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bad visas
- To: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert
- Subject: bad visas
- From: "Elaine" <http://www.hotmail.com/~et>
- Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2004 17:01:37 -0800
From: Robert <http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert>
To: Elaine <http://www.hotmail.com/~et>
Subject: RE: identity theft
Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2004 16:17:47 -0800 (PST)
Actually, what's sorta interesting is that I was writing about
H1-B visa issues back in 1998, 1999, and 2000 to Senators
Kennedy and Kerry (yep, that Kerry) and I never heard anything
back from them about it.
I suspect I was the only one writing to them about this issue.
You probably were. I was a project lead for Indians since 1989 and saw the
handwriting on the wall then. But during the boom years, no one would
listen. They still won't listen for the same reason I said above -- under
our system, business has a right to go to the cheapest labor. It's the
devalue of labor -- our value, what we want or need doesn't count.
You might find this interesting -- got this from Justice Tool Box. Also had
heard on KPFA that Kerry is a Skull and Bones and part of the same gang...
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Hi Reshma, all,
Esther sent me this earlier today and I replied back to her that this
"progressive internationalism" (good cop) agenda of the likely
Democratic presidential nominee (Kerry) and our Resident Bush's "bad
cop" global domination policy fits in nicely with the Skull and Bones
New World Order program. Though many of you might laugh this off, I
would suggest that before you discredit this notion you might want to
read some Anthony Sutton, a Stanford professor on the topic of the
Skull and Bones society and how they have been instrumental in playing
and funding both sides of conflicts, including the Democrats (the
Left?) and the Republicans (the Right).
Either way, this new "muscular internationalism" as proposed by the
Democrats is nothing but subscribing to a global power of the triune
(England, Israel, American) to control the world's people and
resources. The White Man's Burden.
Note: None of these Democratic contenders are asking any hard questions
about 9/11, the catalyst and excuse of this move for world domination.
By ignoring this issue they are in fact supporting and playing a
leading role in this New World Order agenda.
http://www.antonysutton.com/
On Tuesday, February 17, 2004, at 01:02 PM, S. R. Yunus wrote:
Date: Tue Feb 17, 2004 12:58:34 PM US/Pacific
To: http://www.yahoogroups.com/~uma1
Subject: [UMA] - The New Democrat John Kerry
Is there a significant change in the policies of the neo-conservative
Republicans and the new Democrat front runner John Kerry? Not really, says
Mark Hand, Editor of Press Action.
"It's Time to Get Over It"
John Kerry Tells Antiwar Movement to Move On
By Mark Hand
February 09, 2004
http://www.pressaction.com/pablog/archives/001294.html#001294
Researchers and investigative reporters are fascinated with the
neoconservatives, that group of American empire peddlers who turned George
W. Bush into a junkie war criminal. A similar group, the New Democrats, has
been pushing its own dangerous brand of U.S. hegemony but with much less
fanfare.
The leading mouthpiece for the New Democrats' radical interventionist
program could be our next president. John Kerry, the frontrunner in the
quest for the Democratic Party presidential nomination, has been promoting
a foreign policy perspective called "progressive internationalism." It's a
concept concocted by establishment Democrats seeking to convince potential
backers in the corporate and political world that, if installed in the
White House, they would preserve U.S. power and influence around the world,
but in a kinder, gentler fashion than the current administration.
In the domestic battle to captain the American empire, the neocons have in
their corner the Partnership for a New American Century while the New
Democrats have the Progressive Policy Institute. Come November, who will
get your vote? Coke or Pepsi?
In fall 2000, PNAC released Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces
and Resources for a New Century. It's a blueprint for "maintaining global
U.S. preeminence, precluding the rise of a great power rival, and shaping
the international security order in line with American principles and
interests."
In fall 2003, members of PPI joined with other tough-minded Democrats to
unveil Progressive Internationalism: A Democratic National Security
Strategy, a 19-page manifesto that calls for "the bold exercise of American
power, not to dominate but to shape alliances and international
institutions that share a common commitment to liberal values."
The New Democrats don't begrudge the Bush administration for invading Iraq.
They take issue with the Bush administration's strategy of refusing to
invite key members of the international community to the invasion until it
was too late. The neocons' unilateralist approach, the New Democrats
believe, will ultimately harm U.S. political and economic dominance around
the world.
"We are confident that a new Democratic strategy, grounded in the party's
tradition of muscular internationalism, can keep Americans safer than the
Republicans' go-it-alone policy, which has alienated our natural allies and
overstretched our resources," the New Democrats say in their foreign policy
manifesto. "We aim to rebuild the moral foundation of U.S. global
leadership by harnessing America's awesome power to universal values of
liberal democracy. A new progressive internationalism can point the way."
Proponents of "progressive internationalism" are a lock to control
leadership positions at the State Department and key civilian posts at the
Pentagon in a John Kerry administration. How do we know this? Because these
New Democrats obviously ghostwrote Kerry's campaign book, A Call to
Service: My Vision for A Better America. Place the Progressive
Internationalism manifesto and Kerry's chapter on foreign policy side by
side and you'll immediately notice the similarities.
On page 40 of In A Call to Service, Kerry writes: "The time has come to
renew that tradition and revive a bold vision of progressive
internationalism." What is this tradition to which Kerry refers? As he
describes it, Democrats need to honor "the tough-minded strategy of
international engagement and leadership forged by Wilson and Roosevelt in
the two world wars and championed by Truman and Kennedy in the cold war."
Now, turn to page 3 of the New Democrats' manifesto. It reads:
As Democrats, we are proud of our party's tradition of tough-minded
internationalism and strong record in defending America. Presidents Woodrow
Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman led the United States to
victory in two world wars and designed the post-war international
institutions that have been a cornerstone of global security and prosperity
ever since. President Truman forged democratic alliances such as NATO that
eventually triumphed in the Cold War. President Kennedy epitomized
America's commitment to "the survival and success of liberty."
Like the neocons, Kerry was not impressed by France's stance against the
U.S. invasion of Iraq. On page 51 of his book, he writes:
I hope by the time you read this book that the UN has been usefully
employed as a partner in the reconstruction of Iraq and that Jacque Chirac
has ceased his foolish rebellion against the very idea of the Atlantic
Alliance. America, which has always shown magnanimity in victory, should in
turn meet repentant Europeans halfway, not ratchet up the badgering
unilateralism that fed European fears in the first place.
There's much to digest in this paragraph. Perhaps the most interesting
nugget is Kerry's statement that the United States should "meet repentant
Europeans halfway." Hmmm, John, could you elaborate on what sins the
Europeans committed for which they must repent?
On page 50, Kerry details his beef with Old Europe:
The Bush administration is by no means the only culprit in the breakdown in
U.S.-UN relations over Iraq. France, Germany and Russia never supported or
offered a feasible policy to verify that UN resolutions on Iraq were
actually being carried out. Our British, Spanish and Eastern European
coalition allies are eager to rebuild European unity.
Throughout the foreign policy sections of the book, Kerry does his best to
convince the reader that he would not run from his role as war criminal in
chief if elected president.
Perhaps the most repulsive section of the book is where Kerry discusses the
Vietnam War and the antiwar movement. On page 42, Kerry writes:
I could never agree with those in the antiwar movement who dismissed our
troops as war criminals or our country as the villain in the drama. That's
one reason, in fact, that I eventually parted ways with the VVAW [Vietnam
Veterans Against the War] organizations and instead helped found the
Vietnam Veterans of America.
If the United States was not a villain in the "drama" of the Vietnam war,
then who is to blame for the million-plus Vietnamese who were killed during
the 20-year period of naked U.S. aggression that ended in 1975? Surely,
John, you don't wish to blame certain communist dead-enders in Vietnam for
the carnage?
On the next page, Kerry informs his reader that it's time we stop
questioning U.S. foreign policy intentions:
As a veteran of both the Vietnam War and the Vietnam protest movement, I
say to both conservative and liberal misinterpretations of that war that
it's time to get over it and recognize it as an exception, not as a ruling
example, of the U.S. military engagements of the twentieth century. If
those of us who carried the physical and emotional burdens of that conflict
can regain perspective and move on, so can those whose involvement was
vicarious or who knew nothing of the war other than ideology and legend.
This last passage is probably the most unsettling part of Kerry's book and
one that every advocate of the Anyone-But-Bush 2004 election strategy
should read before heading to the polling station in > November.
In this one passage, Kerry seeks to justify the millions of people
slaughtered by the U.S. military and its surrogates during the twentieth
century, suggests that concern about U.S. war crimes in Vietnam is no
longer necessary, and dismisses the antiwar movement as the work of
know-nothings.
Kerry and his comrades in the progressive internationalist movement are as
gung-ho about U.S. military action as their counterparts in the White
House. The only noteworthy difference between the two groups battling for
power in Washington is that the neocons are willing to pursue their
imperial ambitions in full view of the international community, while the
progressive internationalists prefer to keep their imperial agenda hidden
behind the cloak of multilateralism.
Mark Hand is editor of Press Action. His views are not necessarily those of
UMA Board Members.
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