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    From Ras@moaulanui@hotmail.co.nz to rec.music.reggae,alt.religion.rastafarian,soc.culture.jamaican on Thu Oct 31 08:09:42 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.music.reggae





    KFJC (fm) ru+ DEVIL'S RADIO rCorCo "YOU SATAN NIGGER"


    rCorCo> "Stiff" DENNIS EDWARD BISHOP
    700 SOLANO AVE , ALBANY , CA 94706
    (510) 524-7640

    -------------------------------------------------------------

    89.7 FM
    'THE DEVIL'S RADIO'

    FOOTHILL COLLEGE
    LOS ALTOS HILLS, CALIF.

    DEVIL'S RADIO [kfjc fm] ruarCorCo OMEGA MAN MOVIE
    VILLAINS

    SPLIFF SKANKIN' -and- ROBERT RANKIN'
    [Dennis Edward Bishop] [Robert Lohse]


    STIFF (spliff) SKANKIN' ruarCorCo NIGGA YOU LOOK LIKE DEATH
    #1


    http://www.exorcist.org.nz/skankin_rankin_roy_cohn.jpg


    STIFF (spliff) SKANKIN' ruarCorCo NIGGA YOU LOOK LIKE DEATH
    #2

    http://www.exorcist.org.nz/stiff_spankin_rubber_stinkin.png


    KFJC FM / THE DEVIL'S RADIO

    DENNIS EDWARD BISHOP / SPLIFF SKANKIN' http://www.exorcist.org.nz/the_devils_radio.html http://www.exorcist.org.nz/radio_exorcism.html http://www.exorcist.org.nz/music_mafias.html

    #1 NOT A CHRISTIAN.
    #2 NOT A RASTAFARIAN.
    #3 BEST FRIENDS [Jose Scott} ARE TOTAL SATANISTS.

    "spliff skankin" 6 DENNIS
    6 EDWARD
    6 BISHOP

    KFJC FM
    "MODERATOR"

    6 ROBERT
    6 EDWARD
    6 PELZEL

    HE WILL PLAY WITH NUMBERS,
    ALL KINDS OF NUMBERS TO RE-NAME SAME EXACT COLLEGE CLASSES.

    . . . TO ALLOW THE FRAUD TO CONTINUE !

    KFJC [fm] SCAM rCorCo "Students" Take Same Classes
    Over And Over Again

    D.J. ROBERT RANKIN [Robert Lohse]
    (STAND-IN FOR ROY COHN)

    ACCOUNT # 666
    https://www.facebook.com/DJ-ROBERT-RANKIN-238995666646/

    ROBERT LOHSE / ROBERT RANKIN' http://www.exorcist.org.nz/citizen_cohn_luciferian_higdon_byrd.html http://www.exorcist.org.nz/framed_at_kkup.html

    THE LOOK OF DEATH.
    OMEGA MAN MOVIE VILLAINS.

    LOOK AT THOSE TWO !
    SPLIFF SKANKIN' YOU LOOK LIKE SHIT !

    KFJC [fm] SCAM rCorCo "Students" Take Same Classes
    Over And Over Again

    rCorCoru| LOOK AT WHAT SMOKING 24/7
    WILL DO TO YOU.
    YOU OLDE TOTALLY GRAY HAIRED FOSSIL !

    --------------------------------------------------------------------


    KFJC FM

    DAVE EMORY CAN'T DRIVE AN AUTOMOBILE
    BECAUSE OF MULTIPLE SUICIDE ATTEMPTS IN AUTOS.

    SO,
    DAVE EMORY TAKES THE BUS TO FOOTHILL COLLEGE !
    HA !

    Speaking of Communists,
    at KFJC FM and KKUP and some other stations,
    it is looney-tunes "conspiracy nut" Dave Emory.
    Dave Emory never has a complaint or did have a
    complaint against the Soviet Union. Emory toes
    the Communist Party Line -

    Speaking of Emory the Commie kook, here is something
    from the internet, from another individual who is familiar
    with the behind the scenes skullduggery by Emory,
    against Nip Tuck, etc.
    I know these facts ALSO to be 100% true:

    Emory's past is seldom discussed. His father,
    writes Paul Bernardino, host of a cable television program
    in San Francisco, "committed him to an institution and
    narcotics program 20 years ago. Emory has told several
    people, including Tom Davis (a northern California book
    retailer) that he was sexually abused in a prison in Boston.
    He has attempted suicide several times via cars and
    narcotics. His emotional problems drove him to overdose on
    narcotics in a 1988 suicide attempt."

    Dave Emory's mentor, Mae Brussell, was a courageous
    investigator of political assassinations, a tenacious critic
    of government. She inspired a modest but devoted audience to
    probe the American far-right and its pernicious influences.
    Among the researchers who worked with Brussell and
    posthumously expanded upon her foundation of political
    research were Honegger, John Judge, Emory's former co-host
    Nip Tuck, and Will Robinson & Marilyn Colman, hosts of
    KAZU's "Lighthouse Report." All were staples of Tuckman's
    program. Emory's past is seldom discussed. His father,
    writes Paul Bernardino, host of a cable television program
    in San Francisco, "committed him to an institution and
    narcotics program 20 years ago. Emory has told several
    people, including Tom Davis (a northern California book
    retailer) that he was sexually abused in a prison in Boston.
    He has attempted suicide several times via cars and
    narcotics. His emotional problems drove him to overdose on
    narcotics in a 1988 suicide attempt."

    This was the year that Mae Brussell fell prey to cancer.
    Emory, her self-appointed successor, began a series of
    vincictive slander campaigns to purge other researchers from
    the air. His first straw man was Nip Tuck (an alias, today a
    very popular science fiction writer), Emory's co-host on
    "Radio Free America" for several years. Tuck was publicly
    denounced as an "agent" of an unnamed arm of government.
    This smear was based on the slimmest of "ties": Tuck once
    taught English at a military base. This alone rendered him
    suspect in Emory's mind - yet he later acknowledged to a
    Christic Institute activist that he'd known of Tuck's
    background all along. That Tuck was a lackey of the
    intelligence sector was repeated on KPFK, unsubstantiated
    but delivered as bald fact. The victim of this smear
    vigorously denied the allegation in a letter to KPFK. The
    station ignored it. Tuck found himself groundlessly
    discredited, humiliated, his written denial censored -
    despite the fact that over the years his conspiracy research
    had grossed tens of thousands of dollars for
    publicly-supported KPFK. Emory's next victim was John Judge,
    a popular protege of Mae Brussell. Abuse heaped upon Judge,
    says Bernardino, was the result of "personal jealousy," an
    opinion I share. So does Jonathon Vankin, a former staff
    reporter for the San Jose Metro, in Conspiracies, Cover-Ups
    and Crimes:

    Judge had managed to get himself some lecture bookings and
    onto radio talk shows. According to Tom Davis, a long-time
    friend of Brussell's whose mail-order book service is one of
    the best sources for political books, Judge and Emory had
    been competing for radio kudos since at least 1984.

    Moreover, Brussell appointed Judge, not Emory, to the
    position of curator/archivist. Excluded from plans for the
    library bequeathed to Judge, Emory lashed out. Personal and
    professional envy was the foundation of his belief that
    Judge was an "intelligence agent" and a "Nazi murderer" with
    "ties" to the Manson Family. The charges have never been
    retracted. Emory opened his fusillade at Judge in a
    November, 1989 blast on KFJC. He announced with an imperious
    air, "There's a bit of unpleasantness I'm going to have to
    take care of...." The Mae Brussell archives were being
    catalogued and organized. It was not ready to open to the
    public. Emory set out to destroy it and its curator, John
    Judge, before the doors could open. "One of the things I
    wondered about," Emory declared, "in the creation of the Mae
    Brussell Research Center, was how long it would take the
    intelligence community to gain effective control of that
    center." In fact, the directing board was composed of
    friends and associates of Mae Brussell. Nevertheless, he
    arrived at the conclusion that it had been overrun by the
    CIA: "There is an intelligence presence at the Center now
    that is so massive as to render the whole thing little more
    than an intelligence front." He produced no evidence to
    support this startling allegation. He remained vague. "There
    is a very sinister presence," he charged, "there are
    elements affiliated with Aryan Nations." The "sinister
    elements" were phantoms: Emory had learned that Judge once
    delivered a talk at a Santa Monica debating club owned by a
    right-wing extremist, a connection too weak to support such
    serious allegations. Hammering together a guillotine with a
    post of smears and planks of innuendo, Emory claimed that
    there were "indications of serious financial impropiety" at
    the center. What's more, "there are indications that have
    yet to be finalized that the whole thing has disintegrated
    into nothing more than a great big criminal enterprise." A
    devastating revelation - and no "finalized indications" to
    back it up. In fact, the financial impropiety he spoke of
    largely amounted to nothing more than Judge spending money
    he'd raised himself for the Mae Brussell Research Center. He
    spent some of the proceeds from his own fund-raising tour on
    meals, though there is some truth to the charge that a
    portion of the funds were misspent. According to Robinson, a
    director of the Center, Judge did nothing criminal. Yet
    Emory carried on as though he had information too explosive
    to air publicly - "investigative tributaries," he said - and
    had no qualms about divulging the results of his
    "investigation." Emory's carving knife sank into the
    Center's finances. "Under no circumstances would I recommend
    that people have anything to do with the Mae Brussell
    Center," Emory said. He insisted that all supporters demand
    back their contributions, repeating there was "a strong
    intelligence presence there." Who? "You might as well send
    your name to Langley or to Tom Metzger so he can put it in
    the Aryan Nations Liberty Net," he said. The intelligence
    "presence" was "specifically Nazi-linked." A week later, the
    charges were repeated in a telephone conversation with Roy
    Tuckman in North Hollywood.

    This time, Emory claimed that John Judge was a "murderer."
    As always, he didn't trifle with evidence, simply stated
    that there were more "investigative leads" that bookish,
    soft-spoken John Judge had committed murder. Unfortunately,
    to this day, only Emory knows anything about it. The
    allegations grew more and more fantastic. On Tuckman's May
    10, 1990 program, he charged that Judge and the Mae Brussell
    Center were an extension of the ultra-right Western Goals
    operation, an industrially-sponsored covert operations group
    responsible for much havoc in underdeveloped countries. A
    week earlier the Center had been allied with Aryan Nations.
    Now it was Western Goals.

    "Beyond that," he told Tuckman, "there are two evidentiary
    tributaries leading in the direction of the Manson Family."
    Now it was Manson. But what were the "tributaries" that so
    alarmed Emory he was moved to denounce Judge and the
    Brussell archives? The "evidentiary" links, he said, forced
    him to ask "very, very serious questions about the Center."
    He let on, as though divulging a dark secret, that Judge had
    ties to "several murders in the Carmel area." He has never
    stooped to explain his meaning. "I'm not accusing any
    individual," Emory said, incredibly, "but there are serious
    questions implicating individuals - including and especially
    John Judge." He again suggested that supporters of the
    library sever all contact and demand a refund. Listeners,
    believing that Emory's vagaries must have some foundation,
    withdrew support for the center. It collapsed. Judge sent a
    strong letter of denial to Tuckman. Like the others, it was
    ignored. Judge, once a favorite of the program, was publicly
    humiliated and drummed off the air. In 1992 Judge denied, in
    a Santa Cruz newspaper, that there was any substance to the
    charges. He said that he'd been "hounded out of [the Mae
    Brussell Research Center] by this kind of nonsense." In the
    same story, Dave Ratcliffe, a Center director, laughed at
    the notion that it had any connection to the government,
    extremist groups or satanic cults. He chalked up the
    allegations to "Dave Emory loving to spin very detailed,
    wonderful sounding scenarios that are of his own invention."
    Vankin's view was that "whatever the objective reality of
    the Mae Brussell Center controversy, the version that
    navigates Dave Emory's brain is another of his many
    traumas."

    Emory's attacks on Paul Bernardino, a political researcher
    and AIDS activist in San Francisco, culminated shortly after
    the fall of John Judge. In January, 1989, Bernardino
    received a call at 2:00 a.m. from an enraged Dave Emory. "I
    hope all you faggots drop dead with AIDS," he snarled. Like
    Upton Sinclair with a reeking slaughterhouse in his sights,
    Emory went on to blast Sara Diamond, formerly of KPFA-FM in
    Berkeley and an Emory critic, for carrying on a hidden life
    as "a CIA agent" and "a whore who gives cheap blow jobs." On
    the air, Emory accused Bernardino of taping an unauthorized
    tribute to Mae Brussell for his television program. Emory,
    Bernardino wrote in a public denial, "was too lazy to simply
    pick up his phone to do some checking before impulsively
    mouthing off." As it happened, permission for the taping was
    granted by Brussell's daughter. Bernardino protested Emory's
    "slandering, wilfully and maliciously maligning my ... name
    and character." Once informed that he'd erred, Emory refused
    to retract or apologize. Instead, he claimed that Bernardino
    was fronting for "the Gay Mafia." He referred to Bernardino
    as "a homo from Mexico" and "a CIA agent." He further
    charged that Bernardino had far-right political connections.
    "Such dangerous, mud-slinging lies," Bernardino lamented. He
    voiced an opinion that radio personalities have an
    obligation to "keep their personal vendettas, mud-slinging,
    unfounded hate, spite and personal attacks off the air." Pat
    Carey, a volunteer working for Bernardino, supported him in
    a letter to KFJC dated May 22, 1991. Emory, she wrote,
    "claims quite falsely that Bernardino had called for a
    boycott of his program, which is absolutely not true. He
    also claims that our cable TV program on Channel 25 in San
    Francisco ... started from Aryan Nations, which is an
    outright lie, a fabrication." She demanded equal time to
    refute these "lies." Her ire was echoed by Brette McCabe,
    hostess of the television program, who noted the "purposeful
    cruelty" in the public condemnation of Paul Bernardino.
    Despite these protests, Emory continued to tell stretchers
    on the air about well-intentioned political conspiracy
    programmers. Pam Burton, a KPFK programmer substituting for
    Roy Tuckman one week, refused to play "Radio Free America" -
    she thought it laden with self-importance. "I see radios
    going off all over town," she grumbled off the air. Emory
    learned that he'd been pulled and branded her "a CIA agent."
    (Critics must be federal intelligence agents out to destroy
    him.) His denunciation of any detractor as an "agent" was
    taken up by Martin Cannon in his May, 1991 letter to Emory:
    "Interestingly, while your practiced eye has gleaned
    unmistakable evidence of federally-funded malevolence, this
    evidence remains invisible to everyone else." Cannon
    pondered "why you have never bothered to offer any proof of
    your accusations" against Tuck, Judge and Bernardino.
    Emory's most venomous campaigns were reserved for Barbara
    Honegger, author of The October Surprise (a detailed
    reconstruction of the Reagan/Bush hostage debacle) and a
    close friend of Mae Brussell's. When Brussell died of
    cancer, Emory accused Honegger of murdering her. He has
    never offered any public explanation for his widely-spread
    belief that Honegger killed Mae Brussell. In her June 10,
    1991 response, Honegger wrote, "You have committed the
    unspeakable offense of stating to numerous parties that I am
    somehow responsible for Mae Brussell's death." She
    explained, "I tried and tried, as did many others, to get
    Mae to see medical specialists ... without success." No one,
    Honegger emphasized, "tried more than I did to try to save
    Mae's life." The murder accusation "both saddens and sickens
    me," she wrote.

    With "Nazi murderer" John Judge bounced off the air, Emory
    turned a jaundiced eye to Honegger. Her reputation was
    golden in conspiracy research circles. At first, her book
    was ridiculed by left and right alike as a dubious theory.
    But official leaks concerning the hostage deal caught the
    attention of the press. Honegger's primary source of
    information, Richard Brenneke, a former CIA pilot, was
    acquitted in a trial arranged by the Bush administration to
    discredit his account of the flight to Paris. All of this
    lent credence to Honegger's investigation, and she became a
    familiar voice on the radio talk show circuit. In L.A., she
    was a welcome guest at KFI-AM and Pacifica. It was on
    Tuckman's program that Emory proceeded to carve into her.
    Drawing upon articles written by Harry Martin of the Napa
    Valley Sentinel, Emory contended that self-proclaimed CIA
    pilot Gunther Russbacher actually flew George Bush to the
    October Surprise negotiations with Iranian officials. Since,
    Emory and Martin have reached the conclusion that Russbacher
    was not the pilot after all, precisely as Honegger insisted
    in the first gusts of Emory's defamation storm - but only
    after branding her a "liar" for doubting the allegations.
    Harry Martin has since become a key source of information,
    providing Emory with material for his radio program, as
    Brussell once did. Harry Martin is a former Republican
    activist. The corporate press ignored his series on
    Russbacher, but it has been featured in the Liberty Lobby's
    Spotlight. The Village Voice couldn't reconcile the many
    glaring contradictions in Russbacher's story. John Whalen, a
    journalist Emory respects, wrote in the San Jose Mercury on
    July 11, 1990:

    Depending on whom he is talking to, Russbacher has claimed
    to have flown Ronald Reagan, George Bush, William Casey or
    just himself to or from the Paris meetings, frequently
    changing his tale when confronted with contradictions. When
    a reporter at a major daily reminded Russbacher that SR-71
    pilots and passengers require hours of pre-flight medical
    preparation and special flight suits - making it unlikely
    that Bush would go to the trouble when a conventional jet
    would get him from Paris to America without all the fuss -
    Russbacher abruptly revised his plot line, claiming that,
    actually, he hadn't flown Bush home.

    Emory had linked Tuck, Judge, Bernardino, Diamond, Burton
    and now Honegger to covert branches of government. The
    allegations have tarnished their reputations in southern
    California. Yet Harry Martin, one of Emory's primary
    sources, is the former publisher of Defense Systems Review,
    a DoD mouthpiece staffed by past CIA Director Eugene Tighe,
    former CIA Deputy Director Bobby Ray Inman, and Paul Cutter,
    alleged by the FBI to have sold arms to Iran on behalf of
    the Reagan NSC. Emory publicly excoriates Honegger for
    boarding Reagan's 1980 election campaign and briefly serving
    in his administration, denounces her as an "agent" - and
    ignores Martin's known links to the loftiest levels of CIA
    covert operations without a flinch. In July, 1988, months
    before Emory's tirades began, Mae Brussell received this
    letter from a Napa Valley resident concerning Harry Martin:

    Dear Mae Brussel:

    I understand you're quite knowledgable on the CIA's
    activities. We have a person - Harry Martin - in my
    hometown, Napa, who has been publishing a small weekly
    newspaper, The Napa Sentinel, for the past 2 1/2 years, a
    newspaper that purports to be a champion for the little
    people, but actually has covert ties to Napa's development
    interests. What really bothers me, however, is Martin's past
    ownership of Defense Systems Review and Military
    Communications, an international publication that went to
    congress, the president, the U.S. military, the defense
    industry and foreign governments. It's quality was the equal
    of Newsweek, and it had ads from major defense companies.
    Although listing Napa as its publishing address, I doubt,
    considering its sophisticated layout, that it could have
    been printed in Napa (it was mailed from Los Angeles). The
    magazine, besides promoting weapons, supported Reagan"s
    Central American policy. By his own admission, Martin had
    contacts with the intelligence agencies of Western Europe
    and Israel.... Some of the deceptive practices he is using
    in his newspaper have aroused my suspicions he might be
    involved with the CIA. There is a further possible link, a
    Sentinel columnist named Mike Savage. Savage was a talk show
    host (a program ironically called "Doubletalk") on our local
    radio station, KVON, for several years until he resigned in
    1987 (supposedly after the acceptance of a book he was
    writing [for] Doubleday), and became a columnist for the
    Sentinel. Savage ran for the Napa City Council in 1986,
    listing a BA in political science and an MA in psychology
    from the University of Denver in his campaign ads. Savage
    was not elected, but ran again in 1988. However, this time a
    reporter for Napa's daily newspaper, The Napa Register, did
    some checking and revealed that Savage had no degrees from
    the University of Denver. Savage said it was all a
    misunderstanding. I've been told by an avid radio listener
    that while a talk show host, Savage had more than one CIA
    agent as guests. He even arranged for an agent to talk to a
    local group. On the radio, whenever he could, Savage
    ridiculed citizens who protested against Reagan's Central
    American policy. In recent years, Savage has travelled to
    South Africa, South America and Europe....

    Savage explained that his globe-trotting was financed by
    Doubleday in lieu of a book contract. Another local reporter
    checked on the story. Doubleday denied that Savage had been
    signed. Yet Martin's Sentinel sided with Savage, claiming
    the book contract was with another publisher, one he
    neglected to name, though he had flatly stated so a year
    before. Jonathon Whalen concluded that Martin's work on the
    October Surprise required "generous leaps of faith," and was
    riddled with "egregeous factual errors, unsupported claims
    and misleading attributions." Martin has himself since
    admitted that Gunther Russbacher's claims are
    "unsubstantiated." Russbacher, who hails from a Nazi gene
    pool, was hardly a reliable source. He was, at the time,
    serving a 21-month sentence for impersonating a U.S.
    attorney. During the trial, FBI agent Richard Robely of St.
    Louis testified that Russbacher was an "FBI informant."
    Under cross-examination, Robely admitted that the
    self-proclaimed CIA pilot was an "infiltrator" for an
    unnamed "interagency group." Rae Russbacher, his wife, is
    the daughter of a Naval intelligence and FBI undercover
    agent. Her first husband was dean of science and engineering
    at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey. Martin's
    version of the October Surprise was embraced almost
    exclusively by Dave Emory and the Holocaust-denying Liberty
    Lobby, a spin-off of the World Anti-Communist League. Most
    researchers, including Honegger and the press at large, have
    poked numerous holes in his story. Yet Honegger's attempts
    to demonstrate that Russbacher was a liar were interpreted
    by Emory as an "attack" on his own credibility. On June 6,
    1991, on Tuckman's program, Emory repeated the accusation
    made only by the Russbachers that Honegger was an FBI
    informant. No charge could be more damaging to her career.
    On June 10, Honegger wrote a letter of denial to Emory:

    I have learned last week, as a guest on KPFK in southern
    California, you stated on the air that I was or am an "FBI
    informant." That is both false and absurd. No FBI informant
    goes on the radio three to five times a week as I do
    criticizing the current administration which pays the
    salaries of FBI informants.... Again, you owe me a written
    and aired retraction and apology for this statement.

    Emory ignored her denial, and gullible listeners of KPFK
    still believe Russbacher's fabricated charge - joyously
    echoed by Tuckman and Emory - that Honegger was a snitch for
    the FBI. The irony, of course, is that Russbacher was
    informing and infiltrating for the Bureau. "Gunther
    maintains that he was the October Surprise pilot," Emory
    told Tuckman in the June 6, 1991 interview. "That is to say,
    he flew Bush to Paris and flew him back. Gunther's
    background checks out." In fact, Gunther Russ-bacher did NOT
    check out. Emory's animosity toward Honegger blinded him. He
    was willing to cling to anybody in his dismantling of
    Honegger's reputation. Emory went on to concede that there
    were glaring contradictions between Harry Martin's
    interviews and a prior taped discussion between Russbacher
    and Honegger. He ex-plained these away, noting that
    Honegger's interview of Russbacher was conducted at 2:30 in
    the morning. "By his own account, [he] was drunk on his tail
    feather. Gunther is not the first person to misspeak himself
    under the influence of alcohol." Tuckman put Honegger's
    conversation with a besotted Gunther over the air (an FCC
    violation). Drunkenness is a lame excuse for giving two
    diametrically-opposed accounts to reporters about a
    historical episode as significant as the October Surprise.
    Honegger challenged Russbacher's account on KAZU-FM in
    Monterey. Emory and Tuckman interpreted her reservations
    concerning

    Russbacher as direct assaults on their own credibility.
    Emory spoke of Honegger's "vendetta" against him, a peculiar
    form of blindness to his own smears. "There are a number of
    baldface lies that Barbara Honegger told," Emory announced
    on July 11, 1991 on KPFK. After accusing her of mere
    thievery and "murder," he maintained she'd insulted him
    during the Monterey broadcast with "a fire-storm of
    invective, innuendo and outright lies." In fact, Honegger
    had said little about Emory. She had simply identified holes
    in Russbacher's story, explained why he could not possibly
    have flown Bush to Paris. Tuckman mentioned that Honegger
    threatened to sue him. "Yeah, well, she threatened to sue me
    too," Emory said. "I basically told her to piss up a rope,
    and she hasn't done a thing about it." Having declared
    falsely that "Russbacher's credentials check out," on this
    evening Emory offered his expert opinion that "Gunther's
    situation may be b.s. On the other hand, maybe not." But
    Honegger, he charged, had "muddied the waters with her
    personal bitterness." The grim irony of all this was not
    lost on me. At this time, I had my own political program,
    "The Constantine Report," which aired on KAZU in Monterey
    (and, briefly, two years before on KPFK in L.A.). I had
    collected taped broadcasts by both Honegger and Emory, and
    concluded that Emory was attempting to bump her off the
    airwaves as he had others by undermining her credibility
    with bizarre accusations. I began writing a series of
    letters to Tuckman, calling attention to the lameness of the
    charges against Honegger. I pointed out obvious errors in
    Emory's wild accusations, asked him if he really believed
    Judge and Honegger were guilty of murder. For my trouble,
    Tuckman sent the letters to Emory, who accused me of being a
    "CIA agent." The charge was made in a private phone call to
    Will Robinson, host of "The Lighthouse Report," Monterey's
    answer to Tuckman's program. "This Constantine guy is no
    fucking good," Emory spat. "You're going to have to learn
    friend from foe. The problem is you don't listen to advice.
    You can just take a humble attitude, listen to what I say
    and follow orders." Emory gave Robinson an ultimatum: either
    strike "The Constantine Report" from the playlist, or Emory
    would not permit his own tapes to be played on KAZU.
    Robinson chose to keep my program. Emory is no longer on the
    KAZU roster. In his taped conversation with Robinson, Emory
    took credit for purging me from Tuckman's program in L.A.:
    "I put the kibosh on Constantine, " he crowed. A crowning
    irony of his attacks on myself is that he considers one of
    his "most important works" to be a reading of William
    Pepper's book on the Martin Luther King assassination - a
    point-of-view I covered comprehensively two years ago, when
    James Earl Ray filed for a retrial, citing developments from
    news sources in Mississippi and the UK. The stories aired
    over KAZU for several weeks. In other words, I've already
    done Emory's "most important" research. Emory was profiled
    in Jonathan Vankin's Conspiracies, Cover-Ups and Crimes,
    described by Robert Anton Wilson as "the most exciting book
    on conspiracy theory I've read in this decade." The San
    Francisco Chronicle called it "a lively and provocative
    book." In it, Vankin relives Emory's rebuttal to the
    unflattering coverage. Emory's obsession with the book, and
    with me personally it would seem, culminated (although not
    concluded) with two consecutive five-and-a-half hour
    broadcasts - eleven solid hours of otherwise valuable
    airtime - devoted to lambasting me. Feigning the high road,
    Emory pretended that my alleged "hit piece" didn't bug him.
    He did feel moved, however, to describe me as a
    "front-running yuppie pantywaist," whatever that means.

    Emory accused Vankin of plotting with the Moonies to ruin
    him. Vankin described the eleven-hour tirade as "a personal
    vendetta for an imagined slight," and related how Emory
    lumped him in with "Moonies, right-wing tax protesters, the
    anti-Semitic 'Identity Christianity' movement, John Judge,
    and most amusingly, the alternative newsweekly where I work,
    Metro (a "masturbation vehicle for yuppies"). Emory, who is
    prone to thinking himself a bit of a martyr, said the likely
    result of Vankin's book was "a possibility of physical
    violence and mind control." Lately, the basso, self-obsessed
    McCarthyite of the near-left characterized Noam Chomsky, a
    studied critic of U.S. foreign affairs, as a leading
    proponent of "the fascist third position in America." He
    also diagnosed Tom Davis, the book merchant, as "senile"
    without the benefit of a physician's consultation. This was
    the week that 65-year-old Davis, then keeper of the
    voluminous Brussell archives, gave all 33 filing cabinets
    and a mountain of political books and tapes to researcher
    Virginia McCullough. Emory had already announced on the air
    that he was working on procuring the files from Davis.
    Losing them to McCullough, yet another researcher with whom
    he'd had a falling out, must have been a bitter loss.
    ******* tactics are typical of Emory. His smears must be
    stopped before more reputations are decimated at the expense
    of all who care to know the truth about the workings of
    federal intelligence groups and world fascism.

    - The most respected
    Alex Constantine


    I personally discussed - Skull and Bones
    with Dave Emory. Dave Emory didn't think it was important
    or interesting enough to research it. The Foreign Chartered,
    German Skull and Bones 1832 Secret Society that tries to
    run this world. They meet in a Tomb. New Haven, Conn.
    Emory of course wasn't interested in the facts.
    Emory is only concerned with talking about tired old Nazi
    documents. Emory likes to live in the past, continually.
    A typical anti-Nazi rant by a Pinko Commie like Emory.
    Always toeing the Communist Party Line, never a word,
    NEVER A WORD about the abuses in the Soviet Union
    over the years.....only attacks against the "jr." Senator
    from Wisconsin, Joseph Mc Carthy, and Emory's typical
    Pinko, straight from the Comintern playbook.
    I bet if Dave Emory were alive in 1939 he would be a
    PRO-NAZI like the Soviet Union was, until Hitler and
    Germany attacked. The Communists and the Nazis
    had a Pact. All the Communists in the U.S. were pro
    Germany at that point - completely switching gears
    when Germany attacked.

    Emory is predictable.

    322 and Skull and Bones
    THAT TOMB!
    George Bush and John Kerry, etc., etc.
    Dave Emory the crazy pinko kook isn't interested.




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