman ot
thlg. year'a ccnference.
muld- DrE
-oncr not to ti
ouotad
the follosdne
s-netch o[ conversatioi
. otrr qUYG'E shoulder.
Unlon delecate tc lfir.
Cheppic: "Shet'c that
got on youg
aelad by I molld of Ugtrt
rettcf, ieplled: "Foutr
_ [tr, Chapple, who has a
$hougand."
ff"or$'vou've
|undre{.--and twenty
lbw anlmals on hts srnsll.
unhaDDy to have con.
boldhg la Kent: "Bhe€p.n*
_Dcleqata "How-_rnaugi
rhccp ilo you have?"
fir. Ctramte, elrldently
Thlr, they wlll bc
ftrmeif-l! the approxl-
nhatc number of Mr.
Chappie'c to'tal comple.
ment or uilon memberif
27
As a sign of the
June,1973i
ttruce' preyailing for the
Camden Nqighbourhood Festival
tug-of-war was organlsed
tween a team of squatters
d a team of policemen.
e squatters were disqualifd and victory was awarded
b the police because when
they started losing ground,
spectators broke thraugh the
si-delines and pu11ed with the
squatEers
IT
Xtra I
It',s
Navajo students have been
known to engineer mass'f1unkins t in r.rhich an entire class
deliberately fails a test because they know that sone
students couldtnt Pass and
they dont want to single anYone out for humiliation
who I
On th.e 21
Ner"r York
a pa.rty f
The venue
announc ed
nd Kos-Ler !
Grand C
an orgIn theFlEvEfiTies
anization knowh qrs BESA(T
Berks
Ass
Ext
)p
11
pl
Dt
fi
a
p
ce
Easter , 1984:
procession
crucifi-xion
traffic in
group of 1
eet
t h.e
by
a
ur
ounded the
c
e
Jesus, cut 1
a
told him to
woul
sai.d t-hat t
his getaway l
Ealing and Chisr.rick Guardian
October ,1972: A 30-man British Army recruiting team set
up a display of 'The Army'at
Work and Play' on the playing
field of Lochend School,Lochend Rd , Easterhouse, Glasgow
and the 1ocal youth showed
great interest,turning up in
considerable numbers.A cookhouse erec.ted to dispense
modern army food(rForget what
your dad. told you about army
grubl t)was soon smashed to
matchwood.Soldiers enjoying
a peaceful cup of tea in one
of the caravans were hurried1y .evacuated when f 1ames,
from the bonfire 1it beneath
1t, started to {.ick through
the f1oor. Iihen the other
caravan lost its windor+s the
Army decided to pack up and
1eave. Two Land-Rovers drove
off, leaving their exhaust
systems behind: young saboteurs had tied their exhaust
silencers to nearby trees.
IT
any joined in
1
it
ed.
ApSne
'and'
t
Lau
a-!$t
c
egoEls
ur taup
bril
a
ious part of
becCly'.Iy
Jent
T
lsu-lFreDle
ndlconplr
Jopie
hand
rolci-elJog[
in Istree
rtf^oo-le.
urpra
noti-
jolf,nfld
0n the 24th August 1968,Jerry
Rubin,Abbie Hoffman and ten
other Yippies entered the Nerc
$tock Exchange and climbe visitors gallery
ng the rnain ha11.
es addressed the
d traders r+orking
on the e{i1s of
greed.Most of the
ound the incident
nd at the end lof the
uth
ed
.e
.t
rhus i
e stu
re
TI
t
.t
a
3
ch
n
rt is usual to, U"l',t staff ro
notes from circulation but in
Chile it became a political
duty.This r.'as due to the Chilean workers' habit of writing
anti-government slogans on
thei-r banknotes.In 1973 the
problem reached epidemic proportions and the government
was withdrawing banknotes
alnost as fast as nerr ones
could be printed.
remove viry worn or defaced
-.il(
1'
hen
to.
t
:lll
i
Ult mFused
slyU
trayitr when they heard
that'Apialketisrnetwas a farc e.
Fair News
Stamps and Banknotes
r
e
11s .
i$:
e
er
nd
cen
a
sho
Pr
d
hang-
nd kn
Fmuch as they cou1d. The
security guards arri.ved and
the Yi.ppies uere ejected fron
rhe building.
D'o it I
JEi??-Rubin
D Bulletproof Gloss
Enctoses Gallery
AtStochExchange
Tlre Nt'w York Stock Ex.
change last night installed but-
tetproof Blass panelr rnd t
metal Erillwork ceiling on its
visitors' garle;y for what an
cxchange spokesman said werc
"Etsons cf .sccur.t;.r."
Work to enclose the 100.
foot-long 8,allery, which in
The I
policeman'stanp
friendly
was .clained to have been uith-
drawn earlier than planned
because of the widespread
practise of adding captions
to 'it .Tine Out even ran a
competition for the best example.The r+inning caption was
ttNo,he cant stay even if you
do marry him.tt(One of the
children depicted on the
s favstanp was black).Xtra'
ourite wasttNo, I did I nt ki11
your daddy.
tt
places hang.s directly over the
desks and telephone booths of
clerks snd brokers, began
after the cluse ol trad.
"!ror,ly
ing at 3:30 P.M. yesterday. The
job was expected to be completed before today's l0 A.M.
opening bell.
Last,Aug. 24 a dozen or so
hippies threw dollar bills from
the BaUery a displav man,
exchrrnge membcrs
'to sr-'o rcpcated. do not wanl
-New
York
ffi;-
Don't call us, we,ll calt you.
Below: Pleaeure Tendency sticker
In august L975 a new telephone
facility r4ras installed in'the
!{anhattan Correctionaf Ceriei,
!iew York. to enable prisoners
to exercise the.ir constitution_
a1 rights to communicate with
lawyers and re1atir"". Ou.ing
its first year of operation
prisoners made over $IOO,OOO
vorth of fraudulent long_dis_
tance telephone cal1s
for telephone boxel.
GOON.
,PHONE
INSICK,
There ire thousands of thtngs youd rathcr
do than work. Do them. -But only-lgsether can we creete a'revolution
where pleasure is the onty alm.
On the street again
Pari..s.May'68: The f irst nonuniversity territory to be
occupied during the revolt
nas the Theatre de France at
the 0deon. The wardrobe dept.
uas raided and,dozens of
denonstrators came out to face
the CS gas dressedn as centurions, pirates and pr:.ncesses.
THE lrtest youlh tmdov.
ATL1NTIC CITY, SGpt. 24-It *es
sxxilLdl
,T: 1'., if, "+illli:
.leheme hy Dublln youth to
ncrp .notorlsts suf,cring the
r-.nwelcomc attcntlon of- tnlJic wardens. An carly bcnef,.
ncar dawn whca a strantc male voicc
lallcd wcr thc polict dispatctrer's radio:
'Hello, City Hall. Hello,bity ltatt.,
Thc desk sageant wrinklod his brow.
crar.y from thc
reDorts that herchamc
r.g
approac.hed by r young
scamp .rho offcrcd : - .t'ii
scuire th.t tieket for you for
nrg motorirt liSuircd
fZ,"
hoy. j'.lgst you tntst-me,;,
replied the lad. Thc iatri.
sued. motorist coughed--up.
'r ne boy
ran ofi doyn thc
stneet to wherc the wrrdcn
Lya-t nriting 'out rnother
'Who are you?' he rsked the caller.
'I got your car,'clmc the repty.
'Whcre arc you?' thc scrgcani askcd.
'I'm around Crarwood MilE,'the callcr
said, 'and I'm going to dump it in thc
During the 1981 .Brixron iiots
po 1i
na1led their i.ntent1
e one gro
ting
rtb
r
water.'
Momcnts later, thc policc asocrtainod
that one of their vehictes-{er El_bad
bcen stolen,- Irte thii lfternoon the tide
io
receded from thc Rhode Istand Avenuc
dock, disclooing Car 8l in the muO of
tlcl(€t, -snatched the wrrdcn's
bool. from his hrnds rnd
.into
thc bay.
-Ncv
L967
to
z
disru
Beat r
ferry
Nazi C
Provo p1
the psal
vi11 eni
en loudsp
forth the
fire.hla
ess
x-
ne1
ed
dd-
sme11
stre
vere being shoved up agalnst
railings by mounted police,
held right by reins looped
around their necks, and kicked
senseless bv spurred riding
boots. tt
quoted i.n
Pla y power
During the narch lon
tagon, yippi
dr
back ! 'l
col1e
york Timcs, 25.9.6t.
ed frorn the zoo
alon
can be
ce
eP
mov
1Ce
atron
r
gai
i
s
ac
nass
lrl"q
h
{re
d
at
ro
ture !rev
er
until the
white. . . su
rr,ith the n
frbn the n
grasped wh
vas overc
Other peop
than me, ha
vere throrJ
snok
l-n
to living
s allEer Europe,the Soviet Union,United
States',Japan,and rere being
pursued far along the canafs
and.beaten up in doorways by
policenen falling over each
other to get at them.0thers
ev
mil
conv
ment
cet.
rina
ft
nak
a
ain
.Th
to
on
h
ra
(
snoppers.
r crowd ol
THE crTyi2gth ,March,
l!I9P
1984: During the
attack on
the Stock Exchange a snoke
bonb landed 1n the midst of
the police ranks.A police_rroman picked it up. and the
national press carried the
dramatic photograph of her
the act of ihr;wing ir
at the crowd.But this
t the whole storv.
belching smoke Ihe
ter arched rthrough the
nd landed dn anoiher
eman - conslde.rably
.r_in rank to qhe hap_
II,PC.
the pa
the -i-ight
the
nce
vaDished
Uni
nts
ed
lild-
e
d
ce1
kbu
s visit
,gd;{}},'t.ir;trT:tn
Eve
p",I
.rlcdgrif
nrI:i.IIetrGt
nl_g-
lfIIIIock
9l-,Jssed!n
;"
[eJh-aunted
lchange.
blick
IliItI[r.",.fi.JJ
elal]t
uith
lointmlnt
elr[ilror
I{all
St
hinsflCommlionaires
rrd? thei
rn-
;E
i io Il;," :;., o
:;i; closed
"il:' IFil
" and fowered
eyes
.'wi!tr the
heads
r.ronen incanted the
Berber Yeal1 - sacred t; ;i;_
erian rcitches _ and proclaif,_
ed the coming demise of vari_
ous stock.A few hours later
the market closed 1 .5 points
the following
9orl,and
dropped 5 points. r day
_it
l(a t . 1968
ctuoted ii Playporrer
29
15'l*,r.6crl; fufiimt
J:llzt5c'l str:'ke
lm ncummz:.:r - .* , c:::ie-b:-eaker s
flam 0u0'!tr :r :o Iccertake
:!E @- r-t t,:: -Of der f ' 1n
tr[-'o':!ss:II i::i. In support
u: :t* s:::iers,1oca1 Postal
#,T:..:! a:terpted to suspend
r=l:reries to the factory but,
ei:er a short time,their
e:forts vere defeated by 1ega1
laneouvres.
lhree nonths later,postal
vorkers 1n Sydney,Australia
Here surprised to find many
sacks of mail- - recently unloaded from a mai.1 ship contained packets for a firn
ca11ed. Grunwick in London.
Detroit I968: Inspectors at a
car factory relieved boredom by
taking their jobs absolutely
seriously.They began rejecting
something like three ouE of
every four or fi-ve cars under
examination. Sornqacars were
rejected simply because they
did'nt turn over quietly
enough.Management tried to drop
hints about inspectors being
too punctilious - but were
naturally reluctant to state
this openly.The inspectors
ignored the hints.Unfailingly
they argued back that their
interests and the company's
were identical and thus they
had a duty to ensure that only
products of the finest quality
left their factory.
i.irir: --olg ::lt
Ra t geb
Belgium.July 1983: When the city
of Liege ran into financial difficulties munici.pal employees
suffered a massive wage cut - ln
some cases uP to 757".The authorities tried to break uP a Protest
march of council workers bY the
use of- riot police equiPPed with
water canon.In retaliati-on the
1oca1 fire brigade brought up
their vehicles and turned their
fire-hoses on the riot police.
They then filled the town square
wit.h f oam.
\
P
!
.l
!
!
'A
ta
YOUR BUS SERYICE:
London Tnnrport lr .w.rc of thc lncrcrsln3
dclryr rnd lnrdegurtc scrvlcc on mrny of ltr routc3.
: BRITISH rail's two+lass s1's-
tcm proved too much for a
West.Berlln dottor whc flew
lnto a rage at the behaviour
of " arlstocrats " ln hls firstelass carrlage, a court was
told yesterday.
Unfortunrtcly wG rrc un.blc to do rnythlni
rbout the rltu.tlon .t thc moment. ln frct. to b+
completcly frrnk, we don't glve r duhn.
rl
As long .s wc arc -ln control of your movcmcnt3
!
rnd rr long as you heve to trlc whtt you crn trt
( end not whrt you WANT ) - md, of courlc, es lonl
.r wc don't pry a dcccnt yi.tc to the bur workcrr hrvc to w.lt llke
I)r Hermann Hartmut-Bade,
aged 38, said he was a tradc
unlonlst an{ wanted to show
clrc.
the ffrst<lass passengers horv
,
llttle power they had.
So when the Holyhead to
London traln stopped trear
Stafiord statlon on Sunday,
he got out and uncoupled thc
earrlage. "I admit I dld it.
but I do trot feel gr:ilty," Dr
Ilarhnut Bade told Stafrord
YOUR BUS SERVICE
Mr ChrlstoPher Lee. Prose
London Tnnsport h twtrc of thc lncrcrsln3
dcleys rnd lnedcquetc rcrvlcc on mrny of lt3 routc!.
Unfortunetcly wc erc uneblc to do mphlng
maglstrates.
cutlng, satd the doctor's
sctloi produced a Poterttially
'
very dangerous sltuation.
Mr Trevor Mardling, de'
fendlng, trrlil the court that
Dr Hartmut-Bade, a doetor at
a West Berlln hosPltal. had
made a polltleal gesture and
had no lntention of hurting
euybody.
The doetor was flneal t500
and order€d to pay 950 qosts
after he admttted unlawfullY
uncorrpltng r traln brake'
plpe and power cehle.
ebout thc altuatlon .t thc momcnt. ln frct. to be
complctcly frrnk. wc-don't glve a drmn.
Ar long .s wG arc ln control of your movcmcn$
.nd r3 lont rs you hrve to t:lc whrt you crn tct
( rnd not whet you WANT ) - rnd, of couruc, r lon3
u wc don't pay a dcccnt ri.tc to the bur workcr clsc.
Iou'll hrYC to w.lt llke
fi Jamie Reid classic from
A tSuburban Press'period.
Aftctrord
Acting the fool is a politi ca1
act.llhen pomposity and over
seriousness reign it is lef t
to the fool to be the voice of
sanity.Getting started is e asy;
powerful cultural symbols c an
be demystified,and the inau rhTahiti.1983: As part of an indenticlty of advertiseioents can
ustrial dispute,but vearing their be ex'posed, by anyone wi11in I
usual broad smiles,their garlands to use a bit of intelligenc e
and their flowers-behind-the-ears and a spray-can or felt-tip
the staff of the Beachconber and marker.(As a bonus the new mesTaharaa Hotels in Tahiti hurled
sage carri-es all the visual
about 50 of the 1200-a-day guests impact and present.atj-on tha t
into the swimming pools and then the medi.aniks worked so har'dto
pelted them with day-beds and
'put into the original. )
drink tables.
But discornforting trends in
popular humour are soon
"This could recuperated; televlsion political satire which scandalize.d the establishrnent 20
years ago is'now presented at
peak viewing time as satirical
C0MEDY.It may make_ us 1augh,
but it rarely does more than
t' encourage our cynicism
- as
history.
Shakespeare observed, I'There is
no harm in an allowed fooltt.
Revoluti.onary buffoonery must
RaouI
attempt to jolt people out of
customary ways of-thinki.ng and
behavins.
!
!
!
!
!
Our pranks have nothing to do
with practical jokes.Too ofte:
practical jokes are played by
the confident and cunni.ng on
the helpful and guileless. Thr
message of practical jokes 1s
that we should not be trustfu_
of others,nor be too eager to
be of assistance - a profound1y reactionary message.
Revolutionary buffoonery trier
to build confidence,not cynicism; it tries to demystify,no:
alienate.But most of all it
brings PLAY back into daily
1ife.
It has always been the aim of
jesters,by playing the fool
themselves, to expose the r'eafoo1s.
h--Ad-f rsEsl -4 neEsqll-- t
KEEPAMERICA
\t At!,al!,lo lrtror Vem (-nln llrlh
. !.. '
lpr rr Pnn \l E' tcrj ,r lll nm
tiorl ()uLlnn roj Y,q hr& tna tahl
Y,u rl-lellcll
&m tts tl'-llr
Pso
r, I
llvt
READ.TFL! DECENT
MA
G AZINES
-sir-r'rjrE
r L.s
l -ii-i-;g-E.E-
aa--
bi
gE
\
\
\\\
\\\
\\\
q
J
II
)-
II
E-h"
Es,. z ".i
Es
o
iiiii\il
.l I ilsl
' 'l2l
\\\\\Nr
ir Nh li5t'i.riit..i.i1t
sr";:E;. i;;i;=iNi
oa
I
i \ S\i;:Es : iiliE *S,.
I tA *li:iEE : :ii;;E Si\
l*Nili; i=i;iiii .[I[
t/)
TB
g0
iSiNffisii
\\ :ic\ .\l
.\t
\1t\.N
N.\l
5rl
rrE
oE
r'
a
dp
<&
It
s=
I
f*: B
F
t-'
H:
CL!
U'tl
ErE
FI'
F
\\\
\\\
\\\
\\\
\
[\\\\\\\\\
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
\\
\\
\\
\\\\
\\
\\
\\
\\
\\
\\
\\
\t
>r'O cD
\\
\\
E
\
-I
Ar
r\\\\\\\
o
\\
\\\\\\\\\\\L
.f.\\\\\f i:
\I Y0
\r\
c
oc
!.d
a\
..\l
r\|
r\)
r\l
.\)
rNSnr$:ti
i i\ TEEEETI ;=i r.\i
r\
1l\. .\\\\.|rl
\
I
o t{
=tA
e=
lr,l
GI
Io
dz
!3
,.\ ti;ii
fr:,I
i\sEii;r;
iN S'=:\l i;;
,\'
\\
\\
\\
\\)
\\,
i "\ I ts:S;"r r\
iN:!.=,i! ::! \\l\\t\\l
iN ii a i$;:r \\l\\lr\l
l\
E:I
it,h\:i=:\i
t"U3#-\l=
\
J
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
l\\r^r.r
>.r
(!o
.c
o
oo
L€
o,
EA
{)O
o>
JC (,
(,
.c>
!o
L
q)
o.o.
olD
l"
.' ;5
o
il [\\\\\\\\ \\\\
E ^-I Yl r.\\\\\\\\\ \\\\
r *;
il ^\\\\\\\\\
r.\\\\\\\\\
E i;
r\\\\\\\\\
=;E \\\\\\\\\\l
r.\\\
\\\'
.3,8
ol
oLO
oli=
to.o>
(!
c!
oo
ooao
.Co{J
os
t! .-l
H OO
O,od
3Cl.(l0
I
oo6)
qi
o\o
-Y
L.iO\
Od
b0 .o
(n(0(!
OL
c4J
n€o
o!ruc
>oo.
(0()tr
u) c4
.\
}.\;
}.\
I\
.\\
I\\\*
-\\)
a\\
a\\
a\\
a\\
^\\
r\\
\\\
\\\
\\\
\\)
\\\
\\\
\\\
\\\\\--..\\\\\\\\\\
='pl ol
c .dl
s:E
.:
5l
!
--:l
\\> \_ er .\\\
.\\ : 6 " .\\\E
I\qiE
PI I\\
\\\
.\\ :E rig -\\\ 5
"i
.s
k
.\\\
El
\\\
^\\ ;86='
* -' \\\
t.\)
^\\I
U) vrEi
i I'\\
;I;; J.\l
.\\\
r\I 3€5'
.\\I:
L\\
^\\) i \\\\
dl
L>l
0 Dl
.o +l
i()l
(!
E
d
c
d
o
rj
L
l\\8rt-.,
.\\l: ,
il\\
\\\\
il\:I:;
\\r ;; I ! ^\\r
\\\t =. ,\\\
.\\\
r\\f;6.tsr\\l:E
o)
L
o
.3
o
d
.o
($
a
(,
c
c(!
:
\\\l=
.\\\rrrr\\\l
\\\)
\\\\\\\\\\I
\\\\\\\\\\I
-\\\\\\\\\\r
.\\\\\\\\\\l
^\
6E
g
r.\\\
E .\\\
I\\
A .\\\
I
l; r\\\
r.\\\
fi
Ii
='o r\\\
\\\
\\\\\
\\\\\
\\\\\
\ \\\
\ \\\
\ \\\
\ \\\
\\\
\ \\\
\\
\\\\
\\\\
\
I
2
ie
.l
EO
o
oz
a\\\\\
.f.f.f.!.5
aoL
oo
L 'q
d c >
pu)
c
Eoo
oE!
0CO
4 a 6o
>!
cl sc O o
d o
d
O
d,
C
c
a'A>
6o>
o
6Edooo
-6
60!60
Fc
- r!
E O
5 c6
ooo6E
!€r!tL(6
()A
iF!
o
L O L I
'O
o
o o .oD
6
L
d
ot oL
U
c
o o o!
c
eo
! l,
o
9Ed
H
{
I
6cLc
O o C O
o.i
.i!PQ.ag
6
i o
o6i
5 O O XOv
oE.iDol!
o
>H O E
d
G O C
CE
oL
dof
o
o o
rr o
c EI
HHooEL,
6
Ooo
&oo
I t o
o.d!
G o
=
OOL6
c
o oq tr,
;
\\
.\
\\
o-o!.3[E
c(!
6
=oDot i O O^;- dq p L,
o
o
f od660
o
o
c
rE
o
o
c
q'i
o
E L O L (,
d md O - O >
\\\\\\
\\\ \
\\\ \
\\\ \
\\\
\\\
\\\\
\t
\\\\
\
\
\
\\r\
\t
\r
il#T*TU"
fi## o Il,S\$
r\ffiL.r.r.l
<a
J\\\\\\\\\\\\\\l
E 3r\\l
rl
rlil;rgiA,E-E
d.\\)
r\\l
\l!!Ei's
i53'
J:IiE; rAisEs r\\f
{A !rl!;
$i:EE"E
r\\l
\lo,3.B #AEBEg; '}!.!
J:gs;#
al :8".-E .\\\
\lE:ifi
Enr;€;i r.\\\
JiiEE rAEii.3'r\\L
$l
N
\i \
si
\( lN
\
\:
s
4
4.=
2CI
3-^
I
S
i
s
ir
i
=+
tE
ie.4
I
l)
C
-F
D
@H
Hl f o
FI Do
=ldL
aol t ,
Hl !o
Elo
hl iE
ol a tO
4
Hl
al < !E
1o
UO
9>
zAZ
62E<Y
<=d>=
'N \\\
\\\l
\\\\\\\\\\\\\
o
;
FO
De
I
60
oo icCD
so
io
OL IL
60
<U'
=F
\\\\
.:
>€
*i;:;[;
*:::
:\\i
5358:s3
.\\\
.i3:;:
S
\
iL,ili^'si1LLi\\i
.\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
\\\\
:[-|
\\\\
.\
.S
:il .gIiIO;i
ii\I\i
-l
iiN\
;;=i:
:ll
\\-r.-.r,r.^r^r.-r.l\Ll
:i
,4U
{g:
@3
*6
{
ir
\l s
V
,.,1
6
.c
n'
\
\,
\ \
\,
\
\
\r \
\
\
\r
\
\\ r\\l
at't- tld+a'Y
\\\
\\\
<6E
o
\\\
o
ao od
cc \\\
6N
tx o roo >o \\\
\.\\
mz
\\\
ctu
O@
<E
-:i
\\\
YO
p9
30
\\\
o
t tt
co
CJ
9(E \\\
o
o2
os \\\
zla
ic
ol !!
,o oo
o
q
-ij + ai|.rtdl*v d
\t
\l
trlN<"t.r(
,tl
tt(
\\\
\\\
\\\
!x
o
io
o
\\\
=
.cF a
o
--O l'!
\\\
-Ll
o
o,
i=-6
\\\
@c
>
LO
q
\\\
O '
'!
o
oc
ox
X OO .tr.
\\\
@!
!o
!l
a
!a
o
\\\
oz
v . oo
O!
6F
El
O Oo ()o
z \\\
ol !ol oLO. o
d
E!
C - \\\
5l cOOc Eoa 6EOc
\\\
oo
Lr
ol
Hl 6c
o$
O
=c
<l c O Ld
\\\
<J
LT
EJ
=l
\\\
\\\\\\\\\
Li&
oo
ooc
t(!6
o.ci
ooc
6o'o
O
o
ffiffiffiffiffiffiAB18
,THE STARNING OF THE PICTURE
Gr EvIRI'r,t
: FE:i,]t,ti
^-t - -iio.,!'
----t"
--; tan'jl3eltr"
:i----'--=i)i J{auu:
--':
-:.irsi,5 liot:, by DonaTd
:.loI6on -Sni th. rVew erJi t i cn
- ihe first
english transl*
.:lon appraved by the autho:'.
',, .a Tush'sens,Jous'}/'ider-:tging Errjarjse an ha* trt
f 3 " -\0
;ebej Press )
y
--
Br! gAMEasrl0N,Lor!DoN ttgIv 6xx:
::E_E!y4!J^gIJf!_ItIE3!4r r o A L
N
al-':rr*qi,Og-::T
ecii te rJ and
trarisTated by Ken
,airiabb, j'jle wcst advanced theary
{-,f f Lr-. 6C's " '[he aost audacious
:-JT BOO,( AF FLE,"SURES
:'" Ranui \tareigert ,
'- yr:ars Iater..,
Lhe post Rer,.olurion
t.ript
to'?he
' : Everydey Lif e' . T'he
.. sential. has been said" ?fie
:iint is ltaw to do iti".f3.95
:elCing)
r:or;Lributian l:o the Mayo 6B
reyo-trt in I.l-anc*. lJ-ucft of it is
slill
vit.al taday. Loaks oainous
and impenetrable but haurs rdays,
l/ears of f'un once you get inta
jr.. ".'
"f 4.50
,IIEBEL VTAI.ENCE V. HIERARCHICAL
:otlrw
1{ousmans,eLc "A chrono_l ogy of
. roN ARY STRUG9LE !!JEJ.A;D_
BE p I ECU$$ED,, C1EBECT_ED_,
,
,
:;p PPIrNery[LL!_?AT rlr',rQ
Sq YTT.HOUT DEI.4!:
:atgeb"Optinism in the face
, f f a77 ing into
the pit: of
iorkeri.sm. (Bratach ilubh ) 9 5p.
: ?ACTI
.'LE SOCIETY A!1' 'f it
', Guy Debcrri
New .reprint.
"
:e S,f . ts eqr;j valent oi
,1^
--,
'daP:Lt?'1 a
2rx's
"L)"tJll
I i ack
and Rerj )
: Y J:HBPN_OS , LONDq!,{_ ,LCJ!_ 6.)iX .
W;,,
.TiE VERITABLE SPLlT IA TffS
the break-up
--r.r*","r-" f
f clre Sitr"rationist ffiLer-.ationa7
" "f 2"50
rHE ff 4rE:94 t8tsR0ry_A-A-_4!!Sanguifletfi
ty
Gi.anfranco
-ransTated into
"
engTish by
.)rigent.
!he ( ma inl- y ) i t a7 ian e Yr}cr"r'erl ce
is aTways counihat terroriss
:er re'saLutionarY "
"t.3 "00
)ARK STAR,c/o 5 CALED0Nf,4MD'
LONDON NI
,THE POVERTY OF STUDENT L]TE:
Ten days that slrook the University of Strasbourg"Francen
."/-5p
1966""
(Dark Star/Rebe1 Press)
,THE REPR)DU1TIoN OF DAiLY
, BUREAU
OF PUBLIQ SECIEJE:
by Ken Knabb.5 short essays
on the Situationist Internationai and the anerican
reaction fo if
....95p
I D OU B!, E
-
R E F L E C T_I O_N l
by Ken Knabb. ;.".. ". "...50p
,TiiE
REALIZATT*N AND SUPPRES*
Nay-June | 85 . ( as above )
I
WCTORY IN EUROPE - DEFEAT
attack on llll I I nostaTgia and
it's present day use(as above)
- BM CAIIBUSTION have produced
Taads of other leafTets incJuding,'Tony Benn-Another LeftWing Capitalist Pigt,,Shakespeare was a Feke Horror Shock,
and tThe Frauds prayerr. All
their sEuff is higltTy conbustible and highl-y consumabTe.
uuch it.o-qfs,nof
verj,nuch 'b.-!.i: the only anaiysis
of rtJe
' '8i- ' 85 lf :l ners u Si:.nike wrsrt lt
borhez-iog with,Nick Brandt and
,Bff Comhus tietn previous of fering
A videotape by Isaac Cronin
and Terrel SeTtzer
wnn
TflliEVtebs
;TRUGGLE rN sourl
s
Ea"A'T;T-AI - gofrers wont f ind
L6ese easy .reacli ng(but then
t,be;. I re not 1ike7y to read
thern anyway ) .
sSoutlr Af rica iSourfi Af rica'. t
Tottenhan.. r ioters .
t To
t tenh aa ! Tot t enhan ! |
shouted at anti-apartheid
aini-riot,2/11/85.
'RBST IN PEACET: an attack on
Moveaentt
ffiFeace
incTuding a critique
of CND,
Greenhaa Connon,and soae aspects of the anarchist opposition t4ithin thetfroveaent' .
30p.post paid.
I
TWO LOCAL CHAPTERS IN THE
,
'PeopTes TeapTe' suicide cuTt
and the CaTifornian gay scene
Ft
I
ffiofic€t
CALL IT SLEEP
etc.'...
the ru-le.r''s greaLest
fear is coning riue: despite
a71 the huaiTiations
the ruling
show can think up,the nost active sectian of rhe strifting
miners are beginning to prefer
life on strike to Tife at worko
- While we're at ir night as
veJJ quickly run thru' the BM
Conbustion repertaire
:SOUTI{ AFRTCA i985: THE ORCANIS.4,?rO,V OF POffi
?REFACE TO THE 4th ITALIAN
goNrArNsw
anti-hi.ererchicai
vioTence in
nain.land UR, "lul y' B5 -May' B6 .
The nast canprehensive and
ratianai
contefiporary study of
r ia ting , fcotbal L and what have
you"-EssentiaT.Most of the press
.ufEings and stuff used here
vtere n:icked f rontRebei VioTencet
' i4 LN EB CA_II |LJCTS-MAJAR CONTRA-
l'lq'r{0j l;ffi
:;f,ECi.4CLE'
,lt,
Tu-ETrssRY oF UN IoNS, : Dar t i I.
a translation of a workers,
assenbTy dacunent , pr inted_ in
BarceTona in 1979.(as above)
"w_4-qq SLAVERY - FoR No 1HANGE, :
Teaflet@
'Jobs for a Change'festival.
(as above)
,
FREED1M IS THE cRIME wHIcH
)a
ON THE POVERTY OF BERKELEY
fuo
of anerican scsciety in generaT,
t2-50
A videotape froa the llSA.
by Isaac Cronin and Terrel
SeTtzer
TIze first
visual work produced in the US which nakes
use of the situationisr
technique of detournenent - the
devaTuation and re-use of
p.resent and past cu7t.ura7
production to forn a superior
theoreticaT and practicaT
unity.
The video is in 4 parts,
1.7'he SpectacTe.A generaT
attack on the various miseries of the ruTing wor1d.
2,Bolshevisa.An attack on the
v anguard i sa,?inc 7 ud i n g cr i t i q ues of refotnisn,terrorisn,
7 ibe ra7 7e f t i s t -hunan'i sn, and
collectives.
3.The Cadre.An attack on a77
those wiTTing to perfora his
or her roTe in exchange for
the niserable conpensation
which nodernity confers.
4.The New RevoTt.IncTudes an
outTine of the South African
uprising ot 1976.
Video casset te(VHS).....f,7.00
. .. . .3ap
'Ca77 it Sleep'script.
?.THE END
OF MIISICt :,nusic a7J
day heTps you worE and p7ay, i
'white dopes on punk, /e'tc.The best critique of p.R. so
far . ( V2 / Autonoay press )
,LIKE A SIIMMER IIITH A THOUSANL
London WCIN 3XXa pretty daan
l.ang but. ve71 worth Ehe ef or- c
_f
r*l
l-
-J)
-
BfiLn[U
mH$$r
Aruo cHrcNeLocY
THE ANGiY ERIGADE
DOCUSEI{TS AND
cHRoNoLQgY
lntroductioo' bV &en Ulloir,
f7.20
Elephant Editions,
BM Elephint,
London UVCI 3XX
, RE-INVENTI,NG ANARCHY.
t ENRAGES,,anon',A petty coTon-
scr'tPs of theorY'
T;tr""
"f to be suPerced-e-d bY
presentTy
eriticaT actiwitY and effective behaviour.latch Out" ' '25P
A crrIZEN,s' il
-'idl,iARps
Aron. Anarchist altenatives
to NATO and the larsav Pact'
IRSM / Ist of l4aY GrouP. (Cien.....81 '50
fugos press)
ER-
ENT A
oil
(B7ack and Red)
by Erlichs and others.
ProbabTY the best anarcltist
|nthoTogy atoundlwritten bY
living t active anarchists .
....f6.95
t1R}I/BAR 45, - Brixton anarch'
paPer - rRiot
iffis'
- including
sPecial'
tour"ii.
an exceTTent guide to Police
radio nevs-sPeak. 50P to BH
AaoLrtoN
WORK
by
Bob
Black
OI'T-OF-XOXTROL DATA IORPORATION
P.O. lox 432
EOSTOII, llA 02258
checta payable to Donnt Xo83Y
HURRICANE, London llCT.
'POLICING LONDON' '
joutnal of
coPnittee
fi;-denolne
supporc unit, and verY goo^d it
sa's- too. A77 issues Yere free'
i'
# Y #o r\lro#'rlo#Jn? r*o,Y
iiit".nrP.7'1ikeHigh St,London E1'
as good as '7000
Nothing
Julys' but a vaTuabTe docunent
of tnet 87 Brixton riot.(Makes
nyt87 diarY seea PrettY du71
tho' .Ed)
',y,r,
' FTGHTTNG THE REVOLIITI-Ol!. 1!2'
@ioua.Siort biogs of Nestor
Makhno:ukrainian Peasant ainy
leader who fought the white
russians onTY to be defeated
by the Red AraY when the
connunists took Power,B.uenaventura Durruti:sPanish civil
war anarchist whotaaongst a
fev other things(nainTY actions not words ) , said this '
'We are going to inherit the
earth.There is'not the slig'htest doubt of that.The bougeoisie fright bTast and ruin its
onn noiTd before it Teaves the
stage of historY.lle carrY a
new worTd here in our hearts '
That worTd is growing this
ninute.' tartd EuiTiano ZaPata:
nexican Peasant arnY Teader,
..-.fl.
1s11-18(1).
Paris Connunards:Louise Nichel
speech deTivered at her ttiaT
foTTowing the suPPression of
the Comnunat sttd Peter KroPotkin.tHowever Eany tines it is
destroYedtand vhoever destroYs
it,the idea of the free citY
which rises in. revaTution and
aboTishes authoritY and ProPerty together cannot be dest.fr.20
royed...'(2)
in considerabTe quantities to
but dont
Tondoners if'required,
knou hov You'd go about getting
then no*.
Deane
'RIOI CONTROL' bY AnthonY
cox Ltd
ffiB.Thornton
25 Haynarket,London SN1. RoYaT
IJnited Services Institute for
Defence Studies.fSBiV 0 902726
21 S.Published 197 5.
FREEDOM BOOKSHOP
Opening timer:
Tueday-SaturdaY
l0:(X)6:@
Housmans
"a\ Bookshop
OPENING HOURS
IlordrY.FridaY
1O:005:00
Saturdey
10:fi)6:fi)
For curtent catrlogue Plea$ write to :
A DISTRIBUTION
84b WhitEtsr.l High Street.
London El 7OX
London's specialist anarchist
bookshop
IN ANGEL ALLEY, 848, WHITECHAPEL HIGH STREET'
LONDON, El
?AX
ot -241 -9249
5 Caledonian Road,
London Nf gDX
Tel0l-8374473
H0WILEAM
TO STOPreBH
'*fiBb
re onthe working class,theirfatalism andtheirtiny
minds
.,'
i
't'
t
I
!
E
t
.
I
'Never l#ork'
tl
?
Preliminary programme to the situationist movement
This inscription, on a wall of the rue de Seine, can be traced back to the fint months of
1953 (an adjacent inscriptlon, inspired by more traditional politics, allows one virtually
one hundrcd per cent accuracy in dating the grafliti in question:.calling for a demonstration
against General Ridgway, it cannot be later than May 1952). The inscription reproduced
above seems to us to be one of the most important relics ever unearthed on the site of
SaintCermaindes-Pres, as a testimonial of the particular.way of tife which tried to assert
itself there.
NOW wo know why wo aro gettiht poor-
wElCOnE rO gr la a
said their rnai]l ai
have a very low opinic
who do.
is our attitude to the go
who work all hours t
success of their lives n
well close down as r
'Qs
g . nation altogether.
nataon.
An opinion
UK IOSERS'
Gall
was. Only nine
was to get rich,
per cent in Ja-
road will get bigge!.-and
rn our crtles gr}.rru"ne.rt
(??
38'
tcomo lnttoad a
Because unlike olrr - h
Imoril.o .nd
pet itors-Japan,,Ge.;l inhnl
the U.S. U.S.-we simply IIED:(,fa
It
IHETIE PARK The great majority tofinBritons
creation seriously and according to |
ac,
I
.
$ar
{a5
\
I
l-
I
I
{ -'-*-
I
_1
rzv z:J THE GAS SAFETY REGULAflONS cr:m rh nngntu 'd
rbilli4g
fi-[l
uJ
d dnn[an.cs l"l"rm ild ar to yqr
'..@srn & ou,rncd ii.m ydr @s shryom o, oli,cos.
L
J
I
T.rOl.A)l lano
noA^ra6
ffi,ii5l *on ,."
!
,t
i
T6l: 01 876
BEGIONAL GAS CONSUMERS COUNCIL
On22
otuaB rdin Fodm
Dretotu AMs 5 7 8 9 .ni &id
Odorv Aeas I 10 6nd I1 mil
Po Bo 35
Rr hmond
SL,& Im 4oV
irj.o'1a76o4r2
d€lUXBqtmE3t2Sl
MIDDLESEX HAO 1LB
-
-
REGIONAL GAS CONSUI4EFS C'IAEL
i_
6. Nodh ftrm.r G.. C6rer.! 6_r
i
li
- -:;.
-
A pan ol the &itish Gas Corpsalion
/1594
P.O. BOX 45, WEMBLEY.
u !ff
5k!
tc E to r.prosad nE inrerc{ or F ffi
shdrd li6r.oila.r fi6 kal F <@6
sh@rd.,^ rh. {rr' ns,!R ts e c tu EilD
w a€ rdlro. sitdd yd @ #i E ib
F
S- -E
!dE$ r! la G,oJl hY@
r
ol s" H lEdt
7a22). fi.
^n.
lg..dtuwrllm
A Part of the British Gas Corporation
Kl 'tr',r rlilffJ.l
6rd BRrNTTOO
31281
ft.
i;it,lc"'r;&h
Nodh Sam.r G4 Comm6
C@mil ts an in(lM
@ H
t c. contum.A H w, hM . ildh
vd
.held liEr ffirtrr rh€ Ml &r sNmm
d ;riEc kc;il
dn;6!
3Mld. in 6e rn, hsbmo S s@r ro th6 aommar. adress ofuo. ,
@ s6 srilr d $tdcd yd @n M€ b rb Ld.ulift
C@..il SGa
dBsB8&Hd
StM. Ls&^WlMU
I 16l:01-487 2600/ 7. fto
ru@ d w
r@6sDrE
@
b m,bbb h
@r kEn
tu'rm
'
qeas6 chrk ydtr k,
Cusr.meB li5r.d in R.rdia
Dtre.tory grcas 0. 7, a. I 6nd
oxtod Dna.ro.y A65e 9. 10
rnd 11 mry di6l UXER,DGE
tul &bibd a[ T6dfr m mib& d llffi.doh
i',frlfll;gi*
=
tsr., rcl 2DO
TARIFFS
t'7 ffitli"""
Eto,arg!,nhJ
E3<ffi Iundsdfl.'ar.dEdsntu5*16Caft.$G,^rB@F
tu 6m6rrq 58. dr+ r)ld .'<
b
dFning .rsr, ph.r. lfrhlF h h;.fr
I
3hNn on rto rMr ol rh6 6@!r rri r tu
--2
462
afti3
l
Ar.a5
b'iw
,k
I
A,ea 8
Aren I
=
GAS EMERGENCI€S
F'.iF! Tu'n .fl i,nnv il reler Nld llD Ed ,hdiil4 c6ld
@r (ias S.4e Cente sh@n rn h6 t4e$ono i'€dorv u& 'GB'.
tu on,e'cncv seryEo drsdo n(mal woA,no h&6 d Lstu ed
phaso telpdoa rhe Srywe Cenr6 ld ytur Are, a!
dprn'nr;,Farronr
6hown on rh€
o. rh6 actunr (nert ro €reere rd son6s)
.,.:ourut eNoulRtes
Nea2
01-828 9878
Area 3
01-459 a88a
- p .^l- to rh€ t6r d rhi< sffnt .or Y@n AmA NUMBTB tn.{
A@ 5
tuhd{n-Sca 62444
3 .nil R-re'one td Lne'€") rd (:@@l@6 wb f6.ie
d he@d 233666
'- CusrL.mq &Mnt4 ol,Eo.
AFr S
01-4743322
A,E 9
Slaines 51411
Ph6s6 ch*t @i h.l dllim d
ld SIANIS.
: V..st SrBet \
SOUffEND ad BREMWtI
Lden SW1 P4H
I
'
'
rrrrrrrrrrrnl,i,i,nu/ P.O. BOX 45, WEMBLEY,
f-*;*EE--l
MIDDLfSEX, HAO 1LB
GAS
I lsoozaal
l"
THF
^^^'eIER
09 :'
-tE
ff
NORTH
I
fiTNES/
a7 tf
I
-1
T405 C01 336200840007
+00404594
FINAL NOTICE
rcCOUNT FEFEBENCE FOR ENOUIF FS
013
352
1 'l
0 c07
00E 1
9.888
{ccjuNT ENourRrEs - TELEpHONE 01 4?E 3000
IF THIS ACCOUNT HAS BEEN PAID RECENTI.V, PICESE
DISREGARD THIS NOT]CE
According, to our records your account has not been paid and is now
overdue. lf the account is.not.paid in full at the end of seven days,
the Corporation may take ':gal action for recovery of the debt. ff ah;
.,
{
charges in.respect of ; _ suppl;.6 remain unpaid, tf,e Coiporatioi
cqt off your suS
. Tay
9ycd.lrfthord6h6tu,*
.
untii
fq,;gs cr rnplr, .rylll then not be resto'r.ed
'dc2^'t
or*"
Zn*
= NORTH TIIIJ|]IIESV, rr*1re ffi{i$i;1'#*S:trH#rhif#Hhqqifl#
SiTF READ
METER GAS
b3 dbk en6 ft €x.,
o Fi,M
,n'Lids
"
I y.ur m€rd shffi nffibB fird $ffi in tk hoc
_ -
:
:,r.aLAO,MMEEF
ACCOUNT ENOUIRIES
'-'q ro rh rd i: MrirusEx ito-ii-li ^cEA MrqF lffit
.P $.@..dtodk$dbmdffi&blBh&
tu Sdl
. ondryosd. tusddt
- I)@ Jp srh @
l chq6 d 6d di
? Fv illo to3tGlh&tbdGid ko'd bk ffi cffi
rhc E.r.o,, Bllut JD tb Olro NsnmarG,o kFt
&kF
6nd $d b
Olid Mr6d Grc cm. b.ftff
r- hoh shoBturE.,todd{6.d
r.\o t& 6nirE ecrnt Sh cr
@m{rah6 to . h Olc., dEh Sll m.b . chE@ t.
E!€Fs: Tu.n or rupt .r m6Fr 6nd 6
p. G6. Sodc6 C.^ro, srrown in tu i*fu
tu .m6rf$ s6r\(6 drdo nqmir diE
corr€L
!Coda-i€ss,ltatEb...bdbh.@6tbt.@6'l1{,wt@nd@l_!
e
-
d6ntrbN^ffi-;.t.!.&Y"
.v
' ptanNn yrrR
Gio,edl&9dffi'
Olb.Nalb.lGbbMrbd G.obnk
PAYMENT SLIP
[E=,'.i
Odh &@il
hro tu sriF
brr Olric6, 6hh dI h.b . dE
n.rn r(.. i!.aiir!s. rn d.rrril r:rc auo* r€. re cd oI,
NOICES fte drFre !l rhe ommFr.
orli.es ol th. bD^6ton'o
frb
Fqion ld h3 eryrco d tu'ulqy holkes uo&r sckdo 4 b lh. &.
xomwnes*
ftne"6,,iiiiikH
d ffi
tu1
rr tE' r --F
6 {, r
t ..it!-
did.iry .rs3, plear. bh|io6 rh h
h
tu s tk,Dnr d rhis 6c@unt ln.rr b tu
o tu
-.4fuamR< aND vAtWS. { v@ iht6d b u,a 4E,.,ur
a
:E.!EEr@3dusscomDrBssd.nordher@s6s
jn.oniun.lionr
srpry you hlst dw ih6 GrDorarbnlr d.v. n, j,,
6nd tx 6nd m6inirn etticbnt v.tu6. a.d !.rilucrraiss
h!. ,.i
'
-r $S e o6to& r. d6..trh th€ sDpty md h M f
-
r55 I
-:l
zosJ
GAS EMERGENCIES
wur siqnasE..........,..,.
num&'
f
Bank Giro
Credit
j1rcwu-E 17.'9 *
& ABC
.
GIF
Amoohr Ole
krs3?6?-l
N^rtoN^L lrans
^,
Esh
\:zlr@D@mK
&
bre ilar4.'e
b r
-.d
NORTH I}IAMES GAS
a
PAYMENT SL IP
eA
Bl*,0''
E;;i
SEo&d le6 Fyabr6 !t rc @qnBr
h6
94c-
British Gas
20-oo-oo
Corporation -
20-00-00
N Thames Gas
BABCTAYS BAIIIK PI.C
AUIOMATTD BUI.K CREOIT CTEARIIIIG
BABCTAYS BAITK PI.C
rour f
AUT0MATEO BULK CRE0IT
THE OCCUPIER
tr
r4o 5
I
.
;.rC
c
09 07 E6
odoz
N Thames Gas
ClIABlt{G
rmm
f.
kSTOKE NEhIINGTON LONDON 1{16 O
r.
c01336? oo84
CASH
Eritish Gas
Corporation
f
8 0907
+lo4o4!/ -
PAYI,IENT DETAILS
:fud6.eddblwtudtuEbm*:
'
ArrrydtakShfficAsffi
:
8Y 6
b lm
fiAMES S.
:
.
:
'
ESOFGAS.F6B&rhsu&r inh hedrtu
ho
b .ry F.*lw .t hB ,wsr 6 cow ol . nn.ffid sd
kmry d srm td Eqy d.ri4 6 rh. Ds d tu F $
fr. ensuffi &riq tM rmdinc @.&.
1. Ar.ry oi rh.&!show@mtq Apd..
2. By B.n b NoFn HAMES G. P.O BOx 45.
m m-Ehsfro tur snF hr Pry THERMS
i1ffiS.m
_v
3. & th6 ft)$ Oliico N.i66l Girc. &c@ni turdd rhid .omh
di. h. olt paymoni slip (Pon Ollb. Nalh.l Girc $d&) &ch
.nd .ad ro rh6 tu( Otnc. N6ri6.l Gno C6r.. Mn'.ccdnt
hol&r! .hdld sEn- d6r6 and 6lo tu .d6 .cc@ni dih c.!h
chnranc. b . tu{ ol[.a, 6bh dll mrh r chr@ lq thL
in wdtiE.nd lix rd
4.
rcICEg tu d6$
S'LI qEAD METER
"
b md:
6.@ 6nd bC ft6 $d b md uES b Srbh tu
!^d msd. h6 !d dV rb brofi piy,i*d dD wG F
t,wdFd{di
&r&todql@MmdGirc.&(ffiU&Bsldffi
s. rpar.dr BIsr dio ltusr ofr6 Ndb6tctro $d6l&r6ch
r!
b rh to{ Oiib &rtut c,rc hE Mn-il<.@nt
}+s d $dE
s@, & 3d Ek6 th6 .nti6 *cdil hrh osh
B.nk Gh fun 6Mh a 8.nt udm hFdl hnd
.TtGmcrdnkbnl.ach.@m&hm&bh.&il
'p¬hM.n!6jonrMhih
i
GAS ACT 1972
PAYMENT DETAILS
Prym6n1 ol66 ac.a.t is n@ d6.6d lhE
P.O. BOX 45_
MMruY, MI(ruSEX HAO lU
,tr Md
hB dbb a6
rh6 .6
6hbn
MMBIEY. MIODLESEX HAOILB
Che@os 6nd Ponrlffi6 sh@Hb m*@bl.
to bBtStu
6nd crcss.d geas6 s.d only tk E.rori Fvmoni db frth pr
rhsqu. vr Fslnt dd€r.
@bhL tu Fumb-d lbm. tuhitt th dry d s! tTlH
cb To
tsrwnoryr.'16rftrdhundEstbvtmc6EnEw,6t.bffin
l@
'$ft6mdunGF&l6l).nddiv6h
GAS ACT t972
ol the drinrd o.6.
ESE OF GAS
By Ca3h ai Se Po.t OIlica aing
ih.Mlhl
SF
&nk Pry 8itr
FEWA6. Yd tun 9@ wdi@ffi
d &.0 rry fu
s
dthf. d pmry he b ry ld.ry f udn tu rF
b rh 6. d t€ m[ m6r rcadi@ ftb ndb lffi b 1<!
e d
fro C@b.t
bn 24 hdo HoG tu@k
ANI[(mArciS AM vAtWS tr p iffi b G. @xF
d db Fe','n cr&d;
cry.r.!@.du-rc(,rwlda,
6. hb'!
spt Y@ msr stu th c@m!b 14 6
m.trhin ctlicbi Eb.d.niilhBh
cho d @!6rur lh dd.utr rh. stdy ry b @l d.
d rb 6@F6. orfr63 d tu Cffi
Fdon lor th6 s6ryico ot srarulorv norb.s uh& $hdb 4 b I
!h.6.rer,b&b.
tin.. M&hs- ru8 &E
i{ii
'T
ca
a1
be
pe
i-v
o f'\,t
is
an
SC
i;iiiti
en
or
i.ta1.:ih
be
f;SE
er
'P..1
Th
81
sexua
thdt i'
to
c
of ih'e.t
in 'the,,
unaI.lf
Sf.$,La"!ffii.1r;X{
t af is.t
vitti' it
xuali monogt
of .natririo
xuality. !
;'taree
have
Ii
hat post people
r a less romantic
nutes
xie t
sqq-e
:b.a'i
iflfi :'l', $:,I'.*ii&,:.l#i i*;,; [, rni
.\
*fl
uhi
1d
-o Den
o u se a
h i-r mi1
gt^:.I" T
,s'
Sex
v.
-rr- . *[,:!. ]
,i,
Mtn and
r9, a
h;=-
r4 dtdok
ttrOr
the
stances.in
gets the
1
ib-
. $irl
' Strroudg$+.bv a
rions, d3"$fues
that val* not
lh ;;-;;;L,".; uu. u'"
changing and evolvi
time.Things ,are diff
to
$ears a'go w
re writing
s1
,Ty
jus
thi
1ib
ste
h
got
1n
poi
pr
the
te
co1
Den
the)
of
onsl $li
Har
ci
;1s ' . No;t
f.?jd
ffi,irE;;;=a;
Re,adelr,s ly'i ves Pag
ot me\'s dbsire t
inages 'of good gi
perhap6. realising
iot rt ap'hf6rna b
ea
AND NOTJ.TNUSIC,
AS HARD AS
C'RACK LE I
,l Open fo. hrcrr &qn Sei ?.
J I PiEnha u{ie(.fE d.'r nd
ArErhln 6p in ful ri] rt rh.
tbor. Tho wong.rd a BsrBEa
lN THE UK-
rHE REAL ANAESTHETIC FUNCTION OF THE MUSIC SPECTACLE"
'MtnbalTruck
$PUTftIIK FAffiS IH
P@forRiou
KIII. MAGGIE BID'
of out,
BfZARRE LhrecLs to ltlll Lhe Prime Mintslf,r by fans ptooeo
rageous punk gioup Slgue Slgue SpuLnlk are Delng
,Ee{ts!i by
ibc-@mpa-
camcs a
going."
A Yard spokesman con.
firmed: "Leicestershire
police have taken tjle mat
I
{
I
Valbonne, the Ana.chy craw ara now
tht 1O.3Opm to 4.m at th6 n6wly rof ur.
th€ blck ot Heavon ln Hungorford Lana
A lupor-strlct door policy (gucsi lbt and mambcrc only) wilt b€
cnlorced. Baskslly lho club.rlrts fo, John and Sandccp and thcir
,rl.nds ln tho tashion rnd 8rt world to g.t togothcr and dancc, so
by"fllltlr";""
follows an approach by ttro girl fm-'s to.the
erou; aIL.. a concert in kicesl,cr. Thc girls odereo - rc
al.tempt on Ms Ttatcher
iiil!'
"-iii"Joiiii-assasrnati,on
for i50,000.
Eigue Sigue Sputuik reported the mcideni to
ttricestershrre police who
then contacied Scotland
Er very snoNly md have
Yard.
sked us t0 interview two
Sputnik srnger Martin
girls. "
Desville told the People
a LATE lst night one ol
yest€rday: 'It was a genutrle strt fm, goupre Bor'
ine threat against Mrs bara-Kellv.
sald the asa!proposal
t4
Thatcher and a
sinatron threat had all bee4
make a video of the whole
a huge Joke; "We Iere
thing. At the moment we
attract every psycho that's
I
,ondon nightclubb.rs k th€ continuing b.!t of
rpot run by evant garde lashion dcsigner &hn
rrt_nor Sandaap, whh tha labulour J.tlr.y Hin-
GELDOF
DEFBNDS
th.lr b.st
Gems ctc
- rs wrll
Ma:kct, is
drunk out of our mlnds on
vodka and chamPagne
when we taiked all tlai
nosense." Both girls have
made polrce statf,menls.
****t*****'
rtyh psrty
THE ROCK STABIS. IJW
EMY OI
DIVTDUA
,SIAMI
THE MASSES OF INDI
IN
lve
out Pete
ROYATS
r0B
J GELDOF. the British
pop star. difended the
oval famill' ,.'terday and
:smissed comparisons in
,
ustralia between their
realth and the poor aod
larvinS of Africa.
'The 8ap with rfricen! ii
oething you .ccept; we rre
ralthier, they erc not. That is
" said the man behind r pop
rsic campaign that has raised
llions of pounds for African
rine relief.
,eldof arrived in australia to
scuss his campaign with
By CHRIS HoUSE
SPECIAL Branch detcc(iv6 will mlo3lc
with fatrs o[ ouiragcoua pop tlorp
Sigue SiEu. SpuaDit in r bid to lrrc"
two girls who hrvc ahrc.tlnGa le lilt
Pr€micr Ms.t.rel Thrtchcn
1'hc fi.ls-both
in ihclr lrcntl.Frpprorchcd th. b.Dd'q bN guits-
'rriraiinaaa
tha
who lold hir a. in-
lws .,. qju*pt illfir,lH,r,ts,,*
l.irlcestcishirc Dolic. lntcryi.
,amcs and sent r rgDoft lo
Ya.d, Thc nrmcs oI lh. girli h.v. l
BIZAR.RE pop rtor Prtt
Burnr hst night vowcd tc
beetr passed to Special Brnocl yic
takiog ahc th.€rt "seriously,"
Lst nisht ofliceB th.oushout
aountrlr were huntinE for thcn.
flnct
Lrogs
l"i'm sure if you asked he
ould;like to camp out in an
boriginal site for a couple of
reks. I'm sure he'd diE that.
ut hc can't betause of who he
ii It's oot an easy'gig'.
.3eldof wilt meet Mr llawke,
iime Mioister. in Canberra
Iav and topes to get the use of
lstraliao traosDort aircraft and
fommrtmeot of surplus grain
f
tlllr Ee nctrErs
,Fl hovr lir Livcrpool hglr
_
crowd to
and the tul
oftcr hl ond hir wlfr Lynnr *irr vas abl? us,
to moye on but
ond ottockcd by riotcrt in wo wera chas€d rnd
'Etoned."
Pcta and Lynne livc t-a
Pete told me: "It wat Toxtrth a.long wrth lellot
were in r taxl cominS pop stars Echo
snd tb.
we werg surrounded Uy f Bunnymen.
"Wo simply cennot
carry on livrng there
so much poverty
-uttl
ln Liverpml we ere obvlous tugets." he added,
a,Kins Kurt DoD snser
-er
Gary Thomasknown
Garv
Thomapkrlown-u
smeggy-ws left home.
less when his Brixkh
home was burned
THE PEOPLE AND DEM
CONFRONTATION. 'D.B
TOLERATED FOR IT JE:
WELL-BEING QF .T;HE:,
CONTRADICTION WI
THE RECKOITIING W'{
BY THE STAGII{G OF SEED DISTURBANCES l
A mere 2tyears of age and with only 3 record releases to his name
Qilly Brag is already being hailed as one of the angriest young
srnger/solwriters of the decade.
And songltles like 'Life's a Riot'
and'Whidr Side Are You On?'
give fair warning to would-be
listenen tfurt for Billy Bragg pop
musrc ls a very serious business.
A#IGRIEST
'The Bard Of Barking' as he is
known to his family and friends
first came to widepublicattention
with the release of his earthy,
emotive EP entitled 'Between
The Wars'. It was a top ten hit,
but as Bragg admits 'Between
The Wars' wasn't one of his
' angriest songs.
"I was in quite a good mood
the day we recorded it and
although the song tumed out
pretty grim it wasn't quite as
angry as it could have been."
AilNOYED
However"another track on.the
EP,'Which Side Are You On?'
sees Bragg;at his angriest.
"I was r&lly annoyed about
POP SIAR
ry
DOESN'T
LIKE THE
SYSTEM
"I was pretty bad tempered as a
baby," he recalls. "At times I'd
get furious and throw my food
about the room."
"Then one day at school I was
particularly angry. I didn't like
the system. I had gone red in
the face and was beginning to
pull my hair out. I was taken to
see the school nurse. She
suggested I tried hamessing my
eneryy by starting to write protest
the miners'strike at that time. I
ended up ir the studio swearing
songs."
things at thc producer. Eventually
they manlged to calm me down
a bit, but i must have broken at
Bu.t.Billy's fust attempts at songwriting didnl prove too successfr{.
at the ertsineer and throwing
least a dozen guitar strings
recording that one track."
Bom in $57, it wam't until 1983
that Billy.made his first record.
But a tabirt for wrathful songwriting had been evident froir
an early 4e.
ANGER
"I kept brealsing the lead in my
pencil. It was so dillicult. to
Billy Bragg seen from above
as well as popular charts, and
his solo live pe iformances invari-
ably draw a large crowd o[
(pic Bob Bromide)
"People often accuse me of
'selling out', or going mellow,
but remarks like that just make
me angrier. In fact being on
Top Of The Pops made me so
control my anger. Then I began
to use a biro, and eventually
things began to fall into place.i
politically aware young people.
But in view of his current level
Billy's two LPs to date, 'Life's
A Riot' and'Brewing Up' have
possible for Billy to maintain
his anger and discontentment
"I1l be angry for a good few
with society?
that."
both been hits in the independent
ofsuccess and his recent appearances on Top OfThe Pops, is it
angry I nearly swore at a camera.
man."
years yet, don't you worry about
HAVE YOU HEAR D ?
"Now-, itls-ngt 20 yean'-it" 30 or 40-yeot-of-priton thdtyouwill.givcmc.Exactingthcscpttnhhmentt qondt
to a Social Dath.. I prefer d nuterial'death. I-have freqiented thi prionr - itt n\t eiaiiru. fiiciii
6 dE ir^
bullets in my had - or in bed, if I'm lucky.'
I'm not used !9 b-eing touched by- fha! the TV shows. But, yesterday night, cren
WJfv r* - f6ioi{ igugj
$ryuglt tle qiltel of .th9m{ia, I was very mov{ by these ur""e
& Courtois'9"titg their taking of hostales at the iourt of NantesiDec.iot
"ery
rlajl. r wasntitrri
gnly op.- Judges, lawyes, jurors, students - atl had the certainty of itrerrseird as honest citizer
lqdly shaken. It's not wery-day_that one has the chance to be m'oved Uf inAi"U""ls!
lt's not usral to_see, oubidC the Cinema, men who act in the name of their desire ior lito.
If Thiolet, Khalki & Courtoiis tgg
in apublic place all that thoy had ,aid, one
would think of them.as tram?s-or_as madmen. If, in
""iq
daily lih, soniebody darcs to a?fr*, tht;b€r:
ration of his conditions and the humiliation thet h-e f*ls, and if ne acis conscq-uendrtri ilr&
immediately be _called. an idealist, o1, if he's more or less orlanka *ith o1h.rs, ,it"rt"*['
Only P the sky o! th9 sPectacle !s a man who acts with ditermination, sensi,. .. nobility--and
trvlty,
who wants to be in control.oftris life, able to exist as a hero. In this iay the
spectator can live vicariously what he is prohibited to live in reality because it has no vahe foth-
in the logic of commerce.
But there are no heroes anymore. Actorq singers are as insubstantiat on thc stagc
as in their daily life, except that they have money.
Qese people, wtro itrint bf themseti'es as rich an'd strong, were impressed by Courtois. Threepiecc
-.glr5"g - caT and a g_ood-speakgr coohlss, lucidity ana *t arierlo yrr. fi it i
}il 'Soyrt"
i.
nearly
He tickles them with'their immutable-feeling of grandeur,agrandetrr
HT'-l:
t:ry oqrrt,
that they never will
b-ecause
possessed by their d&rc-for posccsJon than
they
-are-mgre
they actually_possess Br"
in reality, morc irbmissive
t^o their wilf
loiplwer inen- i"v poi.r tfrcy
They gre !o- obsessed.by Oe
signs of weatth, ttut they-rilticrer have thc
::$V
!":".
-e-xteqol
lire and the strength of those who have suffered,
those who rre capable of lo-ving cnough
6 rcs[t
--e ---.
hate.
On the other hand, th"y have the- arms, the money, the meens of communication,
the lies. fuid it's for them that one has to work.
ln our. epoch yhere., to. zurvive, it's more valuable Er4g p.tty, meln, stingy rnd 33rd., T our epoch of ahorphou! indiference where cowardice and
h-eirtleiincssEie U['i ronm of
gyni-cism & blasd indifference, Thiolet, Khalki & Courtois came at-the right mom;i t;pL, ti;
big&earted heroes whom we miss so much in the boredom of ourlives! Eseitettris;ttiiil-"iriit[
needed to spice them up with their own sauce.
It's true -they wene gbliged to lie down in the dirt and one lens was carefuly pierced with a bullet!
I hose who are used to curtseying in front of their official mastem - were thiy scared to lose their
wealthy niche?
43
stuf!'iip oiir
These'
h€rc
to
at
in ve4rfor life.
thb
"'
that I sce
ine
int€r'
be abuscd
isolation
possession
or'l
'.SI
Khulki. a P:rlcstinian. holding a pistol and iFgrenade in a Nantes court room
a[ter taking hostages to free t$'o men on trial
This is a translation of a poster which appeared on the walls of some towns in France after these events'
bis-
thir
the chief judge, ignoring werything'ttrat
in this repressii,eludicial system!....You aib grllty of ignorillFFff,ltliBt
like living ti:<e an a-timentaiY ca.ra] [i.e. prJrcli fu]netionallyl...." Co$rtoij
media only made public a 'iery tini-parf <if.*i:f tp.said: a few setr:tencps,H,tIif,itrrbsiapcri;iifi i'3
on the TV. And later on, they minimised *te
!!esei-&r*e,$9 , evcn ioSq
a psychietric explanation for the ?henomdiront:of
Their second demand wasfrpedtiiil':
was, of course.
coune, their
miir fre
car s!6'a
judges vith them,iand drove to t!
tribunal, keeping two
twd judge;
having
havinc riUtatieai
dbtalned-a guarantie
Miriister of the lhte:
su.riniJe ftom the Mirfustef;rif'the
l, l,
l*ffi :++t'"xtr*;1tq1#wffi*
the
iter
!to
peopie cn the outs:de boostej :he mcnles of ihese :hiee nen- arj receat rttoris say that thev sq in go C !::-:.
YMRRORISM
IN
DISHHYLAND
'ON TERRORISM AND THE STATE'
(Glanfranco Sanguinetti)
'In some ways she was far
less acute than Winston'
znd far less susceptibTe to
?ar.ty propaganda.Once . when
te happened in sone cannection ta mention tbe war.. .
. -ihe s tartled
hin by saying
:asua77y t.hat in her oppinion
:he war was not happening
lhe rocket bonbs which fe77
iaiTy on Lcndon were probabTy
:ired by the Governnent itta keep peopTe
'-e-If ,'just
:rightenedS.This was an idea
:hat had 7itera71y never
tccured ta hin. . .'
There are na seCret nattets of
revoTution: a77 that which today is secret belongs to power,
that-is-to say Counter-revoLu-'
tion.And a77 the PoTice Forces
know this perfectTy we71.
The defensive terrorisn of
States is pract:ised by then
eit.her directTy or indirectTy,
eitfter with their own arns or
vith ot.hers! If states resort
to direct terrorisntthis
nust
be directed against tfie popuTatian " I f , boweverrstates decide
ta resort ta indirect terrorisa,'
this nust be apparentTy directed
against then - as happened for
instance,in the ATdo Moro affair.
The outrages acconPTished
directly by the detached corPs
and para77e7 services of rhe
state are nat usuaTTY cTained
by anybody,but are, each time t
inputed or attributed ta sone
or ot:her convenientt cuTprit' .
Any secret servi ce can
inv ent' revo Tutionar y' init ia7 s
for itseTf and undertake a
certain nunber of outrages,
which the press wi77 give
good pubTicity to,and after
which,iE wi77 be easy to forn
a sna77 group af naive niLi.tantsrthat it wt77 direct with
the utnost ease
In view of a terrorisn
aTways presented as absaTute
evi7,evi7 in-itseTf and fori tself , a77' the other evi-1 s
fade into the background,and
are even to be forgotteni
since the fight against terrorisn coincides with the
aTready
connon interest,it
is tbe generaT good,and the
state, which nagnaniousTy
conducts it'is good in-it
se1.f and for-itseTf .Wit.hout
the wickedness of the devi7,
God's infinite bounty couTd
not appear and be appreciated
as js fitting.
Like a drug,artificiaT
terrorism needs and requires
to be administered in aTways
nore nassive and frequent
For any powertthe only
reaT catastrophe js to be
swept out of historytand each
power torTca weakened and feeling the innanence of thjs
reaT catastrophe,rhas aTways
tried to consoTidate itself
in pretending to vage an
uneguaT struggTe against a
very convenient adversary:
but such a struggTe aTways
was aTso the Tast oration
that this power wouTd decTare,
History is fu77 of sinilar
exanpTes.
ObTiging everyone to
continuaTTy take a position
for or against aysterious
and obscure incidents,prefabricated in reaTity for
this preCise end, this is the
reai terrorisnoto continuaTTy
conpeL the entire working
c-lass to decTare jtself against
such and such attack,which
everyone exceptifiE the
paralTel services has no
part inrthjs is what a77ows
Power to naintain the gener_
a7 passivity and the contetupLation of this indecent
spectacTe.
'We have na r8spect i we do
not expect any fron you.
When our turn catues we wiiT
not eriibeTTish vioTence.,
doses.
(MARX)
further, di ssociate our
selves fr om both mod ern cu1 ture and
its neg at ion. We are not wo rk lng
for rhe spectacl e of the end of the
world, but, f,or L hee nd of the wo r1d
of the spect,acle I
f We
must go
IF YOU GO DOWN TO THE WOODS TODAY
BECAiISR TODAY'S THF' T]AV TIIF
YOU'LL BE SURE OF' A BIG SURPRISE
TD
l.e
!33*
'ffi w.e
3\-
s:
=t
J
e- - r-*'
EG
.ltiit' r!:
:.:
,'!.
,.
.:.
',."i:i:l,,+ ;:r:., ::.
.ll
ft-
'&
.&!
j
s"
6
%"
)..
ffiffiffiffi
* €
#
@
;,:;;,,ll iil
ir
i]*::t:j
&
@.w
&= *.ffi
'c'l
ffi r.
& L,ul1
&&:',,,
After reading this
you will ilever
lool'..at national
and wortd events
in the same
,way agaln.
,-.-
.-.
o
ie
ffi
48
,i$$
\.:.t
f
\\
I{ULTINATIONALS
t-tr
:THE DEFINITIVE
\}i
[T
STORY OF
ORGANISED CRIME
lni'
\
\
fi
ttThe company has subsidiaries all over the
wor1d. It controls mining in several countries, has a monopoly of
copper,domi.nates bankirg, bankrolls presidential and papal elections r befriends govern
ments, finances wars
and coups. tt
lll
I
o
Siffi,iI
I
a
,
,
'a
a)
I
()
L{
o
'l
(+{
{r
r{
Lt*
o
>
' (.)
o
/! q,
o
l(
t{
ll
a
a
$
a)
€(J
J
(s
a
I
a
a
E
?ower of these corporations is ao Breat aE to transccnd
l'a11 frontiers...We
are witnessing a pltched bsttl"e between
the great transnational corporations and soverelgn at&te8.
The iundamental politi'ca1, economic and military decisiona of
these:" st,ates are being - int.erf ered with by worldwide organlsations that, are not dependant on any atate, and whlch are not
accou.ntable to, or regulated by any parliamcnt or inetltution
representing. the collective interest. In a rrord, the entlre
poiitical si'r,rcLure of the r+or1d ts bclng undcrmined. ff
:.,t,;;;.ttThe
''
'
-'I'he late President Allende of Chi1e, addressing the
in December 1e72, a f ev'.,:srenths bef ore his
mr
SO Yi::::,1::l::=
o.
. . . rne corporations
are bigger than any nat a on states. , .
t,
,-1ende went on to say,ttl accuse other ludicrous examples of this
rn 1921 famine ki11ed 3
,'.'.lT before the conscience of the beToved eneny syndrone,when comp- mi111on in the
urals.Leninis
,:r1d of having tried to provoke anies reap the rewards of war by subsequent appeal
for anerican
:vi1 nar in ay country,nhich
deallng with both sides,weie
aid matle the iortune of Armand
:.ans total disintegration 1n
EX0N's trade wlth r " G " Farben, the Hammer. He chartered a vessel and
rny 1and. tt
german chemical mulcinational,
shipped a $1,000,000 r,rorth
Allende died a few rnonths
manufacturers of ZyKL0N B for the vrhear to the bolshevik..!ii". of---.ater in a hail of machine gun
gas chambers.And Ford and GM sub- fn return the insolvent lEaders
ire during a CIA organised coup. sidiaries in Gerrnany produced
1et hirn take hls pick fron
,ilende had nationalised fTT's
over 5oZ of all heavy trucks and splendid art collections of the
the
,hilean branch(and Rockefeller's aircraft.While their american
Tsafs.The
ropper mines),ITT was accused of manufacturers were equipping the vitchs ansGoyas,Rubens',Ma1e_
Van Dycks Hanmer
.niti-ating and underwriting the united States airforce,the gerrnan rhose gave him
the flnest private
.cst of the CIA interventlon in group were building the Messer.- collection 1n the
wor1d.
rile.At the multinational sub- snitt.At the end of the war,Eord
xnfact it was uestern compan)mmittee hearings, SenaLor Church and General Motors even fought
ies and technicians who ,rur. i."raiserl the issue of g1obal corp- for and got compensaLion from the ponsj,ble for the industrialisat,i'rations "becoming a Fifth Column a11ies for the bombing of.their
ion of Russia frorn belng a virtpoli tics, using Axis countriest factoriesl
1.1 international
r:a11y medieval state.
-fl::reir
horre governments to destroy
!3mmer helped the A11ied Drug
* )reign regines noL to thei r Iikand. Chemical
corporation to fert_
g1
,8.
Now
ITT
has
exacted a 25
!
"
iT:.ze russian fields and many
pillion payment f or its chi.l ean
other foreign companies to cLntr_
[:anch.ITT vice president ar the TRANS-IDEOLOGICAL BIJSINESS ibute to Lenin's New Economic
plan
including the supposedly staunch
] ine was John Mac Cone , ex " d i rec L l: of the CTA.
anti-communist Henry Ford. Armand
Today, along wit-h a host of LIest- Hammer now holds an $1g bi11i;;;
] rrla Rockefeller builr the UN
ern companies,GeneraL Motors and 20 year contract for the exploii_
Ford both have facLories in
Irilding in vhich A]lende nade
ation
gas and oi1 on
plea through ITT nicrophones. Russj-a and sr:pp1y the Red Army behalf ofof soviet
Iis
his
cotrpany
Occidental
- rvid Rockefeller controls the
with much of its transport.One Petroleum,
:rase Manhattan bank and EX0N
bit of knowledge that t-he putr1ic
crporation.Chase Manhattan
1s carefully protected from,on
.:ades
in L27 different countries. both sides,is the fact that the "Soviet economic development
-ae Rockefeller
spiderts web inc- trucks that carried over 50,000 between 1917 and 1930 was basic_
udes the National Bank of New
russian troops into Afghanistan aily reliant on the technologic_
rrk( the r^ror1d 's second largest
were built by amerj-can companies . al aid of the Unired States.-At
-ank),Mobi1 Oll,Eastman Kodak,
And the computers that organi-sed least 957" of the industrial
.eneral
Electric,Standard Oi1 of the invasion were built by IBM, structure of the USSR recieved
-alifornia,
Boeing,Zercsx, American
who supply both the KGB and the assistance from them.tt
-:ome Product,TWA, Safeways, Nation- CIA with their intelligence
- Zbigniev Brzezinski.
.1 Distillers , Chrysler , ATT+T,
technology,American ambassador
..raker 0ats,ITT and IBM -to narne to Russia at the time of Afghan- John D. Rockefeller's Chase
. ut a f er+ ,i-nnocent brand narRes.
istan was Thomas Watson Junior, Manhattan bank lent m111ions
lBM alone accounts for
to Lenin.Standard 0i1 of Nerr
son of ttre head of IBM.
,etween 60 a*d 7O7" of the world's
York ran soviet oi1 proiluction.
-ota1 market in computers.A reporL
n computers by the french govern- For the nultinationals,the
oarx- When David Rockefeller left the
:ent put it thus,ttIBM has everyKremlin 1n 19@ after a meeti-ng
ist doctrine of the Right to
-hing it needs to becone one of
with Kruschev he declared to an
rork 1s an added advantage, a
-lre Sreat world regulatory
anxious public t'that was the
cheap stri-ke free workforce
;ystems.rr
most intensive conversation I
held tightly in control by a
..firmly entrenched authoritarian have ever had.But we know each
regime,Also for these corporat- other.We have been working toions,a beckoning mass market of gether f or a long t.ine. it
400 million undersupplied cons-
?HE ECONOHICS OF GENOCIDE XT:;:.:::::;'i:3
f::: :::1II":i, IntheAngola
during the reyol ution
MPLA
hypnoti c
While ttre i11usi-on of
'his is the conpany whose founder Cold War has been fostered the
by
lhomas Watson.,. uas al/arded the
each successive politician,whose
lrder of Merit by Hitler himself
political
careers depended on
.n appreciation for services
funds from the corporations,
'endered during the var. IBM then
american involvement in comm
rperated Ln Germany through a
Russia goes right back to 1917.
rviss holding conpany,vhile simul- Hhen Trotsky landed in the US,
looking for flnanclal support,
'aneously'having a 942 share in
:he american rrunitions nanufactur- US industrialist
Armand Hammer
ng corporation;whose production
was'there to greet him.And when
gf bombers for use against Gerthe future head of the Red Army
[any brought Watson a g20O million left New York on board the SS
lrofit from the war.And the IBM
Chrlstlna on 27th March 1917 ir
pctory in Germany escaped
was r+ith a canadian passport
Dstruction.
supplied by Hamruer.
"
T
II
stationed a crack cuban
troop to prot.ect a Gulf 0i1
refinery.
Of course Arthur C.Clarte sussed
all this years ago,when he named
the all-powerful computer in
' 2001 : A Space Odyssey' , HAL which,
conspiracy buffs,are the letters
that supercede IBM in the alphabet.Good eh? IBM are also suppose
possess most of the norldrs
to
rsatanict art
and even the Spear(
but thatts a differe-nt story and
James, the bloody hippy, has gone
off to Morrocco with the book o:
that one.
v
H
z
o
J
-.*\
?
t.l
z
Q.
H
z
rp
3
z
o
o
U
2
ia
8
a
zl.l
I
-6
&
u:
S'
E
C
o
N
,io
6
&
.rl
P
tr
q
.'l
The Secret funding of Hitkrt
Rise foPol €r {9'l}{933
'It is tenpting to expTain fascisn -anongst other reasons - as an act ot
taitiran auto-da-fe of a bourgeoisie
haunted by the nurdet of God and the
destruction of the great sacred spec
tacle,vowing itself to the devi7, to
an inverted nysticisn,a bTack nystic
isn with its rituaTs and hol-ocausrs'
Mysticisn and high finance.'
(RAOUL VANEIGEM)
Above: The Duke and Duchess of Windsor on a visit to Berchtesgaden.
Below: Henry Ford receives the Grand Cross ol the
German Eagle from Hitler's representatives.
,ffi
{h
52
FC)EDaad]IITIED
I,III&ILII I IlIlIW
f'I I'IIl,Il,II,r1Il ITIfTT
ESTED INTERESTS BEHIND THE SCENES
ffi ru0 0F ttEfil0l,
Wilffff.MET[[B
up ron
PffiIET IT, M I$UII.;Pilil NE.
rnEI0 00til1tr ITtlilHII0 m, m
il
The ihousonds of men ond wonsrF
who uork for Texoco feel
,{
deeply obout our flq ond""ry
the '.*,'
ounlry il stonds for. Amerkom
hor,e olwoys srmd up 6, fie tlog.
Vtb rtnlcome fie 52 men ond
' uomen who howcgrc honc.
\ltrb olso honor oll thosc bmre
rrcn-
cspeciolly the 8 who socrifirrd fheir lircs
porticipofing in the heroic re3cueottempr.
ffi fimllililrl0$ff.ffi lu6tullffi l0llllf,ttl0m,mPnfllmilff IW
ilff{til PMY. $Tlt0 uP m fi t RtE 0r ffiim m, m uilfi il0fitn I0 EE.
$m IP mnlffi fl&lllff 8n[ $ru0[0 fll8,Illff $m08 mR ntl m[ ffi .
,,..i..t
Todalr smrdhing$e do
will todt your lih.
53
LLI IN I IItIr
t
DVUItIf fJ.
I
T
)
]A
\t:EdP
lAYr E
.L
tN
4h
lil
T
)
I A:T
t LL
IA
,\.
'tl
:j1
\il:
P,ffit\'E
THEOLOBAI
MAI[IPUIATOBS
,Z
*i"'
' l.'r'
'Ft
.
tl1-, ,
The Bilderberg Grup... the Trilateral Commission...
covert powergroupsof the West
55
Chairman
The first meeting was convened under the chairmanship of H.R'E
Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, who served as chairman for twenqn
two years. He was succeeded by Lord Home of the Hirsel' former-Pnnit
Minister of the. United Kingdom, who chaired the meetings for fod
years. At the 1980 meeting, Lord Home turned over the chairmanship t
Walter Scheel, former President of the German Federal Republic. I
1985, Mr. Scheel resigned, and was succeeded by Lord Roll ofIpsden. {
Participants
fi,//,fr,y .-,ffirn,,,y.t
Origin
Bilderberg takes its name from the Bilderberg Hotel in Oosterbeek'
Holland where the first meeting took place in May 1954. That pioneering
meeting, grew out ofthe concern expressed by many leading citizens on
both sidei of the Atlantic that Westem Europe and North America were
not working togetkr as closely as they should on matters o[ critical
importance. It was felt that regular, off-the record discussions would help
.r."t. u better understanding of the complex forces and major trends
affecti4g Westcrn nations in the diffrcult postwar period.
'
Character ofmeetings
What is unique about Bilderberg, as a forum, is (l) the broad crosssection of leading citizens, both in and out of government, it brings
together for neariy three days of informal discussion about topics of
cuirent concern especially in the fields of foreign a{Iairs and the international economy, (2) the strong leeling among participants that in view
ofthe differing atiitudes and experiences ofthe Western nations, there is
a clear need to develop an understanding in which these concerns cah
be accommodated and (3) the privacy of the meetings, which has no
purpose other than to allow leading citizens to speak their minds openly
and freely.
In short, Bildcrberg is a recognized, flexible and informal international
leadership forum in which different viewpoints can be eiprcssed and
mutual understanding enhanced.
Each year, the members of the Steering Committee recommend partiapants for the next meeting. lnvitations are issued by the Chairman ir
close consultation with the Honorary Secretaries-General and the otht*
I
members oflthe Steering Comfnittee and Advisory Croup.
To ensure full discussion, individuals representing a wide range d,
political and econqlnic points ofview are selected. The overall goal is to
have approximately 75 participants lrom Western Europe and Canadr
and 25 from the United States.
Within this framework, on average about one-third are from the Government and political sector and the remaining two-thirds from a variety d
fields including finance, industry, labor, education and communications. Participants are selected for their knowledge, experience and stan-
ding and with rcGrence to the topics on the Agenda.
Participants attend Bilderberg in a private and not in an official capacitl ",
'
Conferences
l
Bilderberg's principal activity is its Conference program. ln the early,
years, meetings were relatively frequent. Subsequently, it became thc
practice to hold no more than one major conference a year. Workirg
papers, prepared by experts form the groundwork lor Bilderberg discur
sions. At the meetings themselves, no resolutions are proposed, no votet
taken, and no policy statements issued.
A report of the meeting, which includes working papers, is circulated to
participants.and former participants. Since 1954, 33 conferences have
been held.
The names ol the participants as well as the Agenda items are ma&
available to the press before the annual meeting.
Fundlng
The expenses of maintaining the Bilderbery meetings are covered wholl-r
by private subscription; these expenses consist ofthe cost ofthe small
Secretariat, travel reimbursemcnt of some participants and the publication of the meeting's reports.
The hospitality costs of the annual meeting are the responsibility of thc
Steering Committee members of the host country.
P.O. 601 3041!. 2m GK th. HrCu.'T.1.: (70) {t8rli ' T.l.r: 3all0 BIIEM
:{
:tt i
t,.
I
!hf
hL.-
,\)
(_lr
s5
it-
N
k
{.
v-
I
lo
ln
i'rrr.y did not speak of
6ssassi nations, for theY
1
were deTicate gentTenen
and decorous . But the
were there
1 inpTications
, .. .They did not speak of
controTT ing governnents.
. They spoke of Infornation
I and Guidance to ru7ers...'
S
-TAYLoR CALDLIELL
Captains & Kings'
THE BILDERBERG GROUP is an
international Zi"onistcommunist conspiracy.
To the radical-right.
The Bilderberg group is
part of the RockefellerRothschild grand desiBn to
rule the wor1d.
To the radical-1eft.
As Robert Eringer ponders,in his introduction to
)THE GLOBAL MANIPULATARS]
(PentacTe),for some people
it is less frighteninS to
believe in conspiracies
than face up to the fact
that no one is in control.
Thatrs a very sensible waY
to commence a study of the
Bilderberg Group,because if
the industrialists,bankers,
Corporation
oulti-national
bosses and politicians.in
question, dont actually
collectively control the
world,they do discuss things
behind closed doors and
reach pub1i.cal1y unavailable
decisione nhich effect an
anf ul 1ot of people.l,lone
dare call it conspiracy
but I for one would find
it a 1ot less frightening
if I could convince myself,
100Z,that no one is in
cont ro1
For Rhodes had. gone about
Ruskin's dream of emancipation
and equality in a rather odd
way; Dy exploiting the .diamond
and gold mines of South Africa.
Not to mention the people. With
the financial support of Lord
Rothschild he had monopolised
Like most things,t.he Bildthe diamond .mines of South
erbergers can be traced
Africa as De Beers Consolidated
back to 1776 and the BavarMines and by the 1890rs had the
ian flluminati.Not Hassan-I
unprecedented personal income
of millions of pounds per annum.
-Sabbah Irm afraid,unless
through the influence he
Yet he was more often than not
was supposed to have had on
overdrawn,due to his peculiar
Illuminati founder,Adam
interpretation of Ruskinrs
Weishaupt . Anyway, along with
teachings. That is; I To federate
his Platonic philosophy,
the englis.h speaking peoples
Weishaupt passed on his
and to bring all habirable
somewhat esoteric leanings
portions of the world under
to John Ruskin,who as well
their control . t (Dr. Carrol
as being a secret disciple
Quigley , 'Tragedy and Hope' )
of the Illuminati,was ProfMi lner ( Governor-generEl
essor of Art and Philosophy
of South Africa 1897-1905)set
at 0xford University in the
about continuing this project
1870's. Ruskin taught that
by recruiting young graduates
the tradition of education,
from Oxford and Tonybee Ha11
enlightenment , artistic
freeto assist hi-m in SA. 'rYilner rs
don and all that,possessed
Kindergar ten t were able to
by his privileged pupils
gain influential
posts in
could not survive , and did I nt
government and international
deserve to survive,unless it
finance because of their
vras extended to the Tower
powerful patron and up until
orders of not just England
WW2 they were the dominant
but the wor1d.
influence on brltish imperial
To this end in 1881 a
and foreign affairs.It
was
group of forrner students and
thesd young guns who formed
fans of Ruskin,led by one
the OriginaT Round Table
Cecil Rhodes,forned a secret
groups when they organised
society. Up to the 1920fs it
themselves into semi-secret
was known as 'The CTiveden
societies in all the chief
,Set ' , then it became 'The
brit.dependancies and the US.
OriginaT Round Table Croup'.
They didrnt come out in public
Rhodes himself supplied most
until 1919,at the Majestic
of the funding and after his
Hotel , Paris, when the Round
death in 1902 the group got
Table groups officially
became
access to his fortune through the Council on Fcnreign Affairs
Lhe trusteeship of Alfred Lord and the Royal Institute for
Milner
International Affairs.
A Power-e1i te, as def.ined
by C.Wright Mi11s:
'A group of nen,simiTar
in interest and outTook,
shaping events fron invuTnerabTe positions
behind the scenes. i
.
Below left: Bilderberg headquarters, at
Smidswater l, The Hague (fhoto by
JeJf Acopion).
Below right: The entrance to Murden and
Company alias American Friends of Bilderberg, Inc. alias American Ditchley Found-
ation, at 39 East 5lst Street in New York
City (photo by Robert Eringer).
Left: .:A Luncheon at claridges,,by
Felix Topolski - an early Bilderberg
meeting in progress. From left to right:
Sir Colin Gubbins, Otto Wolff von
Amerongen, Reginald Maudling, Prince
Bernhard and Hugh Caitskell.
s7
l
CONFERENCES
1954 -
$
N
$
N
$
N
$
N
58
t.
1985 r
Subjects:
Oosterbeek, Netherhnds
Subjects:
A. The attitude towards communism and the Soviet Union;
B. The attitude towards dependent areas and peoples overscas;
C. The attitudes towards economic policies and problems;
D. The attitude towards European integration and the
European Defense CommunitY.
l8-20 March 1955
Brrbimn, Frrnce
n.
9.
the Summit
r
I
r
t
t
Conference;
B. New political and economic developments in the I
Western
world.
t
I
t0. 2l-23 April 196l
i
i
Crnade
Subjects:
St. Crstin,
of Westem European'USA relations since the first
sense of leadership and direction within the Western i
community?
. Political and ideological aspects;
B. The implications for Western unity ofchanges in
2. Economic asPects.
i
:
the relative economic strenght of the United Statcs r
and Western
3. 23-25 September 1955
Germisch-Partenkirchen.
I
A. Whatinitiativesarerequiredtobringaboutanew I
B. Communist in6ltration in various Westem countries;
C. The uncommitted PeoPles:
Fed. Rep. of Gcrmany
I t.
A. Review ofevents since the Barbizon Conference;
B' Article 2 of the North Atlantic Treaty organization;
C. The political and strategic aspects of atomic energy;
D. The reunification of GermanY;
E. European unity;
F. The indpstrial aspects of atomic energy;
G. Economic problems:
l. East-Wcst trade;
2. The political aspects ofconvertibility;
3. Expansion of international trade.
I
l8-20 May 1962
Subjects:
A. The political implications for the,Atlantic communitl
of its members'policies in the United Nations;
tive
developments.
r
12. 29-31 May 1963
Cennes, Frrnce
Subjects:
I
:
A. The balance ofpower in the light of recent inter-
national development;
B. Trade relations between the U.S.A. and Europe
the light ofthc negotiations for Britain's entry
into the Common Market;
C. Tradc relations between the Westem world and
developingcountries.
13.
in
the
20-22 March 1964
WillLrnrburS, U.S.A.
Subjects:
A. Thc consequences for the Atlantic Alliance of:
Apparant changes in the communist world
a) Soviet internal development;
b) Thc Communist Bloc;
B. Possible changes in thc attitude of the USSR to
the Wcstl
5. 15-17 February 1957
C. Recent developments within the Western world:
St. Simons Island, U.S.A.
Subjects:
A. Review of events since the fourth Bilderbery meeting
a) politicall
b) military;
c) economic.
in May 1956;
B. Nationalism and neutralism as disruptive hctors
14.
inside the Western Alliance;
C. The Middle East;
D. The European policy of the Alliance, with special
refe rence to the problems of Eastern Europe, German
reunifi cation and military strategy.
6. 4-6 October 1957
Fiuggi, ItrlY
Subjects:
A. Survey ofdevelopments since the last conference;
B. Modern weapons and disarmament in rtlation
to Westem security;
C. Are existing political and economic mechanisms
within the western community adequate?
7. l3-l5September1958
Buxton, United Kingdom
Subjects:
A. Survey of events since the last confercncc;
B. The future of NATO defence;
C. Western economic cooperation;
D. The Western approach to Soviet Russia and
communism.
:
B. Implications foi the Atlantic community of prospec- i
4. ll-13 MaY 1956
Fredensborg, Denmark
Subjects:
A. Review of developments since the last Conference;
B. The causes of the growth of anti-Western blocs' in
particular in the United Nations;
C. The role played by anti-colonialism in relations
between Asians and the West;
D. A common approach by the Western world towards
China and the emerycnt nations of South and East Asia;
E. The communist campaign for political subversion
or control ofthe newly emancipated countries ofAsia;
F. How the West can best meet Asian requirements in the
technical and economic fields.
Europe.
Seltsj6beden, Sweden
Subjects:
'
I
1960
_
Bllrgenstock, Switzerhnd.
Subjects:
28-29 May
A. State of the world situation afler the failure of
Bi lderberg Conference ;
I
I
A. Review of developments since th€ last conference; I
B. Unity and division in Western poticy.
t
29-31 May 1954
Subjects:
'Sutu.y
f
?
I
,
lE-20 September 1959
Yesilkoy, Turkey
2-4 April 1965
Yille d'Este, Itely
Subjects:
A. Monetary cooperation in the Western world;
B. The state of the Atlantic Alliance.
t5.
25-27 March1966
Wiesbrden, Fcd. Rep. of Germeny
Subjccts:
A. Should NATO be reorganized and if so how?
B. Thc future of world economic relations especially
between industrial and developing countries.
16. 3l March - 2 APril 1967
Crmbrldge, United t(ingdom
Subjects:
A, Do the basic conceptsofAtlantic cooperation
remain valid lor the evolving world situation?
2) Ifnot, what concepts could take their placc?
B. The technological gap between America and
Europe with special reference to American investments in Europa.
l)
:
r
l
l
l
l.
!:r!
Ie.:r-
l,S
lSL,:3Ll!.1,
lIl
Lt)e
tdir.)
number of people on both
.side.s of.the Atlantic
:s at i--rt,erLv Lr,birv.Briderr:g emerged directly from thc
r, lanic-communist'll luminat i
:- the CFR/RIlA.The infiniLely
:;:' ;:; ;::;"::":.'
;::\-
::..
Vi rgi nia was cancel Ie{,*;f or
::.time since-t954ibeca:se
the internatioE'a1 steerj-ng
committee fel,t it inoPPortune
i at the rad.Lc.atr-rlght'r6pg;,told,,. nenttf or inf ornai discussin the light'of Prince Bernhaljs
i-nger, short,ly...befo.trie; i-s deat.rr.,, ions of probletls f acing the
public p4pfi1e due to
high
neetjnSs.r,r
YofJdr:$uch
..
r. his career.::.a:,4; .g.qYeInment .' r{.esfel'ft
hi-s Lockheed b',Lj-be scandal.
they fe.Ttirrrould create a
;.r i tut ion leclufer rllad be,en
So Eringe:firrdid'nt geE to
better,utrd,Er.,gt€nding of the"
r:ned becaus,e:,:,gf..r1rliaL he'il
a: B-berg conferenr e
investigate
foirces a,fid,: tr€id"q sffect'Jfr8'
r:tten aboui .t!ia,.Bound Table
in
situ
until
the following
rl$:f;J{lrts
weatern'
booktTragedy
r,ups. QuigLe,y,t.e:
year,l971,in Torquay.The scene
, irlte fi,r,e,t'aee ting tha't
r: Hope'was :operly su:ppressed
he sets,of the Imperial Hotel
brougit: a,r:fxicans and eu-:fo'..r:
r his publieherrwho even venr
hurriedly kicking ouc permane:.1
pf
aee':,
''t
pealr:s:'.::to8etffel"
rhe
r t he extenf'.'of,i, de.slroying
'took
guests to accomodate 1 50 B-be: gunder the chairnansh j P af,i:' : .:
laLes.'1'he book- Eseuid how the
,er$ J,o:i.th.e,'ueeke{rd,is dif f icrIt
HRH Prince Bernhard of the
.''ran( ial and comnercial pat terns
: Che \lest Shap.ed foday's vor1d, #efherlanrds at the S1l6fs1*'; r'.r:,,.1,;it :not',eo''coiii;'ere wl tFaulty Towers'
rl that upse.t ,,ihe ,p-ig.,banker.E. t.;,:,'.,.'.,.berp HAtel in Oo-s terbeck ' "t: .,i,r,,: .t.,:t, .Eringei booked himself into t:le
Nav 29th to 31s,t:''::.,:': Imperial for the preceeding
rrugh to cenSOr,,the,rr-eepee Ee'dl. ..,,.,r,.,f *17aad,':df on
Itights and rvas thrown out along
1'934,,tu;e:r -s jnce the neetinE!s.
NoLr",m.urdh..r,to- :Q.u*$ley.r:s: ;',
r istoriin.
r.r/the other guests. But. not bef ore
isgusr'Trage.d.y-;an:d, Ilap.e!, has r.:., ' h_ave been c177ed Bilderberg,
yeetings.
he rrltnessed 2 lorries unload r ng
erome a cult classic,only
rgr6fi',:yr.at. since its jnf i}ing cahinets q:.nd'i:rrgealed crat.es,
iailable fromr i,lghf-rring
And the night before the confer:nspiracy mAi1.'.qider clubs.
?eprron.P'f79.9
lernha1d.hag,.,.1,,'..1,: ence lras due t.o atart su i tab I v
Bllderberg
,
been
the
from
the
To get away
?h11\- fortifled, he sneaked into the
€.lie. Bo'meqbgg,q,lQ{.,,,'.-,.,
:ghr-w;ng Btrc, r,s,..and in-', : , . r'nan'Th'e'te
conference haIl and acquisiEi,ned
:r arremps 6O,,Lelr ,th,a. eildEr-, , ':, 81rde,1"lerq:if,.9*t t".tl,-.1{ti{l;,-:-i:.,:
by
arb:f6:ae
coapiTed
iatqd,.rBr if.g. gavel as a
vitation
list
is
€reers ihemselves have their
souvG.Il r.
q;:E;;";;;;;;..-.o-.tu
Prince.Bernhard in consuTtation utf an inf ornaT i"aterna.tioi;th t;;l3n uruu""i.u" oi "rr
.,,:. Q.S13.F:. .Eflq'.o-,.d,i,$.:lr .y-. g u e s t s
a7 steering coniiittee:. i'9i",
rrerqrrliiit e',it 6i,'!{el.ltrhe amer-e cuunt r i es
"/niiauiU"tg
v6r{.,;greiilnd:g: :}6 n 3 n d
i.
,o4ty-,lrtrriei ' ', ' ,:iduals ar'e: closen in ,q,he. {iqiit
erricipanL",rbut
"pi6gg
J<nori'Jedger
an.d,
their
s,,{,a.,rtd1.'.
of
sp$*t'e.l
E$aa'*:rrh,odTgga r d s
..eplied: fne. b,redes.,[isclaim- : 'r
mov.e.dt' i n'.'i':T.h*r:,,3*bet.8'ere t h em rr,..:1:i':Tg?To en.Bd.r€r f ul.1r.d.i:S,cEqiqri'
!t any of f ici.atrr.invol.vem,enl
an attenpt is nade to include
selves came later, unsurrePtr,t admi tted that swed ish
participant's representing
j.ously , via Exeter airPort .
tjsinessmen and poli-ticians
They had their covert conferto the i r
;-;-;;;iit"r,.*}iJgara ro. , ,, . .,,,{0.t:p,*:rr,,,i,c.lpants,approxima,tlel},.,,, i,:r:q.e,tth'en,r€r:tur:tqd
5,anks,irul,ti,lla!i.o- -al s a n d
gov ef-n.rrq,lrt q,':,rr,iAh,, ev e r y b o d i'
ess Jucc."5 r.lel.epho;i*i.the:,.,1 ,1.r,.r;; pofitiEs,1r-he orh.ers are ffo*i.,;','"; excePt.., eI0e,efv,eB rlone the
wiser.
a personaT. and
rhev .attend
i,;;;; ,;;;.;i'";t;;
-in
capacl-ty'
f
ici.al
'f-th;
not
in.an.of
i3l and many a university
Fron the beginning parcicipants
pi.f""".i,r,"-re",r1t,riiii.,
hav.e..co'De f ro-a North A.oerica
'Itrassss*X+$albahr1q6n Lre i sha u p t
,: ., .onru.ti"g ii:Fe;;;--,.aud,ee'ci.1..Rho,-dres a:aide, the ma n
var.ious*international orsanis- ;cq dt.te6,,u.ith,'beln.g the founder
;;i;;i;i;;i..-.o-"na-.ii-.onatjons.The offici-a1 languages
, olf. .Birtrd,+.,!'erg,,is.',Dr. Jo s e ph
,.i.u.ies]u forr"r-aornr"i-ao
.Ilier.paiE,:Retiag.er.,,oae of the
are ,e^ngTish and french '
::e import-export- b;;[ ;tJ
,*e,ird,eq,ti.ehaiacters the 20th
, ce,otll.i:yr.haE. td tof ft,r.
a- diffe-re_nt country each year.
see
rrnrhlv'audio-lettert(*
I,,D..u,rin g'hi:5'.
;).gun ic Rouot" ii-poi.t; jSince 1e57 lher- ou\
;,cafeer a s
,,: :,'.
-1"-1"
-\?1-dcountii'esre_rn
european
ene s,
,.co*p,ute-;iveJb
uany
l*4-th€-sc
in
I rt even he dismissed the
ries and in North aaerica as
,th1ee,1,ei;rd ehlet rhg,.',4:[so no t c h e d
,neetings aB nothing
iiia..u..g
r,uP., the
:,f,ou:lrldir*€l.:ired,it s f o r
.E:hg'.
Eliropegc ',L.,eague of Ec onor. i c
;;;;;;.;"i",i[rri'J":{'rr""iitti*.f.!El,.';'',u,.'..'.1,.,.r,[6,e'.,-{,{e*u;!1o{'8.1.,€8aq],:.,,''ii':.
@e-eting is centred upon.topics . r"d:o*op:e ra.t i o ni,,it,er,..Eu tro p e a n M o v e lrnt find out the prostitutes
'
of current concern in _the broad ,:serlt'rafid thel,Courtcil of Europe
riso indulged in.
fietd.s of foreign. poTicy,
president Ford
Finatli
,(.t{e',nas,.pfqtt, rrhCIt on Europe ) ,
:aig. :1t!t} rr'.r6.eoqr.*,'th.at he was an
worLd €cortog!t.afid other
sred some I iSht on t,he subject,
,ciiA&ap,ofAf rI,i*S1!eE:];,8Ae.i;C r.'i,,,'-,,.,,;, agent for the Socialist inter of co-ir"rhrough his :liiir.dtor
nationale. the Freenason s , the
,The conf,aihnte does not
is Taid down by neans..:a,$.,,......,1.,1.,.,.rtr., ,'Y.a,itl,eanr'5hitl,'thell{exica n Gov t .
,"''' ; rr$tes*cri1.try' he',r*as a 1igger .
program be ' ....f. working papers and geoeraL
intend that {*
discussion foTTows.In grdlr
I{ell'rth-at.r.s rrrh,lit, 'rle in the
rhe inter;ecret,althoigh.jn
.,
to
assure
freedon:,o.f:sB.e.q,.;!
...,r.r.'r,';t ,,fqc.kf;*,1,p -,[1r' rire.fld vou 1 d c a 1 1
:st of a frea.';aii"d,-,:'eBen di.s'fiim.But tie was'a multinational
and oppinion, thC gaLher ings
:us.sion ,no ri'i';ias"'ar'e''kept
po1 itical
are
closed
and
one , he nould 'nt hav e
off
the
record.
)f the meetings.,
uasted hls time with popstars.
ao resoTution's are proposed,
tnd,as later Eringer discovered,
He vas the best.He had pr'esidno votes taken,and no po1 icy
Ihat was r nt true. So after Lhe
ents
aE his. beck and call and
ts
issued
during
j.n
or
.s late@en
. the. ,
second most polre-r.f ul' ,mart.
after the meetings'
there.were iery fev political
;orId,he wroi" to the first.
'6'llslss:,:iirorth their sa1t, that
is a
'fn short,Bilderberg
fAn assisrant at llavii n".t"i"f
hlsh-rankins
and
flexible
he dld irat have access to.
;;';-g;;;;
t'tant'atuan bank r{,rote
inter:aLiona)
fo.run in which
.: neEinger'uas born in Poland
back suggesEing he write to
o.pposing uiewpoints can be.
in 18BB and got his doctorate
a Mr.Cniites Muller',,,q vice-Pres-'
brough c cJoser together and
1n licerature at the Sorbonne.
.dunt ur Mu.d"n & Co, t.he organnutuaT
unders
tanding
furthered.'
He
also studied psychologY in
isation which assists w/fhe"
Further inquiries
to
lulunich,before settling in
admin. of 'American Friends of
Murden & Co'Henry Kissinger'
London in 191 1 .Then he began
Mr.Muller
3ilderberq.Inc.'
v'1 rr()tts brlt
bLIderbergets 'lnd
makrng connecLions tn inner 5 q
:eplred with Lhe tollowrng
govt
.i r^1^
a neans of bringlng
tosether Teading citizens,
-sough t
f irst
:
,t
'
.
.,,,.:.
f
l
l
;r
:rinted
m7e{jsage;
,
the Bilderberg
Secretariat
at
26. 2l-23 April1978
11.
N.
Mont Tremblant, Canada
Subjects:
A. Wcstern defense with its political implications;
B. The changing structure of production and trade:
consequences for the Western industrialized countries.
countries;
\
B. lnternationalization ofbusiness.
9-ll May 1969
18.
27. 27-29 April t979
Beden, Austria
Merienlyst. Ocrrtt
N
$
Princeton, Ner JerscY, U.S.A.
.
Subjects:
A. The relations between the West and the Communist
Subjects:
A. The present international monetary situation and its
conscquences for World cooperation ;
B. The implications of instability in the Middle East and Afri
for the Western World.
Subjecs:
A. Elemcnts of instability in Western society;
B. Cooflktng attitudes withitl the Western world
to*ards relations with the USSR and the other
Communist states ofEastem Europe in the light
ofrcccnt events.
t9-
2t. 18-20 April 1980
17-19 April 1970
Atchen, Fed. Rep. ofGermany
Subjccts:
-Future
Sqbject:
America and Europe: Past, Present and Future.
id Rrgra Switzerlond
function ofthe University rn ouisocicty;
A.
B: Priorities in foreign Policy.
29. 15-17 May l98l
E0ryenstoch, Switzerlend
20. 23:2tAprill97l
Subjccts:
Woodstock, U.S.A.
A. What should Western policy be toward the Soviet Union
Subjects:
in the I980's?
B. Obstacles to eflective coordination of Western policies;
c. How can the Western economies put their hous€ in order?
A. The contribution of business in dealing with current
problems of social instability;
N
B. The possibility ofa change of the American role in the world
and its consequences.
30. 14-16 May 1982
Sende$ord, Norwry
Subjects:
A. Djvergent Policies and Attitudes in the
21, 2l-23 Aprill912
.
Knokke, Belgium
Subjcct:
The state ofthe Western community in the light ofchanging
relationships among the non-communist industrialized countries
and thc impact ofchanging power relationships in the Far East on
Nbrth Atlantic Community ;
B. What can Arms Control Achieve?
C. Middle East: Issues at Stake;
D. Ecdnomic Issues: Dogmas and Realities;
E. Current Events: I ) The Falkland lslands Crisis, 2) East-
Western security.
Relations: Poland, Trade and Finance.
22. ll-13 May 1973
$
N
$
3t.
Subjects:
A. The possibilities of the development of a European
energy policy and the consequencris for European-
North American relations;
B. Conflicting expectations concerning the European
-
SecurityConference.
23. l9-21April1974
Meglver Frrnce
Subject:
Prospects for the Atlantic world.
24. 25-27April t975
Qclme, Turley
Subjects:
A. Inflation: its economic, social and political implipations;
B. Recent international political developments :
Ddtente or Confrontation ;
B. Issues in Medium-Term Prospects for
Gr6wth in the World Economy:
I. Protectionism and Employment
ll. Risks in Banking and Finance
C. Current Events: U.S. Foreign Policy in the Middle East
Central Americi.
32. ll-13 May 1984
Saltsj0beden, Sweden
Subjects:
A. Westem Powerand theMiddle East: A Case Study
'
in Attantic Relationships;
B. The State of Arms Control Negotations;
c. Future Employment Trends in the lndustrialized
E. The Soviet Union, The West and the Third World;
A Case Study: Central America.
Torquay, England
Subjects:
North American and Wcstern European attitudestowards
a) the future of the mixed economies in the Wcstern democracies;
b) the Third World's demand for restructuring the world ordcr
'
Subjects:
A. East-West Relations: Containment,
conflict and the efFect on relations among NATO members;
2. Other recent developments alfecting thc rclations among
NATO countries.
25.- 22-24 April 1977'
N
Montebello, Caneda
. The present status and prospects to resolve the Arab-Israeli
I
'
l3-15 May 1983
D: Current Events: Continental Drift: Economic and Pol
33. 10-12 May 1985
- Rye 8rook, N"r Yoil, U*S..A.
' Subjects:
A. Divergent Social and Economic Tfends in the Atlantic Wor
and the political implicatidns of those attitudes.
B: rilr:lt":dthewestdealwiththesovietBloc? i
D. How should the West deal with Developing Countries? t
E. Current Events: The Current Status ofthe Budget in Congr{
In 19T6noConferencewasheld.
F. Operating the Alliance.
andtheEuropcanPerspectiveonthatSituarion-;
-
|T
:
c
60t
:
r -1sh bureau i:. -o:-rcon. He'o
Den Haag. Then he went tc Anerica
va-:a-':of Ch:ie
r: himself acquainted with
w/Churchi11, Duncan Sgadys, pres.
Rusk,then
head :j ::.=:__,=-.-_=:
'=r PM Asquith and a regular
of the EurolMovement,and Henri
Foundation,Henr.; l-l :::.: -: _'_:::;:ture on the 10 Dovning St.
Spaak, a former belgian Mp, fundJohnson,Pres. :: ::.: _,_. -:. _:
raising,and as a result of
-=st 1i.st,r^rhen he was disEndowment for I::;::::_.-i:: :
their visit,the Ameri-can Comm--:ced f or publically j.nf errand so on.
ittee
on a United Europe was
Ir that Lady Asquith was a
Their f irsr: lrr:er :.-.i+:+-.+
formed.It was officially
rsbian.Even at this early
launchwas held from )1ar _.:: ::
:.ed
at
a
luncheon
:.ge he was reknowned for
in honour of
1954 at Hotel :e :-:_:=:_= ;
Churchill in 1949.The chairman
.:ng arrogant and cheeky.But
Oosterbeck,Holla:.: :: _r,=.1 . :
.: apparent.ly rea11y gaffed
was lrlilliarn Donovan, f ormer dirthe dutch govt. :::
. :-:1e in Parls during WW1,
ector of the 0ffice of Strategic
There were no re::::a:!=: = :-_ ;::_
Services(the wartime US intelfi:,en for some unspecifi-ed
urity uas tight as ::: ::: ::_-:_
gence agency).The Vice-chairnan
::rigue he was expelled from
icians,indusEr:a-:::j
-:- -::
was A11en Dulles,Director of the
:e a11ied countries(Sorry, no
and
scholars fuse: ::_.:::- ::
newly formed CIA.And the Secret- together
srcy TopIis connection as far
into a '),=. I :-:.
ary rras George Franklin,then
: I know).He left straightaway
..nchd
According
to the '!::: :: _. _ : - : Director of the Council on Forspent 9 months virtuatr ly
identialr minutes :: -_-:: :_-,:
:'*n and out in Barcelona,
eign Relati.ons(and nowtCo-ordin-' meeting:
:fore somehow getting to Cuba,
atorrof the Trilateral Commission)
rrlnsuffici.ent :.::=--_- : - - i:-,ere he.had a job reading to
A motley crew if ever there was
so
far been paid t: _:-; ::::
'.e staff of a Havana cigar
one .
planning, and to evo- .-. ; _ - : .. : :
actory(Where else?). But hls
Total secret US funding of
national order whicl-. . ,- _
:ay in Cuba and his absence
the Euro.Movement( 1949-53)was
the present-da; :: -: - :
:om political
8440,000 (and rhrough the ACUE
intrigue did'nt
-b-eyond
When the time is ripe ;,: : : : : - :
ast long.He soon turned up in
the CIA gave f1] million to the
of world affa-:. :.:--:
exico,where he helped the uncampaign,which Retipger concepts
!!.o.Youthbe extended to the yhc.l.e
:rtunately naned Luis Negrete
directed,1951-59).The major prel
rt.
occupation of the Movement at this vor1d.
.rones set up a secret society
Retinger
continued c:
tj.me was the rearmarnent of Germany
. young mexican patriots.He
nurture his baby,. takine =
and soliciting support for the
,so advised the Mexican govt.
active part in all ti-ie !_: european defence community.
-- nationalise americari-owned
" "
'? etroleum we11s,and pu11ed
until his Cea:..
This is uhere Prince Bernhard conferences
off
1960.For
the
he e--:: _ ::
came in.Rijkens thought he would
:s first major international
rmodest I record
grave in t.-or:a
.:cident,when he helped expose
make an ideal figurehead for their il u
Dneen cemetery, South Londo:.
group,because of his royalty and
-: american oilmen conspiracy,
apo1itical stance,and arranged
!-.esparking off a war between
for him to meet Retinger.In BernUS and Mexico.
In the early l92Ot s Retinger hard t s words this is what happened;IRetinger came to me ana lofa
-=1t on various secret missions
1; the mexican president 0bregon me about his worries concerning
BILDERBERG AND THE MED.A
lrcluding ore to the Vatican to the rising tide of anti-americinisn.in Europe.I said to hin, tyes, 'f f the BiTderberg Croup
7sc.'-ch up re1-ations betr+een
i*s -::
you I re quite right, it's
Exi-co and the Church .In 1924
very bad;
conspiracy of sone sort, i 3 :._.
Retinger said.'Wel1,wou1d you like a
i: arranged the first congress
conducted in such a way es t.
to do something about it?rAnd I
: Lat,in american trade unions.
give a renarkabTy good ialiat
t0f
_::
courset.tt
E.:s wasrstrange as it may seem, saidr
of one.'
Along
wlth
Bernhard
the.
concept
and
of,
european
.-urote C.Gordon Tether,c,:- :le
!.1en
n::y first cane to him.Retinger the original crew,Reti.nger
attempted
Bernhard/Lockheed,:.,,.ei
recruited
Hugh Gaitskill and
iii: to brit.MP,E.D.Morel for
up, in t The Financial Tines r ir _ ;:;5
*ip in forming a secret society Sir Colin Gubbins from Britain,
That was the last time BilC=r!e:t
Guy Mollet and pM Antoine pi;;;
;.: this end.Morel died a year
vas
mentioned in the FT. A1l
from France,Rudolph Mueller anl
-i.er,so t Retinger tried Bevin,
further articles mentioning Lhe
Max
Brauer
from
Gernany,pietro
l:o vas nt i-nterested , then Sir
subject were banned and viihin
:fford Crisps , who was , even to Quaroni and PM Alcide ile Gasperi a year Tether
-F"|: extent of writing a book on from Italy,Ambassado, parrayoiis- The FT editor was out.of a jc:,
ar the tine rsis
Pipinelis from Greece and ble
pa subject.But j-t was never
Max Henry Fisher,a member of
E.ished as Crisps was promoted Bjorn Kraft from Denmark.Quaroni- the Trilateralr.Conmission,
the
I: Deputy PM on Churchillts war describ.ed the experi"n.. th,r";
son of Bilderberg,coming j.our
...a po].e once remarked to
L', : net .
way soon.
me , many years ago; r Every pole
Most editors of the Estai.i-!sh
! tr,ith the outbreak of W!'12,
nas
r
consp.iracy
his blood .
ment Press have been to B_ l,e rg
!c:nger himself teamed up with rrrst came very invague
hints
k:era1 Sikorski and the polish concerning
conferences and some are neabers
desirable aims ; then,
London. iltho'
i;c . in excile in r43,Retinger
of the steering comEittee. Bur
as
f
gradually
caught on," t."'
zleorski died in
atter the end of the Tet.her,
details, then he revealed
some
ai:aJed on and gct involved in
there?s barely been a B-bere
further'details,then
a few
mention in any of then. At ihe
6rr-:ra1 Sir Colin Gubbins'super names...rl
Operations Exectime of the 1967 mee.ting in
=-ret Special
Their first meeting vras
t:,ve(of
Cambridge, Cecil King, tlln cleir_
'A Man Ca11ed fntrepid'
held round an o1d pinglpon!
man of the IpC(publishers of sucb
io"),at one time parachuttable in a sma11 apartnent in
anti-establishment journals as
ft into Nazi-occupied poland
Paris,on
September
25th iSSil
+ cotrtact the Resistance(at
the NME and Melody Maker),seat a
Here 'they decided to get the.
menorandum
Sears of age).
_S
other publishers,
US more involved and [eep it
'' After the war,ironically
'that on notoaccount
rdiscreet r.Bernhard
shoulri.
all
ana
pt=t such exploits,he resuned
report or speculation aboutanv
Retinger
tie
subsequently
went
;: tream of. european unity wl
content of the conference
Washington to lobby beneral to
I
as
much
enthusiasm as
be printed .
---i:si
Walter Bedel1 SmitL,the new
Erier..Similarly
using the
So why have the press
director
of
the
CIA
and Charles
lreat of Soviet Expansionism
there
?
Jackson,a
National Security
:ally support.In 1948 wlth
For their opp:::i::.. ::.
Assistant
to
Eisenhorr"r,
und
. - - ',-an Zeeland, belgian Min.
world affairs.To e:.sL:e ::::
another american commi.ttee was
l,:reign Affairs,and paul
their fe11ow journali.sis :::.:
born.It
consisted
- :.3iS of UNILEVER,
John
report or sPeculare a:....:.:..2
he
organised Colernan,chairman ofof;itre(other)
'= i:rst Congress of Europe in
But mainly to co!'ertlr. i---;, _ Burroughs Corp,David Rockefelier
-T*
B-berg views
_
_
\1r,.-L
-n: _)ilaE\ATlOl(AL STEERlNG
fl
I
I
V, l,ri
tt,
,,'
ris
!r,Ii
impressed when he aLten{1 ed rn
insider',s man.A shadowy figure
1969;
power'.
of
centre
on the ou.tside
,^r':?l'n,..;:,i'""i:i;i"'iri;"'.zi
,, r::cbe r,Te,Former German x;.::;"lt;:;:11":;':i::o;il.'o'" urt"c
luele-ss concerning a wor
::es-iert,i.aIter
Scheel,replaced
he didint cop
about rnyloay,yet
.,
:.-e. :;ouqLas Hone(uhp had...p.{r.9r-.,.i..:, anJ.. of
.tire Ua.i.fas.h,He wa.s at
...r.tr-i.pr"..d,'i!.
9]=g{is.$.q,,,,,,, l.urr
:.a:::an.This rcas decided at
"t
unir-.ommunisr as
,l
which inf-ormation
the -speed of light"
Ehem as:'"
IittIe
noves at
clique of
1 secreg meerihf oi ftu,2$- * "'
'7e meerinI ne ,.u" oep1uue*".by,,,, ::T*ffi: ::t*i:".il:;tr;;:::t:
:e:.ber inLern€tional seeering ",:. p"qul r'inn.!,executive editor"
irr
:::riLree,at r'iie,Londori:i.;J'],g.t-ot nF;*nn,i,;;1;;;;;liii iiirj.**i;1,,-,1.yu"9-lirl::;,lr_
;;;;;.;;;;;'iiln.
rhe 0crober
B-berg Ilne.
i:r Frederic Bennet,tory MP for
The official
Buesel v,as reDI;;;;'Ui"Vl.to"
are reach
l, rbav(a1so parliamentary advis;;i;;;=;;;r,;';;;;;
;;.i;;;;;
:lt:-i'.::::1u:io"=
th
t,l=.!,1.,.q.,1dg;meetings.Yer
,r- ro merchant f6nkers Klet+*crrt'' of .pub,1 i.c pinari'*iiii;rr.ilj'srincrly
t.
rstrictly_confidenEial'minuEe
-B-berger
:e:son and chum of.early
".'--ih;-.;;;;'J,Ot)*,;.,j!,,r*t*e...
'!,,i;,''... ;..;;;t.-.;;;;;:"""
ieggie Maudling).
sLeer,:rr:.Bf l,h.$rr;1.S,.$'S:iiFFeting would hav
the tiEle,
rhq sLeering commit tee also
..1,i;;". ;I'i.Iiai"; ;;;-'
+:
:!l::'l:::Yld"
Conclusionsr,action
'Genera!.
a:poinLS an .*lonorary Secretary'.,
for rh" ;";;;i-i.ir.l,;;";;
proposed against the spread_o
..eneral for Europe,and North
.i.u= and selecuing the best
comsunisst...basically.ln 1956
i:--erica.Retinger he1{ the euroof
;;;;i;-;;"-;;pics
;;;;i;-;;
w/a call for stronger
: ean post up until his death
disiussion.And tn"yiie i".y
?loJtB
-..". i"r..ui
licks ,$ori,n-did,.r:of R.ussian
dutch diplomat, Ernst ,;;f,}''-![.-il:M;;.
or' tn#.i,tu#iinr
Expansionism,pacifying the
,an Der BeugeL took over.The lst
g".-.n"r.-iii..
;;;;";;
i;;;;;;
r.i.erican Sec.9"q,"""s ,-l-?g ,Jolil3?n.:.. ui.g,."U*"u"k f..o, trre e-ui;,rgri;:!,eer; Arao-=,Isrl{eli dispute and
preventing Nationalist China
I: 1976 he f,as replaced by i{i11ian tnI co.enittee.Every british Pl{
(Formosa)-faliinpl under Commi
of t[e CFR quarl:i]y
::-dv,editol
y"u..
has
arrend30
of"ttle
last
'i:reign Affairs' and a key CIA
ed B-b..gias ueil "r Lord Carr- rule,veie declared immediate
priorities.
: : rureloaatf enough the end of
;;r;.;;;;;i;
;;;;, x"iii i";;;;
was
.-.. y.Carrhy'l{!!:htrials
;;e D",1i; ne+tejg'Kissirlger .*s.u:.,:,-.."':,:....3ut aqtl.q,hir,,l91 4 conf erenc
-a:ge1y dowr to Bundy.When
on rhe:.:r::e,t3.r&.,1.&.,,"-': r*it,tE".,r*iin$,l,.ia,. Ilegevej$i,airtie.ih,q.r.under-:la:thy really started loboting
lying theme geemed to be thei
before he becaie -Ni.xon's Sec.if
-lack of achieveneqL,France go
=--: Heni for the crA,he met his
;;;;..wr,lr"-i"'-"""-riiri;--::::..Bundy was hiE particular
most of the bi.;;-;;;-;;;;s"i
;;;;;;";;;;.;;";*"."n".rrId,Ford
-::;e: because he had-c?r.rtrib:1-tud
nat ionalist.some of them even
.on_
eregce"
- '-:.e defelce fund of Alger Hlss' "iEended conf
"
""
asLutely predicred the cotlap
In'61,
in
rhe
oor".
;;;;;r";
: --- -e Eas ilso the son-in-lar+ of ft;;;;6t
staffJ al r rhe hiihesE of demociacy,if national inft
:--=; -.1n T61 Bundy had bee.n
D6fence Departqena.-"itf,--A-hqrg- ever that neans?
:-----'-:.ted Dfpury Asst.Sec.ot
ers.And uiifda.tjly rh'e'"'e&E,t,S.d'iir*- ...,. I.:g app1q, .q. thar despire
-::=::e in ii," i<eon"ay. .a,dnin1s- ;::;3l""li:i,$,.I-..$$,r.; B-boy.s. i*lr...-.the .;ir -*,Fi#*1fr"e;;;;,s-;;;;;;N
described in
efforts are frustid'tiid by the
What actii'ilfy"ioes on ar"thi
-: i::r:ger.he's
I:. iest ald,,,,E,be:.:BX,l*!,t_.Ss1,l,byi'r r,:r.;..:.rue$f:i:agg,:i:i..8.:,is,{}Qtfi+:f;.:.&atter. own bureaucraEic democraciesl
./1,/r/rrhry .,%rhy
PETS.S RXX.EEIE
BILDERBERG MEETINGS
(Embargo: Thursday, Apri.L 24, 16.00 hrs )
l:::--e:arder, Perthshire, Scotland, April 24. 1985.
Tre l3E6 Bilderberg Meeting will be held at the Gleneagles
E:--el 1r, Sptland, April 25, 26 and 27, Eo deal with the
f,:1-:*'lng rub jects :
fre Soviet Union under Gorbachev: Foreign Policy
llpIications
The Wtstern Global Response to the Soviet Challenge
:be Ffgnentation of the World Economy: Debt,
C"rrrefy Disorder, Protectionism, Uneven Growth
,
South 1}f rica
,.;
If:prox:ratily 115 people will partici.pate in the conference
f,=3r North'Asrerj.ca and Western Europe to exchange views on
i-ssues of common concern to the region. The meeting is
p=:.\rate in order to encourage frank and open discussion
%rZ €"r"71,r"-*
from the Secretsrlsl
At pr* ry &lural-
SIc{e"fu*L
&f t,'N
a-bout these issues.
A list of participants and a booklet describing Bilderberg
l{eecings will be available upon reguest.
62
P.O. 8ox 3Oa18-25m GK Th. Hros.Tcl
{70) 46,:1121 ' T.l.x: 32te BIBEI/
" or:
c(n C(1'-l
r'c az
ultd
xJrc
ZF
lrH },
- t{F
n'
frfr
r. ol<
o D F.9'
!<
'r t+l
DN
n4, r)()
;' OP
rl 5
Fto
o5
7a
g'
n<
o.0,
A
n
. 9,
Z
F.
cl
!
O
P
!,
@
h,
.
t, tr<
oF. tr5o
,c,t,
L
tr, Fi
''l
ri Ft !,
oo
o<
h,r
FOUI
ooo
ttpH
orrp, o
:t
tdop,
Ort
p,
H.=dr..
o5
3d
p, Pt!
p0,o
o<
,(oN
P.
rt
(no(,)xF(n
l,t'Jt,
6)r,
qttrEc..Eo
[, F.o o l' o
OStrirFrO
)foo5rtri
B P.Q
?r,Fl rtEj5o
. td .
tp5. . 0,.
OO
E,
5otdtlr.otr,
5P.9,9,O0!
O 7i B B
u
rtrtrtl-,.9,1J
rtol-5F =
oOrQ5
9<
E
c tr,Fl
Ut ZP
xod
Et.j
F3O
0' r-.
rAO
o<
0,
)rp
I 3
5 o
tl D
O,
Fl olQ
O O5
o 5O
H
o
P
7
P-
DISO
5 o n,
rfftt'l
o<P
I P.
<Pc{
oJo
. Iro
OI
tsX
O<}r
p!, F,
p,l,tt
pqo
oJ l.t
lQ
!l
0'
5
5
O
Ul
o
o
B
I
NBE,t
€t'l'-3!,
<0,
H P.n
5x lrB
OOO<
OO<
lnrr
Oo
O Ut
Pi Ou! O
ortoo
oBo
P-|..fi o o o
o
E,o Frro E !,
Hrt
Ot;o,
Ot
P,
c,tl. rl rrr0F,t
5 H t{<
E\<
rdo
orolJ
g,OF.6) trrto
drroo
UorO
P.O rtJ
POJI
OFta iD t-.;tiD
7
E.
c.tsB
o o !,
P.FtI
5o..
rt
F
oo
0, lP.
r-lo
5nr
!,
5H
rrd
a
Ulo.
; iD
el
br'rr5rndHa
o
h
;
lD E
3
*
i1 ":q
o
Ft o F{ o
er
c b 'E (/l o p o
o
E .-6- 3 .i
!v
- A
;.. 5
),
o
c!
F
; I ggI
Vt
OOFC=ltrO p,
uPtdo=q<rrruotd=,ttP0,Eoc
P.O'lD. F.O 5 trooutt,
!t!tP.x ft
^r
:) H <'r' ut5 lr n, 5n,9,nx '..tse.;rF.op.op.irx0,EBroF.J
ttp.g, I Ft o H lr !, o I o uoFt ft o,
ooF.
P.?JP. )f P.P.O O oEai--F.Hitddp'iiEirE-Ho6ftftoS
ooft
,,
oFtt
rr rtPH!dFfE
trB 5 rr rtoFtErrftoBrtBrtF..oooSrrl
o o P'5 (D p' ts9,0roo
On'. Eit -r'b6ii.b6gi[6ii6
nHottftc!5 .r op I Fr o 8o. tBcEBFrl<,a5b,b.5io
ft
!,
6ri
5rtro-ri-46-a'ii
o o o o hur
OE 0,r1ts3 OoJO=,. O. t. HO 6)Fr
htnFto O.
fto
O
z>
o lJ. t.n F. I FiCO O
Strh0
P
P.
9, rt
0, rt fl O,dOn,
BPor)
OIrEU
SIrt
(:)rt Ool
(hP
rt€
O,rrtrlll1qflJrroOP.OrtOOP,
O 0,
rrto
(,o
o:to
,
o
P
P.tr
th
O
rt
o
o:t5
o
!,
o
E ft
€P.o
5(D
'' E O ft fl 0 5 0 ooEP. Ort0ri,OOflf'lOO
drrP.OnD<
tr 5 Ftp,5 r '\, o 5 itPrQ O
P.
I
UO
FJ
A
0,C)!rrfort.
0, opr S
='
5 (0 5 0 P.O
Fh!' !' !| . 9, P.O ft
Po
5
o
O
tr,=
,.' P.5< taEE
FI
Ort
rf5
O
ErtoOP,
EoltXS.
OIJTIO(/D
{EoP' <P-l-l
o rl I ^!,
ooo
rt H rJ.rr'A O orP
O O fl rt
, r+aftU,9t
0, olrzo
o f.l
F'rf oItIr\(
lol..
I
H
hO
rtO
Fn
o
o
o
o
!,
Pp
Dr !, xrr
tro
o
r{rn€ ?, 5ct
,
OOrrrHFnO
5rrQ0,5
rrH O
E O0,
l-. F..
"
I
o 0, in o I 5 P. 8P.<
Et
50
l-.
r, Dt QIP.C{O
trXc{
O
trElXO
A, O r<
I'lP.OctFlUl
5 (Dftoo
o5
rrr O Or)l
-.0,O
p
FloE.'
X
rr
o tr o d |rjxrj
5 0,
5ulFnE
O)i
o'Qtlr)
!,
P.o o
.
"Drl,
r-t ;r
P
OH
P.QrlO
O<0r
rt
SrlUt
(5
|-l(D
9,O0r.
O
a
Q<rrY
o.
vo
O ! t-.
n
O
rtP.!r\
E
:
5
O O in
O O rtu)
FtP.
ft
F
5(D(D
rrt!l-
P.
0,
p
U
9,
t..
'U
x^
!?
-"'!
tr
E
2,
!i
!its
E
E
A
P- s
Ep
- (I
tu9 F.
.--o "t
p1 m
bo
ril
@
l'
e
F9) z
r-f o
z
o
:
tt
F
l.{
il e5
:E,
''-s!
r:r'iF. i- 5
;'.
hr
::
xi'
-'c s
hi
e
ti
5 O
.
F.. q, oJ
.
5
<
o p,
B Or
o !,
d
,m
-lq
E
I
E
r
!r
(,r
-l
oi
z
o
P.
O
!,
rn
Hr
D,
P.
E
a
o,
q
9
I'
slc
{X
ut
{
E D
H
c!
p
D
<
Fr
c1 FU
t,ur
g,!-1. D
o
!' !'5
trB lr
A,
.HO
O
)r o
ndOHrt.g,lE
.F3.c{qOc{
H
P
, O D
.
c{5
|J O
O)l c{
4
PP' (D
tt
P5
n
oo
,f
loOSSOrfN
rFIP.!,PJ
O fi
5
l-.
o
q
cu, cu, ,1
F
o
tt
O
l,fr
5
O
tn
cq
x(,:
I!
tsr
o
o
n
p, nt
UF
ofr
5d
tJ. y
c!
.'
U
E
r ts'
.
O
E!
E! !r! o
Fn oP.
o o
H Ft
5
D
al rl
d
.t,
oE!
9, !,
lJ fl
Ort
<Bq,
rilJ.OH
ooH
rrEP.
fl
o
o
a
l{uro
od!
Ett{z
our!
Orr5
P-O ri
ft 5:t
o5
EtoS
9, tr<
Po
Prto
tQor.
H hur
F.O.
do
ooo
o5B
o r..
5 irr
rt
P.
50,
co
xl,z
oH
.>F
zn
ErD
OFr
tdO BU
0rq,
tN
Ft r-t ft I
t' FT B'P.
!ro I<P
!,o
nrt
0,
ir, iE q
El l-.
|lrt
tr N Eltrl
la o F.<
5q,
l'l
E FJ
oo
6l
fl ttl
O.
o
lo
lro
P.ct
tsH
PP.
o
otr
ln
EI
tl
Fl
ts
o
{
cc
vr@
},t,
D P5
oo
o,
QZC
XtslUt
r-l),
q{eE
olJ.o
lrPt'
5lO
oFr
Er3 ft
Elr,
t{..
q.
p,uo
5 6 !,
P.r<
or
o
5c{
tr l't
O.
ft
A.P.
tPlr,
CirrctD
(J)'dUr'!
tzln C
Vt
tr>
l, lrllr>
EO
X
!(!c{c{
rr!,
o
oFog
P.<
5
5 q, lrF
oP.
5 <5
EP.r=6
tor o
)
o t,
P
utr
0, rt
<n
qP.O
o
AZ
oo
5
n
7
.=
U
p,
5
E
Eto.
. !t o
t
ooFt
O<:r<
oo,sD
O PFnu
E P.o !
ooOF
FtFt
r
C
Ft
q
,a
t-t
tr
TJ
grO
pr'rEOOt F.rrrEDerUEttrHldCc{OtUO=, toUOr{<0r tr,()C o
ttr,U,OUg:UO
Eter).Ur=
Qltj!'r)Ec)Frttr=A
]roo o
5o fi r-t !r!, o o p
g
g
o B o r'..9 to E itti,6'ri,it'ri: q y! !rp.opEp.o o p.p o:r. 5
o
it otr a
H D, rJo o o 5 E !?
o B F.rtF.Fr,o
H tr fr i.E ir!
E 6 oE
i.< r,.nt
FE
E n E 6- 5 8i cr d F.ii ni o,q s, o 0, o
5
! |t o
o e,;o o
!,
riyo
o
oo
tr,EE
dFd
tiP
? !1.t.o,o
r-ttl.BU
eb;+il
F.o p.orQ
!-:.FEE
oo
rdp6E o6!.i
5
e p., P.
" 6 ii.p. . tr
Fl o o
fit-tP'P'd o
Hp
5
tr
o
o
o<
6
F:6
p.p.o
o
o
r.r.6
o
x
ii
6E
fi
(,/|:t|+n
!,
tt.n
P
E
aD
ll
n
P' rt o 5 o Fr H o o - H ri' ii' t- tt t F i4 ii 0i a
a d po
it
rr
g
, H i+ 5 o' t, i o .- i- b q, n p,oa,rFop
(,'
o r< E
I p I b ,b ii n, ii 'uEp,
Dp.
=
op.Fr oHo0,oooop.
xEF-'qB.66b*n.'.ryiHFr,=io6-o
p,o d0,
-55uy53-6X'
loUl50,ur5r.t
o.F!rrHlnHold
oQ.
lEoO.
truBi
aiVgal
tr
uioocys 5
r 11 ;.tr6ot6115:
r(p.. .Hfi
gE.AOl.ortEabE-aaqil
..rsdili6i;E
_FF119!r',rqtO P. Op1,gr!-9-qD
g_..iFIF.OOOF.,OIEOn,riF.dirtOor.
tl-j.
tn
c,Ep.
'itini
xlnrtrntrjoo
SrtlnohorooHoS
Ftotrl'r-ri onrFitIEi'5
g p F:t EurEtroo. vtBori t,
trro ooFt(,lJtrt.r,rnrr..
o
O < tFt aD
lor
aprt
oi ] Erf:rrb
eri,pFt
6,Urr'ad6'riFo
r O Ft g
FrD
.iP'o
rt0,o
tJE.oa-E !-t. Biii..ilrteoapEii
QPt"ididF
o6ly!1
oE.<aoza.
oF'ul:'rt
rr0,5
ol''(rtEPo
6criiii6oo.EF,.o
IEtr.-hntrib.lrF6'
o
rrtrorr^ oo
'-d'uiFf
xflooo
uFtrtoErtEEp.
6p.t..rui.;665b6,5rt
.-"6,1
_..bo Jzn
oo\nu)rt,e
ooEtp.H Sriot
oo..o
F.o0,rri,
t,05
iE!,
o
:ai
OE
otr!!,F
E.Q_tJBrt.
o
O
5
rdotrE-'O'6
o
rtEIHEOp.
ittE
tro?6
CEo
og.r:tr.
or
oH
doo
rdq,
o
oo
j
rrl
H oaD
,o-o
diDS'5ogg'-.
rrroor-tE r{rtrd p.5e,
0F.6
iit
F
Ft q,HFt
r x o@
FlUtct\F'rf
E0
F.6r.
P,qlc
i56p.r'rri5c
Hlooog,oB
Dil o o
uo rtq'
o |io rn h.
ooc5o
iD
6,V
bFr
rra._ia'1
tap'rruEo.trrr.
.+o E
-46,i
o-p-;i.(/D 6Hri.6O06-F.
.Floy
EE - gIroBcjqB
E''
Sida
xbE6F5'ir'ir;
o
oor-.
r(. o A
n
ilhypFo..
-ii,d
i
tr
oo
ria,r-itEu;r
nEo D5
D
r'r5 O
rr
o t_'rt1.
r-no(,l 'p
-b oE!D,oo.Hr.to
..oo!,!d_ EJ IEFE:.
E= iid i!,^
.<iio<t;i;i'ri<x
--'ni
o
H'zEl
-Hn
P.
ri
E'tr
-'rc
Ea
tr
ts ooo
Y
ooHts'o
o
trtrF EdAE
fpEr
tdiD' oi
i-:toooorJtroo
Eiio-l{
o
f'roo <
qr.6:o
o
EE
tr
orrroit
n
pl:our
5E-!
r..!rriotrrortrrrr
=
b
{il
cr. a
p.3A f..''lrr
a ..i?
.'H6
H
oo
rr
nr
<o
d
a. D o
G
EtPo tr tto
o0, g
5 ?p':ri5
o5o!,rt
6 ..or.
qtAit
oxT
d'-.tE'+oiioh
i
Et
o
c
ofr
I
B
lrti'rpo
!q
rf
o
.
9o.
I
;:j(/,
b,i.
trEdrtrroodF.
a
I
p.
Ft ts. 0, oo ?r
-rrrt
!,
J ri o o E.
gpid
q,opo oDo rl
iD
6-ia
O
!
ri
avtrn
H
D.
qlq
g
FrE,
-'
o
nh.EA
p
.6
il'].
Fl
P.
F.
rr!
o
p'. rr o o
rr(0
5
5
,.<
d2
inb
!-r
lh
i
F=ho
c.idj.
ts
.
r
y.'
gl
oc
rrlrttr
n
6
QD
E.
!.i9
A5
!,
oF.o
D
Frt O p oqi
5.
P'
()
oo
ii.3
9E,
zrioi
P
P' Ir o P<
rror-rP
onr
5
E
A
<;6T
i-:,
!,!.!-r
cto
.q
o
o5
*8il F
C|o
g
.b
63
'c
-i'
P
"o
di
E
r!
o .;
o
E
Ei
,i, i l I ii ,i ; ;; t ; i ps xfr
i
* f, Ei n i i*;* i;
ffi
t
ii;*, :
ab
o -i;
; h ; !
:
Fl
d
i
t
Qr
o
k
s.tJ
E,
I
ss
P9E
se's E
.co'r{
> A>r ;
x
6
A
u
D&aH
"HS ii
Fltr
FID
4l Fl
E'
6A6 #
E6
s
4z DaD
D i;
fi(o
o(ail
zDk
d
A
U'
.Ctr
f{
o
t{
+J0
U
a-a
H+J
u! t{
+J(,
lr
o
o
.O.
El{
+J
o
o
oo
t{
OU
B
.,{
QC
..t
rc+J
Uto
ll{
.r{
o
k.o
OE
{JO
UEI
tr >
o(,
611
trq
do
tt0
kc(,
...t
OE
'c I
(1
toe
I*
O.
o
H
,J
.tt
E
I
+J
B
E
..{
N
Ul
HO
oo
>o
k
(
MH
o
10
,D
od
bH
k
U'
lr
ri
tr
..t
o
ff;ilIi;fl
til ; ;i t
9fi,3 a' rs i { i
H
oo
.,1
i
q
f
+J
c
(l
o
tI,
Ffl
o
.lrrt,-=4;
rt,
q
tr
$ifr#iH, rt x ff rm f $xii m $liI I I ifi I il$fii ff
i, rEE#-E*{;
,,E,*;f,il li*uf rij
E
lJ
$gI:;{* fi,lt ilf;ifff ;slrfigii rl Ii
ErE
:sl:i;ElY*,sI
iiflsrEH'iri;si ;j;*fi
sE.9q?fi
.F{
(,
fqtr-',i ;; iH f ;gXI"rg I-E girl is $6
s
tr
rJ
Fl
Ir
k
lli1
l{
r{o
o
o'{
|I,U!
!t
h+r
uc
od
{J
!
Or
:
&D
t
L
(,
1
dlu
o
'Fl
I
o
qr.r rt!\
;c
.Fl
;
tr
(,)O
.JD 9.+r
+,
rr
.tro Fl
+J
..{
t, r, t,t ('..t
t
nl . h..
o.
t{
H...t (,
+J . o o
t{
'Fl
tr +JC) t{ o rJrJ
H
T+'
t{.
tr
O
H
(,
O0".{
.qG
+J6
trc(,t\
.Ft(/]
t,lH r{('
o o o+rtr
+J
o
9.A
rr
,A
OH \(ul,
(u..'l l.l 0,
j
3 D Ft>
OO od
rr.l rrt . o trrr_l u o=
t+, cl.
t
o
c
o
UOq{O
.Ol.{
go'r.{DEHo
q+.r
H.C-t rd E
oc .
..E . C trL) t
ut
t+J
.r{{JOU O-..1 EO
t{
rr{
o+J-Q(J
d
..1
O
.
t{;,{
O
O
rd
O
3
. ()'O O r-1
tr.o tl{o
q.t ()
oo
Hc
fit$
+J tr'( t{.r{rl{ t{ 5-dh }!
O -rl
O
(, tn .9.,tA
d..{
oU|hoo
D }l c -o tH iUO
qO O+rOOtO +J trtr(Jtr..{
t{ OrE ..{
3
F{F{
t{.
A& +J
+J t{ t{ t. l{ >i
F{
Loo
qo.odo
(tO6r.l-l-{C
o
l{ tr cl.> H (aoOH zOoCt
trq
A,aEo
()
h
(t
..Qh.H
O
O.'{
r{
O.C,
H O.tr i,..{ tt, o }r
q
o
do
+r
c
o
tr
o
+r
ld
o.q
H
OU 4r Fl6 fq H c .r{.r{
+r(, O l{t{ d O Ft O
.o trlOChET o 'C,tHOtr{6r${()d
.t..ifiI a .L. ,l(
.r{ (OO
Ai
o.OO '
(a
O O ulu t{ t
HOtl{OOr F{t}r
(,E
E
'.{
O+rOO
F{trrtt
.
(a
2-0lO..l
X>
o ..!tr
4J
C..{
c OES t!.'r+r )
-(rtxr(
O O
o O r+{.Fl .p O g.o+r t{+.1 ..+.1'rt t{+J O k.F{
d d-C,{ r+{
tr }\rr, .C Fl. +, or+J
O
r{ u! o
o t{ xta
O tl.{ r{ li .C C tr..{A 6 h..{+JA >r(, ni q
|J.rjij o - -:-l]] ll-..1
O
6.F{
t{U
+J..{ g H
..{O
a
ollt(a$tr85
q+JtrO
At
d
d+J
HlUtr
=
F{.r{+,D
OCi
oooFlr+{+ro.E
(lr,
rH -F{ tr r|E{ Fl
arQq{
o
nt
1..
F{P.qr{..|D H.-OEO
t (,l
B rHrJC) t+.r>r
6 6..ri
+r qA
C(,,
nr+{ 3 i+{ O()o{ C
rc,HO.'{t r roE
tr
otH
OOo
HoAOC.,{
iril.a.i
,l-rt X O O - o O O Otr{
H !
lr50EO
(,
q
rr-ori
D+JEt.{}r .i-{
C- 'E+r
O Ot{ rO
.trx O Eo okoH+rko
o+lE6tr
-9
Oi
(l.qdCOtr.CoooEo cOc
--{r,;r O+J
O.'{.
dc,Ok
o-tE.
{JUllr.,{OOtr
ortl
f.{ Oatt.lr
oH >+r o.a;
O' 6
rr ol.a C .drr Or{.rFl 9.Fl t{ o (,r0 d tr gFr c, H d
E O-lklO.'{,1, a0) tr(u f{+J+Jt{O 8E+r
ov
o '.1 q$Ofrl!o
r)5trL;
o.d o-t(aFrAl+J H(,l l] +rO(,rltr+t.
c
OHE
H
O
Ut
ttl
'.t
d
o
o+r
oo
t.ol.l +r&CD$
Cqo.troo'!u
+JE.eirj 'o
()d
TAyr-,| tD r{Co..{
O (,l'15 E o o o{
dtr9.'{
lrnt
o(,
o
krr{
c
o
r{-lglt+{T.6
b
AJr:
.-lttoc
.
()C o$ e O O O +r.,r ..{O
]]H>4.qq{dtI,Hr!.9
tr..ArOlo
6
fqo
O
ooo"h
rUo.r{CO'Otrt 1
.Oh
('
-{U(,)OAO0T+.lbq)
Uo
o gc trr.l!>. Ft{ t( r o r oI--^fr tt,
otH (, il o c, doii{
t{.d.rJ+{ d O tr O .5 +ro6
-. :q l.
ctrE
O (,l +J (t..1 '.16O+Jh3O
r Ot{t{o
d.J.m
o.+rtrc.ttH
-Uld.
3
lr.c.q I k . p
-qk
O+r.'{OOXA#C
oo
(.,
> O
U Oio HF{ O+J U j-E Ct..l
irio c ur . -Cq(..{Cr{Ot{
..{ Fl trAE
orrto
5dF{
O (, o 6+r (, O ru.-t o c.;
t E,-r trtO I d t! OF{ C rr o . AU()T{+Jtr
o C H r{ En
Oo(, t
O H+J E 6 E$.1
rd +J dO t{ tt H(,) o t{ E O o+r C E o 0t E o k !E.;..{
oE
OO>rkE+rl{trtUEnEtr
!{f{Ht{+J5d
o l.{ o o or+{ o.n ii ! r{(rH I l{.'l O O I
q
uro
O
O
O
O
OUO,r,
C,
O+r
iid
o
{.l..{
U
t{
O
O
O
t{
U..t ii ri o o o o ut, t t
r.r o >.QJa o E+r..{ o +JOO O (u o..{ E E . O >r{ t{ O O.r{ Cra{ c d.4 a..{,{ c (, ul.r{+J.r{
O O O.i O +r E E E o d..{
o +J..{
E o.r{ t{ ur ru c +J ..{ C OtrOtrl{ E(,)4.'! A.O.q H+, O O o O O+r o.tu O, I Oat.,t d H.Q
o
q
r{ d > "{ l{ l.{ t{ }rH d :
>
E
E
l{ tr o o.t o c.c o ol.1 (u XOt{OO
E O O O-.t- .Q
!!^o!€o.Eoootro
AHDt(aUE
H(J|J o(,
FI(9A(0E{
ETESESEE
ESrf
CDAAFIU(aE(,Orq()O
[r]tr{E{E{OE() a
(
o
.F{
.
r
oi"
?
C
3i98538
o
o
t{o
O
b
C
'A
o
o
.Fl
Y
!
{
>r
h
cO
tr
64fi
+ta
t{Fl
Ofit
.O q{
d,E
+rE dd
.qE
bd
r.lr-]
C -A.)
-'{
.O
tro
O XC (,H
F{
.t
!(
o
A
tf
':
b,
E
(,
>r
. Eo
(,
(
I
o
c(,
Eq{
F{
oo
(, +r
Ct,
*lF?
t{
A.l-)
lo
bc
OrE
fll
t{
CX
,t
cd C (,x rOFl
oo
(E tld
tr
(ad.
(J
)-lH
&
x2H H2
glH
F{ DH
9lH
F{B
HUl
EI' N
.tr
.l{
trE
o
Fl
o6
OH
.Fl Oo
d 'rro
('
UC
o
d(,
o
(,
=E
.o
(,ro
=
oc
.d
Ed
c Aa
c,o.
uO c0,
tr
O +r,
( oul
r{ 297
H
4d
l{ uc,
t/|Fl
(,lI'
.Ft
A}tg
+roh
66C
E.'{ o
.Etr
.+r0
od=
o=
E.6
Of.
OU
O r{.o
Fl (, F{
l.{trd
6Oq
tcro
UAO
dcd
(/)oU)
DAD
ra{ d
(l)OO.'
to
lJUIO
a'a
..1
+{ 6.q
OF{ U l{
,a
u(/) o
c-ro
O O td .'{ -:-
4r
c
O.
=
.Fl'
#q
>r
E
o
..1
ktu
E
o
f{
t{
O
'Fl
tE{
d
d
F{
O U OF{
5 C(]F{
ol..t d lU
e
t{
h
1
T
${
(,
l]
trl
N
+,r'o
Fl J1 E C
f{
(, .Fl...l .Fl 't O O
O11
d
{.'{..{
!t
p.
o
d}{
.'{
t
U
U
}r
o
t{
EF{
5rO l{ O
a
i
.7t
.r{
.F{
a
r-.1
p
.Flgl
T
+J.n
t
,ld
O E
trtrq{(,.Qb
6(,
E EOo e
.'{OrUt .O>
o,
P
o.c
4(u
A.froX5
Cd (aO
OC U'
A. il X .i(,)
<A tD.A
a
+JEO(,
oox,
q
r
t{+JF{F.|trO
@At
H
+J+J
O
qrHoq(l.p
e 60,
atr .H C
.aoo.C..{(,
CQ {r+r E4
t{
H.A-lOt{C
OF{ Fl
+,
Ooo'Fl(,o .Ctt
Oo dO
td
O.
i
|)F)
trfiE=Efi
OB
lqH
A.
o
oar{Atu
E oFt
+J.oO
trdd
.,EE
o
. .E
o-rl
=tr
EItrH=
r]:
+J
g
E
.q
q
X
4
H
H
F E{d
v,
x4E<d
P EtxxcaEi
QDDE{UIH DUHi!
E]E]H!(
Zz>tt
i
t+4
5
&dii
T.;
}(
b
THE TRlLATERAL COMMISSION
started in 1971 as a. reaction, believe it or not, against
!lixon s' 1i.bera1 attitude
toward the commies.It r+as
felt by certain individuals
that his detente strategy
v/Russia and his close relations w/China would weaken
the West.The main instigators,
of this train of .thought and
eventually the Commisslon r4rere
Zbigniew Brzezinski,then head
of the.Russian studies Dept.
at Columbia Univ,Henry Owen,
then Director of Foreign Pol1cy in a Washington DC thinktankrand needless to say;our
old :pa1, David Rockefeller.
In 197O,in his book,
rBetween the Agesr,Brzezinski
had made a call forta community of developed n6tions in
order to contain the gLoba1
tendancies towards chaos. . . t
lnd at his think-tank
he
developed his t trilateralismt
concept toward. this end.
What Brzezinski proposed
in hisrTripartite
Studies twas
pretty much what the B-bergs
Yere already doing,but with a
rore specefic ain.That is the
creation bringing ther3 Spheresl
- ilorth Anerica,Western Europe
and Japan - together in a global
economic community. It was I nt
long before Rockefeller got
vind of it and,after tossing the
idea around a few Chase Manhattan board neetings,he took Brzezinski to the next B-berg meeting
at Knokke, Be1gj.um, and formally
proposed the formation of rThe
Trilateral Conmission t .
lJith his fellow bergers'
seal of approval and the assistance of Brzezinski,Rocky began
recruiting for his new society.
George Franklin,the executive
Director of the CFR,was sent to
dip a toe in europe,and, The llan
hinself went along w/FrankIin
on a sinilar nission to Japan.
?
Then a Trilateral Planning
Group .was formed,and on July 23rd
l972,at the Rockefeller mansion
in Pocantico Hi11s, New York, they
had their first secret neeting.
at 345 East 46th Street,NyC.
(However the european branch
is a 1itt1e less open,situated
inside the French Electricity
Board like sonething out of
Rockefeller financed the venture
'Man from UNCLEt.Reison being
the former chairma.n of the
out of his own voluminous pocket
french electricity board,paul
until later72 r*hen tax exempt
I)elouvrier, is o,n the etecutive
grants were obtained from the
Kettering Foundation
.committe'e. Prior to that the
euro.HQ had been at the Centre
In Jqnuary I 73 [here was
for contemporary Euro.studies
another meeting;in .Tokyo,where
at Sussex University.)Furtherthe final all round approval for
nore B-berg claim their propthe conmission was confirned,and
the following month other found- osals dont exist,while the
trilateral
ations,such is the Ford FoundatConmission nakes
theirs. availabie to aaybody.
ionrwere persuaded,easily,to
In theory..The trick is they
share in the .running costs.By
May the thiee respective Executdont make it abundantly clear
ive committees had been selected. where
their oninously named
The UK Rep.was Sir Kenneth Younger rTask Force ReportstortTriangle
forner director of the Royal
Pirperstare available from.Heice
Ihstitute for International
both Right and Left-wing conspAffairs
iracy buffs have t exposed t TrilThe official
launch of the
ateral r secr.ets t whie h were obTrilateral Commission was on
tained directly from the
July Ist,L973.Included in the
Commission.
75 people,whq then began trilatBut very'much like B-berg
many early memfers of the T.d.
eral connissioningrwere Jimmy
Carter,then Governor of Georgia, have now ascended . to, positions
Ildnry Donovan,Editor-in*chief
of greater por{er,in their respective fields,where they can,
of'TIME INC. t,Reggie Maudling.,
and do,implement commission
Lord Roll, and Alistair Burnet,
recommedations.That is rrhy,in
then editor ofrThe Economistr.
Robert Eringerts words, tthe
The first fornal neeting of .the
Commission has acquj.red a
Connission was in Tokyo,october
reputafion for being the shadow
that same year.
government of the world. t
The Trilateral Conmission
The most notablerTripartite
differs from Bilderberg in
Study t is I The Crisis of Democthat; B-berg
is
only
bilaterracy t , by Sanuel Huntington(nou
a1. It does t nt include Japan
co-ordinator of security planain its scheme of things.
ing on the National securi.y
B-'berg is ad-hoc while the
Commission has a fornal nemCouncil ) , which proposed .that
the West needs to moderate
bership.B-berg is nost condemocracy. (0o Ee Oo I )
cerned with w/East-West political issues while the CornmissAbove left: The complex at 345 East
ion is.more interested in North
46th Street in New York City which
-South economics.And B-berg
houses Trilateral Commission headdoesfnt publish a journal
qu-arters (photo by Robert Einger).
while the Commission does,
Above right: The complex at ltl
'TRIALOGUEt,a quarterly pubBoulevard
Hausmann in paris which
lication,available
on request
houses the European office of the
fron the Conmission's US HQ
Trilateral Commissio:
n
65
COMI}II$$$H RICOil{}IENilS COSPIRATION }YIT}I OH..E]PORT[R$,
PROrS$ES N[$ AID AGINCY, COT{SUI.TS SITH FORD AT{D I{I$SIITGIR
" I'ilir inrt*rnst.iouiti s}'ri$r:m rs unr!+rg<rin.t il drl$tic rren\'
r:tllxc, }Ltlrirl$i<kl i*l'i{lit}n
{i}ilxlil:ii!.rn thr$ug:h ir lluruhrrr
'}l
refirr.ul,t, ltirt!\x'li:1L {*$iJ n:ir$:n.ii'i,i:ti tlr* ti:nsirut* t:f lrt*n5
v.1.!1':{:i1:.+." rvh,+lq: t},rs *if$i**}r.i*'i ptrx}ttttd by ttr,:: ntrrupt
*F:rn6e i* ,1:ii:loysg:iq611 iire {lt:t:s.rrn3}rtiirri h;- tirt {:ntr} i:lf
[lir;:,).r ,fi*-B* prs{iiiFirnfi Ji\t\{il It* uur}t} stgllrl.
"('i:rti$r<.rni*tir.:l:, in *tl it'ltr:lttpt i.I t$.iri{:rai$ tht u*rtr:t^
lringir-txuiltptirtns ol dre Dtd $!st8n1 could L:.ild t,$ ir gs,nrrel
br*nkd*r'n. {Jn tht *thr:r hitnql. rrcirtitc pulic:i*t ro *dopt
it hl rhs fli1lr F$rt$rrJ, $*d cotldi(i{)ns *r}uld 9.xl$trl ,lh€
i!fr!! ol *tfr"ciitt r:$*ptritti(:,n nr{-rrr: rsirlt]l^Y th;rn sver ttefore.
Su,;h c*tpuratil:rn nrust ll't hirs*d (>$ aht principle cf
r"qu;.rl.irr. 'I'hi.s il
(!t)(k:rrlil$ilinS. "
th'r' t,*rc tf t:n1' tuttre. polit.ical
Snrdcr Saltrr. fuln€r Eritiih fsrriB$ S8irBtsry
Above: Front page from the Wintet 1974-75 issue of Trialogue - TLe photo
depicts memb6rJof Trilateral's Executive Committee meeting with President
Ford about Trilateral Commission recommendations.
66
: RISE AND FALL OF J,C.
::y Carter r+as recruited as
:harter nenber of the Triteral Commisslon by Rockefil-er and Brzezinski,when they
appened to bump into hinrin
adon.Carter had been poj-nted
t to Rockefeller as future
residential material by elder
atesman, Averill Harriman,
rmer Governor irf New York.
:nteresting aside;Carter had
i to London aboard the prive jet of fe11ow Georgia boy,
,Pau1 Austin,.the chbirman of
:ca-Co1a.)And the two had a1ady met when Carter became
vernof of Georgia inr71 and
proached Rockefeller about
lling Georgia shares in NyC.
Carter rea11y got into the
.C,never missing a meeti.ng
d ironically used it as a
ast during his presidential
npaign,to show off his
ouess in foreign affairs"
uting trilateralism in a
eech in l976,he said, rWe must
place balance of power polits with LIorld 0rder politics.I
ilateralism
in a peanut she11.
rry I bout that.
S1or,1y but surely,Carter
gan his ascendancy from
.heresvi11e, Georgia. In 1975
r= oade the inportant break:-:cugh and won the foi*a State
ED), they dever go wit.hout food
or a place to sleep . irJhen the
public schools are inferlor or
torn by strife,their
children
go to exclusive private
schools"And when the bureau_
cracy is bloated and confused,
the por*erfu1 always nanage to
discover and occupy niches of
special influence and privilege.
By 1978 David Rockefeller
t+as already thinking about a
new president. for 1980. 0nce in
power Carter appeared to spurn
the advice of his t.rilateral
staff,in favour of the Big
Rockefelier in the sky,hii
missus, Ro,salynn(r,rho had even
dodgier mates than her husban.d,
notably the Rev.Jim Jones) and
his o1d buddies,the Georgia
Maf ia. In that order . Mi.1es Cope-
Back in'73,David Rocxe'ie__
had modes"tly notcii thatrp:rr.::
citi.zens 'are often able io e: :
with greater flexibility
t1-.a:
governments u and exercj.se tr € I :
will in a manner which effe:: s
the wor1d.
But. " .
A CARTER IN TIIE HAND IS Il,O..--l
Shortly before Jinny Carter
assumed the office of pres:ieGeorge Bush briefed hj-n on :l:
-
world sltuation then,as is :u._
tomary, tendered hls resigr.a:: . as Director of the CIA .'di r i : :
a f ew weeks Bush had recie,,.e
an invitation from Rockefei_::
land told Eringer that Carter
to join the TrilateraL Coaris._
would have formal audiences
ion.He instantly accept'ed aud
with Zbig,Vance and the others,
soon became one of the nost
then di-smiss them and call in
enthusiastic purveyors of tri
his mates ,tl'te Georgia Maf ia t
lateralism.In turn uhen Busl
and with their feet up on the
from the Conmissior.
tables,decide rshat to do regard- resigned
to start his presidentiai
less of Rockyrs mobstadvice.
canpai.gn, in 1978, Rockefeller
And Miles should knov.Dont stand
helped out with fund raisiug,
so close to him!
recognising the onconing :i!U: _
Carter had used pretty much
wing
swing and the advant_
the same technique when he was
running for Governor of Georgia" age that would give Bush.
Horyever the swing vas
He portrayed such a convlnciig
even more to the right tha"
racist,redneck stance that even
therstreng.then the dtA,ti..= the likes of George Wallace
l= -cus "Then I Time imagazine, under
Bush was runni_ng on"After
endorsed hio.But at the same
vi"nning the fowa State Caucss.
tle editorship of T.C.er,Hed1ey
tine he nas telling black leadllorovan,subtly promoted him into ers in Atlanta to bear
Bush failed to fol1ow Carteiis
nith him
footsteps due to an insurmount_
I household nane.Simultaneously, and theyrd find him a real cool
t:.g(as he nas known)Brzezinski'
able stumbling block _ Wiil:ar
governor once hq got in.And
Loes, owner of ,The l,{anchester
bcame Carterrs chief speech
what t s more they did and he was.
rElter.When elected Carter
Union
Leader' , Nev Hampshire ' s
Relatively speaking.As Governors
cuarded Zbig with ttre Asst "
biggest newspaper"Being a
of Georgia go.
rresidency of Nat.Security
staunch Reagan supporLar,Loes
Carterrs most important
eifairs.But then practically
consistently
denounced Bush
rejection
of trilateral
adris entire staff were trilateral
r
of rOne
vice
_as a'liberaltstooge
came
in
Apr1l
7B
r*hen
t
:clnissioners anyway: Mondale,
Worlders
.The
Trilateral
"
against the Conmissionts pro_
i!i.ce, Broyn, etc , etc.
Commission became a big issue
posals,he decided not to deIn 1.973 the Trilateral
and'
dashed Bush I s chanies of
ploy the Neutron Bonb for NATO
--:lmission had circulated a
obtaining
the Number One spot.
f orces, Th j_s decisi.on, and Carter
This
time,and
Itatement saying,'rhe T.C.is
for the iine
himself,recieved
a right slagBbeing,Rockefeller: had..to raake
INensneekt,by
freated for a 3 year period and
ing
in
Tiilat"ri7/
da wlth second best.But having
ft is expected to complete its
t
Die Zeit r Ed . Theo
said
fi ssion in 1976' . So wiro used who? B-berger
that it caflt tlave nade
Sonmer,and at the B-berg meet.
nuch difference Lo him Reagan
fccording to f,amous retired
CIA
in
Princetown,New
t
Jersey,that
getting the repub{ican nomina_
tfficial,Miles
Copeland, Carter
month tion
and.hence the presidenc.y.
liayed along Hith the Commission, saraeBut
r+hat really blew it
Just
reeing it as a rray of r+inning
as
it rcould'nt'nake-iuai'
when Carter refused to go
difference to him if Tina
arer the business communityl.And was
on
supporting
the Shah of fran
Turner got it.Or anybod_v else
rlen he accepred the democi.;i;during the Ir-anian Civil hrar.
for that matter but you roust
lcsination Carter condemned g5s
Like most places,trran ho1-ds
geL bored running a Lank a-I
, rho1y, self -perpetuating
host fo huge Rockefeller
your 11fe.
:-liances that have been formfinancial interests,Up at the
,: between noney and politics I
Chase, they rrere not pi:eased.
.:.i r+ithout actually nentioning
According to one particul_
::.e Comnission,went onto desar1 y worrying Tripartite study:
:::be them even more succinctly
'0ur peoples
a Hartime
'In ny view the Trile:-.era:-.ar he had previously described psychology to need
fighr
this(Energy)
Conaission repteseDts a
:-.ei-r ain's;
t
war against ourselves. (OoEe0o1 ) si<i lIed , coord i:ta:- e I
'A polit.ical and economic
Eringer goes onto surmise that
t-o seize cont.oi aad =:for.cos:-:te who have shaped decisions
this was the reason why.throuoh
soTidate
the
4
centres
ot
never
had
to
account
for
Kissinger ( Executive Conmittee"
=:.i
poner - poTitical.-o,,gt,,r
:-stakes,nor to suffer from
Conmissioner),the Shah was
-=-: .:: ::
inte)lt:-:-=r:. i ustice.when unemployment
brought to the Us,agairist CfA
::evai1s, they never stand in
advice;so winding up the iran_
--rtl"
i;r;1--:
--:e looking for a job.Hhen
ians and sparking off the
-=:rivation results from a con* hostage crisis at the Anerican
: -sed r+elfare system(I like that. Erabassy in Tehran.
_
_
WMLININ@
ff:#DffKAflD
I{OI{SPIRACY
'tt
;fieneral frhton
in A{ghanistan
)frtyinwnnie
frarterplot
t&futatonhig of
the prdetariat?
That'll do nicely!
uBs ia,ATCnE,f, .Slrf, q;p*ln.
,{s th,e Klem,lm le.ad'e,r:,h]p chang,es once again
signa;ls intercepted at our tben.ing p,o,srs througtr-
oul the pla.net revea,l the exlstence cif a lasr
'plasric detente' consp:ira.c-: involr inrg R.uesia's
ne-- 'first iami.Li', leading rn,e,rnbers oi the
Pofiifoeio arnd rresrcrn credil card ccr,mpan.ies.
lid.Lry axt
InE
t0
aatla@ri&ffi6ffi[
il&ffit{il
{Fx{rl-r
td.r .l{ ik| .ti Eilaf
i-rlry!Lr*!iE
*siHa,n ns ftr
ml, xir .i 0. m lifi
lrra{L:s x }rq{f
l*im,n
-*lroln
L,rar'{6 r lrir
egilinf
.I'i,AsTY RICH
i{ uH :ild i,liifrill0rr
t-{rlffilsraim
:ffiil1ytr6 n fur'ilr,
Idrs flilffi
ilrnrry
il(ryf{ 6dur' Brtrni{lv
lj@r,Td nr a*q tf
,BB6{ra[ ul!fi {r
Bffittalfr rlt€. :{ 1I[
hrfrqd*r{AiIr
ltn Se@ t JB un, .s
-rahr-wfltt T T
N{ryflfiI
ffi!m.
Qns
68
trftillq iH :6 ifil
nffi!!
!{nrrnff
'm'llcmmrmlm"
!{il!ffi:8l{.}t #itr{ il
,@r ,lru E fF aidnq*
lr$rt. !t- {lis fxfi i]lm
l6@a wttrfilE r :r& mr
M 1la !@nofl$E
l$inafi. rd iE ,81
ffium6 $,r! $ $l@ i!'
il rt&! :hd* !ffi wr{
:frQByM t6 :orrilr& lSlE
rbi{ tffie}il i$ h{
'{lwr hc Ffl. lrHqfi
is arqt r :d. tidr'l lti!
ST RJK.E.FfiEE
rl f
I t0 sn, 6trft
ffi
*6 ,l:
iS
ff *m. ,i..
ffi fr d wisd
trk+Fa am u{r !ta!
t{t6ilau!uifhre
trtr&g.:Ir6riir{
*iff ll.@wrffi t!.
h fs :e-ln[ E i? !t,
et tan,s r{@t,, n
:tr
XrE SySi,E,V TO ileS GC.?ilCraV . 5irE !:(iES 5.iA.*0ilOS
il{ alff !t ffi r $r1{rt
.io{tr ifit&.s. HiltilE}.
..iS
*tu
ilBrffiJ rf
{{s- d r$r-:,!r{ ri tt
I f ]xfi. ::itri 'ulosd r
nlm rrqrmnr ]f lir*flililsr s :l1r dltr ff ,?
rffiFffi [ kt E:r. im
frftffi
rni6r ll(ffi B
trb s[ tr ra{a rh }m
mrir ri f6 n }ltr {l&.
tK*t !i prm !r Jfr
ffiEm.ffifisf{r@
"i5lhrtr.*
ffilm0 il
lnt
i,ri$,.. r
ffifrmrr*srtti',
t!{ rhrtri llllrl ,.vc it
mwElrll*
lffirfl
flrqrEffi u,lnil.${
an $s ,iXrElE
$$ lffi
,rw0 rrtlnit
'tt
ffi
tHmn:rw@fitq
tln,Wr, il rlifrl ut
!&{r! il{ [ ]l!. Jlr r
ruffitst
M.
.sisil{etrud
mlne
illnif. 0 *rt r oilq Brn
rFl_
nmN relt'G
CITY PLOT
u
:u,i$nrffm{ilr Bri{!
ttffi $ m iuf! trs [d
'lrmrffil
trNml
E[Uftet f &{ llhlr. :t{
Yi{43 litr{hr ri*
trr
,raa ri dirr ,lI3
iwi l@ffi Mfl5 ri hr
!1!.{ rdffsriA,iiwam
mrmriq rr$ tr&4r.
i:** .rrr6f tlo tn{Err.
snq iiror xF& 6o{i dtG
a rcHd$ia{ n tlo ii.
t& a[':.rs nk ffi r
:Allli,0rhilll$Ms
i
F51r! e d-tu
3okl lnmrfl*- ::m 1
swaoffi
m i
EuE xilE }: rr mr 9r'o j
d tlol irff rrc ro I,r, ri
-fn{tr4 }tr-'!i| 16 n4amff |
4
]
:id !ild!.l t i'dl
sNi No (BBriE *'rd
r
:iMrM ff t10 !,ro,|tj-fY
nfux
NlCELY
i[ tta ffi.m
tI:iffi
mttryPflstr#
m f;Esfr :, -$fliatr y
{[ ?G.frlrhr
r{llH - h, &nrs
Ef5:un'rs!E ffi
il,]}wSrmrt tffi 1r !l
'fG fill:n Jre Msffi
fi fr tl ,.&$ :wio.
da*q nls.r. Lr.iI:,I"
:!.r,+ir: N,l.lflri,J r.
'IAf;l!:rffiiqnR
:" atn,
tr'ft
dulie
,i u[ is'ii* ileiEo
EE rf tus:mxcil
,sr;*t l,,tr nl I
etdt'1 ,s islr lM t!
tiffi $rt,*d
lB ffi':n
ltr jgrfr
f.i[ rfl
+*-u
lnrri{:lljlgl.l
nrtun ,ilt{h rd
fr,r'Itr '0' :lr$ te: $a,. 1i
frtr ffi a*r -e,$l t|il
ln tra wEidd r€d*{iiq
ff, gr&, f tI xtrrt *
!.rflffi:sr @ar:rw
,-.i[&tcffitE
l{t rl rqr :{ EG{tttc+
{t+lK;,;|'HlI*lffi
r :na ry"rrlrg:hr
.ItiffiffiliS{
:rfsrso ffi.
ts
$*.**t!. !imM6 ry.
-rE lfl ,s r Jrir6. s ${
g l:l&
"ttmmtiE il:m
,rt"rtr'*:;:*tt
, iiB$"' . ..
* ,
: i : : .: : i a : Ielr,,':i:,Sri,t,trhs,:,,,:::,:""
i,1,,+d,i5r,,.3,.1 ..: -. -. - '- . i,+iil;,ss**;i.,:.
-ifr"-iot".-.,i,
i::,,:,.,,:.r:r:'.Il.9}:
appcint= : :'.: z: : : of
:.=:lCna- - : :: - ::::,financigl
-,s'nt alwgy! -:a x:,;-- .- :
-: -rad it com::g. to '.-: =. =
=: :rre he was : ra:n.
Tha youra==- s:r. :: --:.-.
- ::ckefe11e: il,--=rii r==
: - - :ated Bt .{a: i'€: : :: I : :.:
- : -. lon .$chooi :: l:: :.::: : s
= St..,a-lf' iid"i1,.q,;;,es .:.:- .-:,s s :! :
::-3Rer
tn ti.,: ::::--:-.
.: --;::
-- _:.,._'_._^
H3:l":: :-.:r:, -- I I I:lirii
s-:::r.i-=.: :: :-.= Rockeiel-.::
I:.:=:es: -l: - -: l-.: Chase/F::st
j'i
.1.i:::.na:=:../UheE:,Ca_
-- :.na- l'-:,
-'-:.. ::.../Chemica_
l:a.:.^/Fi:-.: :,.:-::.=1 Bank o[ 1..
plt$g:,iii'li.:::.--:: : ::S,ll::r i:f1$li, lr,;.
Ptr,ui!.ti;=1. : Ji::, t, :,.: .:,rl;3rf,SriillTa,i:* I ::i:
:s-::ts :: :: .-::-:-$113
- ,,-E::+j+1.*tij;:L.j
hil.ll:,:.,.
r_4;tJr5
!::,-., t:::= .'-:-.= is r:::.:, :lre:
5: : : il-: : ..
Ili4:,:i: ::r= i:,:i:*:elis:,
.:: -:,h: =:r.:t:s "::,::..; :::.::t_
:::.:,jrfiifi s:::i: -i;:..:s:.:it.o
;,
rg.arg! ::e:: ?:l ,t: ?..:1,e:l
!.':: S -+}5I
: -;sr
--=-. ::.!- Llr: gS,..:.:
::
S-=:-::i:::
::e-c}1f-
-:i!a
.-= lhas= ,:.:
5fi{i:':;
::.= ::.-.::
]il'
: : L i:,dil:FL li,r-,tol, I:. S I i r t: .ii; :.. : : :. e s
- :.:: ed .i.: :- :.:.:=, l:.--=:::t::
I-:-nes:
::l
i'::.:'ri-,il-.
: :,r,,
.r.:.u,-.: : :
-.-:l€i?.i:
: l_-.a1, !::
j;.y
.
C=":; :.S B.r::C:r
E at t.-', : a ) r,. C ai
f ---,L.i._.-_
E trt
i,nii
tt.
---.
t/r.,!\
: {.; r. De tr, ir.:i { );;;ry7;; ri
T q{r. ES ri I \.lr.' j,T.\\ A,3E
Jc:: ;,issc C ni:,m;lt
J
\i lr_ :=ix::, L:s.i.ls,c
-:;.:i:: Dt:;:.
C".;;"*;;..
:
UE i3:: S FRi\:\_.\
{g,5r;iyi;;it
r
T r as.: :*i 1'.r,rr elrOrC,
J ; : ; *. : :.' 5='.'g:-; -.
D,rr t= R.t'cxrr:l-;--E*
\'-,,:;: .1 *1.,._;.. C..;;.n:.;:
.\- rl t
\{.rir:i:ii Sx.tr,p
iii,1 ry1e :, :.: A.\ D i g rr,:! C h;: rWAr.
TR.IL.STER..{L CO}i}{]55{O\ CCSFERE\CES
,t/;-i J1i':. K,,r-:..
,\{,;.y' 1tt-i CIiau,;
.';1:L)." -r
1rqt..
I
tJ::,_,?,r:.t
BCFIi
Ju.et ll-;> tr\'sihinE1.:n. D C.
1
.{:,'ji iv::, Toxil.-
.\l:,;;.-',; L-:j::
.\l:::t. ln-_;j ii:r' \\;;|11;1,-.a p
..
=_
r"r:::::=:
::.-.::.:s
."1
TI-{E TR]I..{TE R.,{]- CC},{\{] S5]O\
1.{-r .,,-y_r' -\'1.1 ;rti3; r )t.i
rG:
:: : : i,{$r._: : : : :-e : :-:- :e:.js l.ii:.E.,1
S:.::larli.: .:: :: li--r .--?rs.ii.'
,.1 :.,ri:e' .i:j ,tlt ,lIi . i.+rxi;it:..'.,
--.1.:i -Ii r:::s r.:.i res:';-ia::a:i
f
: :ial '
: ::[t_
-: Ga-
:
.
: -1:.,:: ers ::
l-
l$ii
:,:..i:r'.:: 11, : ::- j: :1 :+i$,.t,hjirjt:fi6i!
::::, r:!, tle rl::e+iil*aa;._:rj tli,:e
: - z: '- : : : :-: ::s: :"lli'ahmei :
-:--:=
- sl.f . r e"Li ad
: : -r. : - - IL:1t
: - ,-:'- ratc Ed
.
1,::ica.lria
.
:::.::
:-g),ZOt rtr t
:* :.i, !{: :::_
ll''est measured and fcund
, n anting oil Afghanistan
p1_0-': D:;.:'=,a-u;,c
Ll: r:e iDof-c::!f
-"1..;r.-?--.;.r.,,,..,
1 ue.rf .=e:t .-a! i ::::: --,: _=:
.: :-:e =-'iL=;;.-'itt--g-., :1=t :S:1.c: !.:rasi:: o: .d:t_a.:--_s;::'.ei..:.-- a:: :: :-...
ia:..:::..e..o c. i.*-:-;;,:-.: :-"-rr..: a::. :; l.-.
=.=--'.
.
s:.a\:: .:. iirC.-t ef rr_e ;*---l:
:.-_: ,::.:
:_!: ij !-:: : :1ei ir::l"cc-:..j-i,
I{.: S:.:-:a-:-- ;:; '":=.:'.-.:-_-.--r
- , ,f:-Ki-:F:-4.. _t:i
s::.::..ej :: ::=_- i:_:-:,::C;=:r:re4l-
Se=:r-a;r.9::::a. tr.e ::e !:..i.:.
-;'- i
-i
-:--ate:?LO,;'.lIi:.:.::'-' -"-'
;::,i;tci.: ires:lrUi,- -u.
-.r,.-r...,:',li
=,i--Il=, =: t
l\-be:
trt'e.:: !.e S Cf 3- c,,:i
:.: :. :
-t:€ w:as
i: re:red *i:,ffi
,u,: iaaja,:ct of r:i.a;e- s= =.'= ii-t it,ir.t.t F
!r-r'oe;. ir sa:C- " Iil,* p,.,rch r!6.1 ::. !*---"=-.._.'
,": Tr-:+: ha''e tee.-. a:.:i,r.. c :e! c:; :, --j:-::
-_r-,1. .
I r":(e
f .;si..e:. ei:: l: t.:r: c.:.,:..e. :t ::e.:.: :.t s..=_-. r:::+=_l= i=., ,I !(
, rerna:ke'd.. '" h,a j Afsi"a.:.::t.a.: r::e ia::t...
!
- I--: a
ibcer Le.red ::: s.r:a.rs5d,::*e:J C,alter dc.=:::
-::'--:s:
'.
." 'AsJr\ !o sta.:d o: its fe* er:.:.:- i::::e:
:,:::.: !::::. .- - - ,l a
,kr{:. ccc;!m.:;.
'::t;;,.;;" y:c:a. atC:qli, ::-i::,:. ii:: --: --..=':-t,:-:;
1*;.
lnbi.:z,ed c: i3;,-,= .,
ai"i:it( tie e:n.s:crs ci pyr=:qrr :a..::; i::-'::=--::'-::
,:i
do
atalns:
pre:,r"rer
f:om F::s:i:::'s ::_.::: :: :::!_:.::
la..lq
k:,:..:]'j'l
:r-e:.a: h.:: i,:: : : i.
*1,,:i:]' wc:is' r14..:i }i- Ia:.:: ..:.::-r--: r,_ De;.:::e
ti-e -;,ee; -rc ;e.; .ie b:;re !(:::.::: i.-:_::.._:-:::..-a- :eop.e o:' .4..i;:-e.--.:i.:a:.. tt: :.j-::.:: r:.::.:'--r--1.,1'-'....
I ,Ra.i:sh.€l re*,:*j ihst ?r'este:n i -.:+ *.<-- :-,:f .- , ..-- .
a.:c c'.::;e i!-5"19'E--":r-:, ii.
i.,.=.,
:.;:r: y:t::-:.: .; -, =.
:-*'aan ::::: e:::. 115: a r =: C:-:::. i ::..1:: i:_:..
' l.-.ese- 1:_1::c-. cr=-:t:es *'.:-: !{:i:.,:..=- l:: };: - :::_:
=':'::,
::c 51,:rl: ,i1S0:) l{ie:r.d ?;l-.:. ia_: --::i-. ::::.A-_:::..:::.
F,-is:ar ait-.: cl--e c=l':s
::::.j :.:....-,,.-=:., i,',.:r,,Ir"r F.anc::..'s ir-ersa5g r:l :':: Is:::. ?:: ::::..- ::i_-::
:c
re.::.,e
\'.,:-:.:. a:: -.: ---::: a i:: s.:_::.::
.:a.t.iEJ.-j'€
:l.i{:
D:C:.ffi:S
oj a{'1.-1tr:..-.i.
.-:::i
-!.:_:::
s,
nj
{
JL
r\
hb
AO
\J )
u
H
o
H
{i I{
trl
o trt
I,
Cb FI
a
H
}{
}{
Ei
"It is indeed intriguing when a prestigious collection
of internationally powerful men lock themselves away
for a weekend of hu.sh-hush talks on world affairs."
Thrs bock is the first comprehensive account of the
structures and rn{luence of two little-publicized
organizations, the Bilderberg Group and the Trilateral
Commission.
A report of special interest to students of world affairs.
ROBERT ERINGER was born in
Southern California in 1954. He has
E,
. : written for the Daily Mirror, Sunda.r,
: People, Neu's ti'the Wrrld and
=,
E
. have included infiltrating the Ku
; Klux Klan in America's deep South.
". I'
Eringer has been researching the
trJ
(5
Pen thouse. His investigative exploits
U.J
F
E,
Bilderberg Group and the Trilateral
trJ
m
O
E,
w
Fl FI -o
T UA$
dt
vw-
rrE06
u+4.
,TAT .
atn?
I
w
70
15 reff(
a$.
\\
.
EIIEU&OS
cr{0s8$0a6
wno
,m9
ffi#-,ry
w ffil
Fo.)ua€ IEASE'D
rw,*ffiw*,ffi|
"ml
nrl
ffil
DRUNK ON THE POPEI S BLOOD
VESTED INTERESTS BEHIND THE SCE}{ES
I
have b€en extradited to ltaly again to s€rve life for the
killing ol Ambrosoli. So unless he was planning to live
to 108, there uEs no show. He had to make a move,
He had deckJed to make that move whori ho roturned
tothe USApdmn.
What lead8 Sql to believe he was murclered?
Belore his deaih, Sindona was making plani for
associates io visit him, and had already set in chain
certain raquests. Such were not the actions of a man
about to top himselr. That's the lirst thing which tells
you abort his state of mind. He genuinely believed
througfDut tha time he was in ltaly that ttrcy were
goinf to 'do him'. His centrd thrust to avoid
extrSdition lrom three statcs was that, 'lf I go back
theywill kill me'. The very thing Sinolona satd in New
Yori( would happ€n has. happ€ned Sindona's
thinkirlg was to do a deal with the US authorities and
the ltalians. Hs had lots of information to do a deal
with.
What sortof infomation?
a
Am€rican tieatment. lt was harder, not because of the
Italian p€nal system, but because there were three or
four guards, lights, television cam€ras, even sealed
lood containers. He turned such security into a wind
up, even if it was tor his own protection, because the.
lasi tnrng ihe ltalian authorities wanteo was tor'
SindonatBdie on their soil, 'officially murdered'.
What wculd have been the ltalian government's
reaction. to Sindona's death?
There was an extraordiRary tug ol war going on
during Sindona's trial. One faetion of thg gov€rnment
wanted to kiil him and th€ other faction saw a huge
political embanassment
he was silenced by
suicide; The other side would srgue the
embanassment could be a lot bigger if he wasn't
silenced. The first argu.nent won, bec3use Sindona
would be able to itemise the Malia and P2 monies that
went to the Republican Party of America..for the 1980
and 19&4 eleclions, as w€ll as the massive amounts
ol .monEy thal weint to the Commuriist Party' the
Chnstan-Demacrats and Craxrs party in ltaly. For
if
instance. Umbetto Ortdani channell€d orer @
since the Second Wodd War
Sindona was murdered. I believe that because the
or*y way he was going to live as a lree man, lollowing
mevercict inMtantwo weeks ago, was if he colld do
a deal Therewas no other way He would have been
' gSbvtnetinptheAmencan sentenceoi25yearshad
trnlsned and, as his binhday approached, he would
72
million io Craxis' party. What they have in ltaly no,v is
rapproachment, a marriage between left and right. lt
was Aldo Moro's dream, and he was shot tor his
efforts..Bul what you have now is Gelli's creation. The
political coalition was crealed by Gelli and lhis is not
his first attempt.
What did Sindona kno^, that would have threate,ned
them?
Sindona knew the names of the top 500 illegal
exporters ol Lira during that 1970s decade of
r
resounded to the norse of crashing banks whlch wer'
Sindona owned or Sindona hnked. The total loss wa
never officially stated but you're talking in billions c
pounds, dollars, whatever. Stndona had the names c
the still active members of P2. ln 1981 there was th.
expose of the names of some 1000 members of P2,
'
To my certarn knowledge you could treble theli'
number internationally. Such exposure woulo.hava
brought about the rmmediate collapse o{ the preserl
Itahan government. P2 to my mind still has a functiol
within the ltalian governm€nt. A couple of weeks agcthe Minister oi the lntenor got to his feet in ltalyi
parliament and said: 'As long ds Gelli is lree th€1
,
,
Italian democracy is threatened', And that i:,,
Sindona's death tried to get through the prison gat6t I
there would be a traffic iam.
complained about it. He wasn't given the sotl
obvkrusly. lts not his style to be involved directly To
my knowledge he has not murdered anyone himself
Geneva, Zurich and Hamburg. The year 19&
nature of that information but we aIe talking at state
- and head of state level. Uke the CIA awaren€ss of th€
Mafia heroin trafric for example. I saw documentary
evidence going back to th€ late 1930's proving CIA
knowledge ot Mafia heroin trafiic. I assum€ that ev€ry
pkre of inlormation I had during my inv€stigations,
Geili had also. lt / could get a CIA file don't you thirk
Gelli could get his hands on it? Rember Gelli is the
mastor coll€ctor in the world ol informatkrn.
lactor; that :in those last days under the stringent
prison conditions he did not fear tor his life nearly as
much as he did when he tirst went to ltaly. He tound
the prison regime very harsh one, and he
Ithink it was murder. and I think it was commissioned
lI
absolutely true from a non-P2 man. That tor me is th:l
I think that he was fairly sanguine about the tim€
by Licio Gelli. Not carned out by him personally'
Mafia tnal ever - over 400 stand accused. Sindor :
could walk into the court room and blow the whistle o ,all ol th€m why? Because most of the Mafia mon€:il!
had been laundered through his banks The Frankl
National Bank Crash resulted in the loss ot $2 billiorl '
the brggest single bank crash tn American hlstory. Arl (
well aiFranklin, Srndona had banks crash in Rome, l
He had inlormarion which seriously compromised
Italian-Ame.ican relations. I do rpt know the exact
Why do ygu think Sindona did nol follow thro[4h his
1984 threat totsll all?
Was it murder; was rl suicide?
And rememb€r lhe two people who organised the rl
of the lira were Gelli and Sindona. Also remember yc ,
have rn Palermo Srcily, at the moment, the bigge: -
motive. lf all the people who stood to gain frorr
t1
Who would nrourn Sindona's death?
I
No one, precisely no one. lt there was any integrity
it
Italian politics, men like Andraiotti should moun
b€caus€ fre and Sindona were very intimate friends
Andreotti called Sindona 'the saviour of the lira' a
exactlythetime,iyhen lirawas being speculated on
only one ltalian - Siqclona. Sindona's funeral
att6nded by a lalge number of policemen, with thf
gndona lamily ancl the m€dia. And no one els€, othEf
than curbus
1
Archtrishop Mareinkus said in 1971 that Sindont
good
we
a
businessman
lriend
his,
as
ol
and
was a
wtsll ah6ad of his tirn€. When th6 Sindona crast
happened ror]hO aOout 1974 Marcinkus, in another
interview, said 'How could I have lost my intgrest i.
{
w{
Mildnese.
Sindona - | have nevor rnet him.'
Now I believe it's €fi obeconity that the Rornat'
Catholic Church has a gangster, a criminal and r
murderer running its bank. I have said these thingfi
publically and repoatedly. Nffi il I was wrong donl
yor think the Vatican vrould sue rn€? Or Marcinkur
irould? Uttimately, the mly delence a writer has is llr
truth. Marcinkus and I know that whqt I say abort hior
is true. Do yol kmw, I hav€ hqo nd a siogle threat of
t
vvrit since I wroto tho book, anywhere in th€ world. i
M(
and
named an awful lot of people in that
accdsed them ol some of th€ worst crirngs you coulc
accuae hu,Dan beings of. Liko th€ 85 people
murdered in the Bologf,a railway bombing. Also the
murder of Allesantrini,-u*rich I put directly at the doq
ol Calvi, Sindona and Gelli. I accused Marcinkus d
complicity in the unbelievably, successlul conspiracy
to murder Pope John Paul l. lt has been said by r1,y
critics that I acquse dead men well. Calvi had iust
died when rny accusations were published. But Gelli,
Sindona and Marcinkuswere still alive. The murder o1
Pop€ John Paul I was done by P2. There were some
very interesting parallels betwe€n the last days ol
S{ndona's life and that of Pope John Paul. The
similarities betwe€n thern was that Pope Luciani wal
going to do in a difier€nt way, what Sindona was
going to do - pull the rug on the financial corruption. ll
I was lo look closely for Sindona's murderer I would
possibly look towards Opus Dei. Opus Dei is in nany
respect3 similar to P2. Towards a political viewpoint
they are both extreme right wing organisations. They
have srrong links.
Right, but who could walk into a cell with so many
guards and 3 teiecameras watching 24 hours a day?
. currency controls. The currency controls were widely
A P2 member. And for example a member of P2 who
was a priest. And I don't mean by that an ordained
abused but the 500 names Sindona knew were the
500 rESt powerful people in ltaly. Alright, there had
been a general amnesty. But for people in high office
to be shbwn to be 60 unpatriotic is not good news.
priest, a priest is an invisible man. Can you imagtne a
priest being given a reotal search in an ltalian prison?
priest but someone dressed as a priost. A'priest in
Catholic ltaly is a free man. You don't challenge a
Bememb€r Sindona was a man who gave
. . rhbishop Martin $2.4 miilion to build an otd
home. He was Milanese in everything but
' ::cples'
' -.:'rre. He would have had friends who wefsOrieBlE:
"j-oflsrgnors,
what he had taken, and you only do that if you want to
tive. And if you don't want to live you dont tell them
archbishops, all the ranks up. Many in
'
'
the States h6. wo{.rld have ahorUy been eligible.&r
parole, ln his New York cell he could still conduct.his:
banking operatbns worth $200 inillion 6 yeAr. \thy:,
went to top ydrrsoln Kiiling tiindona beCarrle r
imp€rative to U es thoy rnonitorod the trial. Ancl when
the verdict came in, on that Ttrildey, it was Sindona's::,
death wanant. The or{y way tr was going to survive
was il the Americans gpt him out fast oil a plano;r
,
That'e my oiln view. l+e was 'suicid€d', murd€r
dressed up as suicirle. Roberto Calvi suflored exactly
:€lisve the same will happen following Sindona's
the same tate.
in ltaly was on the strict
So wtrat could be the difterent repercussions if it was.
suick o? Or murder?
dderstanding that he be return€d to the Statgs
i mmediatery t5 s€rve out his Americah sentence. And'
. Co a deal, get parole 6arly and so escape the'
,
I onishment m€ted out to him in th€ ltalian courts. .
&d the Mafia have ani motive to go after him?
;
iun not saying he coulcj destroy the Mafia. He qpuld
oo a lot more damage than Boscatti who is now gbing
;'ass in the USA. You can see already the shit hittingl
'-€ fan over Boscatti's revelations in Boston, Neiv
'ork, Palermo. everlwhere. Sindona's information
ras'first division. lt was precise and detailed, and
rent baek to the t9408. He could do a lot of harm.
>r'eiy by muroenng Sindona the culprits mrght very
.eil prompt the inlormatiqn to come out?
:emember the ltalian solution. lt works. And they
Iave just given an amazingly powertul
demonstration ok, so imagine an associate of
Sndonp reads rnstructions in a letter telling.him to
e€ase this intormation. What do€s he do with it? Sit
.rr ,t? The ,irst thing he'll do is read it. Then he'll get
^ic conflict.He might use it as blackmail and so koep
r€ funds coming in, You are dealing with men who
: ackmail because its second nature to them. TheIe's
: vandty of possibilities. ltwill take an incredibly brave
1an to divulge the information.
ivhy not
suicide?
,
Sindona was a survivot. He had survi;ed a great
ft,mber of dangerous situations. Any number of
wfrich would pul down most peopb and put them in
r€ir grave. He was the typ€ of man, had he been in
Aushewitz, who would have cleaned out the ovens
'aher than die. Suicide is inconsistent for a man who
nas function€d tor so long like this. ln 1980, atter his
American 25 year sentenc€, he attempted,lo kill
lrmself. H€ slashed his wrists, which was syfibolic
and not deep snough to be fatal. And he took the drug
Cigitalis which, like the ayanide; appeared in a
r']aximum security prison. They did not know sthat he
nad tafen, he was on th€ critical lisi and ho told them
-
lf it
was murder, officialty ostabtished by the
authorities, I doubt if another rnernb€r of the Matia'viill.,
be extraditod to stand trial in ltaly for many, many
yoars, And that's serious. lf th6 ltalian gov6mrn6fit:
has any ?wareness of the realities of what has
happ€ned, it will be in a state of crisis. lt's a very
important time with 400 Mafiosi standing trial in
Palenno at the moment. lt willtake a long tim€ befor€
th€ US Justice Department will release anoihei',
'importanf ltalian c;iminal in whom they hdve a
political interest. lt is in the ltalian government's
interost to have a verdict of
.
Nor what has that got to do with natural iustice;
suicide.
when a political element is added into an
.
investigation of a human being's death. His iamily
have a right to know. We also have a dght to know.:r
precisely hou/ that man di6d, especially when hq died:,.
in cuslody, especially a high prolil€ tlgure ,tiko-..,:
Wh€re could Sinfura's information be and with i'
whorn?
l
I can only make an educatod gu€ss. I think it would be
in Switzerland. He would not store it in ltaly. I dofilt r'
think Swiss banks will open up like they have on,ltie,::
Marcos atfair. lt will be a dirlicult task ror the na[ao,]t,
authorities to g6t th€ir hands on it. The credibility oI::,
the Swiss Benking fraternity is on th€ line. Ultimatety I
rrvot E say, n€w readers b€gin here and hang around
for a while, because_we havent heard the last ol
l.
it.
l.lo{* wlth Sindona dad and buried what corJld belhe rl l
repercussioris for the British Banking Cornro.nity?
Sho( term, none vyhatsoev€r, unl€ss these::,
docurnonts cofir€ to light and natura! justico were:to'
prevail. Then many city instihttions yrculd collapse.
Leading figuresof the banking communitywqrld taco
long tem prison sentences. But then I iln talking
about th€ perlect world, Luciani's uorlcl. I am talkind
aboqlLloyds, Hambros, |,lat. West and tho like.
@ trilecta Resgarch
::
Tcrrorlsm' et work. Howiver, rrr cvklcrrt
bnught to light by French sourcrs llfts th. IH
o.o r
-bizarre consplrecy lnvolvl4 the lnterru.
donel heroln trede, the Melle, e secrtt Masonic
erd the would-bc rssrslns of thc pope .
Hoarau was.the President of the Seychelles Naiional
Movement (SNM) and led the gueriilla ,Mouvemeni
P.our La Rdsistancc'(MPR), a;ght wing emigr€
alition formed to overthrow the iunent lovernment
frcr,
e
of the Indian Ocean micro state and its piesident Fr.
:ealh. You see, the only way the Americans would let
; Sndona face trial
Thc mec}ine gunning of exiled Seychells op
podtlon leeder Gersrd Hoarsu oo the Cep of
hk Meidr Vale home last Novemhr wrs ridelr
hrrted rs yet rnother exemple of ,lntcrmtiotrrl
and you drift away. That's Sindona playing'thtoso
' dangerous games. Look when Sindona'got baok lo
.ite Church would have seen him as a good guy for
p5siiion..
l:e Church because of his anti-Commuilst
'ltalian
solution'. By killing
.l " ou see this is what I call an
', Srdona, as Sindona had killed Georgio Ambrosoli,
,i'o rnovernents coutd be.made on investigations. lf
irrdona had tried th€ sam€ thing in New York, it
rqJldn_'t work. You can't knock ofl a few iudges in
:;nerica, hot so easily. But it works in ltaly. Even if the
,dges and investigators are extremely brave. And I
MASONIC MAFIA
LINKED TO MAIDA
VALEMURDER
ance Alberl RenC.
Since last February the SNM newsoaoer. the
Seychell* Freedom Hersld, published in'tondon
and smuggled in quantity to th; S€ychelles, has been
waglng a campaign against the influenct of the Mafia
in the archipelago-which has.been growing with
President Ren{\.blesing. Frorir its oin invEstiga.
hons, supporled by items in the lralian, Americin
and British press, the SNM has concentrated its ar.
lack mote and more on the man it considers to be rhe
Mafia's key figure in the Seychelles, Mario Rrcci.
Aged
Agld 55 and a resident'of the Seychelles for the
rhe
past dozen years, Mr Ricci runs a largl number ofen.
terprises in the country, including hoiels. tousing di.
velopments and a tea company. Since June l9g7 he
has been officially accrediied is Ambassador of rhe
Orde.r ol the Knights Hospitalers of Maila to the
Seychelles govemment. This American order is recognised by hardly any other country a1d has nothinc
to do with the charitable Rome-bised Order of thZ
!(.nights d Maln,but rhrough ir Mr Ricci enjoys dip
romatrc siatus
lomatic
status and pnuleges,
privile{es, includin!
includins immunitv.
, He is also very closeio Pres-ident Ren€,
ind sees hiir
often.
ln
its
lasl
issue,
dated
Septembcr,
the
Seychetks
_
Frecdom Hcraldpublished llnen from the Ministrv
of National Development in the Scvchelles caoitai.
Victoria,.and from Barclays Bank siowing thdt Mr
Ricci had transferred neaily trvo million S"erchcllq
rupces (about f271,000) r'o the ruline oaitv. thc
Seyche_lles People's Pbgpessive Front, Tn ietrirn f oi
thc indemnily of one of hh Seychelles comoania.
Oceangate, recaived at its nati6nalisation iri l9g+.
Oc€angate, registered in Panama, rcccived a cheoue
lni;;rlii
llortll Fm,qto0, when thc normai practlcr in ihc
Scychelles is forsuch indemnities to bi oaid in Treri
ury_Bonds which cannot be carhcd for niany years.
The article ended with an announcemciri that ,,h
a future issue the Herald in conjuction with an inter.
tutionolly lamous publication,' will etoosc on of thc
biggat financial scandals involvinp Rin( and Rici..
Was this threat perhaps at the rooi of the decrsion ro
eliminate Gerard Hoaiau?
Hoarau knew Mario Ricci well. He sooke fluenr
Italian'and became one ot tur nicrii ScriirienJi
when the latter arived in the Seycjrclles. Their re.
lationship developed over the years, and when
Gerard Hoarau joined rhe opposition to the RcnC re.
gme, Mario Ricci partly funded thc MpR, while re.
marnrng on exccllent tcrms with the praident.
At this point somc of thc widcr ramiffcstiou b+
camc spparcnt. The MPR is rttachcd to thc rhado*r
l*ti.
lrlnch-bascd_.orgrnisrtion,
Frcnch-bascd
orarnisrtion. Conflrtrcc
Conf&lncc lali.
tutbnalc des R/llittarpr en Pays Od:uolt (CApO\
run by exrremc right?Sin3 publirher Fienl ac vit'.
remarest lo ferment'armcd
Iemarest
terment 'a.rmed strusolc'
struggle' eoein<r
Egsinst Cno.
com.
munrst regmes aooss thc world. It has a strong input
from E. European emigrd groups--includiic ihe
cunent pretender to the throne oi Albania_ind is
cunent
in touch wrth the S. African-backed NRM in Mozam_
bique and the Nicaraguan Contras.
There has been spiculation
there
speculation of some CIRpO invol.
vement in the fsiled Seychelles coup attempt oi four
ycars ago.
During-rhe preparations
for the plot hatched rn
-Room 412 of rhe Grlton Hotel
in tbndon in 19E2,
Mario Ricci gave Gerard Hoarau a credir carO to enl
ablc him to pay expcnscs. Bul the room was bucpei
and in Novcmbcr i982, the Scychclles radio briid_
a
qut rerordings of thc ploiters' conversations.
Gcrard Hoarau war convin'ced that Mario Rie or.
qaniscd the planfinS of thc bugs and then oasscd on
the recordings to President Rin€, Even s{i. r.he r*o
\ men continued to s€e each other
rcgularl). th€rr iasr
meeting taking place in Switzrrlandi yeararo.
However. by now conunced that R;ccr * as :l arr
a double game. Hoarau must have rhe- ia-,ea'r_:
with his colleagr.res in the MpR ard terr
l0erpose the \{afiosr's dru15 a-{
::t-.:.:.1
rn the Serchelles.
-
t:a:i::
:_-:.:.
Gerarc Hoarau h< a-reir ar)E:
dais, ar^rnes: :irrm :ha: :: ::r
l---r r::-:-
it;q: g trfii.:r
::i x.,:-+ s : . -:J : :--r=g_4
i-=e-::
: v-?--: li i-:. E_,_ I a: i:._::-.
-o. .-::=: r-: :-t .: i- ]: ,: - i:-r+:,:"
are-i:: -..
A
: .t 1 ::f:
,: ::t :l v a,; l,:
---' : I tr-:n:i:t:
-J L- : -e t.:
:.: ..r _i J. - - -: :i' -:1'
,
. -::.-:
I,: 1-- I :rtt:!
- :.
: ::4
,:q
! = :: :t-::::
Lr --:
.,
r-. a: - .\:a
Y
Z
ftbri*,t1 .:a,,**..,-*
t:rfiiiii,$1
=
1r
:
t";;
f
a
t
t
l
j::,iji;Ir.::.
: ,r:.,
d
tr,t;..l'.,:.:'.,
'.:;.:t:_
at::
r'
n"{ .
:.r.
ti:
;
{
_11
'
_.1
-i.
'ij: :.:l
..:;
:,.- '.
r.lEil
'The point of o dub b aot who it bs
ottt. Thc dub is
in, but vho it
kqs
bsgd on two oncbnt Brilish
iteas-thc se37qotion ol dosscs'
and tt c scgregation ol sqa: and
thev qan runoin itsistcru on
keiping people out, long efter they
hovc stopped vonthg to @me in.'
Arthony Srngrol, 'ILc Autony
of Britdn'.
As uith nost cliche gurrounded
Byths nost of the ones about
FREEMASONRY are true.More or
1ess. At one leve1 therBrotherhood' iB just a pathetic grouP
of o1d codgers,vho probablY
unnittingly incorporate the
'odd' pagan ritual . (lJno does'
nt? I knon I do.)On the other
hand(no pun lntended.Honest.,)
uithout a.doubt Freenasonry
is used to [aniPulate buslneBs
deala to fe1lon-iasons,to 8et
brethren pronoted,off the hook
vith the lav and eo forth.
Freeuaeonry goes through the
EpectruD;fron the ostensib].Y
harnless rnechaoiens of the
o1d boyst netvork'to the
truthless crluinalityrof
.the
Hafia,to the basic fascisn of
a g1obal control.ayaten that
feeda on pouer and ineguallty.
Freenasonry ln itself Ls
sioply a aecretiYe environ-'
uent. To find out vhat goea
on in that environeent lrou
have to go back a bit.Uasons
have cultivated die-inforuatioir pre-dattng their orlgins
rlght'back there vlth the
druids, pre-chritlan Jerieh
nonks and even the Egyptlan
Isis-Oeirie death cult. And
they:do have eeni-facts and
half-truthB to back uil their
clains. -It ls a fbct that
various rellglous and rltualletlc aapect8 of it are taken
out of the DIBtB of pre-chrle.u
tlan hietory. And blta of
Roatcruclanieo,the Iabbala,
Hinduien,aone foggy notlona
of the occult and probablY
perfectly healthy pagatr
beliefe are adopted.. But tt
1s alnost :lnpoeslb1e to estab1lsh vhat coaea froo vhere or
a deflnltlve Eason phlloeophy:
because even nagons thenselvee
dont knov.
But uhether Lt ras SoloEants Tenple,Noahts Ark or :..
the Torer of Babel, they knev
what they vere after. The
naJority of uasone vorshlp
the sonevhat cooical sounding
'Great Architect of the Universet,belleving htn to be the
chrlstian God- or uhatever,so
long as they believe. Infact
the nasonic God,as revealed
to the eialted higher degrees,
has nothing to do rlth Chriet,
Buddha,Mohaamad or an1rtrecognlsed Godr.The eralted onee are
told that their god is one
'JAH-BUL-OIr - a conbinatlon
of ,Jahneh,Baal and- 0glris yhlch ls,to cut a long storY
short, duallst ; the u:rif lcation
of god and the devil'or 6ooething like that. Rather 1lke
the Moonles or the Procesg
Church:one of Charliers BAD
lnfluencee.
Freeoasonry I s spirituel
rootg aside, i.t I s temporal ones
are aooeuhat leas veird and
ironJ.cally theytre set Ln a
priBitive trade union set up
gothic age. These hlghly
skilled artisans noved frou'
church to caEhedral to Yhat
have'.ryou,and therefore had no
regular base like other trade
gul1ds. So to prevent the use
of unskllled,cheap loca1
labour they organlsed thelselves intorlodgeat and egtabllshed oethods of recognltion.
Tovards the end of the
16th .ceotur5r,aa Baroque archltecture'replaced Gothlc the
craft ualr oo the potht of ervac rhea the
tlnctlon.This
r{Bdustrlal arlatocratarucre
by the real thlng.
Jolned
rGentlenent rlntrlgued by the
erclualvlty and accrecy,began
sluoolng lt Ylth the hlp artlaaaa.Thla ghaee dldrnt' laat
long though,thetGcntstsoon
tlrcd of.the prolccr qualnt
dolnga and bcgan tettln8 uP
thelr ovnrGentleients lodgcct .
So FREEnasonry as ve knou lt
today uas born,elborring out
the initlal noble unionlaiag
intentiona and cornencing on
the path to eaoterlc. corruption and conspiracy.
. Sooeone llkened the situation to that of a peasantra
cottage ripe for redevelopuent
Lnto a lurury veekead hole for
the rlch. The vane of thc
Ilagrc pover(after the Clvll
llar),Cathollclso and Chrlstlan
totallty - due tb the rlse.of
sctence and the btrth of that
roat abhorrent beaat, the
oiddle class - uere all factoro ln the groYth of Free!aaonry.
tlhen Grand Lodge vas
founded ta 17l7,the.'Craftr
had aore to do rtth raDlpullttag flage and polttl.clang
than brLcke aad rortar. Iafact norlal trade unlon buet.ncge had ccaaed altogethcr
and Lodge rltual,oathi,lalatlon and .ocl.ablllty had bccoDe the order of tha day.An
told boy netrorkruaa fornlog,
rirrorlag anil rc-inforclEg
the clage ayatcaraad deatlned
aoon to rua thc vhole ahebaag.
At the cnd of the lSth
cctturrrrasonlc clltl.au ra,6
eigned,acaled and'dellvered
Dy a royal patronage tbat
rtl11 rclalaa today; thc
prcreDt day Qucea larGrand
Patronegatof the Brodherhood',
but coatrary to popular bcllcf
Charllc
?h11 arctnt !o
'keen. Aeand
thc royala uere courted,chultaneoucly aad rubtly
the Brotherhood de-chrlaBtatleed 1tse1f aad lntroduced
_
lfl llancf rt.. ..E Url rl?nDinDP of l,,o
Fr:ltrrqE ,, fnppr,alprdlUo frtdt
n*tttlp d tl,tr rtoot$ PW. A. lr b$
Ur. D.l d Yrbltttntt t G*rnl ,n At ,unt
q.h,,,ff|. nflrtr/ntTatfurc,,lr mq llkcE.
GLC lodge.
hoary
begloa
I
dlff
llr tfarfrhttofctxl:rcy wltlch ptrtnrl.
lrto Oe ffihu cltConr d tt rrlrll lltd
onc€
'0n tlre lirst ballot the result ms A[ee 58, Morrison 44,
trc
ffittWrdrrlt.tlpprlcpundttf,
fta
far. a
1s no
Green*boO S3. As lad be€n decided in adyarce, ttr botlom
carulittate Greenwood's srpppoders vobrl fu Atlee, giving
him a dclory ovo Monison ot 88 to 18.'
The L0dd0 &scribql tus by Hugh thlton in his book
Ttn fatdul Ye,rsws nol a ne{ caLsJs grflp, nor the vote a
oonlerence bellot. RaUEr efuo is rhscribing a lvlasonic
moding in Transpolt tlq$s Uat look place on
2
L@
iloveflrbor 1S5, rifi nnny lrDor Uh and unim olticiab
casting fre vobs. Four
lalg, O flfi 26,Nonrn0ef,
en
ClalmtAllE - theelededcandilhbof $r Frc Masmi-
rc elccbd Learhr ol tre ltbm PdU. (lXd & simihr voE
Efs pbcc h Glecl tn prc$l loadc ottte Partf)
tlm&yq simihr y&s ale
up and down UE
cumlry in he Lodges ol loel cutnclls, unions and
na[isnlissd indu$rles, matlq a hqhing modery ol any
disarciom abod one-personfle-vdq poslal ballots ard
et
oUu uilm dd l@l gsmflrnl detEles on dffitocrry.
todtr ilo. 2603, lor ollicers ad merben ol tp G1,0, ras
'consrnted' in 18$. Has lhdcfier inadreilenlly abolished
a Lortge or ms provisiut mde to hards ttre 6rofrrtrooO
h mdu haven. lT knms hal fic LoQc will shy in
cxi$nce ad loofis lorwd lo resuniq lold' porers now
hat Camly thll is likely lo becone a lmlel, posibly'omed
bI tlt Grard Master Charles Forte, 0r some finerican
@pdgngcr. Mem are arfuised to vlsit County tlallard
nob [t adrilecttrc ald &oralionS Ol 0r buiEing: it is a
$rimto tp lvlaons, aare sonrarry publh placesand tosr
tnlls in London and elsertrere.
ln ib rsdt h UE fuyd0ofinis$on on Shndards of
Conrld in hlth tih, frlmrl by tn R Hm Lord Salmon
boffir'197+76, trsocioiy 0l Ubour tuycn makes tris-
sarmt
'tldilcr$ip ol suct grups as tlm mu$ be subiect
rlischsureald ilfris slroulrl ollsnl [p rulesrnd pradices
ilortr rirdimd[rnature dfteemasons, remedy is
dssolrt L0d00s basd, upm rusfl$d merborship ol
tr
'-'
ln a lml fteftt ol public
is
ol0n Lodgesaeporised as
llarMffr ur
lih.'
involval in crtminal trmdin6; ohers
Blrm[Uun arul
Blrmil$sn
and l{er6tl0. l{andsmrlh
l{andsmfih Borot
Borojgh
todr 0'h; 2979) was 'onsecrdd' in 196. I
Itardling, hen Home Sacrery, ras ih most
rrf,r$.r. l0 his boofi lrp Arodbrhood, Stephert
qu6lYadsodh Torn GM.Bwry Pafhn: 'Ilrc
sarirumcs sl [B lYafihrqfi alhir ms tp
nhtimship betffisn he oppming learhrs, Sidrcy
arx, Ronald Astt. Sporle ms tlr tabour leadc/. The
cutinua t0 qJtlino Sporh's corruption, and
diminishiru md 0l tinrs. Asl| ms tr orner ola
merdanb and ms a rutE wi[r Sporle ol tp
Lorxhn tlotsing Consdtlum. Say m more conrade.
t Itn aot rure
hor opcr lvc lt vas undcr
Ien ) .8, hla very fact that
,
connunLatg uere tot!
vegcer of d.cuocracy
fadc ecvercly.Party
cctgo
out tbe uiadov
fon the
levclr.
e aagon. f,ovcvcr ae
bc aeccrtal.ncd there
nt J.odgc. lhcrc
30-60 frccraaone rt. Cccll Perklnddn
clav llloc r c.rl
.
y dlacredlted. Inlght tak
thla
sooe very f1l.rs ladeed
-vla
I
'1r91y t
baby
rerc
Gc11I?
thc cnd thc
t Just about
SOvCrO
to knock up !o!e coall
1n!tead.
c but;no c
l1
relf bai
toA
n
e
1t1tG, Joacph
cay clthcr vaj
l{ot Tetrlt aod Brlttan
strlngenq y leoy that they
arc. ( Incl entally all thl.s
Yas pathetfcally censored and
edl|el froh theI orlglnal art1c6-t did ,f or ZIG-ZAG 'last
y/c+*ot lrd hcll Paul Fllat.)
$fE-you h{ye to ask doca 1t
n\p that \ch dlfference 1f
th\y are orlre'nt?
Anyone
vho hac any ltrust 1n polttclans descrve all they get
atever,lfhitehall and
the flvl1 servl.ce La rhere
you ilally get rthe odd feet
arranLments a6d handshakes
uith hg.b e/erting pressurc betveen the 2nd and 3rd
knuckle.Goveruuente coue and
go but lJhitehall aluays renalna.Thatra rherF the real
poYer ls and thatis vhere
the Brot.herhood ia too.
In thc lact part of 'TllE
BROTIIEREOODT, dublouely cnt1t1€(rThe fGB Coanectlonr,
lt i1\etartlr
to get ! 1ittle
vel\d. Ycs, there's a theothat \he IGB have lnf7L-./
ted FrLaaaonrv as a lefdon. (Jif,'nt
r3::t'tli";i3l::,1t4.
16, \r'tit-
Fril*oikv?)deeN.of
teE
ret
ehlnErC s
blEhcn aFot t\
arte lessing l.t
lth aill due d
Eil*.lirc)
t
ht
'l$,LSqr m dffd ln llhfur$.
tg.a'
')*: T
11tt1C crul.ec fo1
and qlgLe naval c
ZQS*{og Suarez(thl
have auuaed sone C
sonevhere no end).GLl
Lond,6n afxq4P
f,nr.!P-.aDtuE everrDodt. "
logo of the P2 ,lodge
rras a blackfrlar,and another
oasonlc oath proalseg death
-The
to anyone
vho spllIs the
bebns fr...vherc the tlde regularly ebbs and flous tylce
lt 24 houre.tr The Thaues Ls
of ,c,su3s6 tlda1. Gelli hluself ras brlefly nabbed Ln
Svltzerland,nhen he ettenpted to ylthdray aoney froa
Calvlts Banco Aobroelano,but
escaped ftoin the tsost. aecure
svlss prlson and fron the
clutches of lDt€rpol thanke
to forged paBBportB eupplted
by the latc argentinLanJunta. Anonget other things
the bonbing of Bologna railray statlon ln 1980 ls accred_
lted to P2.
But for a Eore ratlo1ltil
g: study
ot.tffif
entlflFilatd
lllcl<hc
orned/
prodt+$
e) youtd
YOU'd
nru'SEJtrqqn
y ra!+ill,nls
rGA
1
.
1'8
It
rro
, ,a
da
rP2r.Ihcn the P2 dol.nge
hlt
thc fan,la a rethar too lnevltable Yat,cycryonc BUT the
It preferrlng the truc cathollc'
oafioso gsngatera to JPl,vho,lt
has to be said,vas ! blt of r
.
Sporlealso had tusirns md
T.&n Smih, h{low conspirrr
fright provides mo0rcr ir*rafi
$nifi :'...1 almys used to oiw
d.lrh.l:
Erflrlfr"
f.l
H lrfln 'lit ry-" E rln
ioumalbt
Masonic lBndslEhand lga: lhr. rrnl
l'
you're
fp SqrarE lh sa$'fs lgl l :f,,Q
[E motpy b Id SIt I t
didn't you
But ttmm is no
h bor b firt:*a
Masonic entryism into [p sitf En lt
A
elcted tabourandtrade unim S-b-it
dowr - are squiming d tn inrfi
activities ttnt
nw takirq pE. 6 E o:fr
g€ilirE
tE tiF.
club tendarcy
- Tle Uniled Grand Lodges d hgll. f,L
and lreland (nonh and sortr; *ry a F Ilr
called orantr
ue
Ag rrffi
or ttn TUC, although sdrmr$r ccrr:people. Not rccuding l0
d fll Ir trlIt
uniofl Constilutlons
sefrl. hr Ehs-,-l
block
*ro $ilding W ff
lnvestigations 0l local courrib a f t,tt
depth and in nuny cases $ll pEl r lr t
J
disinlomation, no matls hff H,
lrt t
prolessional the investigato{$ E d
I t
cmduct
in'r€stigdion
dl.
secrel ugar**. r tf"-t
fieenusonry
membustrip ol rErly Yr millin t
€
pemdes
Army, lhe
foftslir. :
G
ol London and Lloyds, ltE Ciuil S!8,
f
-,
architecls, and doctorc. lt is rih fr:
--l* -,
Council, lor exanple.
Will not ttn Labour Party, pElii q
rt I
Secretive' rcle ol Milibnl in LiEpd. rt:r
G
into Freerusonry wiftin its om rrt I l' Iut
o, rank hypocrisy must be hurl€d t t I Errt f
fqcountry,
socidies se h E-" frr
TEi{DEi{CY. &ffiq
IL r
rhe
lars exist lo punish councillos *h tffit
crippling surchale wiEn ti€y unilf,f * l Il
tipir ttlasonic cronies al $e eprrr
I [Il a
pensioners and Ubies rlho dic d ffi,
df
many despairing homelaS. lhrffih ffi I
you
sofncu0ore in Lods n E''-. ri-tr,:
MP is slading tnll nrlad,roing r I
yodded
(to
nipple
wi$ a hlb
fm Es r dl rr
o,ttlit thal eum Tirn Turno might Utdt f.f
E$p pompous briCood llailsltrn silingffir: woolsad, rnedihlitrg on &ftulot d H
: I
knoclrs ol Bld Rod - rtird clohit1 m bE rr
'rulors'; fiot to [Ention smn
pfrr q
t trE o0rr
oltran @ to.
Milihnl & fiw atunnol-visimql vi: d tr rl lr
soiles. But cunpredJo sflnc d UEir intEiE. rt
m€t a
cnt,
last
a
on
:;'.ft":l;"*[::#lE
i:il
lllche that thEt ,ieana th
and
e
glocc
Ii' l1
a
tlt the rore reaJ$n to irl
lhe y are. )Apparentl[y the ,
al
:1";,'::liltr# 13l l,;
fron
rlst-
s
1n
{ ;:f,
{
:
fh11
or
t the only Sood-.ftrlng.
Bo1 ghe"vt'lt"idt$fg oie
tolutl.on ra" 366E:rri:the
s-i an evea harder
gne,fe on par,vl$
p.lanalng :t
tiargitt,€
EE
and
t
t
tn-
ag{r;
t'l,oti
ole
ls-
yOri,ld,:;
e ar&x,ir
e hreEio-i;g
e rgfj
aea
;acAi:'3e tte
ve
bourerCr:':.t
d
1a
nd
c
t, tutqg,.liiil
or Iess cTandestlne aettoi'k-'for
lshoeat'o deferffi..
Tracy
osl t-
b,oa:ry,r.ie aot:,r:a
seI,f ;.D..,,p|f,., ls, I t
nd
rh
ar-
efiirfilli
ee-
f,
lsts
Po77tyls
te of
rd
s a17
reer ful
tle
P-
eir
.
pa$s
need
are
is
other
Lodgss?)
nO
eny
t
lT has
vote. Just
is
any
at
is a
the
legal
Camden
down
sscrel
HANDSHAKE
sa
I
oan
ch
at
t
11
ed C'iil effic
ble of def
'g
the tnffiiiri
already ti
qrv.
i:,IJfi
9.teltro
EEErffi'Fp b . 1'E'E7EilrE-ftelInEr-
ion/etc)and laaon spottlog 6Dd
luggln'g(eg.The hard ttDe that
tbe axccllenttll{EE DEBP Iff SHITI
7c-
As
rEad,
a
o,
up
@,fiffihb oen
*wortd.Yoy
otrybr&
b*vd tb lwaD/en of,,ta;u ii
al4leld tn t ongbaA q&o
l
carld succed in & erdition lu Bdrftt
;oc' Aarlr Oulcr,'Dhtrottt'.
trcuA Ptm6u
BRIGffiON IRA bomb blest vlctt+r
lncludod forsrer L.tdl Tory oundl
lor Stephcn Dly .nd his rl&,
Erancet.
xr. D.v. a a.L.o.rl llr! ur OI, fr.r
a1l tr .tE
ru tm nr luPtdebtl:
ilLo vlvlrl' uh'h h
rreir' tt .r rhcn
dthats EE 7'Oril-- rd
You'd hovebeen hord pressed aofio
bump lnto o moson during ony moior
yooru. Ftom
posl l.n
ten voorr.
;rol
lcw coro
cor ln lftc
ilrc Doil
lol+tedgh, thc lotolerd Widgery,
iormcr
Justlce; Vltcount
Wlrllolow, ox-Home Sccrotory;
Normon Skelhorn, iormer Dlrector ol
Public Prosecutlons; 3lr Dovld tcNee,
commlssloner of the lletropolhon
Police untll 1982; ond Slr lon Perclvo!,
sotlcifgr-generol from 1979 ri, 1983
81
And now, the masons
themselves, as
revealed in the Masonic
Yeartsook
llarley Strcercculist
Lno Porotn trsc ccvocBE
\
rrpcant-sursffi lo HM ttrc Qucn 1952-67;
prcsidenl BMA 196&'61
StrEo*rroC. Tufrruxcvo
Ergc.nl-surgsn io tlM thc Qccn
levCvrtlJ. BRowNoaE
rcnlormqsons
o{Lrndon I976'77
frL..d.
tlo Oroor'r rcprorortrllvol
[no B rrxrroro
lfloTErat{-gfox illE
to*d tutlcor ol l72orl
RttloxstrJoxil B^ts{88
RrHfr SlrCxRlsro"xeP Srroe
Rr Hox Str EowID EYtr:lcH ErD (nd)
Rr Hm SteGmcE W^r-r€R GE (nd )
lltgh €rrrt of Irrtlco
. €lucor;Dlvblor
llG Srr MEtvYN DA!iFl HC TD
Hox Su Prrrrx G!.aiAH (nd)
Oroer'r !ol:l
Dlv!rlor
Hon Str Meurre Dnexe m
Hox Str Jet Ltotrro
HorStr Brlrv Sxeer
'
iioxirr lonx sra*ee trcm *
[Iox Sn BASIL E. NIELDCBE e (fld)
Hor. Srr llrurvTeLBor (ndl
trrllyDlvklor
RT HoN StrJogts AtNdD' nslmNT
llor Str Jort Lrmv use
rcBistr.r o[ Ihe H igh Con o[ I ustice in
BankruPrcy
SrrDoucusC. H. Fi^NKac, Prcsid€ntof rhe
L:nds Tribunal
Hls HoNouR rums AxwYL-Devles Qc
His tloroeJurcsFrxrrv
Hrs HoxmnJum:Fnelxs
6
tlrs lloxou* JurctCtsr
Hts Hormr.lume Gmourr
Hrs Hormn .lume McLerrer
Hts Honotrr JumeRttmer
HlsHoilour rt)DCE SLor
Hrs Hoto* Jumt VerxsY to m
HrsHorueJurrce Vg
Hrs Hoxotn Jume Wrtev vroQc
rctirtd
Hrs Horur J^cx AiDcLAG
lirs Horur Nuxex B*oontcr Qc
Hrs Hmue FrerctsCrssasm
Hrs Homr ARCHtsruo Fttexo
Hrs Horsr EuwlroJores
HE HordR ALExAxmr KllvaQc
Hu llonor:r Arer Ktrc-HeutLmxoc
(rutobiogmphy And Norhini 8u Tk Trathl
Hrs Hoxour Gtusur L€slte
Hrs Horor Sre R.umru Lvms ec
Hrs Honour Stolev Noexts
Hls Hoxour EmAr Svm
tfis Hoxour Sn Wrrr.r,rvSrmroc
Hu Hoxour Jrxes STAxSFtELo
Hts Hor@ur ALAx TT^aGu
rtrldccir
tFri
LT{oL JoilN CH^NDos-Follcto olE
lffd-Lieutcnatrt
Arr.
fa NorrhamPonshirc I967-t4
BrrcCuurC. Frtrvertflet cecletD np
vk- lsd-Lieutcninr , Couily of CLidrnd
1977-t2; cheimn, ilmh of Englend
Tcrritrial end Amy Voluntecr icrcrrcs
ol tl. Lr, ,..1.1'Y
Sn DGJr.oxo HE^?, 1972-3
SrrEmtuxo N. !-rccrxs m, I 975-6
Slr JoHx Cll^rrer SrEsrrcs. I 979-tO
Itoloyrtlrdly
l{E}l Duxec Ks.rrr(rE(rYo u
(Cr.nd Mrslcr!
HRH Pr$rr Mlcll^aL tr f Efl ? Esl
!-r{or Sn RrcrriD Sucxr-EY rcvo rN
pdry.rc E Er.ry ro rhc Dtlc ud Dwhcs of
orcr, Mcropolit n Policc 1977-t2
U. Mrxrcse
Co-E. Rmrrc-xHtrtclrorP
t.ord.LbutcnantofGrcnt197,0-79;
Vr'iicoi, Nr CHrtlilBirn r:
:.'l
ctreimen of Chcprtow nc cosrsc l96l-t
Sn MrvrmoJdrmrtorrot
vicc t ord-LLurcmol of Gucnl 1 97 +79
Yls(oajrrnruJYmDL
tird-Lbulcnrtrl lrd Csloc loaulorum of
Norrhumbcrlrnd;ditccts.TyETccs
Tclcvirirn; BerclrYr B.n& {NE)
5n R&xr Vaxev lrEoLJP
l
. . ,
Lnd-Lburc..ttof Brctil$anrhic
:
:
tosem W - Drrcrx cuc cvo xrx
inspstor-gcreml of Colonial Police l!)66-67
l-r-Gex Srn Artxrxors Dg"uuvolo xaecs
rc gi*rrr, Throet, No6il'Eiq:,.
Ho6pi{al, [rndon ..:l
Hrs Hox Rmrrr K. Ersor
&prty govcmorof lsle of Man I 9?4-t0:'
Cmmitrtr ftr Enlien<! 195?-t0: Dlilton
Xcyrr Devekprcru Corpontio 1967-7i
MaDrrsrD. Youncr
krd-Lbulcnrnt
of Erctinghrmshirc 196,9-&{
LrHor Srn hx PrrcrvALEr.r
HoNMoNTAcuR.
MP(Con) SmthPort;
v. ELoI
Srr G€r^rD F. VAt cHAx Ftc? x?
councillot, City of Wcstmins(er 1953-62
DrCeorcsE. H. Enmrsv
Harlcy Strcc(.nresthctisa
::r:;
Joxx M. L. EvrscaerP
DHSS 1979-t2
Jrdiceture 195G70
olicitc-generel i9?9-t3
Lr{m N et G . Taotxg (rrc rD H?
HP(Con) for llftrd Soulh
f,cd.
tpro Fmrgax
!-orDBaJuD
(rncrcliaatbankm)'l::i:,
minislcr of strtc, Miai3lry of Agricdtsrc'
Firhcrics & Food
Vnc.oorv BreostcG
Lr{o- l,mo Eurxrllra oL rt
cbeirmrn. Mamic Huling Asscirrion
Lr4EN Str RosERT Dr€w KcBcBE
hon ohisicirn to HM thc Quar. 1959-69:
ppsidcnr tclinicel eicrionl. Royel Scicty ol
Mcdicinc l
t-70
Sirc CrnCurEoS. IrYlrEcBE tN
cx-nm !urgcm to HM ttx Qten: mcdicrl
ofncer DHSS I 9? l.7t
l96rt-?t
H. PrrlEcEr?Danstcr: Ltrd
Comil 1974-75;
visyCmmitlc
prcpcndrt,.gfJ!Pirit' s CalhC
Mrr Cxmies H; t(. Ftrxer uc
colrlp8nEs'
Cm
cr-Meyuof Chclu
Loeo Cilroor ccnc xcaooBE
mitri$crof slalc ftr FmiSa end
Cdrmooscrlth Affrim ld pcmiencnl.tlK
,Eprg!,entativr aa the UN. l'ri64:.nl '': ' ,':' l
:.
IiAtcsrri[blxr
lrtDCorNwALLrssE L
cheiman, Smellcr Fims Concil, CBl.
l97t-t I ; dircctor, Tovn & C-ountry Euilding
Smicty
lfiDD^rEsBurY
DIY]ET:
tAsfhn;.Mlllcl
eiinrErc l9?&
Ernr or DertY xc orIlrrchiirg l9S
cmsrablc of l.rrcrster Crstle: prcri<bnt, . -r .., ::Gbt ii:e:B.
1.
Merscyside Chambcr of Cmmrcc;
prcsidcat Rugby Foorbell l,crguc
ite*eetrpd
Eerr oc Ecltnmr rxo Wtrrol
Hcredilrry Shcri f t of Rcnfrcwshirc:
mrnaging dircctor. Gcrnrd & Netirmrl PL$
!,-oroKexroxcmDl
r
:
:
dircctu, Lloyds Benk:c{reirmsn, Netion t
?onnit Gallcry
.IXRoii:r[r
,i:i-tiiinr
.foliiihlc
Loeo M rrtcxutrc c8E (cilc
lnD N^THAt
TreMlreutssu No*TtArmoN DL
Loro R,rrrneloelro
Emlor Sxrxxor
&puty rpcekcr and ilcpitty cheirmn of
eommitles, Hour of l..cds, 1968-78: viccpcsidcnt, lnland Watcmys Asmialion
l,oao Sxeeneucct rrc DL
clrenccllor, Rcading Univcrsity: cheiman,
flosrc of l-dds slccl cmhlce on ricmc
rnd rcchrclogy: rmbassedor to
Unitcd Strtcs 1953-56: cheimn,
Hill Samwl Group. 196670
loro S*exsgr x
M*euess To*rsuexo
claimn, Angl ia Tclcviritx
VtscoumWxrruAw rac Dt
Lord PrcsldcnI of the Cmmil end Lerder of
tlc House of lards
LoaD wmLEY cBE
I
Fsidcnt. NFU l960-66
Txr M rreress tx Zg1--{xD rD m
1935-7rt;
.ct aFc:
dircclor,
AirMjoistty
mmber Royat Cmmissim m
EaviffirnEnt.l Pollulim
Mr-Crx Axorew P. w. M^clJ[^NcB UBE
rcsidcnt govcmr lnd kepcr of thc Jcwcl
Hae. Torcr of Lsrdon
Q"U DL
':i.l
nEv PrEbDr Huc[DEATN '.;i.,,
tlorq EowMo Aoerxe
Brlc ALEx^xtrr C. S. Jrcxsox cvocrt
.ADC to HM th€ Qtrc.n 1955-5t
Rcvcnuc l'965-6t;
HM
''!iii!, Srr
ri,.!,r,
Pnmr. Amcry Prttcsrnd Co (rolicilq:)
Dr Smrx R,. T. lleeix-dv ru
mmbcr, R.oyel Comp:ny of Archcs"
llll llodygurd for Scotlend
Gcrenl Synod of lhc
ll:1:'-.
daimn, Brown, shiffi& Co
[ l(er*q1lleirtii$ry1$ffi,ii:i.
VrrurrCou;r
Strt Hospiul fot
oftcial mlicitor ro rhc Supreme C<lilf'of
MP (Cm) Rading Eertl minirrer falcrlrh;
ex-3ovcmr ol Eermuda
Eeruor Etrrl exo KlrcAruNE DL
brigadicr. Royel Compery ofArchers, HM
Bodyguerd fu Scotlad; prErid€nt. Scottish
Amicrblc Lifc Aesunnc€ Socaay: strclime
cmissiffi ro thc CAI'rh of Scotlend
beiliff of GrrcrnsY 1973-t2
Dr BelxrroC. B. I-tgs
coosultrni rB.calhctifi ' UniYcEiry CollGSc
X-rn.f , Blmflor Ho.Patrt' Grtet Oraohd
Srrir Horpitrl ia Sict Childan' Nrtknd
Hean Hospitrl
Nrau MrcoetxoroteQc
SrR DAvtD McNEEQTM
kcn: dircctr, Victm lncrnrimit
llo Qroor'r lorrolold
Srr Jox H. [rvErtmEcBE
ro6i{t
Eerl Kmxexer orKHArrourarD
Errn E$r.rry rc HRH thc Prirc of Welcs.
Assirrbn
Goirnd Defcitac
I
fl;.
Clr:rh lrd3or
vicc-prcrident 6lmrrcEhirc Mrgitrrrcs
r ,.. irirtart
ContyDurham
-
Mr R.ElsrRAR Tlvorav L. Dewaursr xc,
hcedmastcr. Wvcliffc Collcge I94757:
l^nG:
l-rrd-Lieulctrant rnd Custo Ruulorum of
"kr
t 965 t4 : chrimn, FGtry Ccnmi*im
Hox Srr Trevtx R.r:vs
SrrxuvG. ll. Loosrev rc rr
Str LEfrArD BArForD
Chicf lnspcctor of Texcr 1964-7f ;
Cmmissiffi r of lnlead Rcvcnrrc 19il-71
Srr LmEL BrEft
chaplain to HM thc Qucn l95G7tt
Rrcxr R.tv Rrcee P. Wu-mx rcvo
clcrl of Ih€ clost 10 HM thc Quc.n I963-75:
lusticc.
bishop of Chichester l95E-75
Srr Carx Cole xcvoro
Certcr Principal King of Arms; Shcriffi.Cily.
mosonlc boyr: ln
SomEt 195G64
HE Srn Ari-ex M. lxwlsc.rrcQc
tovcmot-gcncral of Sl tJcir
Hq Eovco Lrrxlx BaruJEU
Ctencrhour 1973-El
thc lost25 yeors,
16 Lord Moyors of
London hovebeen
cr-govcmof Bcrmde; MP (Cm) N
M^.r€Er Srr troiatDATrHsox riE
chaimen, Dcplrtmnl Tndc & Induslry
committcc m t€rclechnology 1970-75: Yicccheimen, Southern Rclirxrl Courcil fG
Funhcr Educrtiqr
goicmt-geieol of Ncw Zcaland 1967-72;
1973-75 : chairman of govcmos.
Jobslorrho
Srr Eowrx H. C. LcATHET rcYG xcvo
hd tho Sbhcpr crd Lorlor ord
.G.outloif. .rd lcryor nrd clvll
rorvorlr old Conncrdor Clrcilor
lcrrborg tC Dl, tho llrrt Pone n tc
lwllr Lcch fcrrond
Surg t-r-Cm Sra S ffiEts MUB xcvo RNvl
surjon-ocuiisr to HM the Quecn 197'1-t0l
conultam ra*sdrtist.
St GorSc's Hospital (nd)
DrC^LE0 8. HENoERSoN
codsultrni csdioloSist, Frccmrn Hospitd,
Ncwcrstle
DrArrxrxo*G. Hmox
Rmm F. H6(€THoD€ TD DL
MP(Con) Suthport 1952-59; vicc
licutenrnt, Lrmsliirc I972-l7
SrrJ#N R. Hmeat uae
Surc nE^r-ADr. JoHx M. Homnocr oe
chicf primiprl mcdicrl officer,
DHSS r973-74
Mru€rx Srr Rlx HoHE rcrc KaE K mer
cx-Anmy Gencnl, Gibreltar, Ugandr;
lred of lcarl division CR.O 1954-61
LevCenolhxC. Huxr
crnon of Pctcrtorcugh Cethcdral
Cq-GemcrT. Kawr? cremmr
disrricl rctisarr, tlM High Con of Jusricc,
Pembroteshire md Crmrttf nshiE 194$-6?
Cot l,oeo LrNomroorr s
cdstabla of Rhuddlril adil.
Grrc Ltl
HmETTruYrrEci
jovmmntrturry I95t-73
Vsrv nev ALBEDG. C. Txurlc
*ritus &:n of Cldrccacr CrrLdnl
l,rv Ctron l,rorerDTYEraAx
&flery c&0 of Sr lrul'r Crlrdnl
l,rv Crror Yrlrrr S. lUrt.r.f,r
bocmry cuoo of Ctcrrcr Cr&cdnl
RwCrxor Auett tVeB
Lmry m of Wsr.lr.r Ciradnl
&rlorxlVggrt
dlccrorJdn Frirfer a Sor (Auanlir) Lrl
(pr trlidrcr of SyAry ll alaitg H ir&l
F.ro{xwrltlrrcrEm
cticf rail'trt
( 1962-U)) rtrd
hcrd of rdnirLruior ( I 9t0-t t ).
HccofComm
t,Ev Crancqr.a ro.{x H. Wtur^r6
mritus clunccllor of Brrqor Crrtedrd
Ihlf,. D. Wvuu
prrtklcil. Mcdicrl Dcfcir Uoiqr;
ffi
uhrnt lrcrlEtilt. Sr ftotM's Ho4ittl
(rtd); p<csi&nt, Royel Sci:ry
of Mcdicim (fid!
llmJqrYum-Butg
s md he ir of [lrC C'hrrt*m
DtrRBY DECREE
yone vho takes the trouble
anal,yse one aspect of this
lc
d'd
il
t2
ciety viJ.1 lnevi.tably find
nany different definitions
The Truth,that truth itself
cones Deanlnglese.The only
ertain truth is that everyone
s a different definition .of
at it
is.(Me.)
fven though the reign of terror
at svept the East End of
ndon and becaoe knor.rn as ?he
itechapeT .l.lurders is sti11
ot quite a hundred years ago,
ICK THE RIPPER has become as
uch .a part of brltish
folklore
s Guy FaukesrRobin Hood and
ing Arthur.And despite the
ideous acts that constitute
he legend,Jack the fipper has
econe ehrouded in at least ae
uch ronance and nystery as
aforenentioned . Not to
Eion Hanaer llouse London
.fn hls 'CASEBOOK ON JACK
HE RIPPER',Richard Lrhitrington
ao kidding)-Egan aers the
ene thua i' the gas 7it tHolnest period ataospher e,which,
iewed froa a coufortabte disianC€tinyests the entire affair
casts a ronantic aftergTow.l
:hat nay Eray Dore about Jacft
Dd the Victorian times that
spavned hln than all the invest:gat ions .
0f course therera no nystery
s to vhy in such a relatively
short apace of tine there have
!een nore artlcles, books, plays
rud films about Jack than any
other ourderer,barring Generals
end f,ings.If Charlie Manson had
disappeared off the face of the
earth after the Tate/LaBianca
rurders,he would ,have outdone
his vl-ctorian predecessor by now.
There are at lea8t aa Dany iheoriee about Manson already.But
ving said thar thc Manson/CfAl
tc conaplracy theofiea yere nothing nen.
Consplracy theory 1s wldely consldered a parr of 20th
century paranoia,and lndced as
late as L973 The hlhitechapel
lurders vere not thought of as
a conspiracy or cover up or any
Ehlng of the sort.The first recollection I have of any interest in Jack the Ripper,other
than as a victorian Manson,
creepy-crarrllng the nightnares
of imperialist hypocrisy, was
,THE
BARLO'I AND
INVESTIGA-
'IATT
TION' Ln 1973.Apparent1y
this
series of BBC 1(facyual-fiction)
plays rere pronpted by a nen
theory that eEerged around 1970.
JusE as it seened that there ras
nothing left to say on the subject,a sensational article had
appeared accusing Queen Victoriars
grandson, Prince Albert Victor, the
Duke of Clarence,of bej.ng lhe
Ripper.l{hether there was any truth
in it or not was lnnaterial.
Ioaginations went heynlre and
there was the.blggest upsurge in
Ripper-aania since that fateful
autumn of 1888,when it all happened .One rday or another .
The BBC had decided to put a
Features and Drana crew on the
case to get the final word'on
Jack the Ripper.They proceeded to
go to Nen Scotland Yard to obtain
access to the legendary closed
file on the Whitechapel Murders,
that wasrnt to be opened until
1992.Instead of this mythical
pandorats box they caoe auay with
a tip-off
from a senior-Yard nan
to contact one Joseph Sickert.He
was supposed to knov of a narriage
between Prince Albert Victor,the
Duke of Clarence and a conaoner.
All they could have surmised at
this point uas the murder-victims
had been vitnesses and the whole
affair ras, sone kind of macabre
cover up.0r this guy was just
another crank.He rras?nt and there
vas Dore to cone.Much more.
A contact was made and after
ouch coaxing and cajoling the
story began to unfold,as the old
man reluctantly
unburdened hinself'of it.This ls where author
Stephen (night corDes in. In the
end he's the man wide.ly recognised as gettj-ng the finaT sord
in his 'JACK THE RIPPER: THE
FINAL SOLUTIONT .Initially
Knlght approached Sickert on
behalf of the East London
Advertiser for a follow-up story
after his 'BarTow and llatt' TY
appearance.His description of
the o1d man on first sight was
trugged and aristocratic'.
Guess vhat the storyliners
Soin8 to be.
Joseph Sickert began by
describlng his nother as a
nervous YorIlanrvhotd spent her
childhood Ln workhouses and
gave the inpression that she
was burdened rrith sone dreadful
aecretl He continued that she
vould become very tense and
even rDore nervous rrhenever she
aaw a polj.ceman.When Joseph
had cone of age,his father,
Walter Sickert,the fanous
painter( I used
inpressionist
to 1lve in an estate naDed
after hin by the way)',took hin
aside to teI1 hiD the tragic
story of his notherrs 1ife. It
uas a story that could be the
Sreatest conspiracy theory of
them a11.And a Btory that vould
inplicate aome illustrlous
naaes indeed'not least the fanous
inpressionist
painter telling 1t.
It begins in the court of
Queen Victoria nhere the Royals
were havj.ng probleos with Prince
Eddy(Later to become Duke of
Clarence).He showed no inclination
tovard his royal duties and nas a
big disappointnent to his father,
Prince Edvard ( later Edward VII ) .
Hie doting oother,Princess A1Jx,
decided that he rould be better
sulted to artlstic
circles than
the acadenic sorld for nhich he
uas belng conditioned.So vhen
Eddy vas 20,A1lx went to Ualter
Sickert,nhon ehe kney fron the
royal court of Dennark,and asked
hin to take Eddy under his artiatic ving.And ao the prince begra
to frequent Clevetand St,yhich
runs para1e11 vith Tottenhaa Court
Rd and at the tine vas a thriviEg
bohenian community of artists,
vriters and revolutionarles.
f,night describes Cleveland St
as a 'colony of upper-c7ass
beatniks, that included Williar
Morris and the young Bernard
Shaw -
The prince rrould leave the
palace and switch carriages at
a pre-arranged spot,so trevel_
ling to Cleveland St incognito
ch9 ordinary carriage if on"
in.
John Net1ey,,a aan co@Ditted to
carving a secure pTace in the
service of the powerful.lihatever
tDe cost.' Eddy took to the art
vorld like a fish to water and
urged Sickert to introduce his
to his rlide spectrun of friends.
A spectrum that knev no barri.er
of class,intellect
or otherwise,
and lncluded Annie Ellzabeth
Crook,a shop asslsstant and occ_
asional model for Sickert.Eddy
fe11 for her alnost inmediateiy,
possibly because of her sinilai_
i.ty to his mother.Knight goes
into sone detail aboui thJ phora_
8raphic evidence of this and
paints a touching romantic pici_
ure of Eddy escaping his oroi_
present,oppressive destiny(fhe
throne),and finding freedoo,
happiness and all ihat rrith
Annie in' Clevedon St.
And so it went on, until
Annie became pregnant and garc
birth to a baby girl,Alice
!{a:raret,in April 1885. Shortly aiic:
Eddy and Annie went througL a
catholic wedding ceremonyl T:c
witnesses were IrlaLter Siikert ar{
Mary (e1-1y,an irish catholic
brought to Cleveland St to ac:.t
nanny to the child.Sickert
hj.rsclj
narried in 1885 and began to trerr:
back and forth to Diepfe, vhere ie
painted some of his finest voricI,lhen Eddy was unable to get aval
from the palace, Annie uid tU.
child vent as wel1,and a couplc
of times Mary Kel1y too.
Here this charming 1itr1e
period tale turns sour,as it ua!
bound to do.Itrwas inpossible f:r
Eddy's real id6ntity to reEaio
secret lndefinately, sooner or Later
the gosslp spread'from Cleveland S:
to the corrldors of hthltehall. Ar
first it ras tDet rith disbcli_f
and the ruoour nongera rerc lgnorcd
The fatal turning potnt caac ihe:
word inevitably reached Ehe verv
the pile.Vicroria
yeui aie.
.qop
Not 9f
because the affalr couiC lei:
been^ rhe final. nall. ig .1. ."i:a=
ror the nonarchy,
but becai.sE-- - -a menber of the royal b.ouschold had dared to io eoret!::g
rrlthout her inperial coslcr:Total obedieuce yas th. rsrr.
code.Any traEsgress:or fr=i ::
Eeant dire coEBeqaa!.:cr-i r
flt of pique Ehc ura:E:r
L,r:r
Salisbury, ther Prj.r€ 1..- r:cr_
couaodiog hit te aF; r-:j! ---tE
situat.aoE t rFEi:a:-:ra{a'- d
Selirlrry
ar
prorttiit-L
tr.L --- t*.u-&G
the roE.rc.Ll rrc-;r
ever :.f :iE rrd
Clf '-._ f
-.J.reIr.
o tAcx AND ilu wEM ow fo Klll, Fofr rHNGs lHEy couLDilT AfiEt, tAC( EU }Om ArO LOst rir q
m tR t sIrI!:
13
ard. Annie Crrck';ei:- rrnd,l,ed i.;,
t0 seFerate ca'bs ! irevei t-{: see
each other again.tiil man Sickert
recalled !:eing p;:esert in C-1,eve"land St that fatefui da",r but
poverless to assi-Ei:. h* lla_d to
s:.*nd b1 a::C w..rt":.-: ii ttr'e lovers
!*ere r:.illrt &par'i:. lii;r*ev-*r this
was'trt. to be the enC {'f ,ihe
effair by any mea;is.A.crrding rr
vhat }.lalter Slck*r'r tol.d hi.s snit
it uas only r-he beginning.
After the raiii ilddy was
simply deposi.ted'oack at th+
palaceronly under strict-e:' s-!.lpt:r:vi.sion than usual . The::e uas ns
for'
such gentile pacification
poor Annie Crcok.Her fate was to
be somevhat nore gruesome. She
was fi.rst confined at Guys' Hospital,where it appears sone form
-nooks.
of operation was performed on her.
Fron there she rlas moved from
lnfact it was a commonlY
workhouse to asylum until her
held belief that Victori-a
death 3? years Later,hopelessly
would be the last bri,tish
epilepti* and insane(aeither of
monarch.She uas certainlY the
irhich she showed any signs of
most unpopular.In Ireland she
before her incarceratsion at Guys)
vas knovn as ?h.q Fanine Queen..
But somehow Flary Ke11y had
There had been bonbing and
escaped fron Cleveland Si ulth
assassination attenpts, and
the child and hid i-n i:he East End.
bloody riots in Trafalgar
The child was ret'urned to SickerE,
Square,far more violent and
who put her in tlre :a:e cf sorh
intense than those to come 100
poc,r relatives.lnevitably
she :h9
years later.Not that the disease
ended up in the workhouse,but
and starvation that ravaged ttre
around aboui 1895 Sickert toc.!.
East End $as any $orse ttlan that
her to Dieppe,uhere she spent tire
endured by ehe poor in Previous
rest of her chiLdhocd"$eanucilc
reigns, but 1-argely because of
Mary Kel1y had sI:areC !rer Jsietr,.
another ex-Patriot-german(who
secret with a group of unfci-ruflpassed away shortlY before the
ates (typically
hyporrj. iical,
Ripper murders Dot. that far from
victorian term fos: Ilrfisticul"rsj
where they took pLace)the Tower
whon she had f a1len i:: r-{i iir , If
orders had,in sociali.sm,a feasthat r+as'as far as j-t got Seiisj-ble solution rrithin their grasP
bury and hls colieagues uou.i. ri
and a greaEer awareness that the
have had no need for a::y ftrtler
corruption and decadence of the
action"No neus was 6*od neHs,in
i.d1e rich uas t.o blaoe for their
t
Marathon l/an'phraseoicg', :,:
pligirE "
ne&nt
it t,as eaf,e.But. a 'htrackcrai-ll
Besi,des the brj.tish PeoPle
plan
of
aorla #es i:accieed end s+
had never rea11y taken to itrs
the eover-up proeeeded.
teutonic royal fanilY.The rePubSi.ckert didtnt think tl'rat
licans happily played on this
Saii.sb,.rry aetually ordered anyresentment(but whether E.heir
invslvenent in the Ripper Conspir- body t6 be nurdered,but just
as Viceorla had sealed the fate
acy went as far as the excellent
of Annie Creok,he set into m0Li!)n
SherTock HoTnes neets Jack the
the macabr:e series of events LhaE
Ripoer movie '!'IURDER bY DECPEE'
vould gn down j,n history as the
suggests we'1.1 ProbablY never
Jack the Ripper rnurders. The
know.)and it was further frreled
meddlesooe Whitechapel whores had
antics of Prince
trv the scandalcus
I
tci be silenced.The ma.n chosen for
Eiwar d(Victorj-a t s son and Eddy s
vas unPoPular,
this task,ts hush then up one way
dad ) . If Victoria
or anotherrr*as according to SickEdward r*as openlY dePised, aod
ert, Sir I'lil1ian Gu11, physician
ridiculed in public more than
and ioyal servant of Aictr:rra,It
once.To many EddY was the last
had already been his duty,mcre
hope the Royal FaniiY had of regaining the peoplers loYa1t.Y. If
than crice ,'to render the t:"r,:r- Iehis popularity $ent the same waY
sone harnTess' by certif,yinE uhen
as his fatherts divorce and scan- insane.l{e had dealt wit}: Annie
Crook in such a manlter . But E.0
da1-ridden career,that would be
Stephen f,night.,wha had been
ir.
patiently listening to all this
And here Eddy had Sone one
t ith soroe scepticisn,the
nexL
worse than his notorious father.
part of the Sickert story was
iie had narried and fathered a
even more beyond be11ef. Gu1l" r*as
child of a CathoLic.Anti-catholic
f eeli.ng rras nore l-ntense than any aLso a freemason.So vas Sal"robury,
the nurders
prevailing soclalist avareness or and at his instigation
sere comni.tted,noE on behalf of
slnmerlng rebel"lion.0ne way or
the . government or the monarchy, but
another there was no doubt thaE
of '?fie Secret
Sallsburyrs adninistration
was 1n by and onbehalf
Brotherhoad t ( che highest orders
a sticky aituation.With the
r:f Fr:eemasonry ) .
news of rhat Eddy had been up
To this day the theory goes
io itrs pleasing tc think of
individually
that real. power is'it
the visj.oes of ena::chy thaE
heLd by the monarch+". arislacrac.v,
nust have terrnented Saliqburyte
*i-:
a:med Jc:'ri5 . :-:ji:::a;: a:':e bu*-:t;s: rl.:l'
^1i^l1;.l g.;;e:ri:r:r:a. ir!iL ;;r 6 ;1;;;11
Then in ear;.; i8EE he nade
sceaet-{ acn€is:'11 -'L;1g +i leV flgr:rss
l.:s ::!9..3 raiC sas stated a,ra:i.
--:
a:t:
:,4
!:i:l
llir- i iii;
r':r
l-+'.s-::.- i:.L:.-.r-i-. 1-:i -i a
r:
c|tt.:'"e.:
t)';.T,
i!.::
:3'.1 C:'e:.:C: iic'.
3 :::ei:-
Knight pEts it he cou-1 d see't:t\a1-'
{.Cd1 had been .sowi ng ;tot oni Y
wiTd oats,but the seeds o.f
reval"ution.' Of course there was'
nt any revoluti0n,as the Proceed'ing events put inilo eoticn D)
Salisbury and indirectl-Y bY
Victo::ia, assured.
BasicallY the se&e PouerstruL'-i:ure remaine tod*'r " vith a
f,ell alterations t.o &c{:oaodaie
technology,mass-nedia e::d the
like.llence the Yictorien Period
is teught in our schools and
adherred'l:.e, by our politlcians
in a completely different.llght
t0 thaE bestowed on lt bY
fact.Ae 0rwe11
historical
depressingly out1lned, whoever holds the reigns of
power writes the history
:
r:l(rh* ;ryrit of)tire F:"eemascn Co:
iri.r*.li,.a.1,liiough itf s rlo great r!
icas as ilu:
eIa1":i-or: rhat
ss i-h* ;:- e're.1t Q'te.
i' f iri-el..ac "ii-etoria
Mason patroiiess. Bul l li i:he PuPl:
vent Ehe pupileteers noul-d ltave:
-..j.1.-l-e
ji:
r11 'r)!
'r.,::.d-
:c
lra-
:1,-:rtriatlr-::ir stche .:f 'r:'re stn[e.I:
:.r'."'.-lEft SL.xte '.-aS {; le
::egl.a*eri by sr:m* ki.ad o.f ;:egi'tu-:
-
1:, .1.: 1:.li
Ltrlf
i:
'Oirma'':!
t-htrught to be Ehe oniY scXr:';iotr
the;:e alttiai ll* nfi.,:tlom ir:r anY
*id tro,f.:,: flel,*i.;r.'1.: or llccref Brr:
*:r,ho;d "
:.
'trj:h-ie.'tl. :i*.-,.-.1 u",eti.'
a'.'t i:
?i8,"€ ij&IteJ i-" !a''l+,:.rJ.
-'vas dec.ided that Gtli1., o'*i':rg h:i s
poEi.ticii tc r,foe .Brotheri:ood atd
ever ready co sirow his Brefj-tud€
uith obsessi-ve lcyalty,was the
man for the job.Exactly how tieer'
1y and bizarrely he was comoitte
only becane evldent in hi.s exec,,:
tj,on of rhe job.Infaee executlcl
6ras the onl-y prectical(not
to
nention satisfyiilg)solution
he
could find tb the nroblen of
the meddling oor.oiMary l{i.cho1s,
Annie Chapman,Long tiz Stride
and Mary' Ke1"1y herself ).That
fateful'autumn of 1888 the grue-l
some deeds ueri c:mrnilted acccr:i
ing to time hon0ured masonic
ritual,vith
the assi.stance of I
Eddy's forner chauffeur, John
Netley,who was also deeply inv:i1ved and comnitted to ingrat-,
i rting himse.l"f to the powerf ul I
,rasons.
I
Mary Nichols,Annie Chapnan
.nd Long Liz Stride were entice:l I
-:rto Neiley's cab,where Gu11 I
,'c:1d be waitinglitis
explains
* ::ner .:rnver,iently the impossi:lI
.::r.i:t space rf time in which th:f
riiii;:ders,air.i Ehe e cmpl-icated gor:"
f iui*hlng t*:rci:r:s,-rrould have ta, :
i.n the street before iietection)
5ti1l- abiding by tim€ honour"ed
mason.i.c ccde. Sici<ert claimed
there uas e t.hird par*y who uas
:ione other Lha:r $:i.r"R+trert Arde:son,the assisLe:rr conn:issio:rcr :"
the i{etropq:ljtan Poiiee.An:l tha: i
tle i:error and panic t.ha r: *nept ::
l,on<ion,as i:lxe app,arently f,iendr;
sex-muf de rs 'dere perp€tratedrr,:as f
del-iLeratel"ri fueled tc confirm i
Masel* suprdma,;f iuhirh j-t Ci.ri
Cespjte rhe p:s:-riian r\Fjir-u..cf thei ) . BuL sr:meLh:ing went
urong and Ce::herine Etidor+es lt: tatrc6n1y trecame t-1.l* &th vic i:n
insleed of r-!'re .r:riginai i::rE-iil.farii .{r:i1y " 3* there s&s I _!t,i:.
in trs procrieCings , .-.._' : ,: -..
if tl-'e tord llayorts l!ii;r,,. iri:t:i
Kei-iy became the fir"lai, vic!:.i:Jack the Ripper di5l:}pear!:d :rr.::
nothingness.
I
Waltel Sicke;: conclr,ie-'
gscured
ir:
his onn silence r+es
to veiled threats ti: his trri: rth:rt- of the child u A,tice Ha;.i.:,-,
(and even a bribe fr*m Salis;:: :
Horsever there were sti11 Eore
bizarre tHists to cone.Fccordir..
to Sickert the tragically
oisg.-:
Netley di.drnt leave it there bL:
pursued an obsessive lone cBtr;a-;
against the chi1d,.i11ce Margaie:
After hie second atteBpt on i-re;
life i4 Di:ury Lane.he rras chass:
ly ii:sser=-.--r:-i ta l.ra. ?jrajuta-!. -:
:
,1
.
.
-r
::.
. C: .:. , -:, tr; .iir.:::
t
.
.
liipper
-'"
.:
ial-er
t l-a.'
.l--rie
:
:
:C :o hr.m bY .]:seph) it ail
ei terriblY ut,..ike7Y." r BuE
.s hooked'b'; i:,; peculiar o1d
:rd hls eve:: :rir'. Peculiar
r and undertc3'fi':lr e arduous
: of finding s--l,r: evidence to
up the storY. (n::. ght Proceedertr
- rsessivelY check and re-eheck
. r last detail of the Sickert
: r:7(Rippero 7og;t -i.* an obsessive
those who studY it
.r r-rect..0ften
::.r:rre almost as obsessed as thosi
-,: ?erpetrated it.)Some of Knigi:rs
::.,rr..: ni-th fact may be as tenuous
:.r;'J imaginati.ve as the larger thar:I
-. l.Ie legend the Ripper has become.
:Li xo eet him apart from the
:ir.:rage ripperoTogisr' Knight had
: .:: i. cnly the Sickert storY but
:,: trocured access for che first
:in!e to the closed files of New
:,::.. 11and Yard and the Home t-ll-iice.
Knighc Iollowed uP evei'Y last
;i:r::lp of available inf ormation
rl:r did away with all Previous
:r.qrrries iLeather APron - the mad
:rri: trutcher ' the mad russian doc'i:i::
:C-!-.:!e *s::at*ti gcrrii,ia."l:i.i
:1; --per :, Fr:! a a !ie i. iI " :.)r' " -r*:a 1 -1 :;: i
.1
-f:'
...!r:.
:iJ''1
:Sa$?Ha;
..
-
r;-iE
!asr.: de,so!-:.is
ar,,: lil l:.-.1 -::;r
i:,j; . ,i. i:,a*rl
r;i:t: ii::r"-::
i:: jtir,:lr-jr
iu li: :- a::*.i.:
at:; := ,1eilo1lli-::k*r:.
-:
d "y .nc ..-'. ok .: - -hli.,'l-ii=n
Gu11,
Yet,etea r:cu:Si r
:ie
k* l
- iia 5a:l , ;. : i. r:- linB
*l:til:li-.:-i;:
rr Sickert dir":;,:-':,
- r ,:lurderS,L
; i ii ia:l ll-n
l;::rt,: and
i.ti;j:,r:::r:- i:i;r .end
j:.:,: all :te c:.,:t
:. - :.,-ed.H"a
:'. a
:l:eiiay aS lrr,:i r-il+ sll: :ii-1.:..:-,:l' +f
iiis chari:c1:r:: :'l:i ei'.':,: I: 1':'id
(a:: d Robe r: iaraes Leer . :.:i.* j : .!ritual.:ist -:;1ayed by Donal<, l,ri : i:r1a:,i in the film "o ti!rrr..- the
*.:c Sr:.i: t,:' *:st Enl ::.::;',idence)
Rilpt;:
there is soEr!! i:i-,i+nce
ti-r ar.::i,3est
f-hat Guil i.l il I r,.: i"te 2 g:'r:.-; af ter
-,-ht Fiip;er nu:'ji:r:i,but
tlrr',i- i:ri toi)
uas certified
i,nsane and i.;i:.::tc€ri:ied a: i.l a;y1t:n::r:i1
,rrl .,::ath
i :r e i,:.* a !. s -i a i e i:, Al] : rafi :r-,:. -:,.,,,,: i den t
c,,:,:utre:ir Lri:en. Xnitc u v:^si . i at -..ie
8r'"i:l.e ]l "lui1 ::::r.l hiS wi:.. , ,
Esr-lr::: "Tj.* .oca--, vicar
wh,: r,.:.lmp*
ani"f,., hi.-:, ::r the grave,ci,r-iri:'j!:ii-ed
a'ar ,.i ,::.-:: iL;rr:: t'iail
:,!':
\1.rtrr i!:,
-r-l:'a.
:i,:
f-i'-
.,,.t'.1;:
vi::ua11v
c1r:",
eve:
.:ne il-: --:.: '-:.-,Cee:,rq
painf in:
thsci"::,
::i.:..1 : !-: l-i tbscure
.r : :.'dgrs
l:tilirr:,r::::i'r:
ca:
D: iii,:',. ii.;;'--;:': .r,:-: t,,::d-: aO reA
scne i r : j.at -,
;u::e are'n:
thero , i Cisccve: g is faall-:
ity ,: ;i t-he Eas! ErrJ,iris Pii:
:.r'i-.i.r.:: .i i,i )af tei: : stroke 5:ia
rit:r'i clues gaioi"e;the acs
imp.';-". : of coLii!s 'rlr Hr j::
on the u;-if . '
Flnaily Joseph Sickert gc:
over tiis anger at the revel-ai:
and,as an a.'terword to , The l:
Soiuiion',agl::ed
that. j.i: did s
that his fathe: rras ind.eed th:
Third Man "adding thar i{alrer
vould have
acrcri eqai.et h i.
Lr:r:ri. l
''
.
-.- / -:'-n
.:.'1'l:..1-
:'ej:;i:rne:r irhe Bern-
';er:til:l;.:1.. ;ociai
u:..li ji:.*: lheory ) ,e:-; cf t-ilem knock-
tallleestabllah
ic
,oro -" Lilc Ei'
,.
,i::ethet"
or noi .:i ,.::itrs
1i:1 :rl rl
funeral- i*-.k place of a cr,::::rlr
--!i".ir.:,: rhe sici<::'t siory in an
fu11 of stones and Sir q--:.r,'i,,:r
1ight.
r+as conf identially
addeci ,:, i ;.
11 ii-,5irr-!;r.:l- less ir,ligely
l.rter date?(A1so if the .::,-...;.:::tr:
:r;ru::,.rse Bligh't;t uas to a re?o1uiodies were exhuoed ever;';lr,
:1..r: ::nd ihe a:tua1 existence of
iraces of poison - Sieke;:-:;:
.:,1- ',ii€: characters is conf irmed lo
ex;:lanation as to cause ci ,i.+.:...
-h,: r,-ec,:-r:ds ancl *-ri-t-ings of the
in Cleveland
could be f ound in thei i L.,ir *
: j,m*. { l[.d,:....ts exrioits
i ! e'.r*r c:'ap up :n Aleister Cror+narrow. )
tiie !v":r.lc' s TragedyI. )Further
The existence of Johr, lre::-ti"
-*;''s
the aboojnebTe coachrlen, 4a2 "...n
:r--.re iiirighi es ia-bl-ished wiEhout
mclst dif f,icul"t to estabiicir..irrr-.
rciibt tiiet Lhere rr'as a l'latergale
st.rI* *+v*r::'up,euidence was suppres- the Ciscovery of 2 newspa;-.::.
reEorts,h.r Karen De Groc;:.rl i:s
sed trcm iiie v{ily beginnin6,even ir
::uri..Eilf the myEhical closec f il"es EllC research tearu,got hi,.: jit=r,.,:r-j - .'';..yed: ,-".' inl'.ude the identicy of ica111, established and ac,ii:,j - ,:.:
-:e : ipper, inf act reveal 1i.tt-1e mo::e rorr Height to the onc€ -.r.::-l
absul'd Sickert story.0ne .,::cr',",.,:
r:rai1 act.ivel"y encouraged red herrliis a_ttemDted suici.de in : lr
r irq.ii a.nd scapegoBts ; namely
Thames and the other his a;l::.::
!.::-.Lague Druitt u ttre sexual.!y
death in a cab accident.!.:i.;:hi.
-r,rsane doctor,vho mysteriousiy
speculated ; could he too L-r: e e:
.:Ld*d up in the Thames.
atteEpted to blackmai-1 th* iiia$1.,,-!:i'i
And the uasonic plot;the
Thls uould also corrform L;: tlr:
:cs: bizarre and unbelievable
.y'uwes ri tua-l .
as.?ect of it all , but also the
Over a peri-od of 2 year s
:: €ri io the compiex riddle
is
Stephen Knight had examirred eri:l'-,.
Laken ouc of the nether
= i:rr:st
.':-l
last grape steni and gutt€r pri:j.l
of para:..ia anci superrr.rrDour,and beyo;r.d reasona":1e :-l':i;t:
.r:,:ion.Although
I found Kni.ghts
confirmed Lhe mosE unlike:-ir E:i::i-:*r
-rit::ect:i-ons between the nirasonic
story of them all as the ll:n::
:::otrcols and 'Li:e Rlpper murders
sought af ter f inaT soTuticl , ,{ i
:anuDU.s to the ext]:emerhe proves
that remai-ned r+as the pro!.er 5ial
:ar= cr less i:eyond reasonable
Third Man.No evidence could i.re
:.-'L:li i{hat. the nu::ders were of a
found to connect the depur"l/ po1i,:e
:asoni-e nature.The final clinchcomnissioner, Anderson,direl.:iv io
.: uas Ehe now fanous writing an
the murders.He was most deiirlately
::.e uta77.
involved in Sir Charles ha:'rents
A piece of Catherine Edtiowesl
cover-up rbeing an extremisa-&asorr
:1cod soaked apron uas found in
and. guilty of gross negligerrce of
:ie lassage of 108-119 Wentworth
duty,taking a holiday at Lhe
I iellings, Above it on the wa11
height of the reign of ter:"or"But
;as:ha.].ked'THE JUWES ARE THE
he r,ras not directly involved " For
':'r-]] r'5lI 7ilLL NOT BE BLAMED FOR
his Third I{an Knight had ai.neadl;
rVOfff-IrVG' . This was I nt a nissreluctantly
spelE incitenent to anti-semitism,
come to the ccsclugi.on
that he could be none other than
Es Has initially
thought"but an
lncriminatlng reference to the
the story te1ler himself , w-al- ie l.
Sickert.
m-r,r.hical masoa-nurder during the
Ic had been bugging m+ all
construction of Soloman's Temple
the way through'The Finai So-lution'
{arcund phicht all nasonic ritual
rhat Sickert could not pcsslbly
is i:aseo ).It s importance was
have knol*n all the deiails, r_hat
ccnf,1s'ue{i lry Sir e harles Warrerr,
Knight had meticulously confir-mei
tiee Commlssiorrer of Ehe Fietropclltan Fali*e acd ancther high*
as f actualtr-y ace uraie, wit.ir
E:'
.
?
r.
: a],, r::t :,
:i
lt ai, :::r ,l : ;: --i r:t :
c . ;1 - .:. 9r :r: I '.: r, I ::.! f
," e".i :. l.:. .::r :
.:,a-:t : i
|....
i { + a- l. ti rt: 1 l il -:. ;i: ;l U.
::'*i-i.,"
;,.e:ll:e+::
t.-'
!t: it t;
".*,'
::. g
l
ia
11
:_"-
.:l'rr:::
:]
la:,r; ai.,tr'ia,-
l:]
i i-
e it
:-r'a iil;,.:11"-.::;'l:
':.::"-3
ii
:fie t:::Ei
,::: :.11e 1;1;'f.y=. ;r11,.:
rfDrj: I i:; :t;:;:--l
;,e
: '. -
: .:
-:.
1il;ri- i:er:lr. ;,+1
H3;.lr,t3::
,,
tlL*
ri: af:
s l:-i]:
t1::
,"ri::r:iiiicnai i-eeO:::-- :.:,:f est
ti::: press cf che it.;:: :hat. ta:
_
'.ireY:-
+. tO 4Il
a.i:--.-_:
number of eoually
inq
l:-te.'. J,-. -u
on women.li::::-g's c'....g. - -_:
just becune rcr: insj.dic.ts
The poverir a.tc 1e;ra:: -:
:.
causes ir re::_rs .'-__fELrLif e irtni '-.;E:-. - -:- rtre :
the 198'.'s,
I{ere,the ir:.:, -:;l:-::
i- :
She:1u-t
-:--' -=1
- - : :t
scr.s-E'-:a' j- :
:.s!::---:
P-l- umme r , :" ..
:
'You -^: .a=a:- aa- a :
-.
€lreater t ,.
luaani f -r'i ::: : - :f 7ov=, :':ie -:s. r-i lr -:
.
?:- I
I
a
a
ft
ConspiracY theorles are ever
popular as exPTanarions of our
bizarre nodern world and history.Once You concede that
'Power is Trutht,then r it fo71ovs thar the 'PoverfuT and
their friends Proscribe events
and not vice-versa.HanY events
have caused endTess sPecuTation
as to behind-the-scene aaniPuTators at work:THAT HATT BUZBY
PLANi CRASH/DISAPPEARANCE
OF
THE SEX BEATLES/THE BUTLINS-
ECCA BALLROOII.LADBROKES CON NECTION. . .But none of then
I,I
have had the attention and
fascination of 'the greatest
conspiracY theorY of then a77t
the nyscerY surr.ognding 'JACK
THE CRIMPER, .
I first becaae aware of
'Jack the CrinPer'' aPart fron
thinking of hia as t sone nansonite VidaT Sassoon crinPY-crawTing' through the sP1 it-ends
of Thatcher's Britain - when
I saw a BBC Progranfiet'CTosing
che (VanitY) Case on J.C.',
which turned out to be about
John Craven.(Dont think JaY
Sebring wouTd see the funnY
side oi that firsr bit.Ed.)But
I vas on the traiT.Then caae
the book uhich blew the 7id
off rhe aythr'JACK THE CRIMPER:
THE FINAL CONDITIONERT bY Robin
Day.The faaous BBC Presenter
and political Pundit had vritten a book that ttould be the
Tast vord on che CriaPer enigna.He bad gone to Barnet PoTice
sration ro see the fanous 'Secret CriDPer FiTe(and nanicure
set)'but ins tead had been tiPPed off about a wotdn vhotnight
know sooethingt.She turned out
to be the ex-SirTfriend of the
faaous post-Punk InPressionist,
Peter Puker.In the bar of a
derelictst Pub she reTuctantTY
unburdened hersel f of this
story to Sir Robin"
'incredibTe
Jack the CrinPer's'Fringe of Terrortbegan back in
ihe early 80ts during the reign of P-reoier Thatcher.Thot
ic is alaost forgatcen now
Thatcher vds a verY unPoPuTar
Prlae lliniscer and there tere
ifrffin
heTPcharitabTe organisation
even ru[ottrs that she oight
the
Tearn
ing young chiTdren
be Britain's Iast.
infacc
but
'THE
code
hignway
The Thatcher househoTd
is a PouerfuT convas having probleas too.EsPec- TU1TY CLUB'
high office
Tinking
spiracY
ia17y with their son,Mark.He
Forces,PoTice
Arned
with
the
cook 7itt7e interesr in his
and the Hairdressing Professfatherts buiTding contract
was 'the TuftY CTub'
ion.It
enbezzlenents and,in dePeratwhich procured a fashionabTY
ion.the Thatchers had asked
u'ho was rvi-lirsane fiairoresser
Peter Puker(I had an estate
tY af che
cuiPabil
the
Ti.ng,with
car naned after hia bY the waY)
to carrY out the atro'cities.llearing
to take Hark under his drunken poTice,
an obscene GarY
arn and guide hia towards arthe wouTd Ture
nask
f
ace
1
Br:she-1
istic pursuits.(Peter vas a
young punks jnto his waiting
world renowned Piss-artist)
Tino where barbarous kaircuts
So Mark and Peter began to
wouTd be used to si Tence then
frequent the boheaian ataosforever.The Lisla exPTains the
phere of the 100 Club in Oxshort sPaces of
auazingTY
ford St. llark was fascinated
tine between atracks, how rhere
and it,.was'nt Tong before he
had fa77en in Tove vith a Punk- couTd be a haTf-head nohikan
staggering fron the shadows
ette ca71ed NancY Grease. A7I
went for awhiTe but inevitabTY oinutes after e bleached set
the Cabinet found out and were of incongrous dreadTocks had
been con,uTeted tiown bY the
Maggie vas urrPoPhorrified.If
Harquee "
uTar then Mark was oPenTY
Robin DaY cauTd not
Taughed aE.A scandaT at this
hintiae wouTd have been disastrous. help linking Ferer Puker
self to Lhe crj:res,.fn his iaPThe Governnent acted swiftlYression of llatt:e fron the ExThe Tovers were bundTed onto
pToiced, l:e sfio'rc ed'I DYED
seperate buses never to see
THEIR HAIR:' - a crYPtic clue
each other again on week daYs.
his tCriaPer Period' .
froa
.vas
Sahthe
abandoned in
Hark
Shocked at first bY the cTain
ara Desert vhere he was found
Tater adnithis ex-girTf,riend
journaTists
narooned
by kindlY
tedtPeter had a strang,eiY
vith a swedish au-Pair and a
and
throbbing Peugeot.NancY Grease's Targe coTTection of coabs
wAS
HE
considering
dyes,
hair
yds
vas
she
nore Sruesome'
fate
put on a YOP scheae working in BALD. . .
But despite Sf ,R Robin's
the Virgin Hegastore.
Had that been the end of book I renain scePLicaT"Far a
the Criait it vouTd have been sad enough starC the REAL 'JackNorthern
in
was
caughc
per'
renot
had
identitY
Narkts
But
EngTand earlY Tast Year afxer
aained a secret.SeveraT Punks
Teaping out on Passers'bY end
had recognised hin and devised
to shanPtso their fiair'
trying
to
storY
pTot
the
seII
to
d
f or trhich he was catnii ted to a
'Private Eye' .TheY eere to be
siTenced and so began the series Tunatic asYTun , No' coPY-cat in
ever occured,even
of Tudicrous attacks that vere crinping'
the bigh risk Barnet area and
to go down in historY as che
,JACK THE CRIIIPER HAIRSTY,LES,.
NA MYSTERY surrounds the case
at a77.
The co-ordination for these
However if Yc>u r*ish to
attacks caae froa che uTtiaate
about f ,his jn trigunore
knov
froo
the
noc
societY,
secrei
then cone and
CONSPIRACY
ing
Cablnet nor the Hax Factor Laboracories but fron the nYster- see GOD TOLD ME TA D0 IT ac
their next FAB GIG.. "KIDSious sect thich is sti 77 in
control of our state t.odaY.
Ouctardly ic appears to bea
RUDI ANTON PRINGI.E
TH€
PA
€Rs
Samnt*c?W
#
Foundcd by Hassan i Sabbah, 1090 A.D. (5090 4.L.,4t50 A.M.)
Rcformcd by Adam Weishaupt, 1776 A.D. (5776 4.L.,5536 A.M.)
TIIE ATTCIE NT IIJIIIITINATED
SEENS OFBAVARIA
ltrvlt€YOIItoJoln
The World's Oldest and Most SuccessfuI Conspiracy
IS there an ESOTERIC
ALLEOORY concealed ln t'be
apparent,$r lnnocent le8end of
SnowWhlte and the Saneu
Eave you Ever SECREILY
WOIIDERED WIIY the C]8,81[I
ryB.AMID has FIVE sldee
(countlng tbe bottom)?
Dwar{s?
WEAf I8tbeTBIIE B€cret
WIIY do gcholarlJr
anttrropolo$sts TURI{ PALE
wlth temor at, tJre vtry
}IEMUON of ttre FOBBIDDES
name Y0Cl-gOl5IgIII?
SINISTERREAIJIYbTtrt8
behlnd the AI{CIEMI Aatao
Iagenrt of QIIEIZAII OATL?
WIIO I8 tbe UAN rn
WHAT NAAITYDID
HAPPENTOAUBNOSE
BIEBCE?
ZURICIIthatsomo
8WEAR rB
Don't Lel THEM
lmmonentize the
Eschoton
Lll
EASYTIrOSNAIiD?
If yoqr I.Q. lB over lEO, and5rotr have 19,136.00 (plr.rs haodllng),you nl$tbe ell$lble for a
triaf meroUerehtp ln tbe 4.188. Uyou tllnkyou quall$, put the money ln acls8rboxaod
brqf lt lnyorg UacfyarO One of our UndcgtouDdAgente w'lU coDt€ctyou eborty.
I DARE YOUI
IELL NO ONE: ACCIDEI{T8 HAVE A SIRANOE WAY OF IIAPPENINC TO PEOPLE
WIIO 'NATX 1S IIUCH ABOI'T TIIE BAVARIAN ITII'MINATII
Itoy we worn you ogoinst imitstionst
C)urs ls the originol ond genuine
"NOTHING IS TRI,'E. EVERYTHING IS
PERIVISSIBLE." -Hasan i Sabbah
Nir
;tc
Carbonrndum
Uegitimo
o{
\Y,
RR
V
TH€ ITTUMINATI PAP€RS
IS ALL OF HISTORY AVAST CONSPIMCY?
...ACOSMTCJOKE?
Robert Anton Wilson developed thg story of rhe llluminori, o
conspirocy os old os time itself, os o vehicle to omuse ond enlighten.
ln THE ILLUMINATI PAPERS, he speoks rhrough chorocfers from his
novels ond orher reolities ond presents his views on our future woy of
life:
HOW TO ELIMI NATE STUPI DITY
ILLUMJNATI INTEROFFICE MEi\ Os
SECR TS OF EVOLUTION
THE POSITION PAPERS OF HAGBARD CELINE
IHE HEAD REVOLL'IION
TEN GOOD REASONS TO GET OLIT OF BED IN THE MORNING
RobertAnton Wilson is co-oufhor (with Robert Sheo) of
the bestselling ILLUMINATUS! trilogy:
THE EYE OFTHE PYRAA{ID
.
THE GOLDEN APPLE
LEVIATHAN
ond outhor of:
COSMIC TRIGGER: FINAL SECRET OFTHE ILLUMINATI
AAASKS OFTHE ILLUMINATI
SCHRODINGER'S CAT l: THE UNIVERSE NEXT DOOR
SCH.RODINGER'S CAT ll: THE TRICK TOP HAT
SCHRODINGER'S CAT Ill: THE HOMING PIGEONS
..
R.A.UU. ls he begond good &evif ?
.,.AND THIS brings us to the
zagical theory of reaTity.
The nagician(I
use the
tord in the poetic tense)assLaes that SENSED REALITY -the
canorana of inpressions nonitcred by the senses and col7ated by the brain -is vastTy
different
frou so-ca77ed objective reaTity.About
this
Tatter I reaTity'we can onTy
forn specuTations or theories
which, if we are careful,wil
1
not contradict
either Togic
or the reports of the senses.
But,this Tack of contradiction is rare -sone confTicts
between..theory and Togic are
not discovered for centuries
( ie. Newton
even whe
by their society.The nagician
is a se-lf progranner.Using
invocat ion and evocation-whi ch
are in effect identical
with
seTf-conditioning
and autosugges tion -he / she orchestrates
sensed reality
Tike an artist.
ROBERT ANTON WiTson,artist
and
nagician,walks
across the CheTsea Town Ha77 stage and pours
whis
niddTe of
ny inforn7ng
ECORDS
ve reTease.
n.tre7 nue
contra
th at
c
brog
1y
rh
tr
t
ot
eat
;"e
ch
'ob
even
ing t
SENSED
person se
been taught
as they have been
has
pr.o gr anned
) explode
against each other.The consequent insight is projected
through the' sensed' and the
tobjectivet
-WiTson evokes a
cTash of these titans.The Eas-
ter Bunny to the Fa77 of Governnent via a swig.,of whisky.
get blurred.WiTson
two books i.n the
RTH WILL SHAKE'
far theyt ve
veTy in
're
chuck
oveTs
WILSON'S MOST concert
e
on both the dognatisn
ity'and
the reaTity
atisEs have aTways
wi77
rever
Titerature.He
(with
fanous for co-writi
ert Shea)the 800 pa
epi c
,
ILLUMINATUS, . Tcs s
nothing less than t
of the hunan race an
isn of contenporary
is no exaggeration to
the forenost work of
fiction
to date.
Veering away fron t
uned onniscience that wri
have enpToyed in the past,
1764
7e wor
une
RN ED
is
ROBERT ANTON
lliTson i
aage
for precis
'n e
for tongue i
is,of course,be
an undercurrent of
i affe
p
anbiguity.
,Also,we,
t:
F
r
re constantly
going
tbrough cuTturaT changes which are t'
ks that turn the worTd I
n,who wouTd' ve
nt aTnost
7d'nt fart
hat's
Ttine
t with
7e.
d.
psy
.He
.He is
th ink-
it that
Nicotine stained finge
at of the
pass another cig up to a nout
that seens to be set in a,
ack into it
-scordians evet yperaanent grin.'ft's
ca71ed
TNATURE OF GOD'
wher.e.Everybody who cones here
.Actua71y it's
the third voTune of a prospecttonight is gonna be part of it
ive four voTune ser that's
by the tine I'n finished.'
gonna turn into a bigger epic
Oh yes? I doubt it.
thant ILLUMINATUS' .'This proud
'We17 , actua77y, the real
statenent is exhaied through 6
Discordians run the conputer
pTune of MarTboro smoke.
indusEry in CaTifornia.They're
in restera Persia. Accordiag to aa
Shia
fanily
1\relye!
a
Eassan-i Sabbah care fron
snaili storlr, he ras ealucateal at the Iiniversit5r of Nishapur rith the astronotrer-poet C
taJryan anil the gTeat Su::ai statestran Nizan al-!,lu1k. Hassan hinself tel1s ue that he
earchecl euthusiastically, as a youth, for the secrets of science ana lelig:ion. Be rrit
f his conversioa to Igaailisn after a periotl of spiritual doubt: 'In the nitlst of this
evere anal clangerous illaess occured. Gotl ilesi.recl that ny flesb anil bones becone sonetb
ifferent - rcod chaagptl his fl.esh to better tball bis flesh aral hia blooal to better tha
ig blooclt applieil to re.'Purgerl anal spiritually rebom' EassaD xent to Cairo ia 1078
sk the eigtl Fatinitl caliph for perrission to spread the fsnaill gospol in Persia ( the
n tbe hanils of the Seljut Turks). Ibe calipb agreetl, on conCitj.on that Hassan roufil
upport the clains of tbe caliphrs elalest son, Nizar, to be the ninth Fatnid.. Tlrus the
ect of the lfizaris, or Assassins, Yas botn.
Short bronze dagger dati^ng fron the tine of tbe Assassins.
Found et .elatrut.
I
up
becomes a conpendiun of nadness
7y writing a new book.
book on hisl work in pro
Tist
qWe
e
eversurche
book's curious ranbTing stru
cu77ed fron everything that can
be nilked for fun and shocks drugs I sex, nagic and secret societ'
ies.ft's
a77 written into a nind
withering riot and packed with
enough paranoia to. keep you
gTancing furtiveTy
over your
shouTder for a long tiae.
In I ILLUMINATUST WiTs
sTaas it out on a phiTos
battTeground that draws
craf t,Tinothy
Leary, Ha
Sabb ah , Kese y , Ginsber g
Eliphas Levi,Janes J
and other apostTes i
confTict between ort
unorthodoxy, the sta
individuaT,estabTis
iconocTasts.
The worTd is ru
ITTuninati? The only
in a bunch of Discor
ar
i'
,fr
:
::=d in Siiicon Gulch,between
. Francisco and Santa Cruz "
::'s where,outside of
: ::ything's
happen
:::)uter. wor7d.It,_
: 3A yea.r, olds X#
i: nackers and
o --Zionaires "*
'MeanwhiTe, in EngTand, there.
have been cont inuous exposes o-f
onic controT of ScotTand yard
the anerican secret serr/,
un for 50 years b.v J.
er who was a 3ird
ree na
.Why is so nuci of
oiice force rurt
llow did they'
over the Vaticar.t
is so paranoid
::.^.gTomorat
=1t agerlc
--_7COn
N
.'.se pe
r.-rcesse
re'nt
y'taki
the r
nnents?
7e hav
I ne
: er the
nspiracy theorpeople's eyes
7 conspiracies,
-r,r:::i.r.
certainTy not
books"My books
eopTe t.hink of
Ver nn@lW&rAS
he najor c.anspirnet onspiracies and
-d farts
.zv is up.
:
,:ers fo f€
ey keep sp
'.at conputer
:, no one wi77
ci ce qGha
:,tua11y the cooi
er fro"g
J51i:i;,1
;,illl.:i ri
;i
goliffi[enr
Maggie Tha tcher rs
t:o Nunber I0 "
the worTd reaTiy run by
sonic conspiracy? Is ou7 6e1.,,
ope a bunch of conputer operatL))
out in SiTicon GuTcb?
Letts be reaTist jc abrsul; 7p,;rwitt'to
What'wou7d their
-:ke?
dLike science fiction.That,
s
:11 they read,science fiction
and
:atuputer nanuaTs.,
WiTson' s conversation. 7ik
::s -1 i terature, is an
tevere fiction
and
-eaTity.You can
:.erview of a
::ies, as intl
1en try and
: te recen t
::Y reveTa
''ve 'I th
av ing. got
ROBE RT
t ing
h
ANTON WiTson i,s currerJf,I_r,
a new boak.(Bloody tj"efid_'
secoad on ltis
progress'-list.
r Mar Lboro is 7it ,
be published by
dson and at the ,?a&-.
t ters . Ed )The
1ed
Icause
the
ed: i:
Sestion,which
been
,I
ut fish faTiirg
ogs falJing or-;c
running where
:.t on th
-: was a
-cdge th
:te Vati
:', er the
nd Tike rubbisi:
,the book is
epts and teflets
is is an exact
7s with the coli.ation of data thai::
ogic of norna.l
p r o ach. ( SEE' F0RTEAI,{
,.,:,bseque
'.eroan no
'a17op th
-cpe.Dr
\
I roun
ng that the
: v'er the i ta7
:s we77.The hed
.ecret poTice di
:nditenent for cons
'.ow the second in comn
:nder arrest for conspiracy aif
:urder. (CHECK OUT FREEMASONS
SECTION AND DAVID YALLOP INTER.'IEW FOR P2 IN DETAIL)
e book is a rur:nilrp
Ya.gainst dogrnatism, it al_q:;
ith the paradctx of quarti.t;:t
sl cs and non-Aristotof,ian
i<tg
ics.'
:
I tt s easy co see WiLson as
ideaTistic
andtunreafistic,"
.{r
;. ;.
cones as a shcck that,New Scren:
;ffi;;-*
tle :oll:pse- or.a. his'h i"''"i-i""i-r,i]-"fri;'";a'ii"of:;iii:-": jl:j":I":^:'5:3 lI
,:.*r::g-:-"I3^:l,u::
tt:
vords-,oir Lord bas"pr"rr""a-ii.t; #i,"ffir"i_?li
-3
..n Bassarx randerecr il_r"go and picked as a gtrategrc cerrter
:tartse
of
tho
for*a>
^6i,-^t
L--
rL-
":v
-^rr
tr: --:--*-'--^\
ref,EeoE
aliJu
ii""r""t"""i ;;ii#i
"3ag1es Teachingi or 'rEagles Nesl"), percheal hig! up i"-in.-"o"tlera
.--fr--]
cincrnr
\
Eountalns.
/*
/ oE\,,
lF.
"^ *S4=*
n
Probable layout of .A_Laraut Cast1e.
Thougb largely destroyed., it stiU
bas a rinc, anit the cister:trs used
for storing rainwater.
-*,.i
*a t
-
InnortaTitY? SPace nigration?
ist' thought that his'SCHRODINGER'S
llore high hoPes fron the sixties
CAT'triTogy was written bY a nucnucTear poet nag- dashed?
!'
Tear physicist.A
his worTd
ician orchestrating
'we71 no, there's nore funding
for longevitY research now than
around an equation? WiTson Taughs
there ever was.And on a generaT
at the thought.
nIJn,basicaTTY I wrote an
7eve7 there are Dore PeoPTe taki
vitatins and herbs that are a77e
saga exPlaining how
entertaining
be Tongevity agents.
ed totTherets
Schrodinger's cat - as oPPosed to
also the arrivaT of
PavTov's dog - is dead and aTive
AIDS which attacks the innunoTog-,
at the sane titue,which can be
fact is icaT systen.All
the research to
proved uathenaticalTy.This
cure AIDS is research for Tongevbased on a fundanentaT equation
we find how to keeP the
ity.If
used in quantun P\YSics a17 the
t ine .Ha7f of a17 20th century 'tech- innunoTogicaT systen fron breaking down wet77 a77 live nuch
noTogy is based on that forauTa.
Tonger,auch Tonger.'
On the bad side You've got the
For tbose who want to Tive
aton boab,but there's aTso teTelonger WiTson reconoends vitanin
vision t conpaters ,nucTear bioTogy,
C. He says he has'nt had a coTd
Tazers - everYthing that is'nt
since he started taking it, 15
Teft over fron the 19th centurY.
years ago.
The concTusion of the fornuTa is
Another fag is 1it.A rackiag
that everything can be in 2 or 3
cough fi77s the air.WiTson grins.
states at the saae nonent.'
Which perhaPs does'nt nean
nuch ta you.But,as WiTson stres.ses' ROBERT ANTON WiTson is currentTY
to aTways think for- writing a new book.The third on
itts inportant
his 'work in progress' 7ist.
ward and to think freeTY.'BEWARE
The ashtray overfTows.
OF THE DOGMA ' is Lhe code.
In the Tate sixties and earlY
'This one's to do with the
I Ching,the tarot,' Finnegan's
seventies he was invoTved with a
TinothY
Wake' and how it a71 Tinks uP to
group oi peopTe,including
bits and pieces of quantun nechLeary,who' expTored and extoTTed
caTTedt COINCIDANCE'
anics.IE's
t.he idea of TongevitY and innort'
Doox.
tron that book
ohrase fron
whichh is a phrase
concePt was ca77ed
aTity.This'
found Janes JoYce'
fi)"or'has
which itands for
'S.M.I.L.E.t
tFinnegan's llake' so conpTex and
, SPACE MIGRATION , INTELLIGENCE
II
that hets been readi
EXTENSIONI.
fascinating
LIFE
AND
SQUARED
and re-reading it non-stoP for l5
invoTved,anongst other things,
years .
the study of the nervous systea
The question has to be asked and learning how to rePrograa@e
Do you vrite ALL the tine?
7eve7s of functit for different
I' n ha vi1
'weTT,unfortunateTy
ioning.
-l
ox
ox
,r
l.:
i
Z["
ttTitetCOINCIDANCE' in ny spal-e
te 'cause I've got the other
J<s to finish.
erence can be anything froa a )
hour to three hours.The irish
dont beTieve in tine.
'A typicaT day invoTves gett'f n Cc>rk they have 4 c jocks
up, at 8 O'cTock,drinking five on the town ha77 facing in the
ps of coffee and snoking ten
4 different
directions
and they
garettes.I write fron 10-5 and a1-ways disagree vith each
other
en I take a waTk around ay hoae - they're ca77ed the 4 7iars.
n Hoath,a beautifuT fishing
'In Kerry theytve got a six
77age near to DubTin.Sonetines foot ta77 white rabbit caiTed
the
go out to a resteraunt or pub
Pookah.It always hangs around out
th ny wife.r
side pubs and catches you as you
WiTson was actuaTly born and stagger hone.When I first
arrivec
aised in BrooklyncNew York. He
in freTand
a Kerry farnet
otes fron a working c-lass faniTy interviewed I,heard
by a fellow with an
7ho nade hin attend the BrookTyn educated DubJin accent,probabTy
Institute
where he najor a Trinity
/olytech
CoTTege graduate.,TeiT
pd in engineering and Dathetatics ne' he asked,'do you real7y
beDeaTizing that he wanted to be a Tieve in the Pookah?, tThat I do
he switched over to NY Uni nott repTied the o7d nan,,and I
triter
shere he najored in Eng- doubt very nuch if he beTieves
tersity
in ne either. ,
Tish education.Whereupon he
'This is a country where
,'dropped out' and gat a job in
they can understand soneone Tike
agency,sonething
an advertising
ne.In Dost counfries f seea weirc
he couldtnt stoaach for very
here I feeT perfectTy noraaL.r
Tong.By chance the publishing
torTd opened its aros to hin.
RICHARD NORTH
Over a period of ten years he
edited severaT magazines,ending
up at'PLAYBOY'which he superviz' IMMORTALISTT -, FanaiiZwas there
ed fot five years,It
that he wrotet ILLUMINATUS',7eav'
ing before it was pubTished to
becone a f u77 tiq,e writer.l,liTson
toved to the south of lreTand a
few years back.
'I noved to Dublin because
everything is in a state of chaos
there.ft's a pTace where I beTong
I Tove
rIn it.
DubTin there are no tvo
cTocks that agree.You can taTk
between two streets and the diffil@EElE,EE=<'-
LL!*_i-_Lb
.E-
}E"O
ALAN E:-
This rnagazine should aPPeal to
anyone with a serious interest
'and
in'tfr. imaginative facultY
t s ramifications.
after
Naned
it
the great american Phenomenolopisi Charles HoY Fort(1874 t632), TFoRTEAN TrMES' is in
of Perceffect an int€nsifier
reader aware
ep!ion,stretching
ness to new and ever expanding
frontiers.The editors of this
fine journal dont Pretend to
have all the answers,but at
least theY know which questions
tso ask regarding life and the
Dlastic niture of our realitY'
hach issue contains an incredible densitY of word-sPlicing'
concePt barrage and forbidden
knowlLdge.Subjects covered in
the latest issue(ff45)include
Phantom Sieges, Alien Ericounters '
Ghosts,UFOs,Falls of Anomalous
ob iects, Precognitive dreams,
Kiiler Telephones( I )and the
stranBe case of the Talking
Bear, ihich( a11eged1y )conf ronted
tl,,o campers in Washington State,
told th;n to geE off it's ProPerty at once,and Pelted them
witir stones as they nade good
if all this
their escaPe.As I'Fortean
Times'
oere t nt enough,
also contains a lengthY Piece
on tThe Black Beasts of MoraY',
acartoons and iliusLrations
plenty by underground brushJockey Hunt Enerson,and the finest book review sectj-on of anY
magazine currently in publication(this is not just a matter of
fact).
opinion but a scientific
Each case is documented in Beticulous detail but the editors
draw few conclusions,preferring
to a11ow the wealth of data to
and artspeak for itself.Writ.ing
work is by THE. BEST and one gets
the impression that itrs done
f,or love of the various subjecE
matters alone . Subscribe to rFTr
and yout11 never have to look at
another magazine again - because
you'11 just keep re-reading this
one over and over.Wbrds alone
cant do fu11 justice to it's
handsome fornat and provocative
stance. The apex I Also a great
marital aid.Buy Ehis i.f noEhing
else.
,
PETE SCOTT
'FORTEAN TIMES *45' available bY
post for 81.50 from 96 Mansfield
Rd, London NW3 2HX.
IFESHOCrcAREYOU
ETOOLOFA
S}IIC CONSPIRACY?
::r Shea and Bobert Anlon Wilson are the authors of the 800-page SF epic, llluminatus. l1s subjecl is the history of the
,Tan race and the cloven-hoofed barbarism ol conlemporary politics. lt's no exaggeration to call it the foremost work of
-3rchist fiction to date. The interuiews which ,ollow took place in London in l\4arch 1977 on the occasion of the opening at
-: National Theatre of the 8%-hour stage version by Ken Campbel I and Chris Langham's Science Fiction Company of Liverpool
:iltc lt,wlott\ lllun'rnJrusdl,,r*hrrherirrrJl.lm)rllleeplrheMrfiarndrhe{'lAardthellleasrl{orccenrp,e\idenrrulrhe
-,Lfitrilaath,'rld,hrral.hrilB'ns
m, rudprnr ab"urlafiemprrorsr*,n.r..ailron(lUsnr.)mbol
ol rhrl,ila,e,J
| *h'ch pJrls ul rhe bool are rerl I e\Erence ol rhe mfomd rnrr I Commsron il a rrianale and rh.
' tl,,t'
pa,rs drr ri'rJsy.
r sheE. Atr inrcll.scnr pe,r. n I rnd
narr'nd orsanrsloi or frnancrrr | *nrbJ or rhe Illun,rnrr, b rn ey.
I
"hr.h
1.,,1. rr rr cill trnnnd,rrel, I tla\oil!il,DtFhorqa.lra,.r.,/
l.dl(drheBildcrberaeB,whonreet I ma'ilnsir S,,assounarlhea,J
,n,{Ihrrrr}Jrrr.{.BJrIlintshatttubn^h.unndvru
Ionce.}eilandeen'"dercrmrneIol rh. trilar.rd.ommusron I
.I(,r\rn,{he'L!.lhq,dJ | iltt,t,tun.pr@,nt}'
I rhefinan(rdfareotrhe.drrh nc l.duldn, help bur ronder rf ir
- qhcr. (h( tunrs\ hlcnu,,il I ll5 \cs.ilrcrchrtcb(enrnuilrber I T,il/k,rl aon,n,Li.il, \imilr, ro I $snl lhe lllum,nau at *ork
rhc ,cJ,ry r,. r\( n.rn' I ,,1 ,h'ns rhar Frm r,, *.,.'ur I rhe 8ilderb.rseA. hcrded by I JBnnrftrtr rhcr.s rh.Broup3rn
. .re l,\ n,,r rhrl eJ\r rJJclcr. I rhc dre(rion se were sohs rn. J Drv,d Rock.!e[er. fttr Commt.l llluwrutot that E.m.d ro lor..
,e *herhc, y,'u',e hn'n8 rur u^ I rhe drsu!€ry ut lhe hil Derqeeo I
have nrembe,ed .l I $ddow lirde iutidd leronil
groups likf the Symbiones Ubc-
||hat about the tunrus, ruhblhE
$ructur. ofth. bonk,
Robrn Anro! WJei: hal
w€
were tryin8 to 8.t aery f,pm wa3
lh. asumcd omniri€nc. *hth
*dle6 have.mploy.d jn S. pat
Nowaday! $ientAB rdmii they
don't tnow,.v.ryhng , S.r.l
mo@ fi& on. mdel lo,$d'r
r
f<f
o-
ot!
o'r
--:{;:l
'-
tf
-l
ta
tTD OCCUITROffi
OFIUAT,ISM
ICAL PBRS
a8 an analogy,the orthodox histor
iao describes therhardyare'of
lnL and blnding,vhilat
the occ
e art of the hi8torJan does
hlstorian deacribes the'softya
r corrslst of relating che facts, of plot and charactera:the aoft
ce cverythlng that has ever
cootalna the dslcrete leanlng a
pened le a fact,but ln EELECTranlpulstea the obvloue hardvare
trre facts vhlch consciously or 1n order to nanlfest itself.The
coascLously he thlnks are aLgn- a111ed proaecutors at the l{ureob
lcant. Io sole, therefore,the fact trla18' atterpt to erplaln the s
t rt leasf on one occasLon,
of top l{azlg in dry peychoanaly
tler consulted cn astroTogLcal
terua 18 quite-clearly a caae
roacoPe tay be extre.ely loport- confualng these different conc ;
trto others lt Ja too triviaT to , ual levela of rea1lty.
tlon.. .The hlscorLan,ln other
rdC'erphasls the faccs ytlcb De
els are Lrport.nt and negTects
e others.'
2.THE BRUPTION OF THB
RALD SASTER,.HTTLER AND THE ACE
r , vher
I909, br
tba t
1A
89
RRA
HORUS"
Occult hlstorlane ar
great
palna to ghov hou
Uitler has undoubredly influ- atoosphere
Iiolf
yhich nouria
2oth Century iife Eore than
Jcea gther
in
30ta Geroany took ro
peraon,and
the atteDpta
]y conprehend the
dylng yeara
the 19th
evehta he lnitia- Thle vas theoftiDe
ft
'trd(vhich cul!inated
in the atroc- of the lrrationalr;aof ari
r
:1eB of tbe conceDtratlon caDps,
agaln8t artlatlc rcall
hOrrora
var
of
and
the
danning
$:e
re11gloue
rgr: the atoDic age)constitute prob- repreaaLon,
povert,
apirltual
thorough,and certainthe !ost thorouSh,and
ceitain lnee of Freud and Da
't:iy the
!o8t u;gent,hlstorical yrit- eruPtion
'-1r
againat b
-rilg8 everi
and llarxlet !atrr1
hlatorlans have nanaged to')"' lll.ugtrated 1n tbe
.dlthot
,\t8eaa Ylth great clarity
the eco- occult socletles a
froric,social and potitical factors Spirituallao,Roelcr
alloued,and even
[^rc1ch
encouraged,
ent
by
urI,
Theoeophy
aag
to occur,rhey auch ag theandGolde
1.u"-iiiiii;-;;;;;;."on
ny llportant questionB un-
flourished
rand en
at rotlvatGd an lupover- such as Crovley,
beco'le abeolute
Gurdijeff a1l ac
Yeate
through unorthod
st
-Pr
es.One ot
Y
P
:ll
!P'r:
iot t
iDerit llazl oeobere, the deep invo
lcnt of occult Bocleties ylth
frarevork of tbe Nazi Party a
occul.t beliefa and ioiationa of
Adolf Eitler.
The yord'occult I
lears
ihldden' ,and i! La ryailpl.y
bc1:.cf thet
theae vorkE in ao vay coat.r!d1€t.
the orthodox hi6Eorlcal yorts,:bev
alrply gi.ve a rore gubric:eCeratandlng of the eyeaEa,reetitrts r::
?ersona of Hitlerisr, Esing s ncvel
ac
*a
rDt'
1nn6'i afiJ.t.
Doble tcutotric oa tbe outer vorld aa oD a
cr thc eacicnt aad buret.a 1t to plecca.' Soch
yrbolrlf t-b€ ' rvrrtit.e. Thcy iadivi.duala Ere corpletcly jtrrprophcrtcd t.hc corilg of r rcrrleb tficd ir oblitcr.tiDg
rEtE.hirl
Ybo uoul.d dcrrroy t-Lc ;rorcnt
thrt co.ca Lctycca thct aEd t.b'G
vorld,ard cr.r}llri
f olfj'll,rcrt
of th.ir dcrr:.ty
l
lrdcr
of p.r3or.:rr, c.tF:!1ca:lco r,ld
ftct:lc.Lc' r rcpltrElqr
!e.t
c::rrl:f,ta:rI
LG! pG.tny rrrlJ.rlcd. Ly f::l"rr"'
[.t":! 1t.a a8b:!r,
!cr:t
:rrar|l . l.ncc.rrc-Lc n r co,ot:r0: :ca
lr.:c: . *::lcr
wl :l L:
r'dmr. u.d h.lr rGrs:!
i:l:r!:c:
:!.:r
9tc 5.c:::j; !166a3.-m' :l:aa;::lut
"
ar:
Gc:tE:J
'!s
:::rer
::
hcrG
ilr rr .*.t-.
tLrt. mli
* gg
;beyon$ good,and evil,negating
all
norality,v[rere
onLy the por*er of
the indlvldual
uil.l tlas toi.be
eralted,vae eagerly svalloved by
HitIer:lEovever,Nletzschera
proclanatlogr-ttat
auch an erlatence
vould cptfll
creating a ner kind
St,ein qel1s us that Hltl.er
uas aeare of the Spear's ]egend
and thet he hed traced its history
right. back Lo rhe Ehird cenEury AD.
It was Erue Ehat rire Spear had beer':
posseseed by greac f.igures such iBe.
the Srea; arrd Chai.le-'
ConsEanrine
of lan.,t&! Supernan, uaB :yritten
Bagne, Frederich Bar'bsrossa and
as a u.1-$flrrial naxiu for gaining Frederick II,whc had undoubtediy
c-ooJEfol, qyca.
oycr oheself,nat
os€seLt,nat others.
ggng*-trf,
othera. influenced
Hiti
luence( rER!s
rBn's iiisEory. Hitjer
IiittEf triol("lt to ueari the phr8- yas also EUare.that Ehe Good a
.:',.i1i*i' t : : :f 5:,: I :. : : - : : :. :&*
ll," " ffi
ooral directlo.os,they ueEe
- -".'r
....,;-- .-.
lraqE._.
:H.,,fqF,S.l#tt
: . ::..
_
.1:Ttr.Og3,[ €beee philoeophere,
a aore vesEerni.sed sjrBE€B $f
oe cult 1n:i.ELatl$e. Be f,ound auch
a eyat.eB icr th€ cheEe of h1e
favourtte oper6,hlagner e t FARSISA[,r
Paralf,aL o s adventurea j.n htr.s quest
fer the Eotr.y Sraii are i* real.{"E,y
a 6erlea of l"nltiat!.one deaigaed
to qctivatB the Thtrd Eye(pi.necl
gLand)uhlch .lnducee a vis!.onary
t.e ln whLeh the hlc{des Ee&&of tiEe and rieetinJr are red.Thla abllI&,y *a eomuom
hout. occuLt lore;BS.svatsky
l.t t.he Akaahic Reeord asrd
E r"t rrss cal1ed the cotr l,unconse ious, Ravcmecrc.f t
t I readi"n.g thc Coeal( ehrelnteLLs of hou flit.I"cr s
o {.aduae t,hi"s fecultv 1ed
CrouLeyeaque ant.i"quari"en
r nased ErneE Pretaeclae,
,au oecuS.t asfl{}cteta of
on Ltat., t,oLd Uittrer t?rat
o
e{rtit.ies of .nort e, dimensi
aritl-Beoltiir of rhat -had f ought !:hrinrghouE.
_Li:h .!lre.
llonf
Ucgair-(i.B-q
though't Jeeue;.iae aa- io rain conriol of aai tn o
Arfan,no!;.erJdulaad nho colaed
i.st"i rrhe
' reah
I l of nl.ris
the DhE,aoB:Fl.Aaf Solutloa'shbii '. to
reality
talkiog ab.qgt
abost--Godra
G?dja plaa tc
to ert6reiterSulraeotent vtcits
Sulaequeat
ttlirs ro
rs tha
rh i
rioate
tLe'Jeie),Eit1er
fbru- spgar
fbr;*t
Spear
Dear reriilei'to
re'iilei'to
re.vealcil
to II1tIcr
Eltrer
Eltler
:har.,
th
vaa
?1i'1"
:1:,J:i:).'Iitl"'
yorl,d-yley
1ng
1
that
h
r,tt a.:'
yai he ves
I a!.:',::r,&,r..jril_Eiilki!i;ir
only.
,,ty ,a7
uee tu
to fulfill
fulfilL hl-s
r.;
b88tardlsed hybrld of ttrrr iff,
t.".u"61r3flf
ereonal dcstint
oereonai
dGstlnr yae
ua8 tiircuah':l
throug
the re8ult of uhlEh ,ae,+o ibfid- ooyer.He hed tfiat-iotn.rn*.oo
1fy hia' loltia psissione,i{dto
l."iti.iioi-to-rE;;h
hi;
er. tG tnvoke the denonmi.c
, iron icculr
I t..
doctrlnes^
detail thc nsturc of t6aee fer
of hlotory 1t w*e neeeasery
..
Speer
Ehe Coeai.e ChroulaLa lxot
Spear so ESe!:,',l*lU,SBt*Sru!
chat t!rog{!r the
he had to obtatr E,he .Spear
t.he lni"tla€ipne
inttiatione of
sf r-&:{q
ehe
.: ,.r. chere toek
-'fn this gerto4
he could iteld iEs. power ro imptet- Gfi'tli-hl:t hy rhe use of clruge *rnd
shape v\thLa ti a votld pictute
ent his doCtrines;'-,
rtgual na,.ri
lHevin[ developed rlnd conrr+l
, philosoi$y.v$jch be-caoe
-Tradtttoairilrefct:ante
ro
1?d
,
the sranit-e:-.,$:*aaaiioa or att _ .th. i;;;;-;;;:[tib,EEi*r,i.r,
.;,,..,{4d lnier"diectelinet;iii; ;;*i;;;;ov acts. rn addition-to:til {.. .,.;;r;;l;h;j-i,i.di.6.*tu.Faycho- "1,,,, * po*er Eo Hi;Id rhoughrs rlke
.sth.inBs.rhe riqdr! raahrnT nr rha
then credted,I have had to,..,.,..,. .. -:--l;=;-L-Liir;'tr.*I$l
-p"^--- ux.
Teard
teard Tittlet
titcte, and
have had .,'"tE*Ittaii
and I; ;;;"';:
feeltng l.ife and rhe nasrery of
unarabte
ill]li"-fn-iitiir:,"
co alter nothtns
baeic ieelres".RavenscrofE)iiirler
;;;;;;;.iir,Il;,i'Ier;ph;ti;;hi"
ADQLF HrrLER,'HEtrN
an.r hrs
chrontcl'e.rn thls p,,rldotl-tnbeen'iirt? Iis.Enll"iiillrlril?:""::_iT:,::;iI;;r;ifi:eil-;;rii#..'+ave
duceo Btrat.e,
duced
3tat.G, he saw
aau t.*ra.E.
tha'L U.iee
ti'{e char ae r;r-^-.li::ri*;ii:.irf.:a+.,
nan . f or
such a oan,
hpositble :for oIii.,rb
ters- of the" ParElfai n6d t,een rea!"
and
,tr[i-tr"iiiity,",ip"lalon
uerc-9f f e1--_,-- . P€,:9ple_ of the gth cesturl..AD,-.end
. , ' ..;1ii.;;-d;;;i;;Edt
,.CI{t...^''t tha,t tl'bey ruauld be red.nt'hinafed {n
himaelf
,-ilre
rordartd".'aint
';'{f..s66 6ooi foice of the speir. -" '' Ehe ?.Otlt ccnrax} t.o re*enact the
&..THE SpEl!_ _DEsTi
.cre&te
stsry . Fercei.v j.ng hov the Farstf al.
ordbr
vhich Btrt.ve, to.
,And still I dont succeed
theane is e onElnuously belng re-€ct*
f or union...1.qpXea!r:
urgea
and
"
acted, Ehe e harae !:era conr!.nuausly
vlth all htB,t bittefii:eai and
f feeJ lt and yet I cannot,
bei'ng redncarnated,Hltler naEunaXl"y
fruatration,BitLer proatrated
understand Lt.
stehed to aee whiela characLer hc
I caat tetain lt,nor target it. hLugelf before the Spear and
had aeauoed ln th,e taLe"trt rde6 Fer*
And tf I grasp it| I caniot
noyed to lnvoke lts Evil currhaps vit.h aooe aursrtae thet he
reasure ll-i.
enr.,thereby brlnging abont the
reailged thaE he hed becogtc.fillnguteoat ehsoe and aufferlng.Be
.eIe#*i,O'fiGltER
son,the evll and-pqrusr-eeo eadiei
..
lnagined he vaa choooing Evil
cf
oo ihs equalBut as yct he waa not unlTke any ae i Hietzechean'reversal
Yl"
l:9 been,tedeilad
1y vtcfoua
eLaughEerer tr"andulf trT
all valuest,necesBary ln_ereat
other poverty-stricken yretch,
u
'of Cepu* u tPro noat dreadad Fersonatrag the , Superran.Inf ae t, *1--!,. *qu '"
reJected by soci.ety
and trylng
I'i.r,y t6 the uhole of ehri.etendoa' .
the j.Df lrEity of hla wllf and
io'ii""a
;h;" iffiS Spefn- OfSeatrlslng,and reJolclng,!.unEhe
";l
OiSiilff'Uy-ti.io.
Ravensciofr: is his 1nab111ty ro naater hLrsetrf
lnevltahly
destruetj.ve and demonate
choice
b$t
to
hln
as
lefr
rhat
the rost irofoundly occulttrST
deatiny that v&e ahead of; hla,&{*.ttrer
becone a slaye to Ehe force sf
book on Hitler's occuLtisr and
sor.rght a yay t{} snd hte dead-end
ivt1.
Bi.ves the Bost unconpronlsing
daye 1n Vlenna"In LQI& he f,aund rhe
account of the force which enabe
KAHpp'. ;;;ii;;;;"
ii::-;f-:arr-
,
*t
LtO.ir*Ot i:;:tti-'.i",tt..,
i
tF ree lavi-&{%{
tee acaepeed {it
lny {r}rle h wae b
1!r Btrnce he yae
er ya6';i€a.E Eat"i+* fl
feeirnge.gF- Sstrlor
;5-h;-[
sa he ue.{rd thii: uar
trdence.on every p
1os, *ffi*test .grta
::.,.:,r
r r*hich
rhe
cenrur,,.1.'J,i:rh.eilf*Est t'it:i
"
i
;;
;
;.
;
;
.
;
;
I
lei
;
ili
1.1i1i:-t.
: ::iE*i: :
piii,l.ii""*ry-iuuliiirt.-,'.1Xr-e.rrth,-7.!t"_It_.,_1!_d_:
e;
.
ry
of lril ovn Fe*lr-vea.rr,'rjpp..'6 { ,,i,,itii-Ilr"r:ffi:iiffi-r,
'oonentlhad, been
";;;;:;;.;";1"";-;;;'i;:".
,r,t":r:i*f*#ffi;r#'H*:'l:itiffi-i:,
*l.l:k:thich
energv
:;"1;,":;;Z;
7a tte!.did 'D]F-,JFqtj-et' tir's rrere','Si.Tffiie
;;;idi";-ih;-;h"i;-au[ur.
,Iut"i-ir
-;;"ki';air-t[:
inte777-sen??'Ald tt+- Iry+i.1" .:' ' or tt ri*ril;lf:i'
, ;f
;;;-" elpn.crfi$'i as g
aot tttlted Chrlst, ".".,'i""
ecSs '....ruon.e
that anyoae rn1. B*JecBs.
"it-[-iir"a"i;.i;t'i[l:rri"r..p,i"".'vl.ca7,torthehyPliiiI,cllipprrcaxloa;i';;;";;;;;6ol;".;ffi
,er.: ibout to airiioie Cf,rrrtt, reaos
ruaaer; ,l,et.reen-SQ, uod='Em#
avi mo -:
;;
't a .taylns
. ;;i;;:fi-;"*=;.;t.o"r#*ffiEii
di;i;i;;-;r-;';;ki;; .r,r"- r.e"llrt ftlrsel f_ io' t7luaia11Jor
to
aa6tDer vlll,'
yes invest"d ,rrt tf,i porer-i6' irlrself open
neeasiaiA
[: ;;e&;;"--;lF;;;F
aNt'HoNy poBERrs ANi. oEoFF crLBERr* iro* Crngp_JrrerlCl..se for, Ehe
;1;_;";;;;i.O;"-iir.-ii"i.ii-r.J
!"ii'.tll^iilI
i.."". or rhi' po,"'_fot,'rEE DARN coDst.
rn, i;ao*,tdee
i"!l.I:"ilft+lrj,ij#t
t;as dualisttc;aad vhoever rielded Httlcr va! noE attracted
tese.tag-.i4filiffii{,1
:;::,:-a:.:t1;:8.:j:^
^-
jJ
l.J
?
to rhc
ehe Spear could chaage'Eant8 dea- c.Eteru dicclpllner or: Yoge and
Zen Buddhtar.hc
wat:r root*.fii,f
::ny for Good or Bvil.
ic, val
iooklag for
er
. .: li:,-l
100
ir
..,.
.
j,':
l'i "ilrlr'.:li
-,,_ -.
r
. d"
;Eli: ril
:,:-:i.""tt
iii.,rlr:
l
iili.,,,
r
io
Bt
o1f
aa
yho
o
rt
Y
1o-
oinis
P9-et
1llng to return to unerp'!oyed
vi1lan life,vaa appolnted. to
polltical dept. of the Crny,
re the plane of er-aray Yeta and e:(trdne rlght-ving
ustrlalista to Ylp. out the "olsts end-t*rer Jevs(vho
rcles in vhich the occult doc.lnes of List and Li"ebenfels
rished under lhe ggise of
trost influential occult
oup of the tine: .the'Thule
rnan natioo and'of the occult
;ouer vhich the gernans vere
creating.In such. figures of the
cctoplasD it Yaa prophesled that
r
aan vho would coatrol the
t ltule Group and the nhole geruan
'
1eople uaa at hand.
'
Hitler nas introduced to
iietrlch Ecka'rt through Captaln
Irast Roehn,rho vas alqo active
Group-s activities has been
ed. Dr . Rudolf-SELner, rrrhe a
highly initiated Christ
ln Europefi(Ravenecro
fornidable occult
Astral Prdjection to
the Thulists reetinga.
Sitler yaa to regard S
hls greatest enetry pur
he could not hide an
occult dealings fr
epiritual vision.
Pri.or to E
the Thuliets
(a1las Couat
'had* analgao
Ger.uan Uork
ertend thei
a credible
their esot
rho sas on
had alread
the chari
extend the
finance, in
of the ni1
re-es tabl i s
SovernEent,
renaned it
German Uorke
becane tts u
.a the po1ltical/occult scene
The forn
rt thls tine.Eckart vas regarded
l{azi Party u
18 the aajor initiate of the
the uae of!
fhulists and innediately began
LntiEidate
'the spiritual formatlon of
ldolf Uitlert',recognlslng hir ai enta.The N
exiating i
the propheeied nessiah.
The Thulists recognised the
Proc eaaee
they fed
crlstence of a 11fe-force naned
vril or kundalini,and sought to
atlrred u
harness its pouer to affect phySeroan
Thule s
sical reality.Their practice,in
sYaztik
co.ron nith other systeDs of ritpoverf
ral aagic,rras to reveal to the
ory,Hit
initiaEe the nicrocosoic-nacrocosric nature of his relationshiP auPPor
to the universe,to raise his nind party.
oato the Astral Plane,and fron
thence. to di.rect his vill toYards
specific ends.According to Ravengcroft,this entailedrrraising their
In 1923 E
coosciousaess by Eeans of ritual
to an avareness of evil and non_ shanbolic at
huran intelligences in tt1e Univ- the Bavarian 80
erse and rith achievinf E Deans llall putsch,as
of coarunicatiot yith Ihese inte11_failed and Hitl
Lng Nazls vere
igencest.Tfese'intelligences'rere
[i"-sa". cosuic forces-that'Blavat-eni, gaine( vof
\
open and ready to receive it.The
{evelation consisted of belng
able to see into the dark recesses of tine lnorder to conprehend
the evolution of nan ln its entLrity and to becooe ar.are of its
dual nature: of the evolutlon of
a physical body untll lt could
accoaodate natrr!t consclousnesS,
and of the evolutlon .of hia spirltbelng,created by celestlal belnga,
nttl it va8 of the right naturc
unlte vith hls body.Ae rre haYG
,thls cosuology,whlch vas
ght by Blavatsky and Steiner,
1t sith nanrs tine on Atlantis.
The lan of Atlantis vere lcae
th6n lan le today,they had
t€lllect and yere lo colplete
y Yith nature.f,ovever,sole
duals corrupted their pouer
ed and perverted tba eleapirits ln order to satiafy
n desires.The lofty Spiritrho Yatched over the Atlantf'sav
fit to develop a ney kind
n - ARYAN MAN - vho cquld dev-
thought and self-consciousnesE_
aatef hie lnstincte and desires
nevly-bred Aryans lost haraony
h their environnent but gained
trenBthened gi11.As the Aryans
ane Inore refihed,they eralted
purity of their blood and
ned of the dangCrs of breedlng
h non-aryans.The jealous leadere
the other Atlanteans nade var on
n but the Aryans,vith their
erior intelligence,rron.After
se cataclysnic uara,the Aryans
Ied out of Atlantis by l{aau,
t
last
Spirit-being,and ni.grated
g,a
s Asia to Tibet.
Secret Doctrine apeaks of
Spirit-Beings had tntended
develop aa a [icrocosa, a
-inage of the universe.Once
t,the Aryane 8p1it {.nto 3
s;(1)those yho folloved the
acle and choee to develop as
rLt-Beings had directed,(2)
lovere of tucifer,a deaoaaic
Being yho believed that ran'sl
al devElopnent need not de- |
higher guidance.Tbe follou- J
other leaddeveloped ao Ggo or I
lucifer
d.The incidfrect their actiona,and(3)
tlterest proo- th
ers of Ahrllao, another I
E
101
dJnonaic
to
kin
fr
tho
die
of
eub
1y
YE
,[o
Doc
Hir
ult
he
oea
Lca
All
the
a
ner
u1t
totr
ori
of
The
to
hig
Eve
(by
bee
the
Anc
EI
qua
Elg
Ge
to
1t
vaa
ret
Hir
tia
Ger
the
fav
ack
the
biz
in
(re
in
rit
10.
of
su
h
bea
Cri
ver
an
Ah
Con
fro
deg
kln
as
Ao
fut
and
tlo
len
to
Ae
the
vi
in
Y8
2Ot
t
1
i r-BeiD
vho etrived
-. --irfrr_
Pa:rt 7
!'rr_: ir11ri-*
tie.i
founda
'Jr
L-li ht con
v
back
ipti
d in l76rbv'rAdam
arian ppiila
laboraid riIIs
rll
tei
est
--@$
:tG.-||tElrn
ffi
8r'eat an
1a
5tr=
ffi
1y
the.
Iil.lum-
to
cation
E
f i1t
enj
the
,-r-aa-r},Jr! J&gs fi.J:r=ar ca
!^!,".-, rtF oi
J1^tt_c1-=G -.
reetrasonr
ab
,{tr-
:r
r
esstTin 1785.
volvement in poiei
r1
- .- r r r f,..
+Er.
!.!:!4_._.*ri
Spirar actiitiei
.
. .
r-l
Four years
aa
'H;i*i:i#i:
ret societies.
revoltrE,ionar
sa
others did
others
did little
liEtle buc iehEEh .t{u*:
S, th€se works. .Il.*t!'hot*unu
Fr*'ii;:rs.Ti:#ifff.t;
ng new. *(4)
!N:
c
at.H.4a{*t"''
:i-.-i-.-;'.-YJ
s .i'i;;::
:- Sa:a;tF-.
q f;ll::
I1 rr
r,.e5.iD.
"*-
r r
?:E. '
:
E:=l:t=;l!_Fi:n
q"i:F; j;tr .-E j r: - .
| .
rA at!:4rP
)L].aSC .--- . €€i l&,- .
.+i5c.i5rr.-..rl,
j_:t '
has some interesting :::-:::s
ult
l;y.[-or9Lel' intc e: ---::::i
as- i,6
Thoeps::. a::
rgirrps in:c --:e
t',! In a ve:r
.$roirror:=aie
checiies.
[iracy
gee a L'S esgurrender rc
Roberts see
nt on Ehe
Le
Eh
an
iE
Eh
in
durlng
cu
C
arc
o have been JacEE
of the exiled
;'II, uho help-
Fr
'aeem
obi
Cat
acros6' .4'!h:f:il r':
ed
oPe
be fore
. sec
,i .ot
,,. acy
viet Uni.on.
l5.ilxl.,-'3tE!ffi "*rr.i,
in. the 14th century, had,
his execution, forned a
ciety ito wreak
nch qrown
alloys for
!,s, or consid-
ar may have
iI7q
.'o
US deterointo'the Third Ltorld
than hostility
Uibt.t
.l 1
mong solce Br:,tidea thac anvrtSE-.Sovi*. tsn:cn
fry..'trl
ot6ts
icp;i
ca
ca
C'IA'i's'Rdom
ury
a
tns
U
On
..4
lr
0rde
clai
ists 9.f;
rle'ei
O'
ta
a]
The
or8an.l
Peo
at
POPU
ara
LLrJ
i .-.=;i
.!:!+rr+,t-<.-r.
-r'it-.-.-.
lifi
of
pl ac
.. r r'r.rt*
.'aljl
c ina
ed
brot
br
e1ite. (7)
i
f,! ,ii'q
n.- secreq aoclgtrtrar orie rt hr orc. For
ample, tn 1taly, the ideal
.l
a.
-iD
.ra
a
*^l o
.- I . rf
Li ;;ia;ri:;r
rr-. .;-
. a!
r Jo
mind
..
.
ca.. .!= .-C.-.-.-!.-.-:
a=€:: ::€
.
rq
Ehe
ia.Jtat'
.--.
aa6€-l
.4,
c lude
-i;rg +-. +t . r+-+
-' -'- r''
di
i
; ; :'
It-. r-r?\ -'- tr-r -'I'-.'.?,
{g<: r '
.
.
r.ttt.--.
r---.
-
r-
,:cra
I fr-rr+r
Er=l-44..it..4...
a.i!$.
€c! -:€.ry
- =:
.
.Lr
Er
:-.' ;a--
a-a{:€. t tr!-t
. <r
..
. . .
. 1-;"
..
t!-g .-: I '
103
uho ras a member of the National
Fronc ahd other right-wing groups
ln Britain. It represents about
the nearest thing to a cogent
full-lengch exposition of the NF
world view. It purports !o be a
reevaluation of the influence of
'international intrigue' on 20th
century history.. It opens uith
the engagingly frank statenenc
that Ehere will be footnotes or
references since Ehese make a
book boring, but Chesterton has
checked everything in the book
and it's all truet Pawns In The
Game, wrilten by WilTIEfr-@TE?r
E-Ti'nadian ex-nival of f icer, in
the 1950's, buc sril1 discributed
by the US ulcra-righi, is even
more bizarre. This is a disgustj"ng anti-senitic fantasy claiming
!o reveal the SaEanic forces behind the last 200 vears of vorld
history. Since thi author is incapable of gettlng the most elenenEary historical facts right,
and is clearly obsessed by orgies
and sexual blackmail, the reasonable conclusion would be that he
sas aentally unbal3nced at the
tioe of nriEi.ng.
IE oay be [hat traEerial /like
chia ig part of the reason there
is so little in the way of serioua studies of right-wing conspiracy Eheories. In fact there
even geems Eo be a widespread ignorance in Ehis country thar such
things exist at all. As an example, take coverage of the National Front when i! was ac its
height in Ehe nid seventies. Ir
was the subject of several TV documentaries and academlc sEudies.
However, while TV prograumes
Eraced the hiscory of the FronE,
and academics analysed Ehe sociology of its supporters and Ehe
patEern8 of iEs votj-ng perfornance,. treither shored'ouch inEerest in discussing whag the Front
accually believed, or seemed aware
.EhaE a conspiracy theory was aE
Ehe ceptre of chetr ideology. Exceptlons to this are the anilyses of NF ideology concained in
Hichael'Bi1Ilfl.'e Fascists (HarcourE, Brace,-Jovan-ii-6-1978 ) ,
David Edrar's Racism.Fascism and
che Pol iiics
offiE-N'iffii'ETTEEl3is 1978) and hts play Destiny. And, of course, Searchl
iffic oagazine.
ffi-
. Fo.r a serlous. discussion of
tbe hietoricel roots of such ideas
in this counEry se seeu to be
linited Eo tro books: Norman Cohn's
l,larraac Por_Qenoclde, whicir Eracea
Ehe
ffiychof
Jeuish conspirecy, ahd .1.H. Robertar
erts' Hytho
l{yEholocy of the Secret
Spcietffi
fear of revolu!ionary se.re
EEF6-ETevolutionarv
r socsecreE
_ietie8 _ln the early igrh cenEury,
Eoth of these bookl have been
heavlly drann on for this arricle.
5. Roberts (see Note 4) refers
to theorles that Ehe formation of
the Grand Lodge of England and its
subsequent royal and aristocratic
patronate rePresenEs an attemPE
by Hanoverian supporters Eo siesE
conErol of Masonry from the Jacobites.
5.
The Hell-fire Club in England
specialised in drunken orgies
surrounded by rituals parodying
those of Ehe secret societies.
1 o4
national. unlficatlon was kepE
alive b! the Carbonari. , or-Charcoal Burners, who, llke the Masons, claimed to originate in mvthical remoEe past. (9) SimilarsocieEies existed in other countries seeking revolucion and national liberation, such as poland
and Greece, Even the early trade
unions in Britain incorporated
oaEhs and ricuals drawn from che
traditions.of the secret socieE-
ies. (10)
For the reactionary regimes
the hand of the secret societies
was visible in any expression of
discontenE. In Ie19 Metternich
of Austri.a proposed an j_nternaEional alliance against secret societies in terms similar to Ehe
Reagan aduinistration' s rhecoric
against'incernational terror., In
the aftermaEh of che revolutions
of 1848 Disraeli (in his Life of
Lord George BenEick) made-TEETear EEEE-Ee-Gaw Ehe secreE societies as involved in an age-old
struggle against Christianicy:
.
"The origins of che secret
societies thaE prevail in Europe
rs very retroEe. IE is probable
that they were originaliy confederations of conquered races organised in a great measure by abrogated hierarchi-es.... The two
characEeristis of these confederations that cover Europe like a
network are erar against property
and hatred of rhe semitii rivelition (i.e Chrisrianriy -RS). These
are the legacies of their founders
a proprietory despoiled and the
servanEs of altars Ehat have
been overEhrown. "
By the lgEh cenEury both real
secreE socieEies and conspiracy
theories had played an important
Parr in European politicai life.
The next parc of Ehis study will
examine how they became 1i;ked
rriEh poliEical anti-semicism.
Part 2
In 1838 a novel called The Hebrew
Talisman was published in-Ei?16fr1
This story, which purporEs Eo be.
narraEed by 'the lJandering Jew',
begins in o1d Jerusalem as the
Jew rescues the Seal of Solomon
frorn the Roman conguerors. Then,
over E.he centuriea, he uses its
occulE power Eo enrich himself
and his fellow Jerrs and Eo deepoil the Gentiles. It depicts
che Jews as first backing the extravagance of Louj.s XVI and then
withdrawing their support - thus
precipitating the French Revoluti.on - and passing on the power of
the Seal to the Rothschilds who
use Eheir resulting wealth ro
bring about Bricain's triumph in
rhe Napoleonic War8.
This novel was obviously inspired by various cpncenporary
eventa, noEably th, rlse ot the
Rochschilde and nolcs torrardg
Jhwlsh eoanclpaEton tn Brttatn. -'
However, relevanc here la that
1ts ploc rePresent8 a neH synthes'is of ideae. Part I of this
article descrtbed the lnfluence
ln the ISth century of fears of
poli.cical activity directed from
behlnd the scenes by occult eecret socieCies. The Hebrew Talisman 1 inks these-E;;E-6-f,?aTe;IET ideas thaE the Jeus seri a
sinister force plottlng agalnst
Christiane by means such a8 ritual murder and mase potsoning.
l,Ihere earlier goncplracy cheor-
ists had seen rhe plottlng of rh..
aecret socieEieg as consisCtng c:
tradi.Eional acEivtEle6 euch a8
assasstnaE,lon and the fomentlng o:
unreat, thie novel seee flnancia:
manipulaEion as central to cheir
activity. A synChesie that has
conEinued Eo exercise a baleful
influence to t,his day was in
be ing.
IE 8eem8 unllkely that rhe
novel'8 anonynous auEhor sinply
EhoughE up Ehese ideaa hinseLf.
Presunably the conflating of anti-secret soelety panic wlth sncisemitisu uas a connection that
uas beginni.n& to be nade in other quarters aE Ehis period. AnoEher l9Eh century novel, Biarritz , pubiished in Germany In
T858, ihoss the ideaa dev6loped
even furrher. The novelrs heroes
hide ln the Jenleh cenetary ln
Prague. There they uitness a mee!ing between elders froo each of
the tuelve tribea of Israel at
uhich various plane are laid to
bring about Jeuish sorld domlnation. Whlle sooe tribes plot. to
enrich themselves by flnanci.al
manipulation, others gcheoe to
raise revolutionary oobs to overthrow Christlan ruiers. At Ehe
culminarion Satan appears to the
assembled elders to indicate his
approval of their plans.
Another element hae been added co the synthesl8 ln thie book
- the idea of a secret alliance
between f, lnanclal mantpulatton
and polltical revolution. I{tth
this idea all the oain planks of
modern polltlcal antl-BeoitlsE
rere pregent. They were to coalesce .lnto organieed political
movenents in two countri.es, France
and Rueela.
In splte of the venee! of rooanticlsm around late 19th cent.ury Parie, the France of that era
was a deeply dlvided society. The
Third RepubLic had been formed ln
the aftermath of defeat at the
handa of the Pruesians and the
bloody, vicious civil war around
the Paris Comoune. Its legitlmacy
rras challenged fron many quarters.
Clerlclets and MonarbhlsEs dream-
ed of a reglme that would reetore the values of plous, peaaant, rural France; nationsllstg
and militarlste of one that rrould
restore Napoleonic glories. The
doctrines of anarchism and ayndicalign found audiences aoong the
lrorking clasB, bringing both violent strikes and spectacular acta
of terror.
It ua8 aleo the heyday of
occultiem and secret societtes.
The Catholic Church nas identif-
ied ulth hostility ro the Repub11" and consequently many sought
alternatlvee. French' Grand Orient.
Freenaeonry ,.unllke lt6 Brltieh
counterpart,was expllcitly antlclerical and lta nenbera lncluded
very nany leading politiciana.
Occult societies, claiming'to be
heirs to the tradltlons oi the
alchenlste and the Knlghc.s Templare flouriahed. (l) (2)
Not surprisingly the Bituatlon_ waa ripe for the peddlara of
rlght-wtng consplracy- theoriee.
opposttion to llasonry and.eecret
socleties oingled nith anti-senitiso. The Jewg, an urban population, aroused the hostility of
the Clerlclsts and other sectionB
of the Right whose poliEics were
{
hel
of
rfl
lI t
based on a rural constituency and
a hoetility to the ciries that
uere aeen both ae the homes of
big capltallsn and sociallst eubversion. Such p6Tftica caoe to a
head with the Dreyfus affair which
the Rightist believed to be the
sork of a nysterlous syndlcate
llnking Masone, Radicals and Jews,
controlleci by the Prussian Gener-
al staff.
The literature of the French
Right of this period has a venooous quality that anticipates the
I
Nazis. The Catholic Archbishop of
I
l{auritiug could end a denunciation
of Freemasonry with the claim
Ehat lt was controlled by the Jewe
and could oake a near exirlicit
call for a Final Solutioir:
"Do not hope, O Jews, to esi
, cape the calamity which threatens you...!Je do not rrish to be
the slaves of Jews..We will stand
together against the enenies of
God. Victory 18 certain."
The depths of credulity to
shich the anti-tlasons and antlsenites of the period could stnk
was revealed by the audience that
rras prepared to take seriously
the grotesque hoaxes of ehe plbllcist Leo Taxil. Taxil claiied
to be a renegade Freenason and
described such scenes as the Deraonal appearance of Satan at ilaeonlc netlngs in the forrn of a
ptano-playlng crocodile, and
claimed that underneath Gibralter
lay a laboracory in whic! demone
syntheaised plagues to t ipe out
Chrietian Europe. (3) (Taxil turned out to be an anti-clerical who
had coococted his tales to expoae the gullibility of his enenI
{
'l
ies. )
Lace 19th century Russia was
snother society in crisis.Religioua mysticico ,and occultiem
flouriehed. As in France, clericaI reactionaries looked askSnce
at urbanisatlon and lndustrialisatlon, eeeking to reatore the
values of traditional rural society. As in France, the Jews becane the symbol of such urbanisation 8nd reaction intermingled
irith anti-eenitian, finding expreeeion ln the activities of the
Black Hundreds political grouping. Nurcured by che authorltles,
it organtsed large-scaIe pogroms
in che afternath of the 1.905 revolt. In Rusaia, however, occultists too were lnvolved in spreading anEi-seoitisn. Hadane Blavatsky, rhe founder of Theoaophy,
had yritten
in the foreign presa
in the 1880'e defending Ruaeian
anti-seEiti8m. At the tine of the
1905 revolt coneiderable influence
over Ehe Czar and his faurily was
erercieed by 'Papus' (Gerard Encausse), a French occultist and
former disciple of Madame Blavatsky, who warned against Freenasonry and Jewish influence,. counselling stern repression.
I! nas in rhis ci,i-nate thaf
Ehe notorious Protocols of the
Elders of Zion appeared. This
docu.menE was first published as
an appendix Eo a treatise by Sergei. Nilus, a ruined landowner
c'..rrned religious fanatic on the
advenE of rhe Antichrist - a favourite cheoe of Russian mystlcs
oi che peri,od. The Black Hundreds,
chen engaged ln the 1905 pogroms,
publicised ic eagerly and the Metropoliran of Hoscow ordered his
clergy co preach sertrons on the
JeLrish Eenace thaE the Protocols
clai.oed to expose.
The Protocols claimed to be
the ninutes of a secreE sesslon
of the Zionist Congress held in
Basle in 1897. They describe a
plan for world doninatlon sirnilar
Eo thaE deplcted in the novel
Biarritz, involving both subversion and financial nanipulation;
Although their bogus nature should
have been obvious from the fiist,
Ehe exact mechanics of the forgery did not come to light until
sone yeara 1ater. The Protocola,
sources lay not rrithin Ruseia buc
came from France. They were" in
fact, based on Dialoque aux En-
1860' s-E-iEfi-6n-ffi61-.
!9I",
eon III"nand hls represeive reg-
ime, to which had been added ieferences to topicslities of 1890's
Parie (including the building of
the Paris Metro which, accorciing
to the Protocols, was built eo that Jerrs could, when the need
arose, fill it with gunpowder and
blow up Paris.) The iotgery rraa
the work of the Czarist seirec
police uhose activities covered
Europe as they oonitored Ruesian
emigres and the radi.cals in other
nations they associated with. The
responsibility for bringing the
Prococols from France to Russia
s€eos to belong to yulinka Glinka,
a Czarist spy in Paris and forner
associate of Madame Blavatsky,
the famous occultisc and foirnder
of the Theosophical Sociecy. (4)
Belief in anti-semitic conspiracy theories Baa not confined
to Frsnce and Russla at Lhe beginning of this centurya Such belief were widely encountered in
Edwardian England. One of, the
best-selling novels of the perlod
was When IE lias Dark. a coneolracy ffi?ITfE?-?lElEi6ing a ptirr by
a Jewish nillionalre to bring aabour the destruction of Chrlstianiry and the downfall of Euroopean civilisation by faktng archeological evidence of the career of Jeeus. Budyard Ktpllng's
collection of historical stories,
!uc! of Pook's Hill_ includes one,
ffiLaw.uhich
@'lenders
of Mediaeval Europe Eeeting ln
aecreE to plot Ehe future of the
continent. Even radtcel oppoattlon Eo the Boer Watr uas, on occasion, couched in terms of oppoaition to Jewish gold nilllonalres
sho uere blamed for the war.(5)'
Ae mahy Erttleh Jews were recent imnigrants, hysterla agalnat
German'spiee' and'allena' became readlly nixed slth antt-Senitisn nhen $Jl began. Some aections of the press talked of the
'Hldden Hand' whlch, ln the wordg
of one hiatorlan, uas belleved Co
be
"a confederacy gf evtl nen
taking thelr ordets fr@ Berlin ,
dedlcated to the dosnfall of Britain by subversion of the Billtary,
Ehe cabinet, the Clvll S/rvlce and
the CiEy, and working no\only
through the Estab liehoent but
through epirituallets. whores and
hooeexuale. Sooe even belleved
that the 'Hldden Hand' nas a slng1e lndividual lnconcetvably ualign: they di-d not rule out Lucifer
hinself." (6)
The Ruesian Revolutlone fueled auch ideas and they perslsted
after the war ended. Tbe Protocole
of Zion was disseminated among Ehe
l.lhite armies in the Rueeian clvil
war and when the Whites rrent inEo
exile they epread Eheo co many of
7, The inreres: :: ::=__::-f,. r@
anEiquity also a:::-::r: :fu
populariEy of :- :_--- -.: EGu:L
and che career :i :se.,---:-:
Ericksters 1i<e i;E-_:E::t r@
Casanova (who ::iu:-,,s !'"ro.,.;,,,:
membership wiri- ::--:l:
=rgames and ince--:EEn-E r-__x=:ies. )
. NoE surpr:s::;_o ::e :.:l :j
the English Cl;:_ r:.: w
-have been a t.c::€a :i
-----.-+-_
iecies of varic,-:s r:-:Lr,g- 5E
suggesEi,on has :.ee- riirdtE nFi:
societies of r-c:'*'-E taryTs {EC=[€
f irst joined i.; ;--;!
--t -.=-g=
nuubers during::€:_l. -:r irainly, at a c:-se :i F::l__
=;is, Ehe assisia::= n**E:r =:J:f
these bodies ga-re ::
:-=
would have bet- ;e-. =E-:
;r=i
=
oerchanEs and c:-:r
otri ::.BsE_ed around.
Masonry had ::: :€:sr _.r E[is Eence ve ry L or.; := i::* e:
=current. AlEhout:- l::-__.:_r.
-c ludrng priesEs, :-:: :€:r::
Er
of rhe early lociges, l- r:-tirst condenned yas::- _: _-IAlchough the offic:a'-s:aE
E.
Ehat masonic riEuals "-,- r._:rdr
rrere opposed Eo C:.=:=:-L::tr
Roberts nenc ions s.;EtEE-_---.-,
that the Pope was j.eil
c-: rw
the Jacobites sho, :, :::: :i"
had losc their inf iue-€ := +r.;;ry.
(8) An incerest.ing e-;r:-*:i
the bizarre interactiocs -:i l:.ierenE currents of l8:i :e-:=r
thought, including r:e I- _ ta-ttrE!".
ment and occulciso, is s:::]:e:
by che career of che r:rs:!:-_-,.-E
Comte de Sainc-Geroai:, ::=
deachless'. A French cc,;::-:: :i
obscure o! igins , he dabb1. e: :.: ::
in experi.ments with indus:::,:chemistry and occultistr, a:.: :€ca8e Ehe subjecE of beliejs:.,:
he was really thousands of ;.e==s
old. AE one time he r.ras a i=:e=:
of Casanova and sas arresEei as
a Jdcobite spy in London du=lig
che 1745 uprising, Barrue- .sEe
above, jusE afrer (8) in rhe
Eexc) names hio as one of che
Masonic super-conspiraEors behini
che French Revolution. His naae
sEill crops up in occulE paperback trash: there's even a recen:
claim Ehar he was really an alien
from space.
If iE Eu-r.ns up aE your locai
2:.
tllm_ socieEyf see rhe iaviani
tsroEhers marvellous flim AIlon_
sonf?n in which.Marcello MZTt?Lonnr plays a disillusioned ex_
sociery member in posE Nap_
:i:Iu!
oleonic Iraly.
10. Lacer, i-n rhe lasE quarEer
of the l9rh centr,rry , a ne!, wave
of working class secreE socieEincluding che Oddfellorgs,
-i":-Buffaloes and ForresEers - appeared. These groups, based 6i
Ehe highly conserviEive world of
Bricish t'reemasonry, were an icporEanE index of Ehe emergence of
a working class policics based on
acceptance of the social order
(and
male domlna!ion)
As socialism emerged oua of
19th century radicaliJn ir cook
on elements from the Eraditions
of the secrec socieEies. l{ichael
Bakunin, Ehe anarchisE and joinr
founder of the FirsE InEernitional, devoted much efforE ro unsuccessful plans Eo organise a
Russian revolutionary secret society called the Social Democraric
Alli.ance (yesl)
105
the militar
hisEorian, who
sley
i!acy
exrLa
St
t-
(He
in8y
cI
imate of the
can
e faatePs,
lrst
, Colo:-
tlith
ir-
come
s
idden
il;.,r
,
n
rra
ret. '6
i,'iP"l,:*;!
the cqolng uar
e thaE prot influentia-
st-
yth' s
nos E
I ler
and
'gui1-.
r-
ench
developed a
ce
in the petiat
of
ple
be-
f
at iorr
in
oft
part
E
to
ice
wI.Jl
inEe
in .t
prod
Plot
I she
] light
llorld Re
t
that
ter-
Gaul ), and Plan to have one such
descendant irowned as king of a
i8 surelY too
united Europe, it
absurd to t;ke seriouslY.
Incidentally, Count 0tto von
Hapsburg, the diPlomaE r.7ho Ehe
Rev-
igence
9 ) Sunday Herald February 8
1920. Neo-nazis eeen rsther fond
of thie quote so it is rrorth Dentioning that Ehe altlcle.is ln
tfii
:ir'#}ilili"
ill'fi:i!:"ii the
iii;Hff;:i.:
1r-
t ic:
nry
a
Ass
lar
a.
r1
he
ttc
ing
rh
on
a
ce
Eisxo
a
be-
nn-
n-
tr
l,,l:*r::i!i#
Dawn
:i,H(I!|x'i;;;.ll
ect
hat
civy8
is-
i;iry$:"ili!"tn
aev-
ly
In the same yea
took srr.L tdeas seI
how-
feata in,
1ar
tr ifton
ti-
f ibre
a Pax
task
his h
s than Wi
n. "
ss
waa
notab
1n
5tr
c
1918,
High
Empit
lsh Bolshevik Plot' and CaPtain( later }{aJor-Gineral ) J.FJ.Full-
106
for t
E
cy
had
bec
s.
trhere
Ii,es,
nd, b
zL 8e
Roger Sandel 1
ff &aa
,i"..
rirish
iJ After reading this,
Iook'at national
and world events
in the same
, wqy again.
E-
x-
t
Over four.million copies
!'
of this explosive best sellei
- have tr€en distributed
since
.n it first appeared three
years ago.- It became
r on€ of the most widely
read books in the
countr5 without the
benefit of a single review,
advertisement, or promotion
ih the mass media.
The reason for iLs phinomenal GARY ALLEN
zuccess is that for the first time, someone
had stated-and assembled the iacts to p.or"
conspiratorial forces behind the scenes acfllt
tually control our sovemment and dietate its policies.
Read it and judge ii for you"reffi- ----
KISSIilGEB
THE SEGBET SIDE
OF THE
SEGRETARY OT STATE
by Oary Allon
lfi pagcr / $1.50
Only Gary Allen could have wrltten this eye_openlng
account of the most powerful pollilca! manlpulator ln
THE ROGI(EFELIER IILE
Washlhgton
by Gary Ailen
Hore aro the fac,ts about Hsnry,s,.8ecret swlngor,, lmago; about hls
ehuttle dlplomacy ln Moccow and tho Mlddle eait about tho vtclorlE
he has handed the Communlsts ln Salgon, Suez,'pinama, portugal,
and a dozgn other places around the world.
Here ls tho rufl story ot tho top Communlst lnt€llloenco otflclal who
has defected to th€ Unlted Sistos
and has ldentlilcd the Sccretery
o{ State as a Soilet esplonage agentt
-
Here ls the one book you and your trlends ,nurr ,Bd tiltb
polltlcal year.
cnfl
"One ol the most impttltEE
contury."
j:
CorErffiLa?-H*.w
E.r5-n
rl'l#
tHundreds of thousands,if not
niTTions,of right-ward Leaning citizens have found that
various - consPiracY theories
heTp exiTain their sense of
PowerTessness and frusttation
in the face of worTd events
which seen to grind inexorabTY
tovatds sone.disaster too '
to iaagine.'
ghastTy
"
-JAY KINNEY
. ,i4 , ' RESEARCH I. .
Most right-ving consPiracies
dont amount to anYthing more
than sma1l rninded bigotrY'
racism and the need for a
scapegoat to compensate for
some personal defiencY.But
like most things ' some of the
can result
rnore bizarre ones
insome illuninating
in
sights and effectivelY go
fu11 circle,coming round to
what the anarchists were
saying all along.
JOHN BIRCH SOCIBTY i
enfhnts
terribTe of the 60's right
wing. The Birchers'ca11 the
conspirator s THE f.ilSfDERS'
u gtorP including the Rockef eller and lrlal1 Street crew '
and anyone with anything to
do with the Council on
Foreign Relations/Bilderbergers.The definitive work on
the Insiders is 'NONE DARE
CALL IT CONSPIRACY'bY GarY
Allen.This describes the
Rhodes scholars, CFR, B-berg
and Trilaterals aPParent
plans for a One- lJorld Govt '
as
Ii that sounds the same
Eringer I s
lef.tist Robert
theory , that I s because it is '
EveryLodY hates the liberals'
defenders of the centre like
Rockefeller and David Owen'
The left sees them as the
inevitable result of caPitalism,and the Right sees then
as suppressors of free enterprise.Both are ProbablY true'
LIBERTY LOBBY: anti=semitic
vdrsion of the Birchers,with
US radio/TV show and veeklY
paper, rTHE SPOTLIGHT' (Paid
circ.300 ' 000+) . RecentlY overtaken the Birchers nith their
consistent attacks on anYthing to do nith Israel and
chanpioning of revisj'onism;
ttrElf tia-right , u1tra-sick
theory that the holocaust was
a hoai.The LibertY LobbY arer
nt out and out nazis but
certainly veer that way.
Yet when theY, deal with
domestic,US,matters theY
frequentlY dig out sone more
rational- stuff on the likes
of, links between Rockefeller '
the Mafia and Warners,and
they went to town on the
Commisslon
Carter/Trilateral
affair.UnfortunatetY for
their own dubious ends and in
a generic sensational stYle'
'YourH AcrloN NEws':by c.B.
Baker; takes the LiPerty
Lobby theory one step further,
describing a battle of the
giants,between the RothschildZionists and Rockefeller-CFRer
behind the scenes, natch.TheY.
cal1ed therNew York Timesf a
Zionist front,and clained that
was why they attacked the CIA
(Rockefeller's private police
force ) .
Recently the YA has changed it
tack sone what,going from condemming thercommie jew tyrants
in the Kremlin to detailed
accounts of soviet neather war
fare,microwave and electronic
aggressionrand spy assaults on
the US.
nd counsel to. to the Export/
Import bank,first caused a
stir in 1974 nhen he announced
that Fort Knox had been secret
1y looted.The foolowing year
he capitalised on this initial
ontroversy,nith his first
he
' Audio Letter' . Initially
concentrated on the Rockefeller-soviet alliance and the
ensuing WW3.That led to the
planting of soviet missiles
long US shorelines and the
contanination of water supplies with plutonium.By 1977
e had got onto the Skoptski,
ch.ristian sect advocating
astration - an Illuminati
tradition according to RAU.
Beter clained that the
Skoptski had taken over from
the Rockefeller-a11igned
bolsheviks- in the Kremlin.
he defeated bolsheviks had
then fled to New York where
they took over the US govt.
on the rebound.Onie in pouer
hey systematically replaced
11 the Rockefeller people,
arter.adnin.and other nat.
eaders with organic robotids,which they produced in
he mountains outside Las
egas. The most feasible one
ARTY: est.3,
nembership.Led by Lyndon
LaRouche.Began in 1968 as
the National Caucus of
Labour Connittees, ra sma11
grouping of renegade SDSers
on the East Coastt.Since
then the grouprs politics
Which brings us back to Dr.
Peter Beter,who last croPPed
up in'The G1oba1- ManiPulaiors'
0r
as Jay Kinney puts it in
t
Research' 2'Yes, yes, this is
a17 very we77,I can/ hear You
saying, but what afutut Soviet
fusion bonbs aTong dur coastr
not to aention the secret sect
of of Christian castrati running Noscow,and the organic
robot.oids who have rePTaced
a77 our nationaT Teaders covertTy nurdered over the Tast
two years?'
Thatts just part of Beterts
repertoire , whi.ch he mail.s
subscribers in the forn of
his notorious'Audio Letters' ,
monthly for $7 a Year.Beter,
an ex.llashington DC lanYer
have nigrated from socialism
to tHigh-tech Whig-Republican'
And itts conspiracy theory
has shifted from the Rockefellers and CIA to the british
royal fanily,the continental
Hapsburg-linked' BLACK GUELPH
ARISTOCRACY'and the Knights
of Malta. As I see it the
USLP takes the side of RAWIs
I
Illuninati I as r neo-platonic,
hunani.st, city-building progressive philosophy ragainst
I
evi1, oligarchist, rural orientated , zg.-ro-grouth I types, which
bri-ngs u.s to RAWr s neophiles/
neophobes theory,the forner
elcoming new ideas and the
latter suppressing then.Conidering the contenporary
ippy/Punk London scene, I'd
JOEN BTRCH SOCIETT:
AITERICAII OPilfiII WGAZINE
395 Cotuotd Arte
Behnont, l,lase 021?8
1 yeaz/$lS
LIBETTT I,OBBT:
rHE S?OTLIGilT
300 IndePend,ence Ave S.E.
tlaehit'toton DC 20003
52 oe;ks/$16 aingle eoPg 350
TOUTE ACTIOII:
YOUTH AC?ION NEIIS
m B2x 312
Alesatdria vA 22313
eingle copy $1
DR, PETER BWER
THE DR...BwIER AUDIO LE$ER
1629 K St N.tt. Suite 5092
Vash DC 20006
6 no. aub./$35 aittgle coPY $7
US LABOR PAXTI:
TIEXI SOLIDARTIY
aryai4 net htbt i,q t ion e
304 il. 58th st
C
ilv flr 10a19
6 no. (50 iaeuea),/$15
SPIBAL:
REWLATI@'IARY NEI,IS
267
Route #2,
Bakersoille, NC 28705
Bx
$12/year $2/s@nple paeket
.
COSMIC AT,IARENESS:
REWLATIONS OF AVIABNESS
c.A.c., P0 Bqx 115
?Lgnpia., llaeh 98507
eonpLe paeket $3
COilSPIRACY DIOESI
Alpine Enterpnieee,
W ZeA Deatbortt MI 48121
1 iesuee/$Z0 eingle cqy $6
I
COII SP RAC
IES UN LTMTInD
N BE 3085
9f,. PanL, Mi,rm 55161
$z/yeo,
IOBSTER
Correspondence
Subscriptions
Sr:bs. are for six issr.res.
Correspondence is rrelccned and
all correspordence sholld be
LKilreland - t.3.50
sent, in the first instance, to
US - $12 (sr:rface mail)
Otter countries by rregotiation.
Subs frcm institutions are
double those of individr.rals.
Please make all'cheques etc.
Payable to Steve Dorril
Robin R"msay,
17c Pearson Avenrc
Iful1
HU5 2 SX
tK.
If possible enclosed a stroped
addressed envelope. .,
cnlrrQUE
A Journal of Conspiracies
&
Meaphysics
--Sabjccts Explorcd-High-Tech Murders
Gnostic Gospels o Psychic Wa#are
Global Elites o Russian Spy Schoo.ls
., High-Tech Mind Control
Weather Warfare o Anomalies
Secret Societies o the Ocorlt
UFOs, Sufis, Mossad
Ideological Indoctdnation
\I
Nazism and the Occult
Assassinations o The Middle East
Cosmic Mysteries
Covet-Ups o Revisionisre
Pead Harbor . the Vatican Scandal
Electtomagnetic Fields: EIF wavss
Media Monopolies c Mass Hypnosis
Book &7ine Reviews
l9e'rc celcbating oot lth year! Scad for FXf,E litcreturc end/ot 16
for rnplc issuc (l!0 pa3cs) [SSN: 073t-6t0{. 'lPritc to
Sano R6i, CA 9t{06.
Cf,IflQUE, P.O. Bor
ll{ll,
109
:t
- IroL rt hir bmdl
- It'r rll b6ntl
-}lc'r Bot.no thumbl
- lrh't hc the Tcrrorirt Lcrder tjret ccrpcd tonrqht2
- Lookr more like thc pcrvert rhcy rhowcd on TV they'rc
eoobing thc counuy for"
- Gct higr ourl
- Hc ruyrl llc'r r Peuiotl
'You hrrca't scca it,
- !lc'r r rtialio3 cockruckerl
.-- /
- He'l rery ocedT thc Prc:ident of our countnl ./
110
1
\
/
*
*i,
oop
11
o
LL4
i,':X'iJl
,*.,Lli?.li'#iil;f i:'J;,v,'IJ?"'ifrsay::::::iJ;l::'^1.[f
futl
Ouch had rammed
hastily summoned and,before you could
of :_mlhpt:mine "
lack
.The notorcade passes the
ras School Book Depository
Eoves slowly. toyard the
iple Underpass.At the sixth
loor rcindow,Lee Harvey Oswald
ghts carefully through the
cano-Mannlicher: his Eouth
dry, desert dry. But his heart.
t is norrnal;and no sweat
ands out on his forehead.This
the ooment,he is thinking,
e one noment transcending
iae and hazard,heredity and
vironnent,the final test and
roof of free rri11 and of my
ght to call myself a nan.In
is moment,now as I tighten
trigger, the Tyrant dj,es,
vith hio all the lies of a
rue1, nendacious epoch. It is a
prene exaltation,this
moment
d this knorrledge:and yer his
uth is dry, dust-dry, dry as
ath,as if his salj-vary glands
lone rebelled against the
rder which his intellect prounced necessary and just./Vor:
recalls the nilitary fornula
:
Breath , Ai.n, S1ack, Squeeze .
e breathes, he ains, he slacks,
e starts to aqueeze,as a dog
.larks suddenly lnA his mouth falls open in
,
as three shots ring
iestonishnent
'I out, obviously f ron the direction
of the Grassy Knoll and Triple
' " fnderpass.
ttSon-of
.
-a-bitch, tthe said,
softly as a prayer.And he began
to grin,a rictus noc of onnipotence such as he had expected
but of something different and
:nexpected and therefore better
- onniscience.That smirk appeared
in all the photos during the next
day and a half,before his own
. death., a sneering smile that said
so clearly that none dared to
read it t I knov sorething you
dont knov. That grinace only
faded sunday morning when Jack
Ruby pumped trro bulLets into
Lee's frail fanati.c body,and its
secret went yith him to the :
grave.
ip
( SHEA AND VILSON ' ILLUITINATU,S'
vol.1.P.23.)
rerc a nllitary type }anufacturcll by thc fcstcrE Clrtrfd33
€oapany, t!$t AltoD, Illlnols. 'Thesc bnllctr brc. rcltl
rtth full coppcr alloy jackcts and lcad corcs. Erinttr - d
tlre ?resldcatrs clothlng by thc FBI Laboratory discloscd tL*
there ras ! lrE3ll bolc io the back of lls co€t .!d altrt
ir
,
I
ranrnr{rq+ols
slr
f
_A_
rcrm
TI
If
rrr
>IJ
HUYUEIftIIE
l\ ,i
a,,
^uYCrcEY[m
,rcr 15 rYrx
f,
corcEru6 rrcrocm r anr
f,traExrloucY!
Eao t^Itr. t vot ullr{
ru S FtrL 3 BrciE Y*:
xf,mY 3 m{
y\
to I Etuoao trE^tc
tl'r oarr n: ,otloraro,
ct'MIAft.FEEL
tE to @ rro Etll'
dlrorrt r*Ilc
,attt t E&D.
AtmtE
rrcyou^trn crEotovlotExcE?
ooYot HAVEEXO(XIHSLACx?
rfi .LoLo oo Ya, tEra txE GRIEF Of JFxl o€aYH?
raDaurE8
oAvt
YEARS rcxlx8
,€w lorao vrciE You tH(rctEo?
IIXUTE8
o Y3
IOtlrHt
v€ans
8€.x
oE
crala
tl@rE
qrnnExlFELlolol{
XEiAANCVOt,IAOA?XEI'XEDY?
occuF^Tlox
IYHY?
OO VOU IELIEY: O€IOCRATrc CIECYIOX OF AI'ERICATI PBESIOENTS IS AX
turlrox?
rF 80, r{orv Lot{G HAVE YOt H€lO THIS EELIEF?
IErii.EDY WAs IATXFUILY OYI|G OF AOOsoi{'S lrlSEASE. lF HE XAO XOr A€€X
rueocn€o. Hou, Loito wor,lD HE HAVE LIVEO?
r HE XAO LIVEO. I{OW IA"Y TAiA WqJLD X€X'{EOY HAYE S'ARIEO?
HOIY?
i,HY?
O6WALD'6D(X'6LE? IAiX LANE?
worru, YorJ HAYE &rol XEXT EOY?
rtxrLo You xAvE lHol oSwALo?
wlLr You !E Atarlgx^?EEr
wHEx?
Hom l{
wHY?
FrEl&E rl-a e a'
urHERE,
ta vt Yot t,sED tfxiEort a8sasalx^rlox Ag A PERSoNAL SCAPEGO T?
tq*:
urH^r EFFECT OrO tHE A3S^laNAlloX x^YE OX rHE AUSAO€OI S LEV€L Of BOOETY?
III[lD
xxy aoaar JFr xavE l[ac ro oiavY ]tls o{rx oul{?
w*e"e o,o r^i rrt ,rE HEe wEAFox?
ffiy axora't o(xxAlLY tlaY oljl oF rHE ll,aY uxE HE was ElrPFooEo To?
I'OW IAiY OT'I{ICT W€RE
IHEF€?
I{OIV
gLs 5;
I XY OEWALG WEE€ IHEHE?
xrx, raxv @l xEclEo rt RoEe6?
H(N IAXY(EW^!O rcU3LESAFESTIII
LIVI}'G?
WHERE OOTHEY LIY€?
ffil:
rrrlcH all(,r WO(E l, YxE E€CR€T SGiY|CE AOCXI8 n IHE FFOIIT SCAT lclrch gEVEta
oa.E
rtuo
lxa€E
Folri
ifiY WAa XEXxEDY iILLEO? G0 rqdr 6 lo)
rt{EhE wA3 rH: ala taxAt(,LiElLLY Flr..rElvl
tllo tt yEo tttt t^m oF ?xE ACfffic!|Grr?
In{o i.AYCD lH: t ir o? ft: AcriBSrJAcxtE?
.IA'I, DEAO? WHY?
at{ot Lo txE llrar t€ iEot€xEo?
r{o!f, ttEtx rAtll AaE oaa rHE rlotc rrLE??
c{l
Itllullull
FlvE
8lr
OUR RETURN ADDRESS,t,
*.,
SAN FP
'Ir -l
HouE?or
lglst ri lr :iffi ign r; ir;;nnFiiff
aaoaa
aaaaa
ra aaaaa
a a a a
aaaaa
aaaaa
aaaaaa
aaaaar
aa a a a a
oo
,do
tdo
€r,
>.F o
ttr
t{,
OE
FE'
o
O-l
Eo
>U
t<o
F
'(x €
a
o
2
t po
a,
{ oo
q
n
trl
o
a I
F{
r,
Hi
(+
o
5
o
at
ttl
2t
-Jr
ur
lr
.f
x .t
o
o
GI
!,
I
P
cl
:
:i
r, i i
ffrilq
**;gfil
ffiiiffiffiffiii ffiffiig;i ii
ffiilffffiffiruilliffil#iiiiglfur*r iii
;i{ r*fiifilEiE[fgii*r[E[[;l [;r:tEEx iiIi
$iiEiilirrliiififfgiirriffrffi
i#r rul
1s'B
E,*E: €iB; rEEr:fgiFi
f;Eg;'it[l.lg ;g6$
E;l:sr?i'-;=iil
i:
rr',8#
*i:;tt$*i
p;Ei ,i'[i Hflil{fF; 'gfg
'
F
alo
Instant offee is rinsed down the slnk,the luke,sour flavour is stiIl active
in the-woman's mouth a.s she disposes of the beaker into a waste chute.
Steam from fresher coffee mists the pristine cerarnic ti.les but before it
obscures them strc. catchr:s a milky refLection of herself,,I've been at this
too long' she realises....A dense arbcur of potted fern and rubber fi.nt=
greets visitors to the thlrd floor of Flair
Boutique,,,The Jungrei'it is
cq.Iled,an allusion also to the competitive world of iashion in wtlich these
gf r'ices ccrnstitute a si zable predator.
.t l'lair is a big name,the c.LA. of Glamour and every bit as adept at
(
. thought control.Despite its polaroid filter windows,ergonomic layouts
(a a
. a"td f th'shy i"mage the I'1air headquarters are not in Soho, Covent Garden or
.) *Madison
Ave. but a dreary industrial estate in Northampton,from this,'control
al.
tow'er" however are run noL just a string of record and clothing outlets but
'two world.ad,agencies,a P,R and A&R company,firm production,T,v,programmes,
and experjments J"n computing,also liaison with sonre darker
fashion
"=pe.t..6f
and research by private institutes.On the wal1 in acrylic letters
is
the
regend "Teenagers are designed here'.' ,'rt"s our job to cater,not just selling
products,in any case-I've found you seII more
if you make the pioducts fit
ln as part of a total scheme,the Schools hold them until
16 br so mostly
but its only partial even before then.We provide the continuity...Reality
if
you will'."thus speaks Jake Cantarra chiei executive of Flair,this the new-age
he has seen his profession rise from the kitsch of the 5Os :ind
6Os to the
risinpE star of power today.The advertisers are at last in control.',CommerciaI
a set of promotion schernes any more,a term for serling or even the
lEn't
rspectacle'as
I think they call it, it i-s an ideology,a whol-e way of life,we
can clo u'l lhout custo.rn€rs altogether that's how much we've been I iberated f rom
selling.we can pick,develop and errgineel
colsumers as efficienl ly as we
did wlth products,we can discontinue whole 1ines..'sorry,out of stock on
that ia a a-.
race1. .ha,ha,ha. . ."The phone insinuates itself,tre punchLs a hutton,,,CantarraJ" taaar
la
a.
Daaar
ia
aaa
'!l{hy certainly", "Mr.cantarra, tllis is Julius cleevei. .,'Jake feels the ratex
,aaal
aaa
recliner drop as in arr elevator or a hump-back bridgr:,Julius Cleever the l.{an, :a
,aaar
aaaa
the worlds top executive phoning him in person..UncontrolabLel"wh..What
latar
is
it
aaaa
Mr.cleever?","I have some instrucTl6ns Mr.cantarra,they may result in your
laa!a
aaaa
aaaaa
profits temporarily..'catching a
co1d,,for
how
i.s
long
up to your abil,
i.ty,but you would be il1 advised not to comply Mi.Cantarra
if I make myself
brutally
clear."Some cable*borne clicks sign affi-rmation,"These are your
orders,your accomadations of
rccent underground reLrellion is to be
reversed,we regard this,.'Punk-Fashion' as an undesirable contiouation of
strains found in France,America and the Thircl worrct,even our own Japan,I am
ful1y aware that it. is selling well Mr.Cantarra,simple f ashion yes,i.rarnrless
certainly,but also inert,I want the active designs we had
planned for,
this'Punk'was not at alI intended.You are insiructed to already
return aI1 efforts
/A
aX\:!
Yrlv^?n
3i:,il::"?i3;131, il; i::f:;:'fl.13 Ii::;:,'il";i;:i::
i:-ll;: i:;:lll,lli:i:'
=_I*.',lloiiiiiiio'iJil,#;:l;:::,i::iiil'::3"iiif
animal welf are, pasci f ism f olLowed by mi litancy, puritanism, condemnation of
;:il"i"
hfCX!l),Y' ilrliii.::Fildti:i:;r *:::::io;;:",3:^l'lff.:ilri'[ir:l;;15
youth,purge them
for return to
let
stagnate,let that
catharic-on the western
ready
a
the
nrppy values we were marketing,you
them
outburst take
place,any loss of
profit witi ue atonernent for your stupidity.By the mid8Os I want
the Hippy era back,even flared cloihes,but ttris time with the
new
strains of anti-drug,anti-sex,privacy.and purity grafted on,active
hippies not
complascent ones,you unierstanaicoob you-have 7 years
from
now to make them ideologically sound,ready for ProJect Harvest,oniy swindle
could present problems but that has been rendered unviable....
"
l(t8e
What Strange Powers
Did The Ancients Possess?
A SECRET METHOD FOR
THE MASTERY- OF LIFE
My name is MoNTY CANTSIN. Of course, f can't promise that you'Il
win the title of "\Morld's Most Perfectly Developed Man," as I
did. But T do say that I believe I can make a mighty powerful
NEorsr out of you-in a very short time.
In fact, you can prove it to yourself . without risking a penny. And I have
good reason for believing I can do iL Because during the last 10 years I have turned
many frlousans.s or weaKrlngs - Ieuows
r rh
\ Ely I who were ashamed of their bodies I*F' _ into beautifullv-orooortioned
fn-.
,\
beautifully-proportioned human
lin
#:''.:;:.,:i. = dynamos of strength, energy, and
tireless endurance . . . with the
kind of muscular development
1fi;
*jy*
needn't take o":I talk"
:hat
- big free
from any one. My
bciok will tell you how my se-
!i.i;
Ti.l
$ii,l
il S:.:fr
ill,
1.,ii;i
...
::::;,.
!!--'::i-
i:.l:..tr
3ir
cretof Dynarnic Neorsm may
be able to do such a job for
r you. Where shall I send your
_-..-;.ll.a|li
1 copy? There's not a bit of cost
ffi:i;..
ii or obligation on your part. So
lit.! mail the coupon now.
...-
CIub des six doiets
: ..:
MONTY CANTSIN:
n6oiste un jour,
n6oiste toujours
118
I
N
t
il
I
5E::sa -s open t o all t
r:dy can do it. PeopTe in the
apartnent festjvafb or r{pls,
guidance the l,leoist Eabassv
and
is nov a vorld-wide pheno_ his
-:!reeLs are the greatest tveo_
in
llontreal
,tas becoae
Dena.fn
essence
itrs a hard_
:st perforrDance artjsEs .Every_
centrdl inforoation filterthe for
core
independant
.orruri"Zi_
:cdy - ny father,the pope,the
a g7oba7 of conspirators. To_
ions systen predicated on lhe
gether tiese conspirators have
;o7ice and the terrorists.Even
undeniabTe
fdct
that traditiin_
:f you dont realise it,yOIJ are
expTored
aany. diyerse r,edia,
a-l
art is dead.One slogan ii_-'
tart of a rVeoist perf oraance, .,
appearing at fl.Ta,nusic and
fines
tr
as,Nothlng
,"7i tii"
perforaance festi vals throuph_
Canadian, totai nedia art_
the perfortance of- a aonea"i-i
)sttMonty Cantsin is sonething
out ADerica and Europe.Huch
ca77ed Neoisn, .Another ."il;;_
between an enigna and an insti_
of their vritten na.terial
ates
thatrygu
cannot
:ution.He is a being around
extols the vjrtue ofrpositive
stand iVeoisb atithout under_.
first
be_
thon a vast contetuporary nyth_
pTagiarisn, .Fila and
c^oaLng a /Veojst,.To llonty
presentations depict video
clogy has accunuTated. IVeaesjs
Cantsin
eTeaents
it
is'The
fight for
seeos powerTess to dog his
f ron co,ntenporary Ne"irt'iyii_
totaT
freedoa
thru,
ill
fo.r,
footstepsi retributjon js jno-Togytlive perforaances
I capabTe
of creativity, .Tbere
r1ldesigned
of tracking hia down.
"rL-'
to shock and pririk"
most
"r"as
aany
definjtions as
,Ye is voracious ef appetite,
the vieser vith.priaitive
t-here
are
individual
iVeoisls.
proTific of expl-anation,etercorporaT infornation o giant_
Cants-in hiaseTf is tie nove_'
na77y on the brink of affiuence
screen
pervqrsion,and psycho_
dent's
nost
eloquent spokesyet forever in the sTough of
drana t ic . counte r -act ion.i
a?n,trotting
out
any
poTenic
debt.He is,uoreover. a prince
The purpose of this activ_
c.hat aay b_ying pubTicity or
_ is
anong parasites,a nodeT of
ity
tvo-foTdtfirst
interest.,I
an a true indivi_
aii
opc..inisn and a .aaster of obtuse_ duaT in a world
to fur.ther the cause ofof Lnter_
where
inaivi_
ness. IIe can achieve rDore o and
national
Neoisnrand secondly
duaTity is a- crine,rh" ,"iark"-at Jgss cost to hinself, than
to gain attention for Cantsia
wi.th
characteristi.
,oa"siy-.
a gypsy. He is as ancient as
a_nd the neabers of his .io.ie.
t nave yitnessed the deaater_
the hi77s, as genial as the
The latter goal is retgarctli--'
iaTization
of
tlie
art ohject
sunshine, as cheerful as an
ds p-araaoant by sone obseryers.
and I knoe that the on.1 y'ari
expecta.nt relatjve at the death work stilT worth
As torner brjtish discipTe
creatiig ii
bedside of tteaTth. He is un_
Steryart H.one recently pliitea
I
ay'ovn
life.
thi nkab 7e , unfor get tab 7e o une j
out , 'llost /yeoi s ts vould
j
Neoisa stresses the value
ectabTerTiving on al7 aen forto an_ything to achieve a"too
and iaportance of ne, iaeii.
lit't7e
a17 tine.Nations die and rise
s^candaTized press coveraee.,
ft's central tenet is sinply
againt Kings.coae and ga, enp_
uantsin
,he added, ,enen
that ANYONE can take on tLe'
erotF soar and tall...But
as far as pointing out ,Znt
" llonty
nantle
to- an
of
Monty
Cantsin
and
Cantsin I j ves on and on.
attendant that he had throvn
p.erfora actionb jn his nl,ne.
his bTood over an art gaTlery
Cantsin rras actuaTTy born
As a key nanifesto explainsz
(No kidding! Sorry pete but
rMonty Cantsin
vaTT,hoping that thjs iction'
is che uTti,,_
wouTd get hiu arrested..He vas
you're rea77y asking for this.
ate art product and ultinate_
d-i
sappoin ted.. ( Hone renounced
Ed.) Istvan Kdntor,but changed
7y ue aust att BECOilE
rYeoisa 2 years ago, but
[js naae at tte instigation
Cantsin.cs sociery hasil";i;ii.Lr"
7s a aoveDent based on paradox,
of anerican aail arti;t David
"" i i
inc_reasingTy drained
iro.ny and the conceptual sest_
'OztZack.The two net for the
individual ity the eaphasis-in
"t .iliure he renains it,s foreu6st
first t.ine in Budapest circa.
art lras shjfted avay' froa tie
bri tish exponent. )
aid-1976 and struik up._a
art object onto the p"r"orl"close working relationship.
Cantsin hiaself r'enains
aTity of the artist. Monty
Kantor eas at the tine a aod_
cheerfuTTy inperturbed by such
Cantsin is an artist l{,ith
erateTy taTented young ausic_
a-tteapts to underaine hjs care_
such a strong personaTity
ian with artjstic preiensions.
fu11y contrived Dystique. .In_
that a uniqui naaq is un_
On Zack's advice he enigrated
fact he encourages anii_Neoist
necessary to his individ_
to Canada in jgTT,establish_
sent_i&ent , expTaining th.at ,
ua7 itv.',
. ATthough jt is
ing a base of operations in
reaT aovenent is Tike that d_
avaij_
abTe for generaT use,onTy
HontreaT.Today he is known
it generates energy of .differ_
fstvan Kantor h4s taken the
throughout North Aaerica and
ent kinds,and because we are
conceptuaT persona of Monty
Europe as llonty Cantgin, high
a77 different individuaTs this
uantsin to extrenes.After 7
priest of Neoisa, rthe alass
energy becoues an inscrutabTe
years De js firnly estaDljsh_
novenent of individuaTity,
and inexhaustjDfe gold-nine..
(sic).
ed as it,s ctrjef Z*p""""i.Ui,
It's true thatsCanlsin values
continuous action since 1979
dranat ic, f Tourishing gestures
A aer curi a7, de 7 iber ate 7 y
has been the drawing off and
over co7d, hard speci fics , but
enignatic figure,Cantsin al'_
seTTing of his bloo-d to tinl
this in no way dininishes his
ways provokes extreae react_
ance the ,iyeoist CuTturaT Con_
iaportance. Ai accoapTished
.ions. His'foreignt cast of
spiracy.tf have found this
nedia aanipuJator,he is able
countenance is accentuated by.
systen of art to be the nost
to take liberties by virtue
a severe I Eraserhead, haircut .
appropriate one for the carry_
of his sheer audacity.At vorst
He eabraced the /Veoist cuTt_
i-ng out of ny pro ject,, hi '
he appeais to be that rare
uraT conspiracy in 1979 and
discTosed in l9g2."Fo1lowing
breed of person,a .aythouaniac,
has been co-ordinatiag itrs
a.sched,ule previously
soneone
rhose estiaate of his
dctivi ties eyer since . The
,rf,
the vaTue of ny bTood ""t
own vaTue is so high that he
ain of Neaisn,he says, tjs to
has
fee_7s justified
rapidTytand by
create a yorTdte n€w worjd,
in fabricating
it17cr12sed
wi7l be vrorth $l ,000',0001984
a
Tegitnd that aoulds itrc-losei
and we vant to create neet
.00
per aiTTiTitre. rThis project_
to the heart rs desire.)ReviLed
things.ft's a kind
jse,a kind of actjvi ofty,praction
Tater
proved
by
the orthodox press/nedia
to
be
rZther
optinistic,and a signed test_
for his various attention_
you have to practise i t and
to
tube of Cantsinrs bTood now
grabbing strategjes, he renains
understand what it is. you
seIJs for around $20 _ 625.
as deternined as ever to chart
have to be a part of it.
Uith his, Blood Caapaign,
That's one of the definitions.
nev frontiers of outrage.
ritua-ls and reTated ac'tiriti."
You cannot understand it other
yise.'
Cantsin dispTays an iaplicit
NEOI ST PROPAGAIIDA
serse of how to feed into
TEXT BY PETE SCOTT
Ihe .lyeoist cuTtural junta
othe.r
vas
of
thought
forned
and
in
the
For
further inforaation on
-actual7y
dct iv i -systens
t y. ( parenthet i ci71 y ( ? ? Ed
70,s by the aforesaid
1ar1l Zack.
the. lVeojst Cultural Corrpirr.y
- -')
he
is
David
also
one
of
Canada',;
Established
ylit? to Honty Cantsin c!o
prenier recording artists with
in the aaiT art netvork,first
the fieoist Enbassy, l02A Laioie
it
a nuaber of exceTient IZ. re_
Tater spread to sna77_sca1e
Ave, Outretant , eue
Ieases to iis credit.)lJnder
'HzY rli''
canada
I 19
Bo{3
!E;
I
rE -g
E€i;
:: Ee
t +
lri I
o: o
!r
l"l g
,t l
g,
-!
I
E
!
€
ii
x
a
,{
i
-o
I.c-'E A
s Ege
o
E,
!i!
g!!:6
$
B
Eilr!
!-
i;r;;
ij8E4
ii:! I
rE
ee ;.
96
EO
tsi ^E_o!
a
E
I
t
rs4: f
e
:i5;E
j€fBr
':..;t,,t.
.-c
B3
E!
iE
E!
E.Y
$, !H
+
l:
l-t
g.t
E}
6
E€
5E
Eg
gE
F
&
j'
4
E
I
.t
z
i,E
o
,g
*
!E
t&
M
zH
F
tB
3E
ei
I
F4
J
H
E
?
F-t
:d
J6 E:
E" 4
E 16
= 5ri-rii
120
E
ir
;l
ir ci
'a
E{
o
5.:iBs
f t;
o l6:d
E)
ilS 6CE€
Est{ tti.I
i E4 !.igi.r
it iiiliii
A
o
Ixi
5
F
B
a
I
6
_e
-.
!
?
}H
rc .5
ie
;T
o
-E 0
ESC
<-i:
to
liii il,i liiii iil?ii
s
'
; s3
r.U9
!
s
tEI
;
o
iiiri iui li liiiiiiiiiifiiiiilfiilr
E
i'
E
E
=
itt{
5
g r
€5
oP <E -(
r0
4G' c$ ! 5
3
3E
E
a
aE
,
Z-
i E rfl tiii;iiiffiiiiiiiiBi};E
Et€5
i
si
i:
!,
;E
S
3: 9 !'i
iX
i8
? EFi E
Egst
rii*
E &i4
;t
Be
iEEiiiiiEiiiiii*iiiiiii*ii,
rg; g
E;Ei
9{}
6 e..a
'o
*l
Eg
Er:{
rbo
F]
H iiEl8
9E E
a,
Ed'iE
IE
E4
F
E.U
OB
:s
i i€'l
E}
Fl
h'E
CB
ct
9t
I6f E
u"
A
ra
h'E
, r iitig
*e BE
8E
,t,
E8
Eletd
'^9
it
D E,
8. a'C
9\
€h
o.:
4E
rt
I E.E
P Q eU
'. o
t; 6
e:
dB
E6
3 +[i
-B
::r E dl
a{ EF
d
4
IE
ie
ri . E.E
c
x
o E_a
n !- B3'
t
E
a':
--l
t
t
Ii iililii'Iiiia, fiIi iiiiiIi fiilii
iiiii!fiiitfii$f i iii; iisi;!i ii:ii;
.
,
f St0i(.f i :,: *<,itiiEt through
i'y ej'esti s':*ked it i.n and
i t rfr'irJ ed. .qround and around
J my reduced
:1,"v ?,ff*.:.
"":-1
*5rft,{-'F=.rf*[g.pac
--,..-:,,i,
rc
My inaginatiai4 cringed with
paranoic reflexes.situarionist
theo ry leaves itseTf open to
insuTt;the
supercessi on of art
with literarure.But who were
.^f
f*a
;;i:l::,:iffif;:"iiiit{"?Z,ri3.ii:Z',,;1z*i1z:,H
yzi i,!"i"'"7^liz'n";o,.""
xz:;
t:::,*.w:,;;;ffi:":;_
FI
praxis,at
first r'thousht they
H::ff.#:'1:'_1r^"^-or,?.,?rl.ari,ns
-
l:
,
y"k." .
irlhal
n
you so i::1ss
you
damn seTf
self-righteous?
-righteousT n
-l
i
iIE
PFf
&JJ
1"".;:"11r;{,1:n:;i,-";:;;:;iiz,
*u," tujl r;;' ;; ;"- ;;;7";,;';"r,_
ivity
and git
the nost-. boring
"z1I;0,
: ::ffjJ;:r1ffi;,ffi
,ffi*e_ver,
sot sanethlns af ter all,quir
::'!#.[ffi#
a
3
Yl
d read
:l-.Sry41
rnei:.l*Egnr
i[,,r"]f6ft3$+.0eBffibscure
yt'+.:tjftsopne
slenere.iP{d
r.Eiffo f.ftffiis
Elffitriliffils of
or
epoch.-,lnti{S,,i"r9,s"
I
i?*h:,
ry,yt'. L ept ')-s!Lu sE;4-;.(Fnougfit
1,q1!;'teo;srs,.rveo=dffi!srsi
,ffi*-[ffi".r.,
"uo .noxn\ng. 'o t8? on,on7 t.
a| semi-anorilniiiiis
n'Epe, Karen
ElTiot.It
through
:lin8*1?,"':ll-ifu.*ed
e!$','#{{roa"-9nedme.
::: tlgit
li1 -9|.tl9" .tltbl.B'r.fffit and-
{
=
your
"2? Job,quit your inagination
t-
,I"rl',r;:"t;i"^:iz:,, Sfl
.,0
-^-;n^ja;^1
an(i ,'"iZLZi'"'
vFoararp
int^,th6
soup. rt ,s ggt.ti..l.!,;.qa.q,,Ee-r,;i!ft.s,.
soup.fr,s
gerri.n.g'bettertitts :.,,,,1:-.,. L
getting berter,;bit ti"y ur"
just going to thiak t.hat .7rn h.
pi_cs-taker.But that js,nt rrue,
-
s,4
Fr
LJ
=
z.
z,
3
jsEs.Col Lradiction,n,
d
f riends,
contradiitroos.
To destray art and texts
throush the nediuns of art and
texts is a stranse sane to pt ay.
r'n nat so sure that ius vverLvLe
possibre
ro break
to
breax out from
from ,hu--"
'E
that position,
nJram onTy !.e,e.r"'u!"'o1.Ii",i'r.r,.
-'Maybe apathy'i" rir"-;"1, ;;;;";
_J
:\
&3
er,Qrtili.the
d,,.the Kat
,tiarei{r-1,'8*J'Fq5r prg_qr...
?u8@u*, '
Cdrtauser
and
;";;*r;;'.li;ffi.E*I;
tno-ug*4,,,
r
ffi
*u: .^ tangTe al"#i gnt.,The'.-.
uctian.of mead$fu .and the ..: lef t to.,;::,if,4:Eld against the pjd, . : , ,l ..',Zi',o'Z,X'i:,:
;;;i;i;;";;" d;;,;;##f,
,i'i",ul','
",0r".
72,*
they
i+1$.:a:9,*E..:,r,b':siltLT.r,r ,
;g,6g;19
:::{{.,:,i,
de sefyqt -Bu t sni.Aiy" i,,r""u
taiTet and.diTTicpeople l'rgle erti.sts even
e ren tha |
by the
l"_rpteire€r$$irffi,ili*f3.'
ffiffi#,#;ffi€$;.ia,;ouq.
chey woula'.suF.bIy
they
woufa*si$S,$giy deny tit
*r$S..;trfi=;,tu.**;i,"ir.i;:trtl;]*ls..t:*,rrf,,e,#ritti&:empr
I lU
ltrr1|
1 : '.
sTappy Ttke a niddTe-
woul d' nt ? ) Hah haF+iSi) they
put it on
oi,u- aunyi"'r" t'iZ'-*-Jt".,l Ln*#t,.,rr ;jffi{ -nihjlist.I
r"::i':|:' ;rl::r],:r"i"
tle.ir trip.Is that;:.yhy f kf* i" ..:i. ,ay.sel f ,,body of Jesis,\ody
all want to be caiT,,id iqrffir;+ij+*
.'oi JeSus,.I spewed it baci
Ellio-tTDeny your,.indi uS,El?.ifil'*'"" :.qato rhe roi 7'et and jacked
,: il9', nar\p ot .r#e.,eane i Peroif in ecstacy.The riddTe
""1!,:rlr?,2",',_7;.!'ii?:i,;'.',;"::":iirl?ifu:!003"
Eo
io have
f,.a.ue a varle:E.y1.
varibiy;;. rsf nanes
nanes and
in'd:o],{}})le,i:.fI ,don,t
ins,olriblJ,e,
dont trusr
trusf Karen
Karen
personaTiries to-suit nv noods"
Ejliot;"i''d'ont:ttte-i1ttn"rt'
jts arritude oae l ittf e h1t.
'schizc:phrenia materialised?
The En.d o.,!.SS,E",t"rvityt" The
They/Lhen/those renind ne of
-Z|IZ',::;;.
l-
E-
'
ot
Hi
CfD
-
=
=
-J
()
--- tE
,lL.;c,,€l$i#;1ffi;*;;,'
;;Ii'.'r'i"i'iZZ', ',2';:|2""2;;o
s.6iial relati<j-rl+i&fg3!..
.ii^ was aii get.ting roo
ay f rishtening that I shrink
in horror when i think oi it.
,'r'il
ienated
z.
faEherra
concept so vulgarl
o
r- tU
IFf
f,U ,1
zi
=
=
-;!
ulf
l
z.
fE-
LIJ
--
=
$tr#ffi ll',',;',ir'u'i'i*l;;lr'r;:*;rig,;;:,;i,*{,i;;'ryH}
"r
-
-.ja
+
z.
^
t-a
{;tffii{,uJ,j.,,}:r|fi,*,,;*,,:u,;"1,,;,,,i,:,,;i,4,ii,i::i:iii!'H'ffi
:"';'f#;"" i
.q1
",'ffi:;' *l,,.T#.!"o,;,
'iourn.alisnr:o
They
;{;,l[bt,e,ge,!#ng ta the nitt.y.-.
!,!!,;Cue.:EqO'it
;1::"" !d
r'Zi1:r" -:',,2i"2ir",,1;'
the next
issue).They
were good,very
',zzi"',;T^'";.iziz'nzzol"ozi;
Ehen no more(unti7
,0 ffI
l;,ij;.i,,:;
i p9t"r_, ' ifu::di;.:;:i'*L
*i.r,.
,tr&r"r
iirlr"r
'fl?i9:,.,1
...'.,. ,:.;.,iii
.
.q;d-Lr.aZir'e' a:Tready locking
" ......,...J.,,,,;.,..ii:'l
';;';;".1ir,1,i#rliZr;dt""r,'ri"Z'i.""
",i;;"lr-1;"itnn
.,t.r1e,9os"ix,p,
runn.r"'i';,,.
n"..1
.ag;d."
Pm
lua
?I
a-f-,,ttiiigrqetian,o.ue,kirT and
IJ
'i;,..,..,bfu4*4.*'.,i'J.'ii'it'ri";-"'-;-!rr;'i;r,"
Lfler e u,as..tnhursi
!he.re
was'Anhursr R.d'
j
Hd, in ai
..... .ibliJb.vertisjne. rhars a fuckirto
aili.l:" ".h:b.by ,.F,!.?ry. r even recos:
-_
-1.1**#jiiiqri;I,#ae^q..,
";1$
Iti .Srl1tl]":!ge,g ,t,lut i,
g$1p,gii,cJ.t,is,ir you neet
h*.,...rtbd.hn or, dare I say " . .
worried,an I being f ollowed!,:, .t,l'.1 -+lt, irg:,goqng
-.
under
the
name Lf
t,
ir," and -'ii,.
I recagnised'Tie''b.rowns'
1
ar'. uriLes this'sMtLErgtru*'&rr,.',::"i.:li'{i.r:eitEJr.iZt,turn
around
ii d t c er er accur..-to trredr.iFii{f' , ..'.a,ndl.r.Ii"n boTt for s7ow7y
the dlor and
it
nc.o1e..ttil"is sel f -righLeous
wculd giv'e a quartertyu
bastards
re aot' i t:i t:
v.ed and E'rct t-.Le
b'rioo' L-- : ::: I ''
*:o. r-=?-'8,' : a.
I /l
j
cHoosE
ALIENATION
e real'UFO atorY Eust. encoEPaaa
be1 of the nany oanifestations
g observed. It i6 3 etory of
6sts,phantorns and atrange oental
bberations:of sn'invisible rrorld
ich surrounde and occa88i,ona11Y
gulfs usiof ProPhets and ProPhies,gods and deoons.It le a
1d of l11uelon aDA hallucinatloa
re the unreal aeeEB verY real,
vhere reality ltae1f is distored by strange forces - forceg
hich are aloost entirelY beYond
r porrera of conPrehension,
Theee are the considered
ords-of John A.Keel,arguablY the
oat arresting vrlter of theu all
n the .subiect of UFOs-and related
noEena.Keel's books have earnt
o the reputation of being one of
he oost origlnal thinkers i'n the
leld.Having collated and analyzed
rvealth of data he nov feels that
Oe are not only real,but have
en preaent in our skiee since '
he davn of nan.ttThey seeu to be
yet under intelligent
environnental
ontrol, rrhe told american publisher
tn 1966."8y.'environnenlYoo.-Dy. enYlronDe
tsar!(er 1n
Gfay
tdy Barker
nean that theY geeo to have
taliI
lvays been here - that they corLst vlth us' somehov.Reaenber,
1n the Bible the prophet Zechariah recounts a converEation uith
ran angel'and describes seelng
ra flylng ro11'.The lngel told
is the curse that gohla,tthat
eth forth over the vhole earth!.
Ue1l,that curse is sti11 Yith
us...ll
John (eel nas born in 1930
and began to urite about UFOs
tn l945.During the early 50s he
Yorked'for the Aaerican Forces
I{etrork(AFN), producing radio
ahons froo locations as disparate as Castle Frankenstein in
of the
Gernany and the interior
Great Pyraold at Glza.Subsequent
peregrinations(coue agaln', John?
Ed)took hln as far afield as
Beirut, Damascus.Baghdad and a
thousand ports of call in betYeen.It vas during this period,
yhile on a vLsit to the UPPer
KeeI sav his first
llile,that
UFO.He later described it as
ra oeta11lc-looking disk vith
rot-atin8 outer rio,which hovered for several ninutes above
the Asnan Dan ln broad dayliShtr!
'
f,eel Yas the last aoerican
to enter Tibet fror the Indian
atde(the border vas closed soon
afternards by the Chinese),and
spent several weeks in enthusiastlc pursuit of the abooinable
goovaan.Thia exPerience - and
otherg like i-t - led hio to
forge a nev hypothesis on the
that exista beturelatlonship
eca huaan folklore and psychlc
ghenouena.
Soae years later,in 1966,
Ieel set out to solve once and
for all the Dystery surrounding
ptr.io"e ot UtOs.
origin
"rrd
With careful objecEivitY he
tracked dovn sightings,uitnessea
and evidence,galning in the
proceaE Eany strange ner lnsights
into the plasti.c nature of our
research eventuallY
reality.His
1ed hin to pos;ulate the eristence of another sPace-tiDe continuuu para11el to our oYn.Thie
theory forned the basls of the
-r-:rost''seolna11y
loportant of hls
-
UFO books:'OPEBATIOI{ IROJAI{ ll0RSEr
(l{en York, G. P. Putnan and sons I 7O)
So[etine psychic researcher
Bob Durant once deacribed rOTHI
asttthe nosE dfscussed and least
read book in UFOlogytt:a descrip-
UFOe,
and
I
such
FROH T
one hal
page'OTE
ED PLAX
CIES I and
Read
bring latb
truth abo.
and itrs
ants.Theiris not so
to de-prog
"Be11ef is
rernarks at
again: ttThe
books is aga
tlon rrith vhich Xeel hinsblf nov
uere negsays."Barely 2,O0O
ligib1e,"he
religion.r'Thia.
.copies vere sold in the USA,and
ular1y evideat
only a fev hundred in the british
(publlshed in
connonuealth.The final insult was
CosnLc Questionr
that the book aever earned a
1978),vhich aleo
elngle penny in royalties and vas
theory on electr
later pi16ted and publiehed as a
tion and itts rc
paperback uithout oy knovledge or
psychic phenouenaa
dooned ProJcoDsent.So it nas
these lines of r
ect all round. tt
done nore to erplorc
Dooned or noE the publication
logy of the super.l,nd tbr
of'OTH'vas a najor event in the
other UFO1ogist,living or
field of psychic research.I have
As a phenonenologlet
one of the first british edltions
ri
has his ovn.lnaginatl"e
beside rue as I type.Published
and directions.He doeg'at
ia in
under the Abacue inPrint'it
every aense s classic of its kind. ept the accepted,but rorl.s
and
stead nith viabillty
feel takes as hls atarting PoLnt
the aasuoptj,on that UFOs are para- rrithin a pattern devoid af
or dogna.An acknor,ledged
physical rather than PhYsical.
of psychic research,he nor I
Their appearsn.ces are,he eaye,
in ilew Iork,nhere he coatiar
controlled by a race of ultrapursue his singular theo
to
Elenentals,
terrestrisls(uTs)or
Itlnterest in UFOg is at a! a
rrhose purpose is to decieve Dantioe lon over heie,tthe rera
kind and nanipulate huoan affaire.
a recent personal letter;
in
,Throughout hlstory t.hese--entitiea
t'even thouSh retve been havi
have sanifested thenselYes in
'naJor nationside rrave since I
vhatever foru is aPProPriate to
Hy laEesE book,'CARNML OF fEE=
the level of.culture and technolHII{D',has now been accepted by,':
ogy achieved by the hunan race.
3 different publlshers - ther !
Thus they took the forn of denons
they all decided Eo get out of
or vanpires in the Middle Ages,
business 1n-stead.I'n hoping it
the
enigto
us
as
now
appbar
and
publlsled-this
Eatic'Men In Blackr.r'The UFO phen- vl11 finarr$-'g..
year. tt
uarnE'
onenon 1s reflective,rtKeel
vJhatever the eventual fate o
at one point:"the rore frightened
aCrrnival of the Mlnd',X,eel 1s
the victlB becopes,the uore oaoiassured of a lastlng place in the
festations are eacalated.Dabbling
UFO ha11 of fane.His exploratr,oaa
t ith UFO8 can be as dangerous as
of the occult have taken hts to
dabbling Yith black nagic.The
placea rvhere fer* nen before hLl
phenooena Pr€YE uPon the neurotic,
the gul1ible,the irnoature.Paranoid have ever gone.And yet,deapite
schiiophrenia,denonooania fnd even the force of his learning aad
experience,Neel retalne an alnoet
euicide can result.A oild curioschtldtike sense of l"nnocence.xl d
ity about UFOs can turn into a
deBtructive obsession.For this
.not pretend to know any anEuer8,t
he eays."After a lifetioe
of trav
reason I etrongly reconaend that
and etudy I au stil1 learning the
parenta forbid their chlldren
questions...I
have seen_ a large
from beconlng lnvolved.Schoolpart of this Yorld and ltts nystteachera and other adulte should
erles.tlonder and curiosity have
not €ncouraSe teenaSers to tske
alrrays been an integral part of
an lntereat in the eubJect.t!
ny 1ife.I ao only trying to share
(It ray be vorth Eentl.oning 6t
that Yonder rith the reader...r
thla poinE that Hark Chapnan,
rho Bhot and kitrled John Lennon,
PETE SCOTT
vas hiuself a foroer UFO-nut")
{So it cant do You anY harn
,f t."t a1l l I{atch out f or those
agrees. r'l{orldui'8b tales
.
::?coNTAcT ALlENSrtn lG TErv\..l 3
2
What the HELL do
you think y0u're doing\
It should be painfully obvious by now that the world as we know it won't last too damn much longer.
what are you
doing about it? Going to work or-school, coming home, goofing around. What will happen to yoir routine when attitre
shit_comes down on us at once? Don't yod feel responsible ior trying to help this LnOangirea planet?
No? Good. The fact is, it's too late. Thcre isn't a god damned thingiou as an individualian do about ecodisaster,
nuclear death, overpopulation and so on. Things are going to Hell on i"rrti"in;a
or anyone
else besides the Rockefellers, can do abdut ii'is tolustlit back and
" watch thi show.
But remember
the End of the World may be mulh worse and take much longeiihhn yo, thought. The mere act of
sitting in youi home watching everything fall apart on TV may be too much for evin the s6utest briins to take. tn faci,
the more alert and intelligent you are, the quicker you'll likely be driven to suicide by the sheer hideousness of what you'li
be seeing. WILL YOU BE READY?
WILL YOU STILL BE SANE ENOUGH TO LAUGH WHEN THAT II.HICH MUST COME TO PASS,COMES
I
ilg; th;iltihiilt;u,
-
.
,
I1
a
I
TO PASS? WILL YOU EYER GET SLACK??
'
.ttudy.our SubGenius"titerarure" closely. Keep itlyryour toilet and'riiemorize it. If you aren't as dense as mosf peopli, you'll be quick to realize that, cheesy-scam,though it might well be, the Church of the SubGenius is just about the bnly
organization around that can help you face the god-awful facts without some sort of ingratiating, sweetness-andJight,
goody-two-shoes, pollyanna, life-is-a-bowl-of-cherries bullshit . Not only that, but the Church of the Subceniis ii
beyond the shadow of a doubt THE ONLY TRUE RELIGION. We perform miracles, answer aay question, invoke
I
I
!
demons, and have a direct etheric hotline to space god Jehoveh I through our infra-psychic trance-batbting personal
Savior, J. R. "Bob" Dobbs
who is irctually a pretty regular guy, just very rich and possessed by forces griater than
Man. SubGenius material has only recently been made public. This is yourchance tb get in on tht ground floor of a huge,
lucrative cult
NOW, while rates are low, so that you will not only recievf the immediate benefitilirted on our Appliiation Coupon, but will also be eligible for all the $$$, weird sex, drugs, and sheerpowerover others that go *ith higii.
ranking membership in what will probably sweep this unkempt planet in an unstoppable wave of cynicil, dangerius
power plays, insanely morbid truths and panhandling, zombie-iike teenage "followers."
For the sake of what little you still hold dear, we urge you to submit this application so that we may determine if you are
worthy to recieve the closest thing to salvation you'll ever get a whiff of.
-
-
YES or \O Questions
Simply put a Y or N aftcr &ch qucstion, or SO for .sort of.t
Do,oD..lbildlHrltoEll3ca,sIo[allltt,"Go{t.
DoyqtallmatmlattccrlrtrtrllorarL.lyclmlr0r
Anyamt6lttya.tha}lad?
tt l tr.rtt"
, mltlrr?
Dc yc rra*
tnr t[6orr, ir rr1.lb rrd ]Drd oE,
Do le lan voha ntlqlrt h lrr lad, hbr .d hdr0xrf
Do to fti4 hilt tolly n6a13? Do tq ivc h yu en 1th ,o.ld? Do lc xrlfy /an .;ioD;-;ailrt
Do ,.. lI cat cr* Irr.r.d*, b lF
ol ha6 FyIrt?
Do yq ltc to to or rt rth ,ftI tdna, ldlt reqly tr.l dr.tilara tl Oo ic qrc ilcnt r f6
$..1". o O. ,ryf
Do vr !a ra3a tm 9rc hercd lrrc tar ld?
,ia. artill.3 ud r.ffiizlq rnhcsf
,r.f* til t:i-im
atdFri! on tE?
!lto io rll*
An ro. t'Ft[|''
ao rcr ler{ Dl6fl Sooa trt trl
lotrDly DovoraililkdrtDarlcd!)mi.tlrraLrrllF6toeofl
t6 otta aE r.t-i . irl"r"".-r rorlrl rm* ir n tr
rc c! Do tc.tlov rrrt' irtlr3' rutht tct
h t ilDon roc?
ovorr? .Hrre yc rn r i.iii..o er.r 66 r r* jo**.ir-lerll yer bn rr 3o locdrt ad{ . rloat
Do tq .ltty! r..a lo lrrt ardq tl. Er rlil
lto ,a u& lto r-.td. ri ti i"rty.r".t th rdd, rte*t uc r
ect*:?
Dotrto.Italclt-rlnlr?
vylclyo.Gffih.Fhr.tortqrao,xbr3l,qr[tto?
llc*lrt Doyq-iclrtoa'ttthlatlr*rl
Dovr-rrolcrrfollt
t l.?
Mrntd? Dlvorcd? ItotoltrnaElstlcL?
Ircrmathtrr.dailf Uffii
O"i-iffiI'i-lrfi
f
xta ,c En r ctXa, aa tr -rarE
Do ,o frqrlr. aL rmlty tG Lr tr.t ..acr?
..a rrtr?
rUc ttjru ri. rrnrl Do y-E . .falon.,rr* .*"i u- y".
-a Elrt
Do ,r tha t rrlat, Lt *L ao to-rrtcd
Do vor Bl. tot? ,ob/rrol/clc?
lk crr.alc s?
ttld mrl,
r oD? Ito ,a rtodad
iJlt
mDcr: cI rtn.!. ,rfir.- ;Iri
Do ,r !d Fr(lrodc h.h.t-?
h r.inl, do to mtry y'vc r -lt?
Vtcr yor 3i hr fm rort, uf yuha .
'
Dtily*trlalrvamrrr..a.lftdr,od,ic-rara.dycrplodc
llovqmdrrci? lvrraltl.Erxtt
lrff aldtrirHt-*fuit-.f
frr.f ---rci*d}
bto l6lterc qc!
Do_vor aapltlr.ly ad I, lEr tlli! llLb, r&) ilrt l|Ptr ao Lc Do cqrdr .tn-' j p*
f.r r; ycr m:
Dot .tcr.tlrrr-rH,rlltroraanf,rLca.rtIftry,
rlrtl. rkioi?
Do.r li f7frric Oc 1ji oJoif. a
raftlo ia .rri 1n ci' l} torH tLt ort*rrht?
Do ,d rencdB td rL lrprrdor llil EvEnyx}{ry .l atr o[odrc Do yc lt .rfy i l.*, il,L-fffi -rnm: -.f.1of
(n oat frl$ &Jrrd) s & E rb(i )y yil?
lro ,- til ,ci "rr(t lo tL lat o, r
atrGt-.16
Iro t6 lotttr tlR yo rrta Fa rrhrr?
lf r., a.vid(d rath qrrrtr oi lorjlr td. rlal Nlerb, reld ,q crRcLE THE ANgri,EIs wEIc.It ApLy:
Dot-okltmil-o.dl.frrltL.rll?
.ldrlhdntl{odtc? Worldyq-rct|l lx*ot.r|l
ortry?
Do vr metha wtro tlrG t aar riltr l{o y* TY!
Do;opk corcdr yel odd?
*r&r of afa roaorfr3 nrdr .crtrte yOU!
Do ,x oftr lt rh ttc lnll uH E lta?
Do tor ltrc dtffmni ,Gmndlta.r mcordrt to rto ,fl'E ailtlrt to? OO por; oriiit;t
-51i..X.; lcao, lem, ll. ed-, r
lltttl t?
vot ,ttl E too l+l oli63 rrl? ll. L{bu dcchlos!
laltly; S: Uri: nm; irtf.""tua;'b-;.l6tdrHi
fi; fiJ
lle vo reredx
ll. tlla ct ot til ttrt6 rla dq r lur? Do vc Lctrv. a'lGrlb rttl tLly lLr rltl ,*dr?
t , -iy; -i|l ..ifi".f.f r dt ,l t .., ,trro. tr oYmlto.i t|rt.i
llo yc htc ,t.lr -rl
atrlit rllcl tc e fl:l oft c acrracd 1- 1L1 Do6 oervllllt dny! r.lc Mc a lat nd ct trhc a rxl ! y.t o.catt
mu;
i*;
li*;'i
.tlllow;
i;, U* 'cd;;
alorth h tqld? AF ,cr drrr bt t
td btr dc1!I. n m jood m?
r;r. .oirr; - .rf... iJ,Jrh ,.r.frr.f; oht;
ha.|Icrttli rcLtl&;
Do vo edv 'llor tllqp olf ud rcorrdurt?
lVodd yc lulv [aLr dl tilrd ra nki TY 0.t to ct?
.6oay; ,ai;
rycloalct mcr&;
--.rlj.ilJl'...r"i
Iro to Hlm|Jy rort tl r lmr_ lrr ail
pf, m r$l3t ta lr a{tdty't ,oral ror lb.tcd t lb4olc t laaiou?
qgrr*vc; rXrcO;
--r",
rlcr froxfi; ufrf-m.;
q*.f, f.Lbtki m]ai
qlt ). r*ht th 100 r u r{kdrj mdvci
Do rc dot. rm.d r br? tDo ycr lrc rd icac chrr
.r.pro; lr-tctln; ,..l[r iiit:,-Lmy, wlcrq rlttl rtddh".r;
rot6{dv
Do tc toot aor c tlc rto rwll nllr ao ldld btc q ao il ah tlc vq rd mlad?
ror; rudhrprcdi ;;;
.1.iil, ,.dntca; oviltir,,; ra,
aoL ou lr, ao dLr
Do va lrm tG laftl rc trl dlo.k, Do ,ot r*fdc
, vc bt. &x?
F d nnny, .. yii t. rr,rnicprcnie, t rEvAnp1AN, a ]rty .
AE to tr&|, til atri llol rq'E Ert6 Or. tlc m!. tloL1 'gcd cf ld 'aarg' ,a D r;Fml mt
;1EDIOCRETIN?
Dolo t l ,lstid o r urdn tnl. xrhftt r.a afi'3o rt hJ alt..1 llo yo lcl ;nrob tlar tot.. raclra to .rri bQfha .r ia,
r.3xt AE ,c t {cdlt. ntlr llI rpcr:ddor?
Do tc tG aErya G r ctlfrrrry root. [d yr-dirly-nrra lryLkl ol rtc lolorlr! .Dcmu.
ao yo rc a la lcllcvt h!
Al .tli d la dor, e ta mtlG orhcd Clrrl.c Mrru h h iG. da ,c 116 lcl ct
lGa ao art alc airtr J* of iw cldr n a!zu_"ia".: fklortr .-r.-, ,x I..t NG MoB|n; mi rDorc;
crlt qual.nb ol ,fu|
txr.txa?
OTHEnS:
Do lo bdrcdnly Llartr d.ht trd Drr.f,lnr rlfl darluit r lro toi mlh.a to
bofhS
r,
rn{n,
-t
- Ito rq GclaElitr"ert
m?
'r i.ij.:'- 5o v13o-c lnr- ur!6
Tlc
rodd mdlrbr at rG &yr b: 116; rorl r.."y! ap-r.0.
G
Do Gtdr t rlrE c maG .tlryor rth drl,
do[[y? An yo l@ o] 16 (ictd |drf rrfctl
Do ,c .trc 6v rD { -ttt?
llo ,o srcdra llt l ,o rlo.ld 'ldr?-'
Rhit ror, ya rcu [lr ao hre rml
Itq nrt tm r lolc h ym tot.l?'
Do td a ald v€ ao lEy llal3! io til cx.i, tsr lo l.! alct
rlm; mry; t*.dr;
r"ii-; rxt rtui rd.rbrtr; rr_
Docr crqrhj n
E Gr, lry lrd .16' ao,a lr! tt rhd-uprc -m
t fttL [rtd lo,x?
-, rr-r"r,dotl6:
ai harlc h otk i drDErrs; h[.c6orci
r
lnls: (trllEx:
Do,q hrc crtra. tmo tlil F e clr tmB?
rrd llorlt, odrt'. ..d Tlrrdlr c!hn!
La.,rrdL tDdhcf S6 r UIo?
Do yq hr uy,lotlrr, ttu, cilprlCor?
Irvc,...vc
Do ,a h & lrt rr. naloldld.r abl r- rort L{ .r-r
,ry? Do vor lmalE ard .ortldy o ril4r &c lrts. ro.L tobtcrB,
copy}hrtl O ri0 Thc SubGcnluc Foundrllon
Dott a&otdc h ,cr roit |E arfu ,r rt|t?
tatl, dnfr, dr. ,6rECor?
.
"Researching lhe-Public's Ferr of lhe Unlnowi Sincc 1953!"
The Church of the "lX1S2l4
SubGenius
P.O. Box lzlo306, Dallas,
l1
t:
l-
6
Ol!
o
!ir.l-
\
mox5qtot#
o
':
o
ffiI
=
il
fhe death last month of L, Ron Hubbard,
f:
}J-:
founder of the church of Scientolosv. and oro-
lific writer of Sci-fi novcls, has blolrin op"i, un
old oontroversy. The CIA's so-called mirid control experiments. The documents released in
the past year under the US Freedom of.Information Act (US FOIA) throw an intcrcstins
light on the background of some of Hubbardi
carly critics, and when combined with the US
Navy's released file of Hubbard's military servicc, suggest a sinister conspiracy to shut up an
cx-scrice man who mcst of the world liLave
rYg
ilz,
IJ:
FT:
-Bl
{:
l^i
t:l
money-grabbing cult-lcading chartatan.
:
!F-r
r=l
tcnded to regard as nothing more than a
/
F8BP38s33e
++++++++++
6eedBBtrB6B
HubbardlNavy file has been examined by
^
Colonel
L Fletchcr Proughty, US Air Forci
(retired),_whosc job it was in the early sixtics to
produce 'mver service files' for US military
pcrsonnel engaged in intelligcnce activities'.
Proughty swears, in an affidavit dated Februarv
1985, thaf papers so far released on Hubbardis
.cover
Nary ca_reer are part
pan of
ol the ,cover
file', (known
in intG$ilErccirctes as SIIEEp-DIp) indnoi
the authentic record of Hubbard's national service it purports to be. Being a senior officer in
charge of this
charqe
th,.s tvD€
cover omrarion
qip. of-cover
operation,
Proughty says that Hubbard's intellipence
intellige'nce carocaril
€r can be
ercan
D€ discerned
orscerned by analysis ofoni
of one particular
document. In a memo dated June 25th 1941,
originajinqin the-oflice of Chief of Naval Operations (CN_O), Hubbard is menrioned as biing
Lieutenant C.e.) I-v (S), uS Navai
:>
il#fl"
oa
-=
.,Rec
Proughty says in the affidavit
ords reveal
that oficcrs assigned to the Navy Coudter Intel-
;i
i
lQclcc.$7y1@ Branch) are ide4ftfted by this
eynboll-V (S)."
The answcr seems to lie in Hubbard's post
war work at the Queen Elizabeth II hospitil in
Washington DC, where he was researching the
ideas.that later bccamc known as Dianc*tics,
using paticnts from that hospital. Hubbard
worked thcrc as arnon-staff tharapist for four
ycan from 1947. According to US FOIA documents , this wasjust onc of thc psychiatric units
lhat werr conducting cxperiments into mind
control on tr€half of thc fore-runncrof the CIA,
thcOSS.
Originally codc.named PROJECT
BLUEBIRD, and latcr ARTICHOKE, the
mind control c-xpcriments became known as
-ULTRA2 many documents concerning
which wcre releascd in the late seventies whei
thc CIA was undcr scrutiny by the Congressronal @mmiltces.
From a study of these documents it now
loots ccrtain that most of the psychiatrists who
condemned Dianetics in the lifties and sixties,
wcre also part of thc CIA's mind control rescarch project..It s€ems that while CIA sponsored psychiatrists were experimenting on patients with drugs and hypnosis on one-flooi of
the hospital, Hubbard was getting acc€ss to the
sam€ pa'tients to explore his Dianetics theories
of pain-related psychological blocks on another
floor of the same unit. Quite by accident, he appears to have discovered the CIA experimenis
hidden beneath the patients' ,post hypnotic
M..K
,t
-
c
blocks'.
According to a Scientology spokesman contacted by It Hubbard was duly ipproached by
f
'certain persons' offering sponsorship for his
Dianetics research, bur reftised, citin! his disgust as a former intelligence officei at lhe
bizarre nature of the ARTICHOKEprojects.
v
ln the following eighteen months he is said to
.have
gone
IIal out with his research, finally
writing up the conclusions in the book intiti#
DJANETICS which was published in May
1950, and soon became an'international besi
seller. By Septemb€r of the same year, Dr paul
H Hoch, a member of the .Committee
on
fherapy' of the American psychiatf c nssocia_
tion (APA) had written to thiMedical Director
of the-APA, Daniel Btainne MD complaining
thal Hubbard was making ,extravagani claimi
ano comtng lo 'enoncorls conclusioas' fot
Dianetics. Hoch's campaign increascd over thc
nexl year and. hc was joined by othcn in con_
demning Hubbardts techniques.
For many years Scientologists claimcd this
unwarranted criticism stemmed from the fact
that the-Dianetic formula could provc
tence of the CIA's mind mntroi projecs. No.
til;;:
oT"
tli-"-rr.g them; until the mid-Lventies,
when MK Ultra details were releascd to Con-
gressional Committees investiratinq CIA
abusca in thb wa.kc bfthe-Waterdtc ac;;O-fs.
One interesting item to appea; around that
trme was details of CIA funding of the NEW
YORK STATE PSYCHIATRIi INSTITUTE
(NYSPD,. which was_given $50,000 in joini
gra-nts with the Army Chemical Corps.
On_J.anuary_8th_1953, a certain in-patient at
,
the NYSPI,.Harold Blauer, was injected with
the drug code-named EA 1298. Aja result of.
an overdose Blauer died of heart failurc. Aftcr
disclosures of Government involvement in thc
experiments-on Blauer, his family sued New
York State for half a million dollan. In order
to keep it quiet the suit was settled out ofcourt
for$125,000.
The drug used, EA 1298, was later identified
as Mescalin. The doaor who administered the
overdose was named as paul H Hoch.
Throughout the fifties and sixties Hoch and
other psychiatrists associated with the CIA's
mind control experiments built a massive campaign against Hubbard and Dianetics which
.spread internationally. Some even managed to
influence Governments by their standi-nc as
'cxperts', and in July 196g foreign Sdentologistssere officially banned frori cntering
Britain. The ban was lifted in June l9$, afte?
details-o-f CIA funding of similar cxperiments
using UK doctors began to be revealeil.
It has in its possessiorlhumerous documents
released under the US FOIA which show sums
of money given for research, to both British
and American psychiatrists, at hospitals by
known CIA front organisations. All were con'cerned with mind-control or.behaviour modifi_
cation'projects. The Scientologigts haie a wellattested record
9f gppojsing ai'd exposing this
area of research by NATO intelligence orlanisations. Perhaps what the Churcf, of Scie-ntology say about their founder needs closer
scrutiny in the light ofthese disclosures.
. Perhaps they are.just trying to clean up his
rmage Tosthumously.
Either way, Intirna_
tional Tim€s has a constantly growing fite on
the ILUEBIRD, ARTTCEiKE, ind MK
ULTRA expeiments, and, from what we've
seen so far, tend to regard much of what has
previously been said about L Ron Hubbard
himself, as a load of old sheep dip.
WATCHTHISSPACE
,
SeymourLisht
f
( Religiolus C o r re s o nde nt
)
INTERNATIONAL TIMES yOL. 86 No 2
r
,-.lt'
Early 1n the aunnetr of 1970,r11;'
Into tiris scene of gay aban- took the punch Bhe
'.arounil the oiddle of June to
don,about the tire the sun ras
ing in her haad f
be exact,a Donstrous partJr yaa beginning to disappear behind the oached she held ori
given at a raoch about 10 nj.les [ountains,came a uornan of sone
smiled, aaying, "Nor
50 years.She was attired as you
all that bad,is it?nA
dutside Aspen,Colorado. The
vould expect a rronan her age to
do was shake oy head nega
Party had been announced for
be,wearing a Prlnt dress henmed
She eeened to have known ni
eeveral nighte at Dannyta,the
at nid-ca1f,and her. hair vas so
tion and how to deal vith t
loca1 rockr.ntroll joint in
felt better.Returning to Ey
silvery-grey it looked to have
Aspen,Juet as lt rrould be
been dyed.At first glance,infact,
Etop 6oEe haybalesrl eipped
eeveraL nonths later yhen the
punch,and entering ny tnouth
guys vho lived at the ranch de- only one thing vould distinguish
felt alive,vibrating nith a
her.from your tnother or aunt;her
cided to glye another one. It
atrarige porer' of itre oun.
companioas.One,a man at least 15
was said that they gave the
punch -yaa,lnfact,alive
uith
years her junior,seened to be a
parties tuice yearlynto usher
in the sugner and the ski seas- kind of valet.He ras dressed like The 1ady, st111 eniltng, gat
a Madison Avenue advertisirrg exec- her littld brood,and s
on.That June,a rainy,boring
utive,conplete r*ith silk tie and
several other people in
month betneen the end of the
wi-ng-tipped shoes,and nas carrybarn individuaLly - includ
skit season and the helght of
Ee - went outside.
ing a 2|ga11on thernos jug and a
the sunner tourist business,j,t
paPer bag fu1L of unbreakable
She had apparently
didrnt take long for the vord
thrur a-process of se
to 8et around.By noon that sat- plastic cups.The other was aa 18
lrlhen she got. outside,she
urday,eeveral hundred of Aspens or 19 year o1d chinese boy,dresthe group into a circLe a
-hardcore oountain hipsters and sed in floying tie-dyed velvet
dorn on the grass at. the ed
softcore local freaks had gath- and snakeskln boots,who stood at
of the rneadow.There she inst
least 6'2ttta11.I nust confess
ered at the r'anch.By 2 nore
that,as I wag a bit stoned at the ed the chinese kid to read e
than 1,000 eumner,celebranta
one's palm and te1l their fo
time,this lady and her strsnge
uere present fo}6 the feetivitunes,nhich he did obediently
assenb!.age looked llke some kind
les.
And such festivitles
there of, apparition.She walked right in IIer nanner of dealing with
2 charges,the chineee kid an
to the barn,as lf foLlowing a
uerelThe acene uould get Bo
niddle-aged valet, seemed ver
heavy,e friend had told ne the plan,and summoning forth the man
wtth the theruos jug and and bag, cur j.ous t.o me then, and j.t st
night, before,that the eheriff
does noy.It seened to be bas
cups fu11 of a
and tovn cops uouldrnt go near began fllling
ghastly purplleh-pink Jutce and
t.otal submission and obedien
the place for fearof being
passing then around.
They did what.ever she told t
-.ehoE or stoned.And .infact, as
All thls tine ehe ras beckon- to do,and did'nt ask questio
huadreds of long-haired,dopeing those of us etil1 in the bara The valet sonetimes nade a s
crazed freaks poured dorsn the
stic contrent,as the lady ask
her vonderful
dirt road leading to the ranch, to cooe and taBte
punch. "Come, ttshe voul-d say, tthave
hin if sonething nasrnt as s
the cops sat j,d1y by watching
gone of ny punch.It Hi1l, Dake
said it ryas.ilIsInt that righ
the processlon,their radios
listening to the nusic ao much
John,rrshe vould say.If his r
crackling occasionally with s
nag ! nt ooe or t.r+o nordg in t
atatus report request from head nicer,wont it John?flJohn vould
nod,hia noustache curl,lng dovn
affirmatiye,ho.wever,she sile
quarters.These the poLice and
alnoet
in
a
hin with a g1-are.At that poi
sneer,and
ansuer,
sheriffts Een apparently prov*Yes,Jean,ofcourse it will ny
he uould shut up and literal
ided vith sone iiragrln,ioi
dear.rrThe 'chinese'kid''passed the hang his head.She had no buc
right. before .their very eyes
the floor of Pitkin VaLley nao cups around,taking an occasional Erouble with the chinese ki
seened to be a stoned aut
sip hinself.
being rendered into the kind
I refused the cup vhen it sas responding to her every bec
of carnage that is possible
call r*ith a condit,ioned gri
first passed to Ee,saying no
only thrut the forbes of *,.
nodern-day psychedelia.
unintelligible
thankyou,I dont real1y care for
numble.
The barn it the ranch,a
This lady moved about t
eny punch right non,Itve sti11
group slowly,scooting from
got sone beer.This did!nt seeB
buge,aglng atructure yith a
claeeical peaked roof and peel- to upset the kid,but a l1tt1e
on to person rrith probing,p
ing,ruat-coloured palnt,fairly
later when it became obvious that nal questions. ttl,lhat are you
ehook on ltre foundations vith
everyone else in the barn,at this ing here?Why did you cooe?
the sound of the rock group
point sonewhere around 50 people, did you take the punch?l.lhy
you join the group?Arernt y
f rou Danny'a.The barn was 'f u11
had taken the . pun.ch, this rronan
glad yourre r*ith us,and not
of dancing.freake,uany of r*hon zeroed in Ln'.-mi.It wasrnt very
THERE?"She enphaslzed the i
had overfloved into the pastures subtle,the uay she did it.StandsurroundinS t.he barn.There, in
ing at l"east 30t away across the ortance of the group arrd the
varlous stages of dress or un;
barn,she etared at lEe for a good undesirability of OUT TITERE
dress,they frolicked tn the
if, everyone outside the gro
2 ninutes.I found it extremely
grand style of hippiedon.Druge difficult
aot to stare back.?hen *ere in a lesser or lower s
Before she got around to noe
of all kinds
were in rridespread ruh'en she saw she had caught ny
gaze, she motioned- rith- .her lBnd
use. Glrls t breasts , bared in the
l"eft the group and stagggied
mldday sun,uere openly fondLed. for me to cone over.I turned ny
across the aeadow to a spot
head.She vbited.When I again
Couples could be seen in varywhere I could see,but not
what ras going on r*ith then.I
ing states of couple in the high looked over th-ere,she moti-oned
grass of the neadon.Cycle freaks the same vay,dmiling this tine.
didtnt take loag for her to'n
ice that I had left,houeveir,
did dusty vheelies up and down I looked at her eyes, and they
seened at least 30r furt.her awav again she beckoned to me fros
the dirt roads and around the
across
barn.0ccasionalLy a stark naked than her body.They were large,
the meadoy to join therr
ttCone join the group,ttshe
guy would sander forth from the r*ith darlc circles surroundi-ng
saidbarn,and staggering beneath the them,and when she sniled,the cir- From thaL far away,her vo.lce
load of p1lls that vere frizzcLes got deeper,rnaking her eyes
sounded 1i.ke a whisper.I got up
ling his brain,piss an irregular look to be sunk in 2 holes that
and walked back toyard the baro
strean into the dirt of the cor- got deeper and deeper as you
skirting t.he ,group as I rrent.lg
ral.fn general,and even froa a stared at then.Suffice to say
f got closer to the group,she
di.stancerthe scene was recognis- that her eyes were extremely
became more insistent, ilUhy dont
able as a drug-crazed orgy,,vhich weird,and to make a long story
you join us?t'she asked,almost
in the finest sense of'the phraseshort,I vas fascinated by her,by pLaiutively."Do you rea11y like
it certainly vas.
her.eyes,and I valked over and
iE better OUT THERE? liouldtnr
L26
ttnow stop rhis. and corne back to
- rather be IN THE GR0UP??t Hy
There had to be
aEarer ar
eps'sloved as cnce again she
the group.rtlt yas all very 1og- end of the long an
acid
rght ny eye.Thie tine,hovever,
lca1,so perfectLy set up.I owed the eky.there had to rairlfi
be
rasrnt just slightly stoned on
it to her to at least listen,
there that rrould glre Lt .rr
little graas and a 1ot of beer. she explained.Why wouldrnt I
ing.That nould proye, beyrcd
head:felt like it nas coning
listen? J backed auay,and sti1l
onet
B doubts or fears, !:a: tt
art,reaaon rras eacaping ne,and
she said{Come back,cooe back,
all RfGHT.The ronan in -ts:sr I
;ould feel Jolts of electricity
come back,join the group.ttover
reached thie acid poln: :: : f, *.g"d
oot across ny brain.I yas even
and over again.I backed further
return,
uhere for her , E::: : . : l& .
tinning to lose aone control of away,and her voice dinned. I
only the*grouptt,and"o-: ::::a;-r**
_e physical functions.WaLking
broke into a run across the
l{othing else natterei.l.-: i: : . E.:"''
s a chore,turning my head next
neadov toward my car,and looking
lnpossible.It seemed that all
back I could see'her with her
Il3'.l13i.:l;:'*:::
could do vas stare straight
hand held out.By the time I
qEile and her valet ai: ::: ,,,=!ttead and stuDble,and vhen she
,reached rny. car , panting , I was 'in
eee
fort'une teller anC :_:: _,..,_*l'
ught qy eye again, the pul1 wbs a cold sueat.As I slid behind
Btash of aupplies fcr :-: l.:riE+..nost unbearable.I sat down at
the wheel I could see her lead- and ner eyea...her nag::ftce-;-=i,
e edgq of the group,not as an
ing the group away.I buried ny
all eeeing, all knoviog,,:rtrrgril- '"
t of *i11,but in conplete psy- head in my hands and shook.
able
eyee.I stil1 se? tl+r E=-s
ic exhaustion.
I never found out uhat
tines,lf
I Iet nyseli sl-:r r-Ji i*
This nonan,who by this tine
happened ag herrrpartyrt.Most of
they' re one reason ar: :rt _ : I - -u I
d conplete control of the group, the peoplq she had gathered to- few
"' l
why I've stopped taf:: i
ain began to zero i,n on ne. A1- gether sere apparently homeLess drugs
st everything,as before,uas in
hipples r.!oung runarrays, f reaks
Sanders I book ' THE F-til _
e forn of queetions.trConermove
too stoned or too lonely to care TIIB STORY OF CHARLES
Y.TTSL ,
closer
to wshe
the group.rtl noved
why or nhat was happening. f
DUNE BUGGY ATTACK BATTl::T.
ttNov,
oser .
said with anot,hit:difficult
to explai.n
(published by E.P.Dutral;,:: _ _
' calurknowing snile,ttaretnt you found
to .others what had happened,and the story of hov one raa*s : i - ad you're not OUT THERE?'i I
oore difflcul.t to pinpoint,for
chedelic fantasy becaae a :: I uldrnt ansver,6o I nodded.Affirnyself,why this wonan had pass- ity.; how the scene, not sre:;,i -- ,
I
yas
glad I uas ot out ed out the acid punch,nhy she
,tive1.y.I
to agk vhere or why,evolz*j-rtt:
lere,because out there I had been had gathered together herttgrouptt good into evil.Just
as Es+tr
spastic fooL.I had stunbLed. I- and,in the end,what she uas go- Ca11ey is,in a perverse.a;'-l{
id faL1pn down.I couldrnt think. lng to do with then.She I,IAS and ultinate product of the :il-::y
they I{ERE and that's all that
nachi.ne - an u[thinkia!,req:er.r- ..
seemed to matter.For by the tine ionlng robot capable of grer+dLt was over,I kner beyond the
itated murder on his orn vei.l!e uas fbeautiful, I thought, in a
shadoy of a doubt that she yas
condltioned iniative - Haase,.r ir:,
:d sor I of way.Her face was lin- In total and complete control
the ultiEate product of o,:r
1, and
et it seened agelees.Her
of the indlviduals sho made up
society
and itrs psychedeii-s
re8 ue e all knowing.Her nouth
the group,beginning yith her 2
revolution. The uachine th.aE : :-Eassj.stants,who looked ,to have
ated acidts expanded eoascicrsbeen under her control for so
ness allored man to vicar::
long that. the line betveen then- SEE DEATII.Once you have see:- ! - "
selves and her had blurred to
death , if you dont have an F: - : - i
eSan tle11lng us of the party she the extent that it was non-exist- else to look forrrard to,I..
..,
:s holding for us that nlght at ent.
also envision the end of tLe
would al.L be coning,
er house.Ue
This is the first tine Irve vorld,vhich for you,death cErrruld t nt ve?We uere norr, af ter all, written about this experience,
ainly is.If you expand your :eE: the group.There vere thj.nga ue vhlch I now look back on as I
sciousness OUTSIDE YOURSELF,
:eu,known by no one else.At the
living nightnare.I aever found
shere you become just one of a;
artlf ,ye r,ould knov uore.IIer house anyone I could talk to about it
ent.ire host of beings,your deaEb
re Baid,nas large,and ue all
until one night in a bar I saw
becomes the death of al1.Die.seif.
ruld etdy there',ae lohg aa ye
Ed Saunders. I knen he rras york- Die,rorld.The coning of Dooa.
ant.!rlef nt that right,John,ttBhe
ing on a book about Charles Man- . Inminent death,of course,
ald.nlee,rrhe
replied,rras
long
as son,and by that tine I had the
justifies all.Imminent death for
cu qant . rrThe par ty , she said ,
idea that the woman might have
the norld,doon"can be all the
:u1d be nuch better than the '-: been part of an occult scene of nore self-satidfying.Once you
,xe that af ternoon.More 0RGAI{some sort,so I described the
believe it's all gonna end,aayZBD.tlore to do.l{ore to 1earn.
rrhole thing to Sanders. He vas
thing becoueg poseible.Enter
lore to feel.Ilore to experience.
fascj.nated,for what I described Chop.Enter Snuff .Enter Gore'You can leave your cars herertt
to him was the sane kind of
Enter the staggering of the
psychedelic fascisn he had encollective amerlcan irnaglnatioa,
;xplained."John has a station
,agon to take us there.tt
countered tj.ne and time agai.n
Doon,the Manson folks siy, is
At that point,responding
in research into the enigma of
nigh,and no longer is the tress:o aome unknovn inpuLser.I got
Charles Manson.
age being carried across Tine
;p and began valking anay frou
Psychedelic Fascisn.In a
Square on a grey-haired old sas,s
:he group.The rconan cal1ed after
way it was inevitable.The drugs, futile placard.Manson-sty1e, doc=
le,and t.his tine there rras anger beginnlng in the fI-oer-power
nas carried into the living r:c:
r.n her v.olce.ttl'Ihy are you Leavdays of yesteryear,and their
of Sharaon Tate and friendsra:.:
,ng the group?"she demanded.
acconpanying expanded conscious- enactedrnot announced.5 peoaie
f'After all Itve,done for you.
ness, got weirder and veirder. As died that night,2 vere ro die
Ken Kesey predicted on the front later,and one had been k111ed
.cne back here!ttThe order rang
hut vith the authority of soneof his bus in the'early days,
previous to the days of 'Helter
everything yent rfurtherr .Beyond Skelter'.A11 of the Manson Fa::1;
bne well accustomed to giving
thea.I lurned,only to fiod her
that which was there justlbefore, nurders are faithfully
rec lr:e:
past that which vould come not
:ni11ng and beckoning again.
in Sandersr book,in previousil
long after.Kesey and some of the unavailable detail. It is sore
iihis t ine I opened oy nouth
Lnd said that I did'nt want, t.o
smart ongs!rgraduatedrrfrom acid
of the goriest. reading yo u ' . te in the group.That I was gosone years back.Others journeyed ever cooe across in vou: L:-ie,
:-rg hone,Again,she intinated
"further"along the psychedelii
Sanders ca11s it'Chop ,8.-.: :.-.:
trail.The search becane a quest, reaEon is obvious. ifo fere:
t.:ar. I was sonehow in her debt.
::.e:_
:'iou drank ny punch,ttshe said,
and the quest. . . an obsession.
102 stab vounds were jo.-:: :i
. _o
r
..
ll:; ..,. ik,
'
J
ir
Lt/
n
tQ.l
Lagt Vill end Judgmcnt
illy iudgment is -'free oll'ond the
,
meek will survive!
lf e 0: Fopac. brry
lccndoodird
oFr IP rll p-lrr, rll iilr rd h .L cIF dL D4 ic
orlE f0 r,tt G arc rcr rba G bE.cc L tL
c'lart t m^iatoN
ed Elp ba{ aE qrl.l |c t,
tmEL
I thr t : r-. L a-ns ... raer td rtr a bt
Myr..lF ! r..rd I rrdtna Fr r rr bi iltd-d
.lo. ao dlm
do- ro lr Tc laE dc ,otil t d
WE
F
iy ,.lE E ta xtoB aE..h L lc.tc
tE - d-.1 -lt
r ,ai.t ftdr lir at d:ry' .'
!E, |.r- TLra.tuim b..bi
rbr rby br bctdrry
Wr. .,. I bE E? rirl4
atuiinf b rl: ilalc
rarr E ?ilr .L ,rdil .!d irb br rll bllfi I: I ry
d rsf.a rt - d
tr rb F)e.3 I FU [.r ao Ei.ab. oF G, q3..d b
-trtbED.3drbtaE
tih F.Fro-tii.
-.- t biFr
a;Or* br rb t?rdoo rbt God tit!. Tb i'|.r rd
5. rq, brtir! ra, apE bo -.. r4
lo bt rrt tot
FIbEL toGGltbEp.lr.dCod tcccgf eut
yor f*:rd
rdi u 1Lr m h|lra{ Ood. Ho mrh ro
rLalE rbrr ntor d.rtce rllcs. d .iiE* rL.
F.t F.. la.r, l9r ]ri ,r. E:h Fr bE ri:trd ilty
rbD io9 it E rL r b rill till .ll ca L
F.rlE ,{o tEt F-DE tat ,tt Ft hE lalld. cbF i
t m u:rEl of bnaoil-n
Am
I rrircrrf:I
ItL tEd r4 a-r-l'E
rl.nt it lI3 lodd. I 'i: , fru tlir mo, ctsc. Or s Fo?aG HI?
c rE.
I F!-.
lcn l& fom. fir Fr. bE.lnrr bd ....
lE
Dlt-a
o, maun Fcura ,q,
ral ,C
lbr r D dr\ Fa b! E ad tB rrll dn,t b F.?
ulr
D rLrr ft rfi{
w
rit
.5E
El
iUIL rif D ar4 A..t E l'. ri- lo.re t) liE flat., atNh t[.r ro th abit.: d -i! b E ql dl,E
GgFCr.rliEratldrrffi.
Eaa
Cc* blp - -ftI tE h- t by.ir .r rc rar .fu
lly nl I tic E .t cI5.E ... ito.. lotr L !.rbc
Fo?ar rlo bG Et Flr br ly tb bL.t roa.d saarx oa
faoabr. h4 S
rd dol bt ror..d .b., ld hro
dr ,rl: F6?aE-FG|E. Yo El.Gr irt yos -d.! God Dads d Dadin ,or w {rifi rEr-|c..
wh
!o E ,atr[t u, trr bt tL tE
To rh nirar l riE.i5 oJ l.ft!3 d. oaGodrCild.EL,
- rnd l'r H Fr!
dbriliat
i.rblo Fr uiE Eiry. TbtrbF
rLr rba lo hd tood. lfryi{ rl:n iLc toilda tlc ir q Fe.d
doorrrp
[d
rl: tLc C alE tdi* bd t-tor
--tt
Frr
too &qcr ... ao Ei{ rh b.l lo Godt arnh Fd.a.
F rEir H. lo i:litirf roll'n bi r llua. abr -y h.bt
. To mc..rd
d.vta I lc Fr B.rd aL? Elh oa
rLrlca
ll.qrtl\
r.,
tb
tE
b mr ban b.!.d tE
ma! crrEd h F.. EL ly E'r i.re!
ielt to E
,aa*L Yor frl6 LE.t F Fr -r ahrtE Hirr.t3 tE allt
lll- illr God't lc r.d ,or.
frm Fr D rbl l}, old lEp corurol G tB
I tir ay s b brm h tb Jy fa ir m aF i.:kt
Tlir i ,our wtd r -ai s - i .iE Yo hE b lflf
.acr!f, rill ffi hil. Tb suar
,ilLa.t ri{r €ili
Er ao till ..td rl: tebr rho acb. F, rlit -dnF tiltrf3.
Hdl o rrErrB
bt Fu o't fiti iq m yq, iafif i
,Yo m mllin
A.id ro rfar E ld I ,iE q ate Jr w.
jr
9 you llc rd ba tilld .o rop otEr aro b-3 tilld.
I br m tle dbit ... t u Hlrla rd ritl b bG
you
p
lf
dort
ood
rcp tE .d!cr. drn tB E r tE
lo
c rii ELaE. E dlcr. ro to EIEE ... ray lrm
d .L Yor EE di E't tn F. olI rm FrirO r iff
ErIJr.. .ro .crLo} ,q uiinj rc-a3 rqli.9 fErm3
qld
rE
.r I s FyEt c L E
Fo
Erlin!. s EttEL tall F.e Xo Erat D a,. aG
qld,Dlag.bqr.
b 4s a.rd rkrEld alE aood Glr6?Yq*
m'.4 OB ni dr Hlrnt b L.
nt rhllr t l.r b -lt 6 i.d ir llf b. r{ b t rii .. dgtrd'd ldcra n- dra{ rd rnry bd8 Wf- iil
sm? Errror
dnral Tlroth Fn o, sdr.orl
-tf.
, er yc br jul.d. E..bll to., b idtd
Mt hb - tb " (.roi{ rb. Fr'r .o5}. F.r LrE bcf.d ,l' rh CL-ir.
F*Lr-riqltlr - ri.h-86]tdrd.bd r..t FG Gat
t llr ta o ,JIEE oa.lt s rtrir t bE liEd
Tholh r|r tadirg.lor
rar [G tocl.d. r yon o'r *{
rii
''iic b.i d rb nll3 l.br lootcd rP F tL lcr oa fw
lqdahllm
ilErEDmrbtl!!r
E
faa rb ,o rt rSit e bd . . . uc m! tlclr of Crod'r
wln th xatd E. fE xe i pllr rll a b.f rfilif
lc a lo.t d . E of qe lrt !E c tt lc Fogac ub
L.DbilEralnill6t atm 6 qba Aay xn dp loott alai qi ,dlcr
lla s lor .E llit ro"ld ,r*rb.lills
rlr
..rd rdF b &lla r
. lrlan3 n l-ctf. Ybt lua, oa
-IE lI3 E c
Fr nt frm tanr Cbirn ridl'll ]rd txrr Fr
EldloC le bdBrryJtd llt Myoqt'tmiana?
Fr lifc? Tb rdc rb run ro$ IUG rc wtr3 ruryTl:re
m tlDcLqlGfm.llE-y.
Draath d
,at
lqro
r
ab,
b
Uq
*
..rd
tE
Ub c-5ta
?
rc
xd briac i, bn h aE InG orcti.i.r rsbr tE EGa
b ro9 il?
tb tilrl Ua.d Ud rd.( hcfirE lovc .Ey h ao.a. of,
jiin
yo
Fcoy'e
l'w
laG'
t-oot
r
tb
'(rirt
tirr fE F i
-,
.hi.
trqn of Fs .rdtc FIaIB Soad l|p rd ac frqld.
Md r hialItU.C
G rrbefdir,
rirdof
Jul3mr lry L o m u lc nlcd rg to tb h tbr r.c.
b-a rd hrh rli. o'r rrE Msir[ rho bE ci1,
Emt .II mrbgE
tr lifc ro rw tlirwld. bad't
bd r lE
D laE ca :Ei, ar Lad afaa i..rrr-tila trm
nUr rlp er lo rE ilBtlI ot boina 6qdr E t E rh=
alEa: at aI: lEor rlr- rb E c wlrutoB
rtp
rlE b lG a.a sld i.l &.tb loacats. ,o. F cb m
o6dr rp re E r r ..rd c ror a c-ne rc ffillna bd.
bt .o E jirirj o Ged.
E rln .{ar't Et b..ld lrE rl[y! trrlit ro oE F o
'Erf c of you rb br julfd : tril r*E EG
Eby'i rafilIdt urr.rE E brd b adi- E a w5.rb.a
c aa loot bct rrrlf, for I I miaia...i hlE
t
E b laE. lE rbt tor, bE Er rldr F EIrc
-ircr
d..d
bEdE rba mLna. foffi. I mctyrt rds
I lt rL F-o Fo?a. b.r3r .bi rlt eG 6 th qiila
don
oa rtr yon rIrL fq ! bvi rc dsai ba rb c
t'.
l:i& m o{n opa rp erd rll ci rirlr rlr :oti. MEb
tiE l'E rlrf looLd .p to crFie r.d E rla - Od
bdl:t.bcd - rbd Mc dl a oa EG, al&l3 tE or
5 c I m rht I t $?ol! GE r.f.t I .fa ir.ry
cla
lrint lond.rrrhd rbErbrGa woj ria3 ri* eiry
E :ts nt.tr!r3 :E 6d" lE 6q o, -.t
D
ac irdta lHE
!y. Tty otc o tor bd rc Fr o !.
ll, lc r r r br ln Frrc rt pogrc'rdC
Do !B q
ad
* r Fer irl3a d do Fg !... Nas?t LE L a adhI. l.t
llrr br rlrryr br dor Ybr m F rrt o, FL.rc.
br i s lr. ..d arpE 16 bct rhr b F! d. t.t
tiai .o c ao blB b.l-[ a, o, plE rrart brd o oic ir
idrmr Hadl rd_rt El ri|l rrne lly 3ru
b r wE hr ffi - ab li3rhr r|l catr, CG rr* tbt
Eld
b E Yl:r cm
ayr -da doa- - dal
aU rd cc bC .o Fir Lllitr3 rE.l ofit aqn a m.
lrr!6 mt
r'aiE i.o rE - airi. lo tc TLirtt3 ft oa t-c
U..!3 l:Clta rlut 6 Ggy't turtl
dia; fa it. I .til b tbstd F i. La ..d .lt b tort r5
rrit to rtc aa. ard{ rlt G lo rablili..ac - r Lxt ar
dt rbrGlE b tL
L aatftx ba br f, rtE3 F ndcrud nd adiq br
xc rf., ['r ro tatt
-lrc w m Do ycrr L
EL, b lodr I? b. !h i Elr, itu wE a f.r Uc
ur - dad? lf ror. m..d blp r c.t r: df.l -drtad
Ir Tb E - FE rspCtd Fr. TLIE
bcl Fx'
oaf- Hir bd -.fE tEtot of th br,abr fg
n.t rld
- dlt . . . la t:y n |l of .rrit! b i.al ,oryxr .t .t ..
aod.a H3 . tE hb" q" h rb GEix
.-.L
d/kabr:>rC.Eca,
loot
Clldq
ro
hlEr
lE
r.d
rtl
f.il
c
hb.
Tb
I -t.ll oa 3h ri ry rB Yar airy glr o, m|riln
dE Gtrld lodt b : rlta lxtE lootr tq b lq- !f 6rts
brb r..l c rb tb Flr.. r. oFe.d. r.d aErr j5lic.
lootr
ro
alr
rab?-y
d
tlE
l]G
rb cl.d &}
tmq
dl b Fi, .o dl rb hE rood it irraGr oE tE wl4
riEly-loott rbE.dD. Tfry bE ror racaii5 -/Fprtb lodrD6d, !tl, tbkf b bcld r+ ArroE
rd ol tnpd rii tE gf &rr.
fr 9aE --tr - r r b rrdF rb.ld E rdtd by tE
TIr E o !b Ftm'rtqH
- d G.d- Th ilr
rrt' E FrtG E : E
r.r., rn-t *Er qtd r*r- u God. raa OoA i r: mtt tla t tE. }l *. t-t
!.adFbbtrrlu
Errb
b.bri-rj
b, th
Gd m thr ry tr C tfa t-& rb ,rr btb lool ara. f -?
EE
-ml'i r-d o, lootaq ? r F.r t-, ,r irir So-, rd
wdc + lL ,lr oa Jc CLi - E- tr'.
b r+
tr n rrrr
rrrl lO.rd
tot
II
& Il b
qd.l I riil
rE
r, -drill nE
rlr9.F.
ai
rdc
-.
-a
Yn
t
r
I
rd:
d
rra
-La
E
G r tr-.{
Lol r F.r lc toot ro rb fin hr:h r-? r
id ty c-Ll6 r rrr c -aal
rbd d El .rrin
Ub't
wld Fotlc
,t
J.rlddtt lrrl? &,q'Eril7
t ctI.*-t*
WlEn .y turB rF.fr L uill L b.l ,il jrE I a.al
r@?TEtdt
I
.,rd C srrl Tb trFrTV E
lot oErlG TIr wtd rilt il o dr:.rfia rf tEpt
Jraa.t JE
rrax. otrcao br.r irpn rL c{ qry
i:1{
Ar.d
TIrjdF-rdl
L.
brstFtrrlqf
f-r.,
.iar !n. rir.p
,* id3. are bcfd - i-b Ii
li.F b bfbc e r m ft.oa.l tr-3 ref rec
pm.Yo
Yo bEidad
bEidad rL..
rlr E tlll E
FG
h id.d E .b
,oEjdtdt.ba
n dEald b' Lr E'
fL. r rtq'r
An,llirt .h ta r. dri, oa - r aeio
6f yr jur fc
Ea&c n. E rIg.E-GoJ F
w
UrrrtrrL
ah q6, tbr Fr bE dc ao r- Ed r-L-b
u
r
iCrLraE
rd
Att rrlqat
,d3?3n Tb ot, ro3 . tL qrf dc b Fl Ercl
*E
a:-r raE
- tlukl bE It m &rdoIr
-.
L2g.
t
The 0reat
ChurchState Scam
And Seaper Cuni Linctust
the Yery nlght that he
reAaed his subaltern for
taking native superstLtions seriously,passed an
oTive garden and sav the
Seventeen...and vith thea
was the Eighteenth,the
orte t'hey had crucif ied
the friday before, t ilagna
l,later t,he swore r creeping
cToserr'an I Tosing ay
nind?' The Elghteengh,vhatshisnaae, the preacher rhad
se't up a vheeT and vas
distributing cards to
thea . Now t be t.urned the
wheel and ca77ed out the
nunber at vhich it stopped.The centurion watched
in growing aaazel ent, as
the process ras repeated
severaT tiaes rand the
cards were narked each
tiDe the wheeT stopped.
FinaLTy.the big one,sinon,
shouted' Bingo!' The scion
of the noble Linctus faaiTy
turned and f7ed...Behind
hia,the Tuninous figure
said"Do thls in connenoration of ne.'
'I thought ve vere
supposed to do the bread
and wine bit in coaneaotation of you?'Siaon obJected.
'Do both, 'the ghostTy
one said,'The bread and
wine is too synbolic and
arcane for sone folks.
Thls one is what will
bring in the aob.You see,
feTTows,if you want to
bring the aoveaent to the
peopTeryou have to sE€rt
fron where the peopTe are
at.You, Luke,dont vrite that.
dovn.Ihis is part of the
secref teachings.
( SHEA AND TIILSON' ILLUITINATU
voL 2,P32)
;
dropped' Lv r*
T;-i ii 1#'f;iF, "rff: $ili:'lli,.$
were photographed by AI Strom for l&therine Graham.
These pholos were later used in the Washington Post
when Uddy and Hunt and the others were arrested.
CIA . men like Uddy and Hunt arerft usually photograPhed.
"--h-ob;ts quoted to Uddy the "Chinese stock market
in ears", the price he was willing to pay for the deaths
of Onassisj !il?ynr Rector (the Hughes double), Eugene
Lyman (California Democratic Party Chairman 1nd
JFK Mafia bagman), an-d Lyndon Johnson. According
to Roberts: "Quoting the prices to Uddy at the Drifi
Inn made their deaths a mortal cinch. Liddy's like
that, and that's vrfhy the murdering slob was picked
by the Mafia."
Francis L Dale, head of CREEP and member of
the Board of Directors of ITT, pushed Magruder to
push Uddy into lVatergate.
cardinal Tisseront, head of the college of c. ardinals
at the vatican, was murdered with sodium rnorphate.
Tisseront had-followqd the career of the present-Pope,
Montini. Mdntini poison-murdered PiG Xi,- -*iat
banished from Rome for it by Pius xII, then became
Pope in
-_1963. Tisseront wrote it all down, calling
Montini "the Deputy of christ at Auschwitz" and the
fulfiltment 9f tlie Fatima prophecy that "ihe Antichrist shall rise to become'the' heai of rhe tfruiiiil,.
Tisseront also wrote ab_out the suppressed seqrets
of the Roman C.atholic Church: th;t'Jesuy;;-;"
Arab who died on the cross when .Roman soldien '
ltucr- a spear in his side, pulled out his liver, and ate
it. The Romans couldn't stop the early christians
from spreading their Gospels, so theydeciddd to
adopt the religion, elean it up, make -Jesus a Jew,
and set up thichJrch-state deil- tp screw tti p.irfl
in the name of God and country that hai bien
geraling cver since. As soon as Tisseront died, the
church seized and burned his paPes, but missed jomi
of them.
1972: Money pours- in to CREEP: r?,,tr
4pril,
Pao^t.-^ i" - '- t' 'x
130
GETTING ACROSS THE HOLY GHOST
!lt CONHECTION WITH MATTERS OF RELIGIO}I
JESIIS OFNAT,LNETH
olios King of the fews, alios christ "the redeemer,',
alios tesus "The Stviour" Christ.
lrlODUS OPERANDB Faith heating, dleged miracte performing,
s-u:Pect known to be cvisive; tGnds to crpress himr.f in paraf,Lt.
DlsrtNGutsHtNG D|ARKS: Scar on hands (pel-;) .no feet,
possibly lerger scar on left rib cege, numerous s-.tt jgars
cncircting crown.
wARNlxe lf suspect is rccotnised, do not lpproach him. Hc b
raid to bc armed with the wrath of God end m.y bc derqcrurr.
,
131
RONALD
WILSON
REAGAN
e.'e.
--ar'?t
J1 -
'y
. YE.
--:.J.--".5_-r'-i
-''- ?'->7-'-
(lqpt ?rcridcnt lcrt.n h rsot ie rhc .lprr radcr lir lcft trrn rr lc rppnrchcs lis rrrncena linrrurinc. lllirldlet tlc brli rp in rhrr'l rhrlr
l
r ilcrt rclct rricl rtcir p,rrhc. Ur to rlfcty. llcteyl ftrc anrrds Suedlc lhc rrmodcd ?rcrUcat iotc bii cer.
And I saw one of his heads as it'
were wounded to death;'and his deadly
wound was healed
L32
'
oagick as a form of psychodrama sign based on six sixes,Ehree
of nhich are reversed,Ieavile
- a oeans of subverting the
guilt feel,ings imposed by puri- t,he other three the right uai
tanical ChristlanlE.y. Baker, on
round - bLatantly fulfilling
the
other hand, prefers to nork the 2,000 year old prophecy.
5
,
in the realm of nordaot humour, Draw your own conclusions.t,
nail-art monkey business and
Whatever next - HargareL
L
=
associated black arts.
Thatcher
as the llhore oi Bab;ion
. I attended a cooic nart in The possibilities
are endless.
5
Leeds and r*as benused to find
0n1y the underlying rationale
CLR propaganda all over the
7.
remains unclear.Fashioaable
place. Subsequent lnvestigaEion imlsm?Sleazy elitism?Credibli pess
IJ
revealed a fine,irreverent dis- copping out?Apocalypsism?Hor* dce
infornation scara based on a
Baker answer,these charges?Bet'-e
JJ
t
Unless you ve spen.t the past
radical reworking of biblical
yet,does he care to?Apparently
J couple of years trapped in a
prophecies.The first CLR nedia not,since he remained tight.-1ipt
J laundry hanper you probably
blitz, perpetrated throughout
ed yhen I put the quest.ion to
dont
need tre to tell you that
1984,1inked
US president Ronald him.ttltn very interested in tbe
tthere is an i-nformation uar
Reagan rrith the AntlChrist fore whole ArnageddonlAntiChristlRevgoing on'.Ce11s of resj.stance
told in'The Book of Revelation'. eLations thing, rrrras all her d say
have sprung up with cancerous
As Baker explained at the tine:
If nothing else Baker presttThe most important aspect of
pro1if, eration,.each spewing
ents
a good exarnple of hov !:
forth j-ts own particular
the
nunber
666
is
that
it
rephave
fun and stay sane in a
brand of I counter-prbpaganda' ,
resents the value of a nants
repressive society.An open-=iad_
t
Take for instance the Leedsnane . Reagan s rniddle nane is
ed attitude is his stock in
based I Ctr{URCH 0F LATERAL RELIWilson.Ronald has 6 letters;
trade.This much is made clear
GION',Members of this loose
so does Wilson and so does Rea- the Evin logos used on rece[t br
knit cult.ural junta are engan.The antichrist will recieve CLR propaganda:'I believe errerrcouraged to cast off the yoke
a mortal wound but the rround
thing r and t l believe not.hi.ng' .
of nornalcy and believe whatsha11 heal,Reagan was shot in
Non that I s what I call keepever they dann well- please.As
the chest but survived...rrand
ing your options open.
one initiate told a reporter
so on"(Slfght physlcal discrepfor
the I Yorkshire Evening Post t : ancy here: Reagan may no longer
PETE SCOTT
otl'have no j,dea how nany neubH
be a handsone matinee idol,buters there are;ue donl keep
unlike the Beast-he certainly
records. People becone non-rneurdoes'nt have 7 heads rrith 7
horns,the body of a lion and
bers of every other organization rather than nenbers of
the feet of a bear,etc. )
A nore recent CLR canpaign
ours.Thatre
good way of putta
ing it. tt
sought to equate Bagnetic credllartin Baker runs therCLRr
it, cards vith t.he biblical
from a humble tabernacle in the
mark of the Beast.Baker again:
ttln Revelation j.t c1ear.1y
heart of Leeds'bedsit-land. He
feels that his activities are
st.ates thatrno rnan might buy
{
all part of a general resurgence or sel1 save he that hath the
of interest in rreird brain-cu1ts. mark or the name of the Beast,
Participants in r.his sti11-burg- or the number of his nanet.
eoning psychic/nedia nindfuck
Just abovL the holograrl on the
6)
gse a variety of tactics.PTV and new cheque cards there is a
co.invoke the trappings of ritual sma11 blue square with a de-
1rF LRI
-a-v
lu rc+
I
tr
? GLR I
tr
Turc+i
.A=
FDI
ld
I
+
i
I
133
\
N13
TheFallol BabYlon
The Mark ol the Beast
REVELATION 14
Ch" 2:7
, and
. and
bf bL
:h I saw
aod his
>ear, and hiq
rf a lion: ancl
r his Power,
:et authority.
'his heads as
healed: and
:red after the
- lollosrd
rshioeed tle
rleln
ffi
riven unto him
great thrngs
ind power-was
t
continue torty
O.n' 7:!, l1' 25
il his mouth in
t fu, to blas-
and^his tabelthat dwell tn
ffi
Joh.1:14
ionS.
D'n' 7.:21
dwell uPon tne
shio him,^whose
ritfen in {re boor
mb slain from tne
re world. e*32tt2
ave aD ear, Iet lum
l&?1, r -
uon.
19 And the
leath; and hi9
iE-irir which t
ship 4e tos!
woirnd was healeo
13 And"he dPeltt
6f a creat thun-
the volce ofharP-
riiri"f[. maketh
ith their harps:
slrnq as it were a
tTrJthrone, and
beasis, and the
nan could learn
hundred azd
'.nnd- which
Irom the 6arth.
irtffiie.'ffi
the'ee{
nyage:
dwell on
o/ those "a;
3";;il" in trr I
Lrg;'ultj",fn
make an image lo.me
ii,f"$"d1ffihoq
"rii [,i.fu[ be tormenrcd'
H;,na 6iimstone in Stin F
tu
lii tn?[Jiv *sels, and
.'Ti-ffi[';h;Lamb:
smoke of tuil
ence of the
rri.ni
uP for
"iienaeth
t
ilrl?tt*iitilld;"Ei
iiil-th. wound bY a
did live.
15
il
,:Aa
i.t
1&i
aKi
'i:itrl
i']:;,
ffi:
::[$i'*dffiXrffffi1
heaven saYing unto mq
;;;-,ie dead whf,
illresd,i
"rrii"
Iot[ rto. h-encefort
;;i-th tG Spirit, "that 6
'
E
:9
-
tn
l.{
t
J
(
\4
q)
JV
F
H
0.
(
U
i
ul
F
(
l.
tII
I
F
IIl
l{
J
(
H
U
B
t0
E
d# t,d
dt{
.lJ.r{
ngi
E *# t'd.9
58
gE $;g :H Ef
.O8, .,S E3: EE 8g so
tEc
.*
Fu EH qEE sI
e.fl$fi $i! I
ds
E:
BRE'
OO
i:'.{
Eur+l6
OOO
.A-Y
.F{
.AE
-C-l
O
t
-,i.5
O
Ul
FI
J
H
(
H
F{
P
t{
U
E
H
0
+J
q
0
Ie 4.€terH i:'.E EE }
tfl
.3*' "h:
O
.r{
dtts' 3Sg I'
$tEE
6
v,
ifl EeB $it Ei$ I ii:
r+i +J
?J
H
lll
IJ
..{
F
s#i
i+ HiE Erl 'drg.
;r;,9 !tT
t
>
..{ .
aa
d O f4
OO
(\I>.U
JJ+)Fi
.4 O.f
tr
cj-C11
o
a.A
go-d
O'JJ
.?e
8.oo
Y{C q
.-{
H rHr,
O O+J
C O
Cr+{
.r{O(,
.J O
XCo
COtl
'd8Ech
EsEh
fi3':nfllEH
tsr .a
O
.A
+)
-c
$'9 oe
+J (
f;'.E, FHt Hf;;* #EI fl Or{
*Hfl t$H EEEt fitti fl #Et
l+.t
H
nlf;s If,s;l;f, sci
; Ef,;
t.ls
€f eE.i rlHr
I H't'F{c
!
t
I
L
$Er
EIH
(t' trlE
EHf,
P€J
?cl$ c or{{-c frIgti
o.,t !r+t
cLq -t .A C'
gEg -nEE Et$s E*E fl HEf
(
F
t0
I
F
tII
F{
J
(
F
H
0.
(
U
136
TO GURE
TEGHNOPHOBIA YOU NEED
ILLUSIONS THAT WORK.
of pegple argn't fooled by the new technology. They know it means new
-levelsAofl9ttedium
wherever work is required for survival.-
At AT&T, we're worried by their hostility.
fn{ll
why we're watching reactions to automation so closely. To find out what
people will accept. And where they draw the line.
Our calculations can help them view their domestication as inevitable, almost
nice.
You see, at AT&T we know even the most advanced technology can be
dismantled by people who want to live for
themselves and not us.
AT&T. We help keep domination up to date.
__
---a'-,
ATgT
i-',
----i
137
il
U 3
buFf lrn
(eyeiilzthe
rn
3Olgs
I ghulled
c nter , enf,aI1
bs'
tltldGnqu
"tlhaf. !o youl
Inforuatiou.
y it all cane back t
turned and gazed vi
:arrogaDce at a conv
ahatter€d her d
ruinous e1b
Th
l
t,I t{
ge
t
ind 'p
1na
en
a
facee
and
of a free s iri t. Ee le
h
future, f;aD ,hia[ .
coa
!!uat .eacaPe ata
Nul,bcr 6rki'sqe
tbe
(s
oang,
lla
for a contr
vorld
-
n
n
d
1e
han
ep-iso
,f
p
Yt-
used i
lnE
trul Y
-urea. Thle
bf
dislocite I
toys,Pat
ive
re
hope, the phonel;
the ahope ca
ffiHk.i:,ii""
rilv-uore your
a spy.Qu99
easar 11y
Civil Ser
unlike
ing uith
higheet p51d etar
fe1l vith 'Danger Hanr,
aver-
up vith
rer$.oin
t]ertainlY one
t.His plot
in:?p"iled
r&!!rrounolngs,
Ie car,
paper(TaLly. $
everYthin8 .Fd-'i
rented.
nging lis\C$of '
denoted(or soneIVuoDer 6'e
i;Sfl*iltine
better of then.
Srpiolts- g"itl
tenpeatuou6
IIe ls alloved
antica and beliIe for one reaaon
be gold,
-he is to be gr].Ied,to
to be brought
to be humilia
dry of infornunder cont
any of those,
atj.on 0R.f
you real
br i77
The Golden Shor.Intelligence and
iEaginatlon s8s no prerequisite.
Slap , elap . . . SLAP :
138
ion in your
t think
a valuabTe ProPe.A nan Tike
Dand on the
t lies biehind
Youtve'li^a a
feast.Anti-establishballoon,ia always at hand,generallytelevisuaf
at arns length,serenely rotund(not nent,alnost anti-gravity.Pe
are
a77 Nuaber 6.
unllke Xobert, Maxvell).
,I AM NOT A NUI{BER.
o
)
l{ov OF COURSE it I e the achinSly
A del.ightfuf
in the executive sashroon,had one
wank,congratulat-
synopsi-s of the
last nerve-vracked
series runs thusly:
:bvlous
cry of the individual.
ing Ehensel,ves on their bravery and
,I AII NOT
,
The
Prisoner,himself
a
nan
with
A NUMBER.I' IT A FREE NAN !
foresight,then vashed their hands
no
identity
for
US
to
know,
is
,aughably'. haive? ,The. filht to- oainof the whole sorry affalr.
abducted
and
taken
Vi1lage.
the
:ain that dreao glves McGoohan his He tried to escape to
l,lcGoohan is painted as a crusEy
but
it
does'nt
Lordy
strength,although
Lordy,has' vork and he
barking']Get it donel'at
bastard,
is
guinea
nade
pig
the
lrt he done enough ln hle official
ninions
asking hos his ideas were
iir
a
dreau
nanipulation
experineni,
:apaclty to deny people TBBIR
into reality.He pushed
be
turned
yhich
to
he
in
turn
Eanages
to
nanip_ rtghta? The vornlng 1a turnlng,
people as hard as he pushed hinself.
ulate.Ile stands for election as
iiESISTIt{G the grave,therefore he
Nuaber 2'using denocracy to achieve This was!nt just a job.He would wor!
of all that ls good, his
lrs a chaoplon
orrn ends.He has his personality from Tan.right through the nlght
l'entirely pukkah,and I bet he bovls assaulted
vould peraonally superviee €Yerla
but resist.s all
(Rafftes
updated.
nean
a
)
I
Soogly.
thlnS and order re-ahoots vhere
atteEpts to nake hin believe
Itaannhile ve can hear eone rnore
neceagary.
ever
he
is
solleone
surviveg
else.He
I shouting i
Although it aeena eternallY
rrears
subliminal
education,he
pushed,fiTed,
vitl
not
be
l't
likely that it was ITV,busily
the sane clothes throughout,
! lndexed,sta@ped, br ie f ed, de turning thenselves into providers
yith
takes
neticulous
hi.s
care
thoae
briefs
on
lirJefed(f,eep
of absolute crap for a nation of
practical
cooking
and
1ov.es
a
nuobered.Ny Tife is ry
ehiteaters,rho
ca11ed the halt,
joke or tno.Or three.He nanages
l:::??'
McGoohan HAS been quoted as aayget
back
to
he?)
td
London(Or
does
tty,Yho's
an
irrirable
J
has knocked ae out. I'a
ing,'ft
NOT that it does hin any
.
lood.He
vhacked.Ttris is vhy Ito stopping.
is hunted during carnival day,
r just cant do any oore.'
but avoids the flicker llan faEe,
Uhen lt vas all dead,they
He is baited rith love, he so
even had bankruptcy proceedings
confuses one,lVuaber 2 that he is
to deal Yith,everyone claining
almost takeo as part of the
they Eade not a penny;Harkatein
Village Establishnent.Ee underIabel1ing The Prisoner as 'the
goes god knons EOW nany nentally
blggest Toad of rubbisD', and
denanding tricks and at one point
dont knov
llcGoohan conoenting,'I
finds hirnself sherriff in a lawanything about artt(Punk Rock?)
less town.Can HE take responsibilIt is.doubtful
that any ONE
ity on THAT scale?He is interrogperson has ever been given'the
ated.IIb doesrnt crack.Technlcally
freedon frou aDove that McGoohaa
ve're back at the start. His
recieved vith thts prograuoe.What
efforts REMAIN rrith us.An unvitthe did uith that freedon probably
ing talisoan.
gave then food ?or Ehought, and
In the late seventies the
gluttony beiaue THBIB aalvation.
only key to I{HAT HIGHT HAVE BBEN
rsas alnost of f ered by llarvel Conics. Eorget the deep and deviouB,have
your fill
of PIease Sir,llan about
They had the usually nagnificent
Jack Kirby rcady to turn the series the house,not forgetting the lovely, uind-expanding Budgie(Zzzzzz) .
(cu1t fave over their presunably)
tfhat they CANNOT ruin is The Prisinto a conic.Unfortunately' f,irbyrs
oDerts reputation,a seriee vhich
vork vas so bad that it never got
Patrick HcGoohan,a ti.ght f.ipped
does one thing others cannot. It
ground,but
the
nere
off
there
rortal,not
averse to looking
could be nade tonmorroy and if ve
strong ruDours that HcGoohan had
urecked,once said,
thoroughly
rrere seeing our first .sighting ve
aSreed to yrite a COMPLETE ending,
tThere is no final conclusion.
vouldrnt knorl the difference.The
to explain yhat ITV never allowed
Freedoa is a oyth.'(BoolHisssssl)
internal conf1lct8,the infuriatinghin
to.
And hov right he ie.Never nind
ly obtuse desire to nake US vork
get
Non,let's
technical.Letrs
tbe snile,this
is servj.ce vith a
at understanding(the ONLY nay)and
get precise.
soi1e.
the sheer bewildering array of
According to Roger LangleY in his
The fact that lVuaber 6 night
Ealent and ideas,Eake it stand
free
cones
article
that
excellent
be lluaber I is neither here nor
apart.Nothing has cone close Eo
albu[
Prisoner
soundtrack
uith
fhe
there(allegories
being quite
it.AND NOTHING EVER WILL.It COrrCS,
(BAM CARUSO)there uere .ori6inal1y
reaaingless as f€cts.)The joke,a
llke q dinosaur, from another age. . .
shows
5O
ninute
thirty
Planped.The
particularly
nalicious one(WE ARE
rhen anythinS yaa poesible,before'
crosses
finj,sh
to
start
froE
saga
fLL.OUR OWN WORST ENEMY)is neither
embarassiag pariah
intelligence,an
proved nor disproved.It night have 1966 and splutters and dies in L968 in televlaual teros,on the GRAND
13
episodes
(1ike
th.ings)with
nost
6een just another blind,it
Dight
sti11 oved,an'd one nillion snackerhaYe been McGoohan playing si11y
buggers,it Dight.have been pressure oos required to finish the job'ITV
UICT UERCER
looked at the audience figures'
:roE the top.It night have been
nappies
plastic
coated
checked
their
.TTYTHING.
Loysy voysy?
Ue yere.As a child I gavpcd at the Bcreen vondering
vhat the hell nas going on;
garticularly
atruck,for eraople,
{y the half black,half vhite
toodoo nen eniling happily in
thelr top hats,noving in and out
of verti.cal hydraulic steao( vats
singing,'the thigh bones connected to the hip bone '.I stil1 gawp.
Ienneth Griffiths
as Napoleon?
Ihatrs going on? l{e NEVER find
out and probably dont deeerve to.
But nainly,UHY SHOULD UE? Are ne
not(free)nen(and women)?Must ve
alvays renain dunderheads? ITV
cancelled at the Iast minute and
the question disappeared anyvay.
Cool protagonists Yould ther
argue that lfLraber 6 vas /Vuober I.
(IIANKERS! )But ttren arain.., (? )
I,M A FREE MAN ! '
139
lEad rt ll E hE hCdG &G bcc. Ttcy cdl h',rppl!t'.
soc rm &ln thet r ltcy rdl rruud thc boc' thcy
crl lid r!.! lt s mv. hao rha Eah olt b.rm. ltb d(trcult
o rdr th oppcfrho tr ltc, ,i ft ro, r3 tic havy Policc
rdrroy prretrtithdrrtFj.rr
bcfocttc[rl n'
' If.r.diofunpo.t dDcdnnetlcrdpozdins.Tt y '.
t&rti tiilrrol rlc aunr rnd uc, PnGrirG.rd-p& ln 5b.
ll.brdrddcl.dirdn.!.rs.P.lduri.Er0frrl.
lb!.rdr!d.t..qdE1q.,!.lls,!:lDlLw
!rrirel Fr
1
ffi tffifi
nr'rds*r.*ou*"r.*:ffi
pm.@pdrdblccdry.
bt
btloo, cscoc hd3uc' bd ol co
Jyr.rtfrea.rDcrL!.td
Auidro ne&drobf bvcL-oclura dad
r rh
drdrtav fdlurc, Sm rfft hcrcdlcd o re
rldbt b run6o rn aDhIlrE. Oa: rqurddh ll
t[rrEoo3bioto!ot rdrarEolytob.trm.dby
1
HmI.ffi5HEl
*c#ffi,ffi*s*-"J*'; =r
-
rdo c!dr; ud troucai Grtatrn YHrd, LG d to '
wrt. Girofu. r r illltrry rbBr,lre lrryc lny ol
rblrrlc mDrrdclflo cqElpDDt rDd ti.r thki
coid.E. brt tt !
Erlt. co&tbL
mrcd by Pl|l red Dcdy' tbrc rcre lood b bG tdl bc
rilq+,:i
.:):ea" 1t
i: ,!i1:'i
nth ti: udoou lcyd &&ncd by thc fiorrtluL
Udorooldy Ptt Lr *rcr b:cn Pn*ot rth Lb
Eurlrf cqdiut rhllbrcLrvc rpalodtcrvy J
trppla3'< c @doo lt,oPE drrr rlLr ttc, Ld I
UDbwudttcodh.
rtoDdlLllolf
ft rm r?Enr 6rt 'rrElllt' lg ts"irt- t!.![ E=
CnLcovoyr lcivc a.oLr ltc-[r.il!durlng rtloor by
rm od& thc pctl*tcr hoc.. At Pt! Eott lr' th.r..!!
lutrcdarfrauilo' b tbbrdipoad lcvd.
flc til fi " As s eryi*l o gw ot rte t*a r.d 1,
o duloxc d *iclhcht, bncil,g d tldittg w,
tlc'lli4rltfr lrr;l1rrtr,;t hx,l iffiely tart ap cotuU'
.?nb :..Th.fivl icfirq da vc gu, vulc ,',btg ti,li[ pr'
*a idct, b'l',b, r$ ,dut ua dnts Ng},,r tlut ilte it ta
bfiffi."
-nc
rn poUtr oct lt.t lt. Dltlrrry t!trddy rn ltcqucr
d.. Ed;llu aa Ghrtcrt.d tc L !!rbL to obLb
o mre ro.t hhh b.qtrcL..
rctlut
-IiLcc crllcc
.
ot r L[h htd olntcmr.vc r.dhlho 5
oddcrrDlc. Wm tewcrycrLaod llrl ttcycell'roo'
btrt'turt{lt' rod h Dl&thttr.
(h dry d YeEel Gatc nbr |dt b-e rruccpo bccrr
e vcry oold &y. Tho trLr tr
vcrr urd trc{
ttrorn or rd re GoU trLr butDt hoottc lrd'$pc
rd d h l! dc. Il bt d rlrla. ll uborrva rrc dL
icr& t-oOi llc. tbcy tlll ib.lt t Epreort, t]rb L
tc rladolc o riii tb nloo.rrw oYco mrtr. llranal'
rb Lrvc rFr[ dD. !t GrcD G.tt
hdy, dctd ru
ntho r t LiEld rddvty !o rLtutrvc ovc-'
dcvHon!.
fronst ldtrrd
!d Irln ril E dy a!!d it tti tlc ryDPtoG oa'rrF
,iui' Esld Dt bc crd by cuddor froo ttc nrud E
ia ilu lo rd rhcrlu Furfcrut" rbqtrvct llc
d lc thi arty mdrdcrt'xr b.c.otc tic.littr
b ilhh Er erc lruoltd cu bc d3btly coobollcd, rnd
h cer tibi dr pd tm rty lcy dould bc drro:d
Dlo[.
f,cLprrdcd, lo,rcvct' btlt hcttt rltGt .paudF
sltcd tytlcGrafu ru &uftray m hotr
EF dr-Hor. E dboro lrlhod. ttb lt. /rE
6rrdeGIlc.A.rGboal lmtrbbvcuodhllcpd,
h.or ilfol{i f cerg b:t olcoqdhlho. h cooH toa
bvGDrotEd tL lcil.Isl' lnnotll$y rd mtd hpdr.
nrlll alc c{fd!d. Hc b crco toodcrtd itp.lhtF !h
lm ue bdl1 lld r hvoluttty gdr Elr docea bc
H ed oH, 2l horr r &r' hoc hddc rf,G b...
Itc.t tr lllt nB.!d Baly tevccollc'tcdrehr lced thco
b rry..t ll.1 't ppb3' ould bc r vcry N3h tqutr,
lironrc cerlr bceo ttLt b Fdrcd t. ar crtn bt llt
ql.*, rtt t uld mHr dlrccdodanrry rftn thc
&H.rla Gftdt o, borh ht! rd lor ftlqcrcf .ddol
llc rrvdcegtl o,t c.rrlc b.r. ttutd b. r &at el b
rr aily trqt tlc r..L d lb tcrc.. Il' Lorcvtr, uy
radoliurwrctryn tlclm. tlrIE brfcc
ritrbtrbdrdrbar
ttc qud.
Tlcru br rododr ]tLllctq
dcr hddG llc b-. b tuvc objccar.n U !o tL lcrrThcy
ua rh*
uLr rlcy rr: r& oaclrl. Plr lit6.
frldyprnmlrborl ml b.ht ddtolbeaoc. TtcySo
Plnrddod
dD
Iotrb
m&'ltcrblcr,
hri..rd
rtbqd.tbc".
irtborr-va-d fovctb tIb b d yrf Drfld b Hrc L.v,
ldy trpjcd"
trpgleg'.
iuun rDou 'rrplilj' lrvc d:antd lray rou
too nig !o Grtrabn. r rt rt L .! [tltd d b.lb
ou-tc art of lL.r!.r. Ia tou b. trdc IlL atl3'
*fu ttflr< tct! ll&rh.d bY lr oalmn-rrd
isptlD0 tootrn!*y blrsd. Il L boillj tcttrd b tt
pottle lUrcdwaoputt...
(hr Dc(ccCorcqodcd
140
'
PIP! APt
i:.ii*
j't:r::1:..
:,'. 4t:.::
,',:_.;r::
I
I
't.I
a
.l
f
tct!
Thrs 'information' ,iriii tfien be used
The into-police recoii-.
with t0 determine how areas, individuals and c0mmunities
are policed and lo target likely suspects.
4
Thc
use ol computers has expanded rapidly.
police akeady have the Police Natioflal Computer
terminals in local police stations handling some
million enquiries a year. By 1986 response to 999 calls
andcommunicatio-nswillbeviaatilmrliionicommand
UndertheDataProtectionBillthepolicewillalsobeable L
li[*fl*hffi,:]',Hff:,'#:,:sJfi];lJ#. f1ffifi'Jrr#fli:t:fl#JrHif':'ffilj,f,f,:jflls#
their owo police records will
severely limitedbe
- on SpecialBranchandCriminallntelligencefiles-those
/
most
likely
t0
contain
inaccuracies
and hearsay:will be
Observation and lntelligence Units. The Met are also
indultrial activists ani criminal intellige;ce' not only
knowncriminalsbutalsotnatcolecte-dbytheArea
Fr
;--***,.'..-*,,*"d
.
[[HiiH'iri:l,[iiffi{,fff','di:1til,,,ilIffi
purposes i, ,6 ruo.rir tna
ol this inlormation is used for intelligence
New computing techniques means that documents
rrotding vast stores of
futice National computer Building.
put Unsubstantiated inlormation on members Of ths public 0tllce6 ha\€ instant access to d
oncomputercanbesearchedbythepoliceforitemsof
helpsinthedetectionofcrime.ArecentHomeoflice least 40,000,000 files, mogtyofl
evaluati0n ot a computer system in Thames Valley found non criminals. ln one reek n 8fi]
interesl lo them. Much ol the information held is
people who have never been convicted 0f any
that over a peri0d ol 3% years 'n0 strong etfect (on
lheG were more than l.m.m
Not only tacts, but innuendo and gossip may find its way detection rate) has been
enqurries.
on
otfence.
noticedl
the
.J
ffifuEtr
HEruEHF*
'Ja
=
(,
O
.H
x
F
\
O z. F
F o x
p. +
E.EdEu=E
a
z
-o tr)
z.
2- lt)
gtrEEfEHIEIEHH'Ed
z
x
J
a
I
:
i
L
a
Gursors! Anarchlsts byte
into council computer
TOP racrt lrfo@tion on Bcrkshire County
Councll's omputcr systcm err be tapped by
ft'o as simple
- as pulling
a Plu$...
fT
IS rmaimes said rhsr th.
!:dvenced rahnology oi oni
tmsr.tion bccomes the school-
boy physics for thc ncrt tcncralion.
lf this rrs ocr truc, it is ccr.
rrinly norc ao rodry, eirh thc rate
of introduction of ncv tcb-
noloty rcalertting, rnd it will
@ntinue to rcclerrtc for u long
ts ?e il
lcc?pt thc rrtc of
dm3e.
r{lthout resplte ls
to change illuslons
at an accelerating
pace uhlch gradually
dissolves the
1lIus1on of change.
l{e find ourselves
alone, unchanged,
frozen ln the empty
space behlnd the
......1he economy
cannot stop maklng
us consume more and
Ec!'er and to consume
waterfall of
gadgets, fam11y cars
and paperbacks.
Faoul VaneiBem
e.
ordinm mcmbers of tte pubtic, lt rs claimcd
lhis Pek.
Rodi!8 AErchi* itv. rlrmn d tll. omput.r',
ffiiry d<ribihS I s..Aboui & *rknidhl s. Ettrg,"
alLr r nmb.i o( th. public [p!.d lnrc iB ryrt6. -'
Aid iL EEiEs .Llo thx t[c ehlri6 ol rbc
l!h&r osad EGi aLm lhrl tha .ffipu!.a rant o, to
sril} alcn &d rbout iloh f6 | &! lrn mnth.
f9r: a! ebjn !*.D.Fr, nrA nrg. he,r p{U
.
-IBH
rhrr O.y Ey b . n !' by .t.D 8uid. ro -bM}jn8 tnro
. &a @uD q8i1,. ilrmtioD R^r cDh Dd tlEi' tdd
Ih.r uloa rbo dc s it mt bstin? thr Lr.
' _ ht l |rticL 6ll.d ..Ut Teh Fun," 3hc lFup E! th.t
dslfid br@ttE a D. r.h.d bl rryoe cint rha
@t] sBil'. VicFdrE S.rvict, tt lh.y follor . at oa
dDpLiEft&6
vardrE ,ovld6 d@tioD d fd. .nrcrtdnmnt
Ed lq! -.DA b li. E ud ir tyjhbL fr ot chrrl.
E u! of lim |.diDlr rt nadil8 LibErf .
M o! Jaur:, :7 rb. E Eti$ cf.h tlrl &M
tb. rftkt .6u.ll] Eqtd ro 3.r lbmuSb rh.
br@dE
rfrt Dd dd thiD't b ri. oopur.r! Ed
=!t
d-A vhdru Ebraib.r B EbDlrh.d ro lbd tba
kfunir CeF 6Ftr.pffi8
prc.nd.dmhbo Ior tlt trriE ol Ra.tiDt umhi$," rh. MH.
EH.
Hor did r progr..ring punctuation rrror
iead to the loss o{
. llrr i nEr prob! ra
Vrnur ?
A. In e Fortran progr.tr
rirtypld rr 'D0 3 I . 'D03l.lr3'ret
1.3' r:htcf tlr
acceptrd by thr corpilrr rr.r3iFlDf 1.5
to thr vrrirblt D031.
(You rill hrvr to rrrd tbr E|;_dlE
Historv o{ Coroutino. t9}* t. trrr t r
thi: caused (he loss o{ tar rii'-r-:,
Source ! IIiPUT/0UTPiiT.
..An tn.id.na b.tic!.d d &
D. wnlte..1
rilh .
.
rhurdo*,
nf th. Vh$d.b rri!
o J.nur, 27. bre
anrmptir8 to .c
rh. rilir
d ti.t d., *h H 6b,
lith . blel ENn xith rh. n siq *ora. .Soriti
Al.d'.
"ld don't nid b b. . ffipd.r rhir.-kid b ld
lound o Earbhir'r l'ufm
mDutar."
,lorer, pdDdp.J rsistrr Ebn;e }tr JohE lfi*.
told aha CtruLr. rb{ mny oa th. r!ehi$,
d.iE r@
'aohl inmtion."
"Poplc tund-rrhp.lr
Drrlty th@ti t!. @,
ouncilMput.r. P6plG fr !( b.tood h itf@ia
*ni..-bul ?dr rol psn of tb. EiDf,td .68!fi."
And h._rddcd ilul.rrbod, rbo did d
L .€
JDurr-a ,7 rould Dot cre r ..Hr!!,"
&t is.
rh
ohpurc B d proBnEEd E & rld. H. Eii k
hD6n. lmm th. ouBid. Du iaE t
,1d3
df
L.
H. dtls.d
rh.l d(bdrfi tr tiri4
'.d rmas
a
orn6.d b Or diDlltr
oqei.
t ; n rr
d
tk .uput.r lhtt onEE cL.dlial kEl..E cb trmiDd !{i iB m
E!
t4 E jd
pLtin8l,@d
xi&t!sr. latleoi
-rmt
th. hriDrl.re ,rcE tb. Ibu, E-L
Af tq c - a
rrita EtE."
H.ddd6.thbdb--:rEr66h&b-d-L-;._
b.nlsDdlbllEIE.r}ffi"S..ia r.F b rb, L= - t.d.
Mc*q&
rui+Sy3-*&-
,"ffi
,4 -frfr,
-
I
q
LilERTEL VIErlAi. t*-!jtr€E
Phone:01-735-7750
1
'The nan of. contradiction
cautiously on the
,'appeared,horizon.
distant
He Iooked
noticably unroDantic(vhich
vould be the uay he yould
vish to appear anynay)as he
nade his way confusedly
along touards his abstract
destination.
TELEVISUAL iOWNOt STIIIULI
ONE .\IE I VE GOT A BLIP IIOVINC
IN YOUR DIRECTION.
He moved over the final
ridge as the sunset began
to throw its dance of
colours
over the desert
' sky.Ile felt
scorched and
his body ached as though
it rere a septic ulcer.He
yanted to die now,before
he evaporated into a perpetual wandering desert
mirage,haunting and taunting those travellers who
. would eventually fo11ow
his path
AdvertisinS exists in Jrder to
culture is merely the.backgrounl
advertise * advertising.
from nhich the ads shlne out,
Seperated from his product,
seeking to replace thenselves ir
man himself produces all the
the. positions of synbolic power,
details of his world with ever
the now cheapened cuLtural pi11_
increasing pouer,and thus finds
ars once held.The architectural
hinself ever more seperated
environment is deliberately nan_
fron the world.The more his
ufactured to alienate its inhablife is non his product,the
itants so as to make then feel
[lore he is seperated fron his
nore loyalty to bright brand
life.
nanes than to their own grey
The compartnentalisation of
streets.
every nonent of life into seperfdeas which threaten the
ate areas of consunption will'
stability and monopoly of the
lead to the formulation of the
production line are those nhich
ideal consuner personality.Forrefuse their satisfaction in
e.ver diverted from his needs and
product forn.The inspirational
wishes by a constant process of
periods of daydreaning,drifting
fetishistic
buying and universal
consciousness are where these
ninmickry.
ldeas energe every day.This is
The Spectacle is a permane[t
vhy all nodern means of cornnunopiun rrar nhich ains to make
ication are used to barrage
people ldentify goods with comnpeople wirh so ca11ed logical
odities and satisfaction *ith
information, overkill r"ality. Ou,
survival that fncreases according
language is equipped only to:.ntto its or.rn laws.But if consunable
erpret this reality,so keeping
TELEVISUAL CONTROL STIMULI
survival is sornething which must
everyone on the same plane of'a
ONE. HAVE IDENTI F'I B!0, TLL
alvays increase,this is because
nanipulated
practical existence
TAKE II,'I,IEDIATE ACTION.
it continues to C0NTAIN PRMTION. created for and controlled
by a
His feet sank into the eand
If there. is nothing beyond increa- globa1 comnercial image industry.
and his tired body followed
sing survival, if there is no point One
cannot appraise(and adnire)
unresisting into its oblivwhere it. might stop growing, this
particular
this
by taking
ion. . .
is not because it. is beyond priva- as indisputably society
true the language
He awoke suddenly and clear- tion,but because it is enriched
it speaks to itself.
ly,as though some terrible
privation.The real consumer beNo idea can lead beyond the
danger had startled hin,but
cones a consumer of .illusions.The
existing
spectacle,but only beyonc
all was quiet and tranquil.
commodity is thus factually real
the existing ideas about the SpecHis new surroundings uere
illusion,and the Spectacle is its
tacle.The ner.r domain of alien
strange and reLaxing; an
general nanifestation.
beings
to whom nan is subservi_ent
alnost exhalted feeling bethe fetishism of connodities
...grous coexte0sively with the
gan to spread through him
redches monents of fervent exalta- nass of objects.ft is the highest
r,rj-th an intensity that could tion siniLar to the ecstacies of
s.tage of an expansion which has
only be equalled to noneots
the convulsions and niracles of
turned need agai-nst life.The need
of great pain for its uncon- the o1d religious fetishism. The
for money is thus the real need
nunicative nature.
only use rshich renaihs here' is
produced by political economy,and
TELEVISUAL CONTROL STINULI
the fundanental use of submission.
need it produces.
ONE.HAVE TRANSFERRED TO SUBEvery single product represeo!s the only
It
is
the lif e of r.'hat is dead,
CONSCIOUS IRREALITY ZONE.
the hope for a dazzLing shortcut to moving within
it,self .
SUBJECT HAS BROKEN THROUGE
pronised
the
land of totaL conaunp- The spectatorrs consciousness,
MENTAL DIVIDE AND IS REFUSI
tion and is cerenoniously presented imprisoned in a flattened universe,
ALL IIANIPULATION TECHNIQUES.
as the decisive entity.But the obj- bound by the screen
of the Spect_
EMERGENCY , EMERGENCY: :
ect which vas prestigious in the
acle behind which his life has
The great pyranid city await Spectacle becones vulgar as
been deported,knows only the
ed his presence,his pleasure. soon as it is taken home by its
FICTIONAL SPEA(ERS who unilater_
Here,where the streets real1y consumer(s).
It reveals its
a1ly surround him with their
vere paved with gold,aod the essential poverty
too
late(l.ike
comnodities and the politics of
people,freed fron work,uere
crap typewriter.Ed)But by
thelr commodities. The Spectacle,
subject to their oun devices. this
then another object already
in itrs entirity,is
his mirror
The concept of the door rras
justification
carries
the
of
the
r-rnage.
alien here,so yhen one opened syaten and demands to be
In a society where no one can
in the na11 he was aluost
acknowledged.
any
longer
be recognised by others,
yith
overuheLned
the shock.
Absolute confornisn in existing
every individual becones unable to
recognise his own reality.Ideology
social practices,wit.h nhich all
is
possibilities
human
at home; Seperation has built
are
identifttI am not here to be proven, ied for.alL tine,has no external
its norld.Adventure is dead. All
but to be disproven,tr said
concLusions remain to be drawn,
linit other than the fear of
the voice which followed
everything has to be recalculated.
falling back into fornless aninthe door.
Cortradiction of the myth,and
ality . Here , in order to remain
human,men must renain the saDe.
the myth of contradj.ctlon.
'Each of the'thousands of oi7 What is represented as genuine
conpanies,Tike each steeT co, life reveals itself sinply as
SCHRAPE
knoys that the onTy vay to
genuinely Spectacular life.The
Fine purveyors of t'eVolutlonary
stay ahead of rivals is to
reality of tine has been replacspirit since 55 BC.
keep deveToping new or inproed by the advertisenent of tima.
(TE.PLAGTARTSED iUy OSAORO)
ved services and productst
Culture is now the diiving
aTways at the Iorvest possiDle force in the development of t[e
price. To nake sure this kind economy,a role played by the.
Analysing advertising is boring,
much better td write confusionlst
of progress continues,wb nust autonobile in the first half o'f
parables.
guard industry, s freedon of
this century,and by rail-roads
cofllpetitive action winh the
in the second half of the previous
sane zeal that we guard our
century.But as ryith architecture,
I
W
freedon as' individuais.
142
Believe in freedorn-
Believe ln
'SUBLIHINAL - BeTov the
thresho-l d of consciousness' so feint that the
subTect is noE conscious
of then.'
LTMT,NhLg
Cosey eJaborates on thatl'
'...of ten vhen peopTe -Ziseen
to a track of ours,it aay seea
pretty clean and cTear a77 the
wdy thru',buC tbey get.,.not a
strange feeTing fron it,but
BEGINNING OF SUBLIITINAL
get a feeL fron it and
they
PERSUASION: 164O - vhen
thatrs
because they're underReabrandt enbedded the
neath
eYerything
efse, tbat's
sord 'Sex' in a painting.
vhat's coning thru'.'
Chris:'Or you can have a very
CON SP I RACY I NTERNATTOil It :
dense sound with a sublininaT
FoTTowing possibTy. the
that dakes you feeT that the
trorse constructed question
sound is guite spacious. They
I've ever put to an intercan work the reverse of what
vievee,Chris
Carter nore
the sound actuaTTy is that
or Iess instinctiveTy
you' re listening to.SubTiningrdsps what I vant hin to
a7s can do the opposite. And
taTk about - that is,
then ue use spokgn vord subSubliainal.s ' their use of
TiainaTs as ve77.But se never
and their knowTedge of the
te77 peopTe what tracks they'
widespread use of then in
re on.They're not on evety
the rousi c industry, controj
track.lle don t use subliaina-ls
business in generaTt
a7 7 the t ine . We var y theu.'
read 1itt7e things
'...you
Coseyttft's just how the
that FTeetvood Nac and ELO
track's going vhen we're recha've used BACK MASKING,
ording it,what kind of atnosvhich is siai-lar.Baci
Maskphere or feeT we want within
ing is - you put @essages,
it,without it actuaTTy Teaping
or whatever you vant rea77y,
out at you.Because the kind of
on a record underneath the
sounds you vant there, to set
ausic in a sjajTar etay to
the scerre as you're listening,
subTiainaTs, but it' s pTayed
vtould rnc necess ariTy aarry ,te77
backwards . SupposedT y i t
ttith the sounds that we're puterters the subconscious in
ti.ng on top,in the DeTody or
the saDe vay that sub-1 iainthe
druns,in an audio sense.
a7s do,buc then I cant
So ve have to put it on another
guite see horv you'd know if
7eve7 in anocher vtay.'
it did or not. . .
Chris:'And it does' nt vork
tThe big thing in Aaereith everybody.lle can have
ica vas the Christian novedozen people in one rooa
a
IDent saying that a77 these
Tistening to the saae track
record producers and nusicand aaybe one person vi71
ians were putting the deviTs
hear the subl iainaL . t
ilessaSes on records w/back
Cosey:'Because
they catch
aasking.That *as just hysteryou
you
vhen
dont
expect it.
icaT.They said the BeatTes
If you try and Tisteh you
had it on a Lot of their
wont get it.)
records.It
only needs one
Chris:tYou
see there are
person to start I ru@our
different types of subTinina-Is.
Tike that and it can spread
There 's a visua-1 subl ininaT in
across the country in a DatfiTn
and video,vhich is done wi
ter of hours'cant it.It
does
traaes,using singTe fraaes.
'nt necessaril,y oean itts
That's entireiy different but
true either but once the
it's
still a subTininaT. Then
just
part
seed is sown itts
there's visua-I subTininaTs in
of historytit
carries on
pictures,where you can consfroa there.'
truct a picture in advertising
ATthough Jesus freaks
and you can re-touch it after
have'nt taken to burning
wards so that when you Took at
Chris and Cosey records,as
it in a particuTar way you can
yet,in a receDt CTI handout
see soaething eTse in the picthey put the foTTowing
ture which shouldtnt be there.
expTanation: 'lle have exper
It's done by aaking the shadol*s
iaented vith sound Tong
of things vork in a pdrticular
enough to be aware of any
way,or the coTours'or just the
dangers or effects arising
vay things are structured and
froa nisuse of subliainals
the vay they're set up in a
and back aasking.I
feeT you
picture.Then
subTininals
knov us ve77 enough to reaT- are just doneaudio
riithin ausic,
jse tlrat we have respect for
just technical
anvone buying our records and using Tayers and
things
vouTd
rherefore
never subject
'So DasicaTTy there are 3
thetr to an.y negative iaaoraT
kind of pasti@e different types of subliainais
tactics,That
that can be used.They're al7
is regressiv'e and saacks of
produced in a eonpTeteTy diffforced invasion of the indiverent vay but in theory theY
iduaT person,You aay assure
yoursel ves that the subTiainhavs 66sica71y the sa@e effect.
eLs are used as sound aontage So,Tike if you're fTicking thru'
:,-l for no uTterior aotives
a nagazine and you see an advert
t
:-:-=veI
.
and Tike the picture and the.
'
type and coTour and soaething
eTse nay register in your stbconscious as beiag jn that pjcture that is.'nt associa ted vi:h
that picture at a77.
. lgle nanaged to get hold of
soae MUZAK" records uthen ve, tere
in Aaerica vith TG,an] they had,
the whoTe chart af frequenZies
and teapos and thirg" i ike that
you should use at particuTar
tiaes of the day. ?be other
thing is neysreaders,the
*ay
they read the neus is based cn
the IIUZAK pr incipaJ, JUs r rhe
speed or the wdy you sa_y the
neL,s.You use net4sreaders at
different
tioes of the day because the frequencjes jn their
voices vork in different
Havs
on peopJe,when theytre either
Teaving for work or getting
hoae.
'But I dont know if rt's
used so auch noi.It
was a big
thing in the 60's and 7 0, s ,
fc's used in different
*.avs
now , thatt s Ehe thing . And the
other thing is the IBA are a
7ot stricter
because officiaTTy
subTiainals are 777ega7 on TV
and of course if the IBA are
invoTved it Deans in theory
subTiainals are i77ega7 on the
radio too.
'But itts very bard to detect shen a sub-l ininaT is beiag..
used. ilorri s HcVhirter took, Spig,-,,,
tin' Inage'to court because they
used a subTininaT of .a nude vo;,.t:j,::.i
nan vihis head pasted on.They.d
used 6 fraaes or soaething, it
ttas'nt very nuch and they adr it- :|,
ted i t rvas used bu t the case
li,
vlas thrown out of .ou.".-iii
t .',t;,
chink un.less he had brought it
to peopTes I attention no one ..'..!r'.::::
uould havs knsw it was there
anyway.
'And you can get sublininaT
soe.lls, superaarkecs use ,eD
all the tine now, j t's a rea77y
big industry.So when youtre
valking psst ther butcher's
.
bacon wafting thru' the air
verrts. Because i t ts 'aI 7 in plastic bags nov'you ca_nt snel7 it
naturaTTy anynore.'
,,,.:
; ,.
:.'::
:'l'.'.i
a,
r,,,
detect any subTiainaT oessages, .
sound effects or indeed sae-I-1 s:
vhich after a77 have been known- to accos,pany pop'lLZ"rZZ" ri"I;; . ,.
past - on any of Chris and Cos-..
ey's records.But itt s ve77 worth .,:...:
the ef f ort Tooking, if only f.or ' '',,:::,.:
.
the exceedingly pleasant ;;1".ge r,.r1
of their spacious eiectro-rhyth,as.i :
And who knows one day you Digh:t t':'',..'
find yourself having assassin.ated
a president of fanous pop star
and not reaeabering anything but
a car horn.
:
FTIRTHER INFO CANTACT:SEND SAE
Bl,I CTI London \\/C I
:
IXX 1 4 3 ,.
il, ''"m$lnq[a[m
ffisls oR$m,,
*ryailEl*r0{Elll.l
P.
nrssrc!|.,
'
. ,,,
e, OUtSSffi
iD filX0ffffi'f
llll(of,Fffi4c,
sodim ie
**..rn&rom
;::flfi{H*IlnJofllllH,..... . .,,'' : : ; ri,l..,|1;addb1fi[,, r, ;i.i:':i:r"
otfinffG F" ffirllil EuRRouGHs
_
illLril
uryg'ttqr*tfiltrtttt0
b tlA-{EnfRS' ltL: A8 / 7 dfi[t5
Diestollc Murrnurs
THE DIASTOLIC MURMURS IN
I
ELECTRO-MEDICINE T . . . . . .
A SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION
-WHICH INCLUDES C45 CASSETTE,A SERIES OF SURREAL
PHOTOCOPIES + MEDICAL
INC.P+P.9/A 109 CORBYN ST,
LONDON, N4 3BX.
144
RACK CAIALOGUE
,.:.--
.ANTZINE 2: Ant's Frontier
tour diary .t Bauhaus/Echo
and the Bunnyaen/Specials
/ Skids / Rez i 1 1os / llo -dettes / P ro graa / Bowie I Futurana 2 /lla7ler
on scot . fanzines/Tribalisa
AoneVOtT INTO STYLET Bov-
.P..R.OTO -.V AGUE .SALI SBURY ART
, COLLTEE' 'FANZINES: (Note :Toa
V7gue never yent to art
co7|ege. )aUNITE 1976-7E on
' eiid,',lo,,f f..EdiEed by the 7e.gi,'e.A:a ,ry,. Rtchard and Nancys
CHANNEL 4 1978-79.Edited
by. the equaTTy Tegendary
Tin AyTet,vho veDt an to
1.,1a66ag". the Glaxo Ea,Dies
i:.-l':,: Btinshees / Ants in SaIisD;ioii.iiip'Grou p / Graxo Bab ies
/ hlire / Spizz Oi7 / X-Certs
2 CTasht Sort i E o.,it' :incendiary Struaoer interviev
/ X-Ray-Spex / Adverts / IJnder-
Y ror-rov / llonschroae Setx2 /
A God' s Toys/Classix/tldsted
Youth/Danned/Last of the Nohikans/ Annesty Reporc/The End
of Bourneaouth(Vil7age retro)
I /\.REYOLTING STYLE( Back to
; :r
r1 ron"'r;,","o',0
I
"22i7',Strange / 20a2
Jordan/ Richard
Rev ue / Thoa pson Tvi ns / V IZ / P ropaganda/Roya7 tledding-riot pin-uF
.BACK FRON THE GRAVET
ll
tones / CheT sea / Snegna / lloskovt
:aV.AGI|E'SINCLE TSSUES I 97 9t - I 4 t
Hands
I aBansh ees'Join
I tour / Ants r Zerjx' tour /
I SreII Haps/Red CrayoTa
of .4/Red CrayoTa/
'l.1.Gang
I Joy Division/Buzzcocks/
|f- Futurana 1 / ?.roduct 109
. a, oRanones / Bois / Sof t ies /
j, Clasn' Rude boy' int / Rain1/ coats / Tour s / Decent r a 7 i se
1l oReveTat ion Rocke rs ( Tal if,!-isnan ) / M ikey Dread / iai t /
I Aniaals t Men/ ttoskov/QTs
I oAnts / Huaan League / Scars /
) Cu r e / Pass ions / Spe c ia7 s /
, I|ndertones/Ian Curcis/
Anocher Pretty Face/Shit fun
at Stoneh enge/ Anti-vivisect":,',:i ;,nit1,y.b. V z i: n eZ n - z 1Pi.st or s f i I d
, aPop Group/Slits/Crass/
j1 Devo / Gary Glitter / Jaa /
Lf Martian Dance / Ho-dettes /
:
:', C.osaeti Cs / llK Sub,s / Fanzines
' A,-Z/-l{ooraock's Pistols book
a aANTZINE: Ants Invasion
f tour progran@e:o7d Ants
, interviews and reviers
IOXTY ISSUES 9 TO 16/I7 AVAILABLE AS BACK NUMBERS.AND THERE
. MIGUI NOT BE ANY 12 OR 13'S
,..',LEFT IIOW.BUT ROUGII TRADE SHOP,
"
Uff
I|
'r:",2:r' 'r:fr:,|;' 'r"i:il:',, ette piracy/PR Retro/Futuraaas
/ VU Retro / I gg y' Par t y' tour /
Cr aitps celtre-spread / Sheep
shaggi ng
I l.}'.TALES FROH THE BLANK
I Lf,!^!:"ii:' ""1',:i:; r\";,i!,
Joke / UK Decay/ Danse Society/
9la77er on'Sounds' /Pete .9cott
on' t.ota7 ( coTd )var t / 'jOur Brave
Lads' ( FaTkTands tribute) / *
'Those Tovable spikey tops/
VIZ/' Love + Roaance' (xRegular.
features fron nov on)
I 7.THE ISSttE THAT DARE NOT
,
I 7',::"if ','";i,X!i;.:1" il"o:"
ian Hovenent/Sex Gang ChiTdren
/ Hippies:disturDinB nee. cuTt /
glOttAD/Banshees:so Tong + thanx
tor the fishnets/Platinun Logic
/ Burroughs : P inaT Acadeay( pTus
super Vague-kunst pu77-out)
.NUHBERS 9 TO 15 COST 70p EACH
(P+P IilC.)t6/ l7 cOSTs rt.50(p+p
INC. )UK, E2.00 OVERSEAS.tTtORX THE
POSTAGE OUT YOURSELF IF YOU
tsT€.}lIGHT HAVE SOI,TE AND IF IIVE I{ANT A LOT.
i,,LEFT ANY OF ,THE OTHERS wrrH rOU .WRITE AND MAKE CHEQUES PAYABLE
OVER THE YEARS AND YOU WANT TO
T0:' VAGUE' (B. I.D. )C/O' BUTCOMBE"
CLEAR OUT YOUR }'ARDROBE PLEASE
CASTLE ST, MERE, I{ILTS , BAI2 6JF UK
GET IN TOUCH.
HAiL ORDER/RETA]L
I i.THE BLACK ISSL)E:SOUTHERY
I4LDEATH CULT SPECTAL +
I I P""th rhrears /Pete Scorr
on never vorking/Sterilizatloa
of aaerican indian vonen/Those
not so TovabTe spikey tops(A
bri tigue of anarcho-punk) / Iggy
Pop:A Lesson in Ntghtaare(by
Pete Scott)+ Intervies/Fab
Birthday Party collage
I f .OPERATION ilINDFUCKt
I 7 trl:,iii,8i
1","' zll",1"'
Church of the Sub-Genius/Bee
on CharTes Hanson/Cetting the
Fearl Dune Buggy Attack Aitta7 ion / Hagick,sex and .Greenhaa
Conaon/ 'The Longest llalkr ( AIH)
/Nick Cave and the Caveaen/
Dancing Tarantul 7as / Lavolta
.VAGIJE ANNT]ALS 1984-BIG DAMAGE;
1 1 oTHE 20th CENTURY AND HOL
I o,trl ritri,"^ r'rT, ; ri' [\tr'r"r r[' i:,,
12 extensive intervier, +
'Nothing Short of a total
./
,
ttar'by CPO/ INCOH?LETE
| 7 coN"rRoL:Bit7y Grahan/Nixo:
I I !,t";:".ti3r:r"n1::!"!;Zil:l
Conspiracy/' DEQODER' tGPO on
I|UZAK / Klaus llaek / Bur gerkreig /
F rogs / Crov 7 ey / Drean ltach i ne /
Cut-up/ Gysin and Burroughs /
t
SITIIAT ION I SM I t con fusionist
beginners guide/Paris' 68 and
the Angry Brigade/llick llercer
on' IF . . . ' and, The Avengers, /
Vague over Europe traveToguei
J(laus llaek on Laibach /'lliner
ConfTicts + Hajor Contradictions'/Slaughter at the Grand/
VU/Diananda CaTas/Band ALds
.ALSO AVAILABLE FROM:
COMPENDIUII,234 CAMDEN HIGH
LONDON NWl.
CT
ROUGH TRADE SHOP,l3O TALBOT RI
LONDON UT I .
UOT DISTRIBUTION,PO BOX 396,
HACXNEY,LONDON E8 4PL.
HOUSMANS,5 CALEDONIAN RD,LO}IDOI
Nl.
BCM TANELORN LONDON'L'C]tr 3;]i}.
I AS€O W THINK T WAS
BUT
OFF TI{AN 771€" ARE--
8EG,NT{'NG
&lU.-
l'i
A MILL'ON 7'AAE5 BET7ER
DOWN THERE
TO
,totvoEe
---S"
"\
4T LEAST
THEY'R,E
REALLY
ltytAto
WH,LE , sIEETI^ To
SPEND A{Y TITAE
WATCH'NG L'FE FROIA
..i,E
o)
l
1.4 7