Glenn A. Fine, Inspector General of the Department of Justice, reports to Michael Mukasey, attorney general of the United states, that Federal Bureau of Investigation agents of the Counter-Terrorism Division, on temporary assignment, in pro-Iranian Iraq, collected an average of 71,000 “dollars” for a three-month tour by literally billing the FBI overtime for 16 hours per day, seven days per week, for time that they spent at parties, watching movies and exercising.  Fine finds that agents were overpaid on average of 5,594 “dollars” per tour.

       NOTE: This still amounts to the equivalent of an annual salary of 260,000 “dollars” per year that the IG feels is warranted.

       [added 8/27/2021]

       We’ll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false.

—- William J. Casey, Director of Central Intelligence (1981 – 1987)

       United states Army Colonel Stephen R. Henley, a Guantanamo military commission president, issues a protective order veiling from public disclosure “any document or information including but not limited to any subject referring to the Central Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, Department of State, National Security Council, Federal Bureau of Investigation, or intelligence agencies of any foreign government, or similar entity, or information in the possession of such agency, shall be presumed to fall within the meaning of ‘classified national security information or document’ unless and until the [senior security adviser] or Prosecution advises otherwise in writing.”  This includes claims of torture of defendants, at the hands of their captors.

       [added 8/27/2021] Thanks to Freedom’s Phoenix for this entry.

       While the United states Armed Forces (private mercenaries) are stationed at 737 bases, in 130 nations around the world, defending “all freedom-loving people everywhere in the world,” the supreme court, of minnesota, rules that 1,600 improperly excluded secret (Australian) ballots in the unlawful, popular vote recount between incumbent Republican (fascist/socialist) senator Norm Coleman, Democratic (socialist/fascist) Al Franken.  This reduces Colman’s lead over Franken from 215 to only two votes.

       Questions:

  • Every election we are told how important that “one single vote” is, why is it now these two status quo candidates will not abide by the verdict of that one vote?
  • Would this type of uncertainly in the election of U.s. Senators exist at all if they were still lawfully elected in accordance with Article I, Section 3 [Clause 1] (election by the State legislatures)?

       [added 8/27/2021]

       The Internal Revenue Service conducts the Adrian Project at Pittsburg (kansas) State University.  Students considering a career in statute enforcement for the IRS are given badges and inoperable guns, and coached through a wide range of scenarios that IRS agents might encounter.

       [added 8/27/2021] Thanks to Freedom’s Phoenix for this entry.

Subsequent Events:

12/22/2008                   1/5/2009                    1/22/2009                   1/26/2009                  2/25/2009

2/26/2009                     2/27/2009                  3/12/2009                   3/25/2009                  3/31/2009

4/3/2009                       4/14/2009                  4/15/2009                   5/14/2009                  12/29/2009

10/6/2014                     10/9/2014

Authority:

“Law of the Jungle”
ccc-2point0.com/preface

References:

“Minn. Senate Race Margin Now 2 Votes,” Los Angeles Times, 19 December 2008, A35.

“FBI Employees in Iraq Were Overpaid Millions, Audit Says,” Los Angeles Times, 19 December 2008, A29.

Judge’s Order Could Keep Public From Hearing Details of 9/11 Trials
www.911truth.org/article_for_printing.php?story=20090109164430664

KOAM TV 7 Joplin and Pittsburg News Weather Sports Badges, fake guns, interrogations and arrests in IRS simulation for students (5)
www.koamtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=10086199

Current U.s. National Debt:

$36,167,124,467,492

Source