Our Complicity in Crime and Deception
—by Bill Watkins 1/17/2018
According to their corrupt, criminal-leaning Twitter bio blurb, the Central Intelligence Agency accomplishes “what others cannot accomplish,” goes “where others cannot go.”
They have been that blatantly un-American and pompous since their formal christening on the White House lawn in 1946. Not without reason, the group was spawned from world war, fears of communism’s spread. Fear was allowed to legislate, similarly to how President Andrew Jackson legislated Cherokee Indians off their native land to get to apparent gold reserves.
Greed and lust are neighbors of fear, it’s safe to say—a fear of not having enough.
Fear kept slavery around years after it was outlawed in England. Few in the South could conceive of working their own land, having become addicted to the lie that their white skin made them superior to dark-skinned people. Fear kept the slaves in line until the 1860’s blow-up of war and a start to freedom.
Fear reared its head in Jim Crow South, was confronted and defeated by Martin Luther King Jr. and others who harnessed the teachings of Jesus, God, the bible and a little man who kicked the British out of India after World War II.
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But fear keeps the CIA in operation, even with their shady, diabolical mandate:
“…conducting COVERT ACTION” and “safeguarding the secrets that help keep our Nation safe!?!?!?!?!??!!?” In a democracy? Secrets?
No, thank you.
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I’m all for discretion in diplomacy and government action; wait until all the information is there, then decide and publish. That is fine, to me.
But Secrets??? I don’t know a healthy one. And I can’t imagine one surrounding the Murder of John F. Kennedy fifty-five+ years ago, for instance, that cannot be known by all Americans and the world today.
Oswald’s attorney post-death, Mark Lane, used to claim that in many cases, the CIA and FBI classify documents and information as “Top Secret” simply because it embarrasses those agencies. In his book, Plausible Denial (Thunder’s Mouth, 1991, pp. 121-3), Mark relates a conversation he had with ex-CIA analyst, Victor Marchetti, who had written a tell-all about CIA activities that was not allowed by U.S. courts to be published until certain redactions were made. (The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence, Knopf, 1974)
While defending Marchetti and Liberty Lobby against a 1984 libel suit by CIA’s Howard Hunt, Mark asked Victor about the redactions in his book. None of the redactions had anything to do with national security, according to Lane—but all of them had one common ingredient: agents would be embarrassed, if the true story reached the public eye.
Mark then includes an example where the CIA spent American taxpayer money to cut open a cat and place a recording device in its tail, so they could get a feline grab of foreign leaders’ conversations at an embassy party. The experiment failed, when it seemed the cat was more interested in caviar than espionage, and finally became obsessed with critter noise in the embassy walls.
The anonymous call to that embassy enlightening them on their rodent problem was an expensive home improvement tip to make, paid for by American citizens, locked up as a covert operation, classified “Top Secret.”
The CIA and FBI justify redactions and in keeping entire documents from public view with Section 102(d)(3) of the National Security Act of 1947, which states:
That the Director of Central Intelligence shall be responsible for protecting intelligence sources and methods from unauthorized disclosure…
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What happened to Congress? The Bill of Rights? Democracy and transparency in a government supposedly run by the People for the People?
Slinking around secretly, killing, plotting, stealing…
Quite a resume for admission to the peace-loving United Nations!
That the United States of America would host that organization in New York is comical in light of all the acts of war perpetrated by CIA, from propaganda campaigns to propping up dictators, assassination programs and other war games too long to list, and too secretive to fully expose.
Martin Luther King has been widely quoted of late, as he should be. A quote that keeps arising out of racist remarks from the White House refers to the complicity of those who do not stand up to such remarks:
“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”
The CIA—its Howard Hunt, Frank Sturgis, and anti-Castro Cuban killers—were not the only ones to kill John F. Kennedy on November 22nd, 1963; Martin Luther King on April 4, 1968; Robert F. Kennedy on June 6th, 1968; Archbishop Oscar Romero on March 24th, 1980; and John Lennon on December 8th, 1980.
We all kill Jack, Martin, Bobby, Oscar and John every day we fail to probe into facts, call out the lies, demand justice, transparency and true democracy from our government. Our government, not the post-World War II perversion that is covert CIA, an organization which still plagues truth and accomplishes “what others cannot accomplish,” and goes “where others cannot go.”
Senator Diane Feinstein and Congress slapped wrists hard regarding George W. Bush-age CIA torture, but today I appeal to her and others to go further.
Join me, reader. And go further!!