Anonymous ID: e84987 April 1, 2019, 6:26 p.m. No.6011343   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1495 >>1578

>>6011039

The Heiresses and the Cult

 

By Suzanna Andrews

October 13, 2010

 

To family friends, Seagram heiresses Sara and Clare Bronfman are victims of a frightening, secretive “cult” called nxivm, which has swallowed as much as $150 million of their fortune. But the organization’s leader, Keith Raniere, seems also to have tapped into a complex emotional rift between the sisters and their father, billionaire philanthropist Edgar Bronfman Sr. The author investigates the accusations that are now flying—blackmail, perjury, forgery—in a many-sided legal war.

 

This spring, Clare Bronfman, the 31-year-old heiress to the multi-billion-dollar Seagram liquor fortune, would describe to a New York court the extortion letter that was sent to her on April 24, 2009. Intended for her 33-year-old sister, Sara, as well, it was signed by several women, including the sisters’ financial planner, a masseuse, and a hairstylist, and demanded that “they be paid $2.1 million by midnight,” Clare said in a sworn declaration, “or else they would go to the press with information they deemed harmful to my sister and I.” What that information was, the letter didn’t say, but Clare viewed the threat as alarming. The daughters of the billionaire philanthropist and former Seagram chairman, Edgar Bronfman Sr., and the half-sisters of Edgar junior, the chairman of Warner Music Group, Sara and Clare were not simply heiresses to a global empire built by their grandfather Samuel Bronfman. As they would describe themselves, they were also important, wealthy entrepreneurs and philanthropists in their own right—women who bankrolled a web of investments and humanitarian foundations based in the Albany region, where they lived. Indeed, as Clare would tell a court this spring, the extortion demand arrived when she and Sara “were two weeks away from hosting the Dalai Lama in Albany for an event on humanitarian issues.”

 

https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2010/11/bronfman-201011?verso=true

Anonymous ID: e84987 April 1, 2019, 6:35 p.m. No.6011486   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>6011398

"All propaganda must be so popular and on such an intellectual level, that even the most stupid of those toward whom it is directed will understand it… Through clever and constant application of propaganda, people can be made to see paradise as hell, and also the other way around, to consider the most wretched sort of life as paradise."

~ Adolf Hitler

(1889-1945) German Nazi Dictator

Mein Kampf, p. 197. 14th Edition.

Anonymous ID: e84987 April 1, 2019, 6:40 p.m. No.6011562   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1591

>>6011495

Only because the MSM won't report on it.. Just think if they actually would report on it half as much as they lie about Trump

 

"We are going to impose our agenda on the coverage by dealing with the issues and subjects we choose to deal with."

~ Richard M. Cohen

(1948-) American journalist, television producer, and author. Former senior producer for CBS News and CNN

Anonymous ID: e84987 April 1, 2019, 6:48 p.m. No.6011678   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1718

>>6011578

>leakey family in Africa

 

Fraud and Forgery in Paleoanthropology

 

A review of the history of paleoanthropology leads to the conclusion that the discipline is far less objective than that for physics, chemistry, or even biology. The field is rife with controversy and fraud, including outright faking. Classic examples include Piltdown man and Hesperopithecus but many other less well-known examples exist that are reviewed in this paper. Several well-documented examples are cited in some detail to illustrate the types of problems encountered, and the results of fraud in paleoanthropology

Topics: paleoanthropology, science fraud, evolution of humans, Piltdown man, hobbits, Homo floresiensis, scientific bias, human fossils, science corruption

 

https://core.ac.uk/display/23324637