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Speak freely within this bread.
When catโs not being whisked away for the weekend, Willow is predominantly restricted to White House residence's private 2nd and 3rd floors, where she likes the solarium; at Wilmington and Camp David, she often sits on porch in sun, @KateBennett_DC reports
https://twitter.com/JenniferJJacobs/status/1538114354570199040
29 Jun, 2022 19:11
HomeWorld News
Updated strategy, new members, old enemies: NATO summit highlights
On day two of its annual summit, the bloc formally focused its sights on Russia
(Look at Bidan he looks like a delusional Howdie Doodie character)
https://www.rt.com/news/558102-nato-summit-highlights-russia/
My own fan! Wowee!
One final, weird note: A memo that allegedly passed between Jones and People's Temple lawyer Mark Lane (who escaped the massacre) showed the two pondering the relocation of Grace Walden to Jonestown. Walden was a key witness to the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. Lane represented King's accused assassin, James Earl Ray. When the memo turned up, Lane denied that he had discussed moving Walden.
(He claims that the memo was part of an "army intelligence coverup" of the King assassination, ostensibly an attempt to discredit him and, through him, Walden.) Most of the People's Temple rank-and-file were black. Most of the leadership was white. Joyce Shaw, a former member, once mused that the mass suicide story was a coverup for "some kind of horrible government experiments, or some sort of sick, racist thing. . . a plan like the Germans' to exterminate blacks."
In 1980, the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence announced that there was "no [more]evidence" of CIA involvement at Jonestown.
MAJOR SOURCES
Kerns, Phil. People's Temple, People's Tomb. Plainfield, NJ: Logos International, 1979.
Kilduff, Marshall, and Ron Javers. The Suicide Cult. New York: Bantam Books, 1978.
Krause, Charles. Guyana Massacre: The Eyewitness Account. New York: Berkley Books, 1978.
Moore, Rebecca. A Sympathetic History of Jonestown. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellon Press, 1985.
Reiterman, Tim. Raven: The Untold Story of the Reverend Jim Jones and His People. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1982.
This chapter owes a debt to research assembled by John Judge.
We are here: conspire@conspire.com
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