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Subject: Blumenthal is the STATE's attorney, not the people's
attorney...Re: Challenging Atty Gen Blumethal
Date: Sep 20, 2008 6:15 PM
http://www.starkravingviking.blogspot.com/
Correct. He does not work for the people;
he works to protect the *State,* which is not
the people. It's the State employees and
whatnot.
If he was working for the people, he would
investigated the Lyme crimes from the time
he held his hearings in 1999, since it was
at that time that criminal activities were
revealed to him:
http://www.actionlyme.org/TICK_BITE_CONSPIRACY.htm
by Karen Forschner.
In 2003, his office referred me to file the RICO
complaint with the USDOJ:
http://www.actionlyme.org/USDOJ_COMPLAINT_RICO.htm
The State employees involved in the Lyme crimes,
like the people who work for Yale and DMHAS and
Yale and DCF and Yale and UConn, who are
involved in the Lyme crimes (Department of
Health staff, too), are protected by Blumenthal.
So, he is not the people's lawyer.
We, the people,. have no lawyers at all to represent us
and no elected representatives, either.
State employees are like the mob; the mafia. They're
a gang. The unions are like gang members, especially
the cops and DCF.
The State's Attorney's office is a joke, like a nasty clique
of clowns who are even nastier and more sarcastic than
the cops.
Blumenthal does not protect the people. Remember
Spitzer's office told me the same thing when I complained
about the RICO and conflicts of interest to him in 1999
as you will recall:
http://www.actionlyme.org/Actionlyme_History.htm
Spitzer office told me in the Fall of 1999, that he had to
protect the OPMC from criminal investigations:
http://www.actionlyme.org/OPMC_CORRUPTION.htm
Spitzer's office told me to go to the USDOJ complaint,
too, since the OPMC was involved in the Lyme crimes.
I note that that preceeds any of Pam Weintraub's involvement.
She was not even on my ActionLyme list at the time that
we were collecting the conflict of interest data, and reporting
it to Pataki and the New York Legislators.
Go ahead and real Ansel Marks' reply to me:
http://www.actionlyme.org/OPMC_CORRUPTION.htm
THEY DON'T CARE if their lawyers and MDs are criminal
frauds !!!
And that Kaiser-Permanente supplies the New York Medical
Board with their so-called experts.
Same thing with Blumenthal. Consider how many people
who work for the CT Department of Health who are CDC
officers and are involved in the Lyme crimes??
This begs for a class action against Corrupticut and guess
why?
Department of Health staff are involved in the Lyme crimes
as are DCF and DMHAS.
Blumenthal would have to defend that class action, but how
could he? He sued the bastards.
Kathleen M. Dickson
http://www.actionlyme.org
-----Original Message-----
From: Kathleen
Sent: Sep 19, 2008 11:23 AM
To:
zerh...@od.nih.gov,
Spin...@yahoogroups.com,
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fit...@gmail.com,
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Jgerb...@cdc.gov,
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con...@po.state.ct.us,
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james.p...@yale.edu
Subject: Re: Challenging Atty Gen Blumethal
No, but if you had kids, they would be taken away.
DCF is his hit squad.
And we Lymies are not completely furious with Dick, despite the
fact
that he should insist legislation be passed that allows the DCF
"courts"
to be open - and the parents be given the privileges given to
regular
criminal defendents - and their wiretapping operation shut down.
It does not make any sense for Dicks DCF tards to be running
roughshod over Lyme victims and stealing his mail, and Dick
saying absolutely nothing about this federal offense:
http://www.actionlyme.org/BLUMENTHALS_MAIL_STOLEN_BY_JESSICA_GAUVIN.htm
As I have said before, nobody really knows Dick Blumenthal.
I would not attack him in this way, therefore.
If our main argument is that people should be given the benefit of
the doubt- the crux of our formal legal system- innocent until
proven guilty, then we, as activists, cannot have double
standards.
Hypocrisy has to end with the people.
Since these gubbamint tards don't know what decency is, they can
learn by example- our GLOBAL example:
http://www.actionlyme.org/JOINT_CHIEFS.htm
As you have no small children who can be kidnapped and tortured
like the Inkels, you are not in danger, is my guess:
http://www.actionlyme.org/andersonpenisbiter.htm
Recall that Phil Inkel probably could get no help from the New
London Police as regards the torture of his children by that
insane
Annette Anderson, because he previously won a big police brutality
lawsuit against the State Troopers.
http://www.actionlyme.org/VIKING_INTERVIEWS.htm
They ordered Phil killed for $10,000 as you recall.
http://www.actionlyme.org/1994_Murzin_Ch8_snip.wmv
Then they beat the crap out of the Murzin boys for reporting
Phil's beating for trying to stop the beating of the teenager
in McDonald's parking lot in Colchester.
That's how this State works. The effing State employees
never hang it up. They get you one way or another, and
Blumenthal's
gang is duh DCF.
If I were to attack Blumenthal it would be over the fact that his
kidnapping tards are in possession of a ton of information that
proves that all psychotropics are brain damaging.
http://www.actionlyme.org/BUNNEY_YALE_BRAIN_DAMAGE.htm
'Seems funny to be screaming about being a protector of children
when the kidnapped kids are all turning out demented and insane
and
eventually in the prisons because of it:
http://www.actionlyme.org/080709.htm
Illogical.
Kathleen M. Dickson
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Erickson
Sent: Sep 19, 2008 9:46 AM
To: Kathleen ,
zerh...@od.nih.gov,
spin...@yahoogroups.com,
kshe...@calea.org,
fit...@gmail.com,
patrick.f...@usdoj.gov,
model...@sbcglobal.net,
jdr...@nejm.org,
let...@courant.com,
jgerb...@cdc.gov,
michae...@po.state.ct.us,
con...@po.state.ct.us,
executiv...@nytimes.com, managing-
edi...@nytimes.com,
news...@nytimes.com,
the-...@nytimes.com,
biz...@nytimes.com
Subject: Challenging Atty Gen Blumethal
Will I be arrested for sending this to Blumenthal?:
http://starkravingviking.blogspot.com/
> Date: Fri, 19 Sep 2008 07:06:56 -0400
> From:
janmu...@earthlink.net
> To:
zerh...@od.nih.gov;
Spin...@yahoogroups.com;
kshe...@calea.org;
fit...@gmail.com;
patrick.f...@usdoj.gov;
model...@sbcglobal.net;
jdr...@nejm.org;
let...@courant.com;
Jgerb...@cdc.gov;
michae...@po.state.ct.us;
con...@po.state.ct.us;
executiv...@nytimes.com; managing-
edi...@nytimes.com;
news...@nytimes.com;
the-...@nytimes.com;
biz...@nytimes.com;
for...@nytimes.com;
me...@nytimes.com;
nati...@nytimes.com;
dv...@cdc.gov;
brigidc...@optonline.net;
tr...@hotmail.com;
illino...@aol.com;
jle...@courant.com;
tinaj...@yahoo.com;
jhorn...@fff.org;
thomas...@usdoj.gov;
thoma...@po.state.ct.us;
kur...@washpost.com;
georg...@washpost.com;
p...@allegorypress.com;
commissi...@po.state.ct.us;
FalN...@aol.com;
brans...@comcast.net;
vts...@comcast.net;
o...@po.state.ct.us;
freet...@charter.net;
scott....@po.state.ct.us;
govern...@po.state.ct.us;
attorney...@po.state.ct.us;
randall...@usdoj.gov
> Subject: Jrugman: Crisis Endgame (They knew the stock market
was over-valued in the 1990s)
> CC:
fra...@ucia.gov;
dr-ahma...@president.ir;
eugener...@washpost.com;
hor...@courant.com;
bmi...@newstimes.com;
tr...@hotmail.com;
rast...@aol.com;
billc...@gmail.com;
amcg...@rms-law.com;
rjmu...@aol.com;
paulcrai...@yahoo.com;
sidney_b...@yahoo.com;
criminal...@usdoj.gov;
karla.d...@usdoj.gov;
christophe...@usdoj.gov
>
> They all knew the US stock market was over-valued in the
1990s.
>
> That's why the rush to the Caspian pipelines and the
attempts to
> get rid of Social Security- so that the people would put
their
> money in the stock market. They did not expect to lose the
Caspian
> Enron pipeline wars ("on terror") and they did not expect To-
To
> (Katrina) to pull the curtain away from Professor Marvel,
exposing
> the Great and Powerful Oz (Mairka) - exposing to the world
the true
> nature of compassionate conservatism.
>
> The world also knows the US criminal justice system is
corrupt
> and targets blacks to "keep them off the streets:"
>
http://www.actionlyme.org/CUSTODIAL_DEMOCRACY.htm
>
> So, all around, the US is a serious human rights
catastrophe.
>
> The Bushie and Rocky Bank-o-crats wanted to rape old people
out
> of retirement and medical benefits, they wanted to stop
black people
> from procreating by throwing them all in jail (that was to
be
> John Rowland's job), innocent, ignorant soldiers were let
loose
> in Iraq and Afghanistan, when somebody on this side of the
pond
> orchestrated the 911 Show...
>
> All along Professor Oz had tricked Dorothy into getting
> the broomstick (oil wars/war on terror) from the witch,
> because he was too cowardly to do it himself. Professor
> Marvel has known since the 1970s that the petrodollar was
not
> going to sustain. After the Berlin Wall went down, Bush
> Senior was going to bring us this New World Order, where the
> Banksters... well, were to do this:
>
> "...march towards a world-government. The supranational
sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely
preferable to the National autodetermination practiced in past
centuries"--David Rockefeller in an address to a Trilateral Commission
meeting in June of 1991
>
> Henry Kissinger is still saying these things:
>
http://www.actionlyme.org/KISSINGER_TERROR.htm
>
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4bKwH3kJew4
>
> Heiney says people in the Middle East (and elsewhere) will
> trade nationalism and religion for "security."
>
> THAT is the end game. Like the Rothschilds, they want to
control
> the global money supply. We saw a recent example of that
with
> Wolfowitz being put in charge of the World Bank. He/They
were
> going to make loans to poor countries, and then whatever
happened
> to the dollar, the debtor nation would have to turn over
their
> resource wealth at current prices...
>
>
> The Russians understand this. They know 911 was a false
> flag and that the forward bases are about TOPOL:
>
http://www.actionlyme.org/070426.htm
>
> That's the big picture.
> They did not win the 9/11 pipelines & petrodollars move.
>
> Some people think this was a deliberately organized
financial
> collapse, but I do not think the Bankster masterminds
> anticipated losing Iraq as a forward base (colony, from the
> looks of the US Baghdad Embassy).
>
>
> Since it is certain that 911 was not what the gubbamint is
> telling us, the only next step for the people given this
meltdown
> is to confront Bush/Cheney (Rockefeller, Halliburton, Exxon)
over
> that event.
>
> Documents related to the Enron gig were stored in the WTC7
> building. Cheney-Enron-Kenneth Lay...
> Cheney-Rockefeller-CFR.
>
> Get it?
>
> Some USDOJ official will have to somehow grow a pair.
>
> Or even one.
>
> Perhaps they can order the DNA from Craig Ventnor.
> You know, like a stem cell from a haploid (Y chromosome)
> cell. I don't know if that is possible, but we need some
> sort of human medical miracle like that.
>
>
> Kathleen M. Dickson
>
http://www.actionlyme.org
>
> =========================================
>
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/19/opinion/19krugman.html?_r=1&ref=opinion&oref=slogin
> Op-Ed Columnist
> Crisis Endgame
> By PAUL KRUGMAN
> Published: September 18, 2008
>
> On Sunday, Henry Paulson, the Treasury secretary, tried to
draw a line in the sand against further bailouts of failing financial
institutions; four days later, faced with a crisis spinning out of
control, much of Washington appears to have decided that government
isn’t the problem, it’s the solution. The unthinkable — a government
buyout of much of the private sector’s bad debt — has become the
inevitable.
> Skip to next paragraph
>
> Paul Krugman
>
> The story so far: the real shock after the feds failed to
bail out Lehman Brothers wasn’t the plunge in the Dow, it was the
reaction of the credit markets. Basically, lenders went on strike:
U.S. government debt, which is still perceived as the safest of all
investments — if the government goes bust, what is anything else
worth? — was snapped up even though it paid essentially nothing, while
would-be private borrowers were frozen out.
>
> Thus, banks are normally able to borrow from each other at
rates just slightly above the interest rate on U.S. Treasury bills.
But Thursday morning, the average interest rate on three-month
interbank borrowing was 3.2 percent, while the interest rate on the
corresponding Treasuries was 0.05 percent. No, that’s not a misprint.
>
> This flight to safety has cut off credit to many businesses,
including major players in the financial industry — and that, in turn,
is setting us up for more big failures and further panic. It’s also
depressing business spending, a bad thing as signs gather that the
economic slump is deepening.
>
> And the Federal Reserve, which normally takes the lead in
fighting recessions, can’t do much this time because the standard
tools of monetary policy have lost their grip. Usually the Fed
responds to economic weakness by buying up Treasury bills, in order to
drive interest rates down. But the interest rate on Treasuries is
already zero, for all practical purposes; what more can the Fed do?
>
> Well, it can lend money to the private sector — and it’s
been doing that on an awesome scale. But this lending hasn’t kept the
situation from deteriorating.
>
> There’s only one bright spot in the picture: interest rates
on mortgages have come down sharply since the federal government took
over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and guaranteed their debt. And
there’s a lesson there for those ready to hear it: government
takeovers may be the only way to get the financial system working
again.
>
> Some people have been making that argument for some time.
Most recently, Paul Volcker, the former Fed chairman, and two other
veterans of past financial crises published an op-ed in The Wall
Street Journal declaring that the only way to avoid “the mother of all
credit contractions” is to create a new government agency to “buy up
the troubled paper” — that is, to have taxpayers take over the bad
assets created by the bursting of the housing and credit bubbles.
Coming from Mr. Volcker, that proposal has serious credibility.
>
> Influential members of Congress, including Hillary Clinton
and Barney Frank, the chairman of the House Financial Services
Committee, have been making similar arguments. And on Thursday,
Charles Schumer, the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee (and an
advocate of creating a new agency to resolve the financial crisis)
told reporters that “the Federal Reserve and the Treasury are
realizing that we need a more comprehensive solution.” Sure enough,
Thursday night Ben Bernanke and Mr. Paulson met with Congressional
leaders to discuss a “comprehensive approach” to the problem.
>
> We don’t know yet what that “comprehensive approach” will
look like. There have been hopeful comparisons to the financial rescue
the Swedish government carried out in the early 1990s, a rescue that
involved a temporary public takeover of a large part of the country’s
financial system. It’s not clear, however, whether policy makers in
Washington are prepared to exert a comparable degree of control. And
if they aren’t, this could turn into the wrong kind of rescue — a
bailout of stockholders as well as the market, in effect rescuing the
financial industry from the consequences of its own greed.
>
> Furthermore, even a well-designed rescue would cost a lot of
money. The Swedish government laid out 4 percent of G.D.P., which in
our case would be a cool $600 billion — although the final burden to
Swedish taxpayers was much less, because the government was eventually
able to sell off the assets it had acquired, in some cases at a
handsome profit.
>
> But it’s no use whining (sorry, Senator Gramm) about the
prospect of a financial rescue plan. Today’s U.S. political system
isn’t going to follow Andrew Mellon’s infamous advice to Herbert
Hoover: “Liquidate labor, liquidate stocks, liquidate the farmers,
liquidate real estate.” The big buyout is coming; the only question is
whether it will be done right.
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