Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barack Obama. Show all posts

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Barack Obama Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom to Eleven Suspected Pedophiles

 Barack Obama presented eleven possible pedophiles with the Presidential Medal of Freedom:


1. Ted Kennedy

2. George H. W. Bush

3. Bill Clinton

4. Oprah Winfrey

5. Meryl Streep

6. Steven Spielberg

7. Tom Hanks

8. Ellen deGeneres

9. Lorne Michaels

10. Bill Gates

11. Joe Biden



     1. Ted Kennedy is said to have been attracted to 15-year-old girls, saying "I don't care" that a girl was 15, when told that fact during a meeting with Pierre and Maggie Trudeau in the 1980s. It may have been Ted Gunderson who made that claim.
     This article from Rense.com asserts that Kennedy was an avid defender of the pedophile lobby, and opposed the Child Safety Act.
     http://rense.com/general87/pedprot.htm



     2. George H. W. Bush was accused of child rape by survivor Arizona Wilder, and is believed to have been the most sexually promiscuous of his Skull & Bones class.



     3. Bill Clinton flew on Jeffrey Epstein's Lolita Express somewhere between 4 and 26 times.



     4. Oprah Winfrey made a name for herself criticizing child rape and molestation, but then promoted the child sex cult run by a man who called himself John of God.



     5. Meryl Streep stood up and clapped for child rapist Roman Polanski at the 2003 Academy Awards (Oscars).
     Polanski fled to France after he was arrested and charged with drugged and raped a 13-year-old model named Samantha Geimer in early 1977. Another victim, Marianne Barnard, recently came out and said that she was 10 years old when Polanski violated her after her mother left him alone with her during a photo session on a beach in 1975.



     6. Steven Spielberg is suspected of having anally raped 12-year-old actress Heather o'Rourke to death while she was on set.
     If Spielberg is not responsible for o'Rourke's death, then top suspects include Henry Winkler (who once co-starred with o'Rourke on Happy Days), and
other directors and producers of Poltergeist 2Researchers have also speculated that Henry Winkler may be responsible because he claimed o'Rourke killed herself, a claim for which there is no evidence. The fact that Winkler uttered this obvious lie suggests that he is covering for himself or someone else.
     O'Rourke's coroner was named "Dr. Frank Sinatra", and he said the girl died of Crohn's disease, despite the fact that Crohn's is a congenital condition and the girl's mother swore she was not born with the disease.
     Crohn's was probably chosen as an explanation for the girl's death, because Crohn's is a condition involving inflammation of the digestive tract. Anal rape can also cause symptoms which resemble inflammation of the digestive tract; namely septic shock, and damage to the inside of the anal cavity. Some researchers believe that o'Rourke was anally raped to death, and that Crohn's was given as the explanation, due to the similarity in symptoms. 
     Researchers have also pointed to the appearance of a knockout drug possibly used to commit rape, which appears in Spielberg's first film Amblin, and researchers have noted that his films E.T. and A.I. may be pedophile grooming films.



     7 & 8. Tom Hanks and Ellen deGeneres are suspected pedophiles because deGeneres has been spotted with an ankle bracelet, and has made strange videos depicting a red face on her sweater that may be a reference to one of Hanks's films.

     Researchers have speculated that Ellen is a pedophile, and is using the face to communicate secretly about Hollywood pedophile affairs. Researchers believe that:

     - Ellen is secretly under house arrest, and/or is wearing an ankle bracelet

     - parts of her set may be references to Jeffrey Epstein's temple

     - the red face logo is on a sweatshirt sold by Jay-Z

     - the red face may be a reference to either the alleged Hillary Clinton / Human Abedin "Frazzledrip" pedophilic lesbian sex tape

     - the red face is a reference to Wilson the Volleyball in the Tom Hanks film "Castaway"

     Researchers have noted Tom Hanks's suspicious behavior after getting diagnosed with Covid-19. Some researchers believe that he and his wife Rita Wilson are exploiting, or even faking, their "first celebrities to get coronavirus" status, and that it does not make sense that they got the vaccine after they had already gotten the virus. Some critics of Hanks also criticize his urging people to get vaccinated on these bases.
     Some also believe that Tom Hanks's film Big (directed by Penny Marshall and produced by James L. Brooks) may be a pedophile grooming film, or at least express an inappropriate level of interest in the idea of children growing up quickly.
     Another thing Tom Hanks did, which aroused public suspicion about possible pedophilia, was a sketch he did on Jimmy Kimmel Live!. That sketch poked fun at Toddlers and Tiaras -type shows, and child beauty pageants. The sketch could either be making fun of pageant contestants' parents who expose their children to being sexualized, or it could be making it into a laughing matter, depending how you look at it. That sketch is linked below. It's also interesting to note that Lady Gaga appeared on Saturday Night Live and did a sketch about a fourth grade talent show, which was essentially the exact same gag as Tom Hanks's sketch.
     http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/video/tom-hanks-skit-casts-him-as-a-beauty-pageant-dad-13016639
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7mTdTz7HHI


     It should also be noted that Ellen deGeneres is the sister of Vance deGeneres, a former contributor to The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Stewart is a former roommate of Anthony Weiner (who sent sexually explicit photos to teenage girls). Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign was outed, by Wikileaks, as having received money from Hollywood fundraising organization Propper Daley, which had contact with John Oliver, another former Daily Show contributor.
     Additionally, Ellen is known for her psychopathic behavior, and her mistreatment of guests (such as Taylor Swift and Dakota Johnson) and employees. Ellen has also invited countless child stars onto her show, effectively luring them into pedophile Hollywood.

     Whether Ellen deGeneres is a pedophile or not, her problematic behavior - and/or those sexual feelings - could possibly be explained by the fact that she was molested by her stepfather when she was a teenager.
     http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2019/05/ellen-degeneres-sexual-abuse-david-letterman-interview
     It would be unfair to accuse deGeneres of pedophilia, if it turned out that she was actually a victim of childhood sexual abuse. But it is also true that the fact that she was molested as a teen does not preclude her from being attracted to children.



     9. Lorne Michaels's show "Saturday Night Live" is littered with pedophilic sketches and jokes; among them the Spartan cheerleaders, Uncle Roy, Mary Katherine Gallagher, and numerous sketches involving cast members dressing up as children or teens and discussing flirting with or dating adults. One Miley Cyrus music video for SNL - "Baby Steps" - showed Kenan Thompson asking out loud why the cast is being expected to demean themselves for Lorne's amusement by dressing as babies and wearing diapers.
     Read the article linked below for more examples:
     http://aquarianagrarian.blogspot.com/2021/04/saturday-night-live-has-aired-dozens-of.html



     10. Bill Gates has been photographed with Jeffrey Epstein, and funded the research of people working at MIT Media Lab, who had connections to Epstein.







     11. Joe Biden has been broadcast live on C-SPAN pinching a little girl's nipple; this occurred on January 3rd, 2015. The girl's uncle is Montana Senator Steve Daines. Joe Biden's son Hunter has also been photographed behind a nearly naked woman or girl who appeared to be just a teenager.




     Why is Obama giving Presidential Medals of Freedom to so many pedophiles? Did he set a record number of medal gifts - 123 - in order to more easily get away with giving 11 of them to pedophiles?





Written and Published on February 21st, 2021

Expanded on February 23rd and 27th, 2021
and July 4th, 2021

Inspired by independent research done by
Pizzagate and pedogate researchers in 2019 and 2020

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

The Obama Murders (Part 1B: Examination of 16 Particular Cases From the First List) (Incomplete)

Table of Contents

I. Introduction, and List of 16 Victims
II. Background on Five Key Players
III. Explanation of 16 Victims' Cases





Content

I. Introduction, and List of 16 Victims

     This article is the follow-up to my previous article "The Obama Murders (Part 1A: 124 Politically Motivated Deaths and Disappearances)", which was published on this blog on October 12th, 2012.
     It is an examination of the facts surrounding 16 cases from that list of 124. The cases were selected based on: 1) their similarities; 2) their degree of connection to one another; 3) their having occurred near the beginning of the Obama Administration; 4) reports by Michelle Malkin from 2011; 5) Larry Sinclair's public statement; and 6) a televised interview with reporter Wayne Madsen, from early 2011, in which he named somewhere between five and ten of the cases explained below.


     You can watch interviews with Wayne Madsen which touch on a few of these victims, by clicking on the following links:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bZqiTDNEMc
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5JoCRpj5Qgk
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNsh-1p8us8
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qd-DU9v9TrE


     You can see Larry Sinclair's statements by clicking on the following link:
     You can see the original list of 124 deaths and disappearances by clicking on the following link:



      The purpose of this article is to determine whether, between September 2007 and November 2011, President Barack Obama and close associates in and near his administration, may have conspired to attempt to assassinate persons who may have posed a threat to Obama getting into office and staying there.
     These persons include Congresswoman Gabirlle Giffords of Arizona, as well as sixteen other American citizens who may have been deliberately murdered for various purposes (with or without collaboration by former Vice President Dick Cheney in one or two of those instances).

      The likely motivations behind their possible murders include, but are not limited to: 1) to cover up and discredit facts surrounding President Obama’s citizenship and presidential eligibility status; 2) to cover up and discredit drug allegations leveled at Obama; 3) to cover up and discredit claims of gay sex scandals involving Obama and his former Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel; 4) to neutralize persons likely to cooperate with investigators in a way that would implicate Obama’s involvement in the political corruption scandal surrounding his vacated U.S. Senate seat; 5) to neutralize persons likely to reveal Obama’s connection to fraud scandals involving casino development, real estate, and other deals in Chicago (many of which involve convicted fraudster Tony Rezko); 6) to cover up a scheme to privatize, de-fund, and close schools in poor, predominantly black Chicago neighborhoods; 7) to eliminate those who would seek to prevent the federal government’s favoring of corporate energy-industry interests which promote Obama’s underhanded, duplicitous environmental policy; 8) to cover up a C.I.A. scheme to destabilize Mexico and undermine its national sovereignty by operating a weapons-for-drugs program across the U.S.-Mexico border, and to neutralize bipartisan opposition to the Obama Administration in Arizona with regards to that scheme; 9) to stifle free speech and the right to bear arms in the wake of the Tucson massacre; 10) to cover up prostitution allegations levied at Cheney and other prominent Republican politicians; and 11) to cover up an attempt by Cheney to set up a secret, alternate chain of command of nuclear missiles.


      The sixteen victims were, in chronological order:




1. Orlando Jones
(died in Union Pier, Michigan; on September 12th, 2007; #15 in the original list)


2. Larry Bland
(died in Chicago, Illinois; on November 17th, 2007; #19 in the original list)


3. Donald Young
(died in Chicago, Illinois; on December 23rd, 2007; #21 in the original list)


4. Nate Spencer
(died in Chicago, Illinois; on December 26th, 2007; #22 in the original list)


5. John H. Stroger, Jr.
(died in Chicago, Illinois; on January 18th, 2008; #23 in the original list)


6. Leiutenant Quarles Harris, Jr.
(died in Washington, D.C.; on April 17th, 2008; #24 in the original list)


7. Deborah Jeane Palfrey
(died in Tarpon Springs, Florida; on May 1st, 2008; #25 in the original list)


8. Christopher Kelly
(died in Chicago, Illinois; on September 12th, 2009; #50 in the original list)


9. Michael Scott, Jr.
(died in Chicago, Illinois; on May 7th, 2010; #51 in the original list)


10. Phil Pagano
(died in Crystal Lake, Illinois; on May 7th, 2010; #56 in the original list)


11. Christopher Smith
(died in Phoenix, Arizona; on December 18th, 2010; #69 in the original list)


12. John P. “Jack” Wheeler III
(died in Newark, Delaware; on December 30th, 2010; #70 in the original list)


13. John McCarthy Roll
(died in Casas Adobes, Arizona; on January 8th, 2011; #71 in the original list)


14. Gabriel Zimmerman
(died in Casas Adobes, Arizona; on January 8th, 2011; #72 in the original list)


15. Ashley Turton
(died in Washington, D.C.; on January 10th, 2011; #77 in the original list)


and



16. Tracy Lawrence
(died in Las Vegas, Nevada; on November 29th, 2011; #103 in the original list)











II. Background on Five Key Players



      Before I go into detail about the backgrounds of and circumstances surrounding the deaths of each of the sixteen victims in near chronological order, it shall first be necessary to provide some background on five public personae with whom viewers may not be familiar, and who will be referred to throughout the piece; namely, Wayne Madsen, Larry Sinclair, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, Rahm Emanuel, and Valerie Jarrett.

      Wayne Madsen is an investigative journalist based in Washington, D.C.. His professional history includes work as a government consultant, and he has either worked for or been affiliated with RCA, the National Security Agency, the U.S. Navy’s Naval Data Automation Command, the National Bureau of Standards, the U.S. Department of State, the Computer Sciences Corporation, and the Electronic Privacy Information Center. He now runs the website WayneMadsenReport.com.
      A contributor to the Alex Jones Show and RussiaToday, Madsen wrote the three-part article “The Story of Obama: All in the Family”, in which he claimed that both of Obama’s parents – as well as both of his maternal grandparents and his stepfather – have ties to the C.I.A.’s financing of political coups in the Eastern Hemisphere. Throughout numerous reports and interviews, Madsen has made mention of about half of the fifteen victims whom this article concerns.

      Larry Sinclair is a felon convicted of fraud and other crimes, and the author of “Barack Obama and Larry Sinclair: Cocaine, Sex, Lies and Murder?”. He claims that in 1999 – when Obama was an Illinois State Senator – Sinclair and Obama had gay fellatio and used cocaine and alcohol together in Sinclair’s rented limousine in Chicago, and also in Sinclair’s hotel room in Gurnee, Illinois the following day. Sinclair’s attorney – Montgomery Blair Sibley – was present at Sinclair’s June 2008 press conference in Washington, D.C., where he discussed his allegations, and was asked a question by reporter Wayne Madsen.
      Sinclair failed two lie detector tests regarding his claims, amidst suggestions that the tests were improperly administered due to Sinclair’s circulation disorders (caused by a nerve injury resulting from his having worked for a moving company); that lie detector tests are not reliable; that – despite the failings of such tests – Sinclair’s answers to the important questions surrounding his relationship with Obama still passed the tests; and that Daniel Parisi – who once owned the porn site WhiteHouse.com, and paid Sinclair $10,000 to take the tests – conspired with political consultant and former Senior Obama Advisor David Axelrod to rig the results in order to cover for Obama, and so that Parisi would not have to pay Sinclair an additional $100,000 for passing the tests.

      The Reverend Jeremiah Wright is the former pastor at Chicago’s six-thousand-member Trinity United Church of Christ. For 36 years – before retiring in 2008, the year Obama was elected president – he played a role in cementing ties between the Christians and Muslims in Chicago’s black community. Wright promoted Reverend James Hal Cone’s black liberation theology, which has roots in the left wing and the civil rights movements of the 1960s, and which sees God as concerned with the poor and the weak.
      President Obama has attended Trinity United on-and-off since the late 1980s, but he denies having heard the particular sermons in which Reverend Wright said “God damn America for killing innocent people” and described the events of September 11th as “America’s chickens coming home to roost”.

      Rahm Emanuel has served a Senior Adviser to President Bill Clinton, and as a U.S. Congressman representing northern suburbs of Chicago. He served in several posts pertaining to federal Democratic political strategizing before becoming Obama’s Chief of Staff in 2009.
      Emanuel succeeded Richard J. Daley to become the mayor of Chicago, following a contentious process to determine Emanuel’s eligibility to run for that position, in the face of questions surrounding whether he maintained a residency in the city.

      Valerie Jarrett is one of President Obama’s two Senior Advisors, as well as an assistant to Obama for Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs. She previously served as an aide to Chicago Mayor Harold Washington, and later as Deputy Chief of Staff to Mayor Richard J. Daley. She has held many positions in the Chicago city government.
      In 1991, Jarrett hired Michelle Robinson as the lead attorney for Mayor Daley. Soon after, Robinson married Barack Obama, and later became the Vice President for Community and External Affairs at the University of Chicago Medical Center, of which Valerie Jarrett is currently the Chairman of the Board of Trustees.
      When Barack Obama was elected president, the office of the junior Senator from Illinois was left open, and then-Governor Rod Blagojevich had the power to appoint his replacement. About this opportunity, Blagojevich remarked, “I’ve got this thing and it’s fucking golden… I’m just not giving it up for fuckin’ nothing.”

      In April 2010, lawyers for Blagojevich filed a motion to subpoena Obama to testify at Blagojevich’s corruption trial about whether he sent “emissaries” to Blagojevich to inform him of Obama’s preferences about who should fill the Senate seat. Although former Illinois Attorney General Roland Burris ultimately received the appointment, it has been alleged that Obama desired that Blagojevich’s choice be Valerie Jarrett.















III. Explanation of 16 Victims' Cases



      Now that we’ve become acquainted with these lesser-known figures who will be mentioned throughout this piece, we’ll move on to discussing the deaths of the second, third, and fourth victims; Larry Bland, Donald Young, and Nate Spencer.
      Each of these men were openly gay black male Chicago residents who died within forty days of one another in November and December 2008, the last of whom died just eight days prior to Obama’s victory in the Iowa Caucus on January 3rd, 2008.
      The first two of these three victims – Larry Bland and Donald Young – were both members of Chicago’s Trinity United Church of Christ, and both were shot execution-style in the back of the head.
     For the sake of relevance, we will skip the first victim for now, and instead look at victims two through four.













      Our second victim Larry Bland worked as a security guard at Northwestern Hospital in Evanston, Illinois. On November 17th, 2008, he was found shot to death in the entryway of the home which he had once shared with his mother Josephine.
      Josephine Bland told a Fox affiliate in Chicago that she had been concerned about the telephone bills her son was running up calling gay sex lines, the amount of time he spent on gay sex sites (including adam4adam.com), and the frequency with which he brought strange young men over to their house. Bland’s mother said that these circumstances led to her moving out of the home which she had shared with her son, who she believes was killed by one of his lovers.



      Two days before that Christmas, Larry Bland’s fellow Trinity United churchgoer – our third victim, Donald Young – was found shot to death in his Chicago apartment. Numerous items were discovered missing from the scene of the crime, leading investigators to believe that Young was murdered by burglars. Young was not only a member of the Trinity United Church of Christ; he was also its choir director, as well as an elementary school teacher.
       In his June 2008 press conference in Washington, D.C. – and in a sworn affidavit he filed with the Chicago Police Department – Larry Sinclair claimed that between September and November 2007, he contacted a representative of Trinity United, and later discovered – only after his death – that this man was in fact Donald Young.
      The purpose of Sinclair’s various calls and text messages was to urge Young to have Reverend Jeremiah Wright ask Obama to amend his publicly-disclosed records of drug use to include the crack-smoking incident – which allegedly involved Obama purchasing an eight-ball of cocaine with $250 of Sinclair’s money on his behalf, the two drinking alcohol together, and Obama pulling a pipe and a crack rock out of his pocket and smoking it while Sinclair performed fellatio on him – which Sinclair claims occurred in 1999.
      As a bit of background, Obama has publicly admitted – numerous times – that he smoked marijuana, and wrote in his 1995 autobiography Dreams From My Father that he had snorted cocaine, and once almost had an acquaintance inject him with heroin.
      Larry Sinclair alleges that during one of the instances in which Young called Sinclair, Young asked why Sinclair had not asked him to urge Obama and Reverend Wright to disclose information regarding a sexual relationship.
      Sinclair later claimed that his question surprised him, because he had never mentioned his sexual relationship with Obama in his conversations with Young. This would seem to indicate that Obama had admitted to having had such a relationship with Sinclair in private talks with Reverend Wright and Donald Young when Young confronted Wright and Obama about Sinclair’s call about Obama’s drug use.
      Reporter Wayne Madsen has claimed that Reverend Wright ran a gay matchmaking service called the “Down-Low Club” for members of Trinity United, who were typically married men.
      Madsen said the abbreviation of the service – D.L.C. – served as a cover, such that anyone overhearing Wright’s conversations would think he was discussing the Democratic Leadership Committee, a non-profit think tank (affiliated with “New Democrats” Obama, the Clintons, John Kerry, John Edwards, Joe Lieberman, and Al Gore) which dissolved in early 2011.
      The well-publicized murders of Larry Bland and Donald Young led some Chicago residents to wonder whether there was a serial killer on the loose targeting homosexual African-Americans.
      Larry Sinclair has alleged that Reverend Wright announced the death of Donald Young at either the 7:30 A.M. or the 11:00 A.M. Trinity United service. This is interesting because – according to the certified copy of Young’s Chicago Death Certificate – Young was found shot at 7:30 A.M., but was not officially pronounced dead by the Medical Examiner until 12:10 P.M..
      Donald Young’s mother Norma Jean told the tabloid The Globe that she believes that persons trying to protect Obama’s reputation had her son murdered.



      The day after Christmas 2007 – just three days after the murder of Donald Young – our fourth victim Nate Spencer was found dead in his home. Spencer’s cause of death was given as septicemia, pneumonia, and complications related to HIV.
      Spencer’s fellow gay black male Chicago resident Tim Hooker runs the blog chgocutie.blogspot.com. On the blog, Hooker has reported the death of Donald Young, as well as the death of Nate Spencer, who he claims had once been his lover. Hooker has amended these posts to chide readers who have posted comments asking Hooker whether he believes there is a link between Obama and the deaths of Spencer and Young.
      Let us now move from Chicago to the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C..



      On April 17th, 2008, our sixth victim Leiutenant Quarles Harris, Jr. – Leiutenant being simply the man’s first name rather than a military rank – was found in his car, dead from multiple gunshot wounds. At the time of his death, Harris was cooperating with federal officials concerning his March 25th arrest for being in possession of large quantities of marijuana, 20 or 21 credit cards, and eight completed passport applications, four of the names on which matched names on the credit cards.
      Harris had been in court for that fraud case only three days before he was murdered. According to court documents, Harris told police that he had conspired with employees of the State Department and the Postal Service to commit credit card fraud.
      It has been reported that in March 2008 – the month Harris was arrested – the passport records of major presidential candidates Obama, Hillary Clinton, and John McCain had been breached by three State Department contract employees.
      Despite claims by then Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs Sean McCormack that the cases are not related, Harris’s claim that his friend in the State Department had helped him commit the credit card fraud prompts questions as to whether the Harris case has anything to do with these incidents.
      At least one of these breaches of the presidential candidates’ personal records allegedly took place during a training exercise, in which the employee was asked to show he had learned how to access a person’s files, and in which the employee was urged not to pull up the name of a famous person. That employee allegedly pulled up one of the candidates’ names. Two of these employees were fired, and one was merely reprimanded.
      The employees worked for Virginia-based State Department personal records contractors Stanley Inc. and The Analysis Corporation. The Analysis Corporation – whose CEO John O. Brennan is President Obama’s Deputy National Security Advisor for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism – also deals with information concerning counterterrorism and national security, working with the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Defense Intelligence Agency.
      We may remember John O. Brennan from May 2011, when he gave public statements concerning the details of the raid on the compound of Osama bin Laden which allegedly caused his death; statements which arguably conflicted with statements made by White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
      Being that the passport information of Obama, Clinton, and McCain was breached, it is necessary to mention that the breach of this information carries with it the potential that Social Security information was also accessed and viewed, which could be used to find credit card information.
      Reporter Wayne Madsen has claimed that Obama has a false Social Security number issued from Connecticut, where the President never lived. If Madsen’s claim is true, then a person viewing Obama’s social security number would be privy to some very controversial information which could lead to questions about the President’s status as a natural-born citizen, and therefore his eligibility for the presidency. This is keeping in mind that when Harris died, Obama had not yet secured the Democratic nomination.
      With four of our seven total black male victims – three of whom were shot to death – and three of our eight total victims with ties to Chicago out of the way, we can now turn towards Tarpon Springs, Florida.



      There, our seventh victim Deborah Jeane Palfrey was found hanging from a beam in a shed attached to her mother Blanche’s mobile home on May 1st, 2008, some two weeks after she was found guilty of money laundering, racketeering, and using the mail for illegal purposes, and two months before she was scheduled to be sentenced. For these convictions, Palfrey faced up to 55 years behind bars, and was likely to serve between five and eight years.
      Palfrey was known as the “D.C. Madam”, having operated and founded the California-based high-price illegal escort service Debora Martin and Associates, which served clients in Maryland and the nation’s capital. Palfrey had stated that she had had as many as fifteen thousand clients.
      From 1992 to 1993, prior to founding the escort service, Palfrey – who had received a degree in criminal justice and worked as a paralegal – spent a year and a half in jail for pimping, pandering, and extortion. In 2006, Palfrey ran afoul of the law again; her bank accounts were frozen, and her documents were seized during a raid by the I.R.S..
      The following year, Palfrey appeared on ABC’s “20/20” as part of an investigative report. ABC went through nearly fifty pounds of phone records, but decided that none of the clients were high-profile enough to merit being mentioned in the report, despite the subsequent claims of reporter Wayne Madsen, who believes that Palfrey’s clientele included 2008 Republican presidential candidates Fred Thompson, Rudy Giuliani, and John McCain, and then Vice President Dick Cheney.
      Despite this decision by ABC, the scandal led to the admission by Republican U.S. Senator David Vitter of Louisiana and USAID Administrator Randall L. Tobias (who resigned as a result of this admission) of having used Palfrey’s services.
      Military strategist Harlan Ullman and Vice President Cheney were named as Palfrey’s clients by her civil attorney Montgomery Blair Sibley, who also defended Obama accuser Larry Sinclair, has filed a lawsuit regarding Obama’s citizenship status, and announced in early January 2012 that he is running for president.
      Palfrey’s official cause of death was given by police and the coroner’s office as suicide by hanging.
      Reports abound which claim Palfrey had previously considered suicide. When she went to prison in the early 1990s, Palfrey allegedly told a judge that she had considered starving herself to death while incarcerated.
      In early 2007, when University of Maryland professor Brandy Britton – who had been brought up on prostitution charges, and faced six months in jail – committed suicide, Palfrey said that she was “made out of something that Brandy Britton wasn’t made of”.
      After Palfrey’s death, Washington, D.C. writer Dan Moldea – who either was considering writing a book with Palfrey, or was actually in the process of doing so – claimed she told him in 2007 that she would rather commit suicide than go back to prison, and find herself alone and penniless in her late fifties when released. Palfrey had also told ABC that she would never go back to prison.
      According to police, a suicide note written by Palfrey was found addressed to her sister. The outside of the note read, “[d]o not resuscitate (DNR), do not feed under any circumstances”, and the contents of the note read in part, “I cannot live the next 6 to 8 years behind bars for what you and I have both come to regard as this 'modern-day lynching' only to come out of prison in my late 50s a broken, penniless and very much alone woman” and “[y]ou must comprehend there was no way out, i.e., 'exit strategy,' for me other than the one I have chosen here”. Police stated that Palfrey’s mother and sister confirmed Deborah Jeane’s authorship of the note.
      These claims about Palfrey’s consideration of suicide conflict with statements made by Palfrey herself. Prior to her death, Palfrey had contact with syndicated Texas radio show host Alex Jones, and stated on Jones’s radio show that, “No, I’m not planning to commit suicide; I’m planning on going into court on April 7th and I plan on exposing the government in ways that… I do not think they want me to expose them.” She even went as far as to indicate that Dick Cheney was one of her clients, and to threaten to name names.
      Palfrey also told Jones on-air that she believed that authorities would kill her and make it look like suicide, that she was not suicidal, and that if found dead, the cause would be murder. In August 1991 – before going to prison – she wrote to the judge that the San Diego police vice squad had a vendetta against her, saying, “If taken into custody, my physical safety and most probably my very life would be jeopardized… [r]ape, beating, maiming, disfigurement and more than likely murder disguised in the form of just another jailhouse accident or suicide would await me…”.
      After Palfrey’s death, Jones stated that “there is no doubt in my mind that she was murdered”, and claimed that it would be obvious to anyone – even people who are not experts on the analysis of signatures – that the letters addressed to her sister (which some have claimed were written weeks before her death) were not even in Palfrey’s handwriting.
      According to Jones, the owner of Blanche Palfrey’s condo told NBC that Deborah Jeane Palfrey told her mother two days before she died that she believed that she was being followed, there was a hit out on her, and that she had no plans to kill herself. Palfrey’s mother claimed that Palfrey was happy at the prospect of fighting the government on her charges.
      The statements by Deborah Jeane Palfrey, Blanche Palfrey’s landlord, and Alex Jones would seem to indicate that Palfrey’s statement that she would rather die than go back to prison may have been merely hyperbole.
      Given the fact that Palfrey’s attorney claimed Cheney and other prominent Republicans as her clients, that her prosecution and death occurred during the Bush Administration, and that Obama – according to claims by Larry Sinclair and Wayne Madsen – seems more inclined to seek sexual relationships with men rather than women, it would seem that Cheney appears to have a more direct incentive to silence Palfrey, and therefore that Obama is not likely to have had a role in her death.
      Now that we have examined the deaths of the three black gay male Chicago residents in late 2007 – as well as the deaths of the black male admitted identity thief in Washington, D.C. and of the D.C. Madam in Florida which occurred the following spring – we must now delve into the corrupt world of the politics of Chicago and Cook County (President Obama’s home turf) as we look into the deaths of Orlando Jones; John Stroger; Christopher Kelly; Michael Scott, Jr.; and Phil Pagano.



      On September 12th, 2007, the body of Orlando Jones – the first chronological death of the sixteen victims mentioned in this article – was found with a gunshot wound to the head near Gowdy Shores, an upscale residential community in Union Pier, Michigan (75 miles east of Chicago) where Jones owned a vacation home.
      Less than a week before Jones died, a CBS affiliate in Chicago reported that “a corruption inquiry targeting him was heating up”. The day before his death, Jones met with Robert Stephenson – his friend and legal advisor – to discuss the allegations against him, to review documents that would refute those allegations, and to discuss Jones’s plans to set up his own investment advising firm.
      After the meeting, Jones made a few cell phone calls, but he never returned home, and his family reported him missing the following afternoon, before his body was found hours later. Despite Stephenson’s having said that Jones did not appear distraught or suicidal when they met the day before his death, Barrien County, Michigan police described the death as an apparent suicide.
      After Jones’s death, Stephenson remarked that he was “shocked”, saying “[i]t’s scary that somebody so well-balanced could just do such a thing. He obviously had demons that I didn't know about”, and “[i]f I had had any indication that he was [suicidal], I would have tried to intervene”.
      Before leaving for Union Pier, Jones evidently left a suicide note in his Chicago home. In the note – which has not been made public and has been reviewed by police in both Chicago and Las Vegas – Jones mentioned his wife, his friendship with Lacy Thomas, and – according to the Chicago Tribune – “outlined how [he] wanted his affairs to be handled after his death”.
      Prior to his death, Las Vegas police handed-in a 60-page report to the district attorney, in which they recommended that Jones, Lacy L. Thomas, Martello Pollock, and Kathy Suey (the Deputy Chief of the Homeland Security Division of the Las Vegas police, which includes the Criminal Intelligence Section that conducted the investigation) be charged with misconduct by a public official, bribery, fraud, and theft. District Attorney David Roger said that a decision would not be made for several weeks, which means that Orlando Jones died before charges could be filed.
      Jones was the godson and longtime family friend, the chief of staff, and the political advisor of John Stroger, our next discussed victim, and the president of the Cook County, Illinois Board of Commissioners. During Stroger’s tenure as president, the Cook County Hospital was renamed in his honor, becoming the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County.
      From 1993 to 2003, Lacy Thomas served as the head of Stroger Hospital. In 1999, Martello Pollock founded the Chicago-based telecom company Crystal Communications Telephone Corporation. Pollock owned the company with Jones, who worked as Crystal’s corporate officer.
      Shortly after Thomas was hired at the Clark County-owned University Medical Center (UMC) in Las VegasNevada’s only public hospital – in November 2003, Crystal received a $24,000 consulting contract for the hospital’s telecom project. Soon after, Crystal was set to receive a $150,000 no-bid contract, and – despite the county Finance Director’s demand for open bidding – Crystal won a $132,000 contract for the project, despite being underbid by $36,000 by a Nevada telecom company.
      UMC officials told detectives that Crystal did little to no work; the county’s Chief Deputy District Attorney later said that one contractor was paid nearly a million dollars, but only produced a half-hour computer presentation of information which was already available to the public.
      Lacy Thomas’s tenure at the UMC lasted until one day in January 2006, when he was fired by the Clark County Manager, and detectives raided the hospital’s offices, seizing computers and boxes of files. In the four years that followed, Thomas was investigated, charged, and prosecuted for concealing nearly 45% of the cash-strapped UMC’s $34 million in losses.
      Las Vegas police alleged that Thomas received kickbacks for steering Crystal’s contract with the UMC towards his friends in Chicago. Investigators discovered that Orlando Jones paid for Thomas and his wife Henrene to take a trip to Aruba in March 2005, and Family Guidance Centers – a behavioral health care company for which Jones lobbied – deposited $14,000 into a bank account for the Henrene Thomas Limited Liability Company.
      While it is quite probable that the death of Orlando Jones was indeed a suicide, and while it is almost certain that President Obama – let alone former Vice President Cheney – had anything to do with his death, a discussion of Orlando Jones provides excellent opportunities to get acquainted with the rampant corruption one will find when looking into Chicago politics, to gain familiarity with the tendency of that Chicago corruption to migrate to elsewhere in the country (in this case, to Nevada), and to introduce our next discussed victim – and fifth chronological victim – John Stroger.



      John H. Stroger, Jr. died on the morning of January 18th, 2008 of complications from a stroke which he had suffered in March 2006, a week prior to the Democratic primary for the reportedly “controversial” 2006 election of the President of the Cook County Board of Commissioners.
      In this election, Stroger faced a challenge by Commissioner Forrest Claypool, who accused Stroger of presiding over a “bloated” government, at a time when Stroger’s critics described his administration as ridden with scandals and patronage.
      Stroger never recovered from the stroke, did not appear in public between the stroke and his death, and resigned three months prior to the election. He was replaced on the ticket by his son Todd, who (with the backing of Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley) won the election – beating Republican Tony Peraica – serving what would have been his father’s fourth four-year term as Board President.
      Due to John Stroger’s advanced age of 78, and his extensive health problems – he had battled diabetes; prostate cancer; heart problems; and paralysis, seizures, and neurological complications arising from the stroke he suffered in 2006 – he was almost certainly not murdered. But his connections to Chicago politics invite a closer look into his career, as well as his personal and professional relationships.
      Stroger worked and served as an assistant auditor with the Municipal Court of Chicago, as the personnel director for the Cook County Jail, for the financial director of the State of Illinois, and as the 8th Ward Committeeman of Chicago, and eventually chaired each major committee of the County Board.
      Stroger also served as president of the National Association of Counties, and was appointed by President Bill Clinton as a member of the Advisory Committee on Intergovernmental Relations. Before he died, Stroger cast an absentee ballot for Barack Obama in the Illinois Democratic Presidential Primary.
      After Stroger’s death, Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley called him “one of the most dedicated public servants of our time”, saying “[d]uring a fifty-year career in government, he left a mark on Chicago and Cook County that will be equaled by very few others”.
      Given Daley’s praise of John and Todd Stroger through the elder Stroger’s scandals – as well as John Stroger’s support of Obama, and Daley’s brother William’s having later served as Obama’s Chief of Staff – it would come as no surprise that there have been reports of corruption connecting these individuals.
      While Stroger began his 2006 run for re-election for President of the Cook County Board of Commissioners in 2005, he selected Tony Rezko – who had also headed the finance committee for Stroger’s 2002 campaign – as an honorary chair and head of his campaign finance committee.
      Reports of this selection came just one year after Rezko served on the finance committee of Barack Obama’s campaign for U.S. Senator from Illinois – making contributions which allegedly violated campaign finance laws – and at a time during which reports implicating Rezko’s involvement in various scandals began to surface in the media.
      It has been claimed that Stroger received more money in campaign contributions directly from Rezko than did Rod Blagojevich, Richard Daley, and Barack Obama. The Chicago Sun-Times reported that Rezko contributed nearly $150,000 to Stroger’s campaigns.
      But this campaign finance allegation is not the only instance of possible corruption involving Stroger, the Rezko family, and Obama; Stroger also appointed Rita Rezko to a part-time position in the Cook County Employee Appeals Board, for which she earned a salary of $37,000 a year. According to court documents, this was her sole income when she secured a half-million-dollar mortgage to buy a $625,000 lot next to a parcel of land owned by Obama.
      Rita Rezko later made $50,000 selling part of this parcel to attorney Michael Sreenan, who put the lot up for sale for $1.5 million in October 2007, and contributed $5,000 to Obama’s campaigns.
      Additionally, a company affiliated with Tony Rezko and his wife Rita had a contract to maintain pay telephones at the Cook County Jail while Stroger served as Board President.
      But the relationships between Rezko, the Obamas, and real estate scandals do not end here; they in fact extend to our next two victims – two more with ties to Chicago government – Christopher Kelly and Michael Scott, Jr..



      Christopher Kelly died on September 12th, 2009 at the hospital which was re-named in honor of our last victim; the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County. Kelly’s estranged wife told police that she received text messages from him saying he had tried to kill himself. She found Kelly inside his car in the parking lot of a lumber yard in County Club Hills, Illinois – a southwest suburb of Chicago – and drove him to a hospital in nearby Oak Forest.
      At Oak Forest Hospital, Chris Kelly became lucid enough to speak to police, but his condition later deteriorated, and he was sent to Stroger Hospital, twenty-five miles away in Chicago. Despite Kelly’s condition having deteriorated, Oak Forest Hospital spokesman Michael Bright stated that Kelly was stabilized before being transported. We can only guess what Kelly told police before his condition worsened.
      Kelly’s death was attributed to salicylate intoxication arising from an overdose of aspirin, and investigators considered the possibility that his death was a murder as well as a suicide.
      Kelly had been indicted three times between 2007 and 2009; the first involved tax fraud; the second, mail fraud involving contract-bid-rigging by his company BCI Commercial Roofing Inc. for an $8.5 million project to do roofing work on hangars at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport; and the third involved racketeering and extortion charges in a kickback scheme with Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich.
      In the first case, Kelly was indicted for tax fraud in April 2009. He pleaded guilty, admitting to hiding $1.3 million in personal and corporate income from the I.R.S. over the course of five years, and to improperly converting the corporate funds of BCI Roofing to pay some of the millions of dollars in gambling debts which he had incurred in Las Vegas. Kelly also used corporate funds to pay off a loan from real estate developer and political fundraiser Tony Rezko. Kelly was sentenced that June to three years in prison.
      In the second case – the mail-fraud bid-rigging scheme between BCI Roofing and O’Hare – Kelly was prepared to go to trial – which would have occurred the day after he died – but he came up with a compromise to turn himself in when the government moved to revoke his bond. Kelly would have reported for incarceration just six days after his death, and he would have served nearly five years in prison.
      At the request of prosecutors, the judge granted a motion to dismiss the charges against Kelly; this occurred two weeks after his death. Because he wasn’t sentenced while he was still living, Kelly’s guilty plea was wiped clean, and his agreement to turn over $450,000 in cash and home equity to the government was voided. Charges against BCI were also dropped; its attorney Tom Leinenweber said that the “assets of the company will be used for [Kelly’s] wife and children”.
      In the third case, Alonzo “Lon” Monk – Blagojevich’s former chief of staff – testified that in 2003, Monk, Rod Blagojevich, Tony Rezko, and Christopher Kelly plotted with an insider in investment firm Bear Stearns to let the four men split between them $2 million in funds which were illegally procured in a deal by the State of Illinois to permit Bear Stearns to sell $10 billion in pension-obligation bonds (we may remember Bear Stearns from its mid-2007 collapse, which played a significant role in triggering the sub-prime mortgage crisis that caused the [arguably] current recession).
      Facing “an extraordinary amount of pressure by federal prosecutors to cooperate” in court, Kelly pleaded not guilty to the racketeering and extortion charges in this case. Had Kelly survived long enough to be sentenced for his involvement in this kickback scandal, he would have faced up to 13 years in prison, in addition to the combined eight years stemming from the two previous cases in which Kelly pleaded guilty. The trial of Blagojevich and Kelly – who has been described as a friend and adviser to Blagojevich – was scheduled to take place in June 2010.
      As an aside, Blagojevich’s first trial ended in August 2010, over a year before he was sentenced to 14 years in prison, 11 or 12 of which he will actually serve. He was arrested and indicted in the spring of 2009 on federal corruption charges, which included conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and solicitation of bribery for his role in the scandal concerning Obama’s vacated U.S. Senate seat.
      Blagojevich hired Kelly as a fundraiser to oversee Illinois’s deal-making with a casino developer who allegedly had mob ties. Eric Holder – who now serves as Obama’s Attorney General – assisted Blagojevich in a battle to help the casino get its license in 2004, and Holder’s law firm later made $300,000 investigating the matter.
      What’s more, Tony Rezko was reported as having “held an option to lease a hotel site next to the proposed casino site”. In late November 2011, Rezko was sentenced to 10 ½ years in federal prison for his conviction of sixteen counts of fraud and corruption relating to a multimillion-dollar extortion scheme to use his influence with Blagojevich to demand kickbacks from businesses with state contracts.
      Being that the outcome of these three cases would have been that Christopher Kelly would be incarcerated from the age of 51 until the age of 72, it is certainly likely that he may have sought suicide as a way to avoid prison. But the fervent belief of Kelly and his attorney Sam Adam Jr. in Governor Blagojevich’s innocence would seem to suggest that – having another person to defend him – Blagojevich may not have been as likely to bear the entire brunt of punishment for crimes which were committed by his associates – Barack Obama included.



      Before considering the possible motivations behind the death of Christopher Kelly, we must examine a related death, that of Michael Scott, our fourth and final victim who shared Obama’s status as a black male living in Chicago.

      In November 2009, Scott’s body was found shot in the head near the banks of the Chicago River on Chicago’s Near West Side. Michael Scott had been a real estate developer, and a member of the team which bid for the 2016 Olympics on Chicago’s behalf. Viewers may remember Barack and Michelle Obama traveling to Copenhagen in late 2009 to secure the bid for Chicago, which eventually lost out to Rio de Janeiro.



      More details about the death of Michael Scott - and explanations of the deaths of Michael Scott Jr., Phil Pagano, Christopher Smith, Jack Wheeler, John Roll, Gabriel, Zimmerman, Ashley, Turton, and Tracy Lawrence - will be available on this page at a later date.













Information Compiled Between January 2011 and February 2012

Written Between September 2011 and February 2012

Originally Published on March 27th, 2019

Sunday, December 6, 2015

A Critique of Ron Paul



Originally Written on November 15th, 2011
For a YouTube Video Which Would Have Been Entitled
“The Ron Paul Contrast Ad”

Edited and Expanded on December 6th and 7th, 2015



I first became familiar with Texas Congressman Ron Paul on May 3rd, 2007, when he appeared on the first televised Republican debate of the 2008 presidential election. The following year, I registered as a Republican in Wisconsin, in order to vote for the congressman in the national Republican primary, and on the day of the election, I wrote-in his name on the ballot for the presidency.
These days [in November 2011], I find myself agreeing with Dr. Paul about two-thirds to three-quarters of the time. In light of various criticisms of a potential Ron Paul presidency which were made on the eve of the 2008 election by Canadian voluntaryist philosopher Stefan Molyneux, in proponence of some legalistic and non-legalistic tactics which I have come to feel that the congressman has failed to properly or sufficiently emphasize, in attentiveness to geopolitical circumstances and history which I feel the congressman has overlooked, and in defense of my stances on policy topics on which I simply disagree with the congressman, I will detail thirteen major areas of policy on which I feel Congressman Paul and I differ to some significant degree, and I will explain why I believe that my suggested improvements to Dr. Paul’s platform would be more conducive to the simultaneous manifestation of legitimate governance, contract rights, freedom of association, individual liberty and sovereignty, free and fair trade, and socioeconomic justice in a free-market system.
The thirteen areas of policy on which I feel that Congressman Paul and I differ to some significant or notable degree are (1) abortion; (2) gay marriage; (3) immigration-related issues; (4) election reform; (5) taxation; (6) tactics for achieving socioeconomic justice; (7) the Federal Reserve System; (8) U.S.-Israeli foreign policy; (9) U.S.-Iranian foreign policy; (10) the conflict in Libya; (11) issues pertaining to the events of September 11th, 2001; (12) issues pertaining to the citizenship and eligibility status of the current president of the United States; and (13) the abolition of several federal departments.



1. Abortion
If Ron Paul were elected president, and there were to become a vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court, President Paul would likely appoint Andrew Napolitano, a former New Jersey Superior Court Judge and [as of 2011] the host of FOX Business’s program “Freedom Watch”. Napolitano is a libertarian, and a pro-life Catholic.
In the event that Napolitano’s appointment were approved by the Senate and he found himself on the Supreme Court, and the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision were challenged, Associate Justice Napolitano would likely be one of five justices to support such a challenge, comprising a pro-life majority.
This would cause the Roe decision to be found unconstitutional, effectively giving the states power to regulate abortion. Currently [as of 2011], seven states have provisions in their laws which would immediately prohibit abortion in the event that Roe v. Wade were overturned.
Like Andrew Napolitano and Ron Paul, I oppose the Roe decision, but for the opposite reason, and due to that reason, I would pursue different tactics in order to invalidate it.
I oppose the Roe decision because it has been used as a precedent to prohibit partial-birth abortion on the national level [Note: as of 2015, I no longer support the legality of partial-birth abortion]. It is for this reason that I feel that Roe v. Wade could be a slippery slope to the prohibition of all abortions on a nationwide basis.
To echo the sentiment of a libertarian bumper sticker, “I’m pro-choice on everything”; on every issue I favor the right of each individual to make his or her own decisions, so long as those decisions do not directly harm another person or their legitimate property.
I accept that a person is a human being in-utero, and I would never argue that a parent has the right to determine whether a child who has been born is truly a person – being that such an argument could be used to excuse infanticide – but I believe that when discussing human beings who have not been born, arguments about personhood can be distracting from the moral dilemma which I regard as the central issue of abortion.
I believe that individual liberty includes the right to judge whether it is truly more despicable either to terminate a pregnancy or to risk bringing a child into a world where it and its mother may suffer for the remainder of their lives.
Additionally, the thought that an abortionist and / or a woman who has an abortion could be prosecuted – and potentially even charged with murder – for participating in an abortion, is something that I would never want any segment of our civil society to be free to permit.
I think it is obvious to everyone today that there is a shortage of doctors in this country – and, to an even greater extent, the world – in general, and I would hate to see doctors with skills and educations involving medical issues other than those directly pertaining to the performance of abortions imprisoned or executed for ever having participated in the performance of such a procedure, as much as I would hate to see any potential mother who is concerned about the world their child would grow up in imprisoned and / or executed for simply being a victim of her socioeconomic environment, and for not wanting to pass-on such harm to the unborn out of a sense of misdirected resentment of the condition of her society and of humanity in general.

With regard to the states’ rights aspect of the abortion issue, I am generally in favor of the freedom of choice – that is, for states to choose the majority of their own policies – and I also – for the most part – support Ronald Reagan’s saying “vote with your feet”, meaning that if someone doesn’t like the laws of the state in which they are living, he or she can always move.
However, considering that the federal and state governments exercise jurisdiction over such large geographical territories, that pregnancies last for shorter periods of time than election cycles, and that many women who can barely afford to pay for abortions also – most likely – could not afford to relocate to a state where abortion laws would be more permissive, I feel that it would be too costly and time-consuming for citizens to have any abortion policy other than the following:
I would support an amendment to the Constitution which would require the states to legalize all forms of abortion - including partial-birth abortion [this was my position in 2011, but as of 2015 I am opposed to partial-birth abortion] - and to prohibit the county and municipal governmental agencies under their jurisdictions from making abortion illegal and/or punishable.
In summary, while I applaud Ron Paul for his consistent support of states' rights on the abortion issue - as well as for exercising restraint from joining Rick Santorum and others in support of a constitutional amendment prohibiting abortion - because the states do ultimately have the final say on the matter. However, because I feel that the federal courts should not have any involvement in the issue - as they have shown themselves incapable of consistently supporting the freedom of choice - I would support the only legalistic method of permitting abortion nationwide, which is to allow three-quarters of the states to compel the remainder of the states to enact an abortion policy which such a supermajority would favor.



2. Gay Marriage
      Ron Paul supports the Defense of Marriage Act (DoMA), which legally defines marriage as between one man and one woman at the federal level, and also permits states to choose whether to recognize gay marriages valid in other states.
      As in the abortion issue – as much as I respect Congressman Paul’s consistent support for states’ rights – I must again differ with him on the issue of gay marriage, although not to such an extreme degree as I would differ with him on abortion policy.
      I feel that the fact that the federal government does not recognize same-sex marriages which are valid in states does not merely create a national problem, but an international problem.
      Being that a person can become a U.S. citizen by marrying a U.S. citizen, a partner to a same-sex marriage which is valid in the state in which he or she resides may be deported if that person is a foreign national, due to the fact that the federal government does not recognize the validity of that marriage.
      In order to remedy this problem, I would recommend that the Defense of Marriage Act be repealed, and replaced with a bill that would prohibit the federal government from adopting any legal definition of marriage, require the federal government to recognize same-sex marriages which are valid in any state, and require states to recognize same-sex marriages which are valid in other states.
      I would note that such a bill would still permit the states to choose whether to legalize same-sex marriage in the first place.



3. Immigration
      I agree with Congressman Paul that to build a fence along the entire span of the U.S.-Mexico border would be costly, impractical, and unnecessary; that we should continue to promote a path to legal citizenship for immigrants; that there should be no national identification card; and that the eVerify turns makes the potential employers into de-facto border patrol agents.
      I also believe that our mutual opposition to the war on drugs, gun control, and the federal minimum wage law would help ameliorate many of the problems associated with Mexican and Central-American immigration into the U.S.; and I support Ron Paul’s opposition to the federal Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (D.R.E.A.M.) Act.
      However, I would criticize the congressman for his stance on policy regarding English as the official national language, birthright citizenship, state “D.R.E.A.M.” acts, border patrol and enforcement, and amnesty.

English as the National Language:
      I would oppose efforts to make English the official language (for the purpose of written government documents) at the national or federal level because I fear that such legislation could be used to give the federal government the power to prohibit states from conducting any official government business in languages other than English.
      While I understand the sentiment held by many Americans that prospective U.S. citizens should learn English, I would emphasize that the wave of immigration from Spanish-speaking countries has been more persistent than most other waves of immigration throughout U.S. history, so – in truth – it only appears that Spanish-speaking immigrants to the United States are not learning English, due to the fact that many of them have only arrived relatively recently, while most of those who arrived earlier have already learned English.

Birthright Citizenship:
      While Ron Paul opposes the national birthright citizenship provision codified in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, I would argue that that provision only entitles native-born individuals to become U.S. citizens if they willingly subject themselves to the jurisdiction of some state (this is to emphasize that no government may force a person to submit to its jurisdiction and become a citizen).
      Since individuals – in the acts of becoming citizens – voluntarily subject themselves to the jurisdiction of governments, there is a mutual exchange between citizen and government – i.e., government protection in exchange for citizen allegiance and other responsibilities – so I disagree with the notion that birthright citizenship has anything to do with entitlement or irresponsibility.
      I feel that the birthright citizenship provision of the 14th Amendment should be interpreted as meaning that no person who shall have been born in a territory under the jurisdiction of the U.S. government – whether that person’s parents are citizens or illegal immigrants – may be denied application for citizenship or prohibited from willingly subjecting himself or herself to the jurisdiction of an American government in whose jurisdictional territory he or she resides or was born.

The Federal D.R.E.A.M. Act:
      While I would join Ron Paul in an effort to repeal the federal Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (D.R.E.A.M.) Act – especially in light of the fact that the D.R.E.A.M. Act was defeated by the U.S. Congress, and only became law through an executive order signed by President Obama – I would criticize Congressman Paul for his opposition to state D.R.E.A.M.-Act-type legislation, such as the type signed into law by Texas Governor Rick Perry and California Governor Jerry Brown.
      While I do not believe that it is within the federal government’s authority to provide welfare for illegal immigrants – especially in light of the facts that the U.S. Congress defeated the federal D.R.E.A.M. Act bill, that it constitutes specific individual welfare rather than a general public good, and that illegal immigrants not having welfare does not interfere with the regulation of interstate commerce in that there is no conceivable way it could provoke the states to practice domestic protectionism – I feel that state welfare for illegal immigrants is a step in the right direction, but only if the institution and proceedings of such state governments are non-coercive and subject to traditional common contract law.
      I would also note that D.R.E.A.M.-Act-type legislation does not grant citizenship, but only permanent residency, and that that residency status and such welfare are only given to illegal immigrants who have completed either a high school diploma or a General Educational Development (G.E.D.), are in good legal standing in regards to their criminal records, and have completed either at least two years of a higher-education program or two years in military service.
      Additionally, there are many individuals who could be assisted by this legislation who did not even become illegal immigrants through any fault or awareness of their own; namely, those who were brought to this country by their illegal-immigrant parents when they were children.
      However, despite my support of state D.R.E.A.M.-Act-type legislation at the state level, I would stress that state-provided social welfare for illegal immigrants would likely be proven inefficient and unnecessary in the event that a concerted effort by county and municipal governments, religious organizations, charity organizations, labor unions, businesses, and private donors would be shown to be capable of sufficiently providing illegal immigrants with the job skills, education, housing, funding, and legal statuses which they would need in order to become faithful residents of the United States, as well as productive members of the work force and the tax base.

Amnesty and Crime:
      Ron Paul has expressed the opinion that anyone who crosses the U.S.-Mexico border without documentation – or comes into this country in any other illegal manner – should be arrested and deported to the country from whence they came. He has also said that he would not support "automatic citizenship by a vote", referring to proposed amnesty bills (he also opposes amnesty through executive order). However, he has also stated that he is not in favor of “rounding up eleven million people” who are in this country illegally.
      Even after outlining a policy on illegal immigration which I believe is as lenient as my interpretation of the Constitution would allow, I am not ashamed to say that I support amnesty for illegal immigrants. I believe that the simple action of knowingly and deliberately crossing an international border illegally should not be considered a criminal transgression.
      This is because – in the act of crossing a border which is artificially created and arbitrarily defined by governments – there is no corpus delicti (which is to say that it is a victimless crime) as there is no real person who can rightfully claim that either himself of his property was harmed.
      This is not to say, however, that an immigrant who – after crossing a border or coming into this country in any other illegal manner – physically hurts someone; steals, damages, or trespasses on someone’s property; or comes to participate in a government social welfare program through fraudulent means, and / or without contributing what he or she would be expected to contribute were that person a citizen (and by “social welfare”, I mean to include public defense; i.e., protection by the police and the military) – should not be prosecuted and punished to the full extent of the law for doing so.
      This is also not to say that a citizen of a foreign government should not be extradited, prosecuted, and punished by that government for breaking a law against illegal emigration, as long as that foreign government was constituted in a manner which is consistent with traditions of common contract law.
      I would add that the immigration policies which have been considered by the state of Arizona, and a town in Alabama, attempted to unilaterally enforce would only serve to turn the Hispanic populations of those areas into even more of pariahs than they already are by making race and skin color – rather than reasonable suspicion that some corpus delicti crime were being committed – sufficient grounds for police confrontation, arrest, and deportation.
      I would add that, in a situation in which there were reasonable suspicion that a corpus delicti crime had been committed by a person, and if it were discovered, following this, upon a search incident to arrest, or during the course of subsequent legal proceedings, that that person had come into this country illegally, only in this situation would I find deportation appropriate.
     Although I share Paul's concerns about the unchecked power of the executive to do anything, including to issue an order bringing about amnesty, I would support any efforts by a president to pardon non-violent immigrants who entered the U.S. unlawfully.

Amnesty and Freedom of Trade:
      I would also argue that an open-border immigration policy would promote the freedom of trade. I believe that – in the same manner as the federal minimum wage law – the international border is an artificial barrier which is arbitrarily delineated by government in order to restrain the freedom of trade, and to act as a protectionist measure to secure and entrench the wealth, prosperity, and social status of the most economically privileged, societally well-adjusted, and linguistically fluent within a nation at the expense of all others.

Amnesty and Politics:
      I feel that the right’s support of an immigration policy which includes arrest and deportation and opposes welfare and the left’s support of a policy that includes welfare and opposes arrests and deportation only serve as distractions from each side’s mutual resentment of the fact that the tendency of immigrants to tolerate lower wages contributes to a decline in the average market value of entry-level labor, which threatens the standards in wages, benefits, and conditions of jobs held by Americans of both greater political persuasions who are accustomed to their middle-to-high socioeconomic statuses and speak English as a first language.
      I believe that having a federal immigration policy which promotes either or both deportation of and welfare for illegal immigrants only serves to confuse attitudes towards immigrants on a large scale, and so – for that reason – I would favor an immigration policy which permits state, county, and municipal governments the liberty to determine labor standards and welfare for illegals; and religious organizations, charity organizations, labor unions, businesses, private donors, and the voting public the freedom to lobby the representatives in government to alter the law in order to affect the changes which they wish to see in immigration policy according to the subjective values of each organization, community, and individual which consents to subject itself to the mechanisms, proceedings, and regulations of governments.

Borders:
      Although Paul does not support the construction of a border fence - and said that ideally, in a libertarian society, borders would be "open and blurred" - he has also said “you can’t just say borders don’t count”. He has also said that he wants more agents on the border, suggesting that U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan should return to the U.S., in order to supply additional border enforcement.
      I believe that if we were to take Ron Paul’s suggestion that federal drug laws be repealed, and apply the Non-Aggression Principle consistently, then the amount of border agents currently deployed, or a lesser amount, would be sufficient to enforce laws against violent crime at the border, and only laws against violent crime, being that immigrants would not have to be apprehended for merely crossing the border and/or trafficking drugs.



4. Election Reform
      Although Ron Paul has said “All of [Lysander] Spooner’s writings are worthy of study” and “I don’t criticize Lysander”, in my opinion, Paul has not been sufficiently vocal about putting 19th-Century individualist anarchist Lysander Spooner’s ideas into practice.
      Spooner wrote in his 1870 essay No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority that the secret-ballot election system used in the United States is illegitimate. Spooner explained that elections of political representatives involve “contracts of surety”, which, according to English contract law dating back to the 1670s, are supposed to be written, signed, sealed, delivered, and witnessed by all parties involved in making the contract.
      Since representatives take no formal, written oath to support the Constitution, nor to represent the people who elected them, there is no formal authority for representatives to vote on the behalf of their districts’ constituents.
      I would criticize Paul for failing to point this out, and for declining to recommend legislation requiring an “open-ballot” system, which would require election results to be made public, and require representatives to swear written oaths to support the Constitution and to represent their districts’ constituents, and also possibly apportion the U.S. House of Representatives according to the number of citizens willingly voting in elections, rather than on the sheer number of people living in each district.
     I would also criticize Paul for failing to publicly advocate removing the protections from prosecution for certain classes of crime which our elected representatives currently enjoy, and for failing to advocate legalizing the questioning of public debt.



5. Taxation
      Dr. Paul has entertained the idea of eliminating taxes altogether, expressing criticism of taxation as coercive. He has also advocated drastically reducing the size and scope of the federal government, in order to fund national common defense and little else.
      Although he has entertained the idea of eliminating taxes, and the idea that all government revenues should be earned on a volunteer basis, he has also suggested that federal taxes be reduced to 10% of each person’s income.
      This 10% suggestion is at-odds with Paul’s notion that individual income taxation, and the 16th Amendment which provides for it, are illegitimate. I would criticize Paul for being inconsistent about taxes in this manner.
      As of 2011, I supported the “Pay-Gap Tax”, which I proposed. The legislation, which I termed the “Accelerated Graduated Income Ratio Tax Act”, would tax “personal income in proportion to the salary of the highest-paid employee of a company”, “divided by the annual income of the average [paid] employee of the same company”.
      However, I no longer support my own proposal, because I oppose taxation on personal income, as well as corporate income, on the grounds that income is wealth generated from production. I argue, as the Georgists argue, that production should not be taxed, but instead left alone, and government should be funded only through fines on the abuse of land. Income and sales should not be taxed, because of the potential that such taxes will have the effect of discouraging earning money and selling.
      Although I oppose income taxes, I would have appreciated if Paul, apparently a supporter of income taxation, had suggested, as Milton Friedman proposed, the Negative Income Tax, which taxes personal income over a certain amount, and gives to those earning less than that amount, an amount equal to half of the difference between that amount and the person’s earnings.



6. Tactics for Achieving Socioeconomic Justice
      Ron Paul has expressed support for churches and private charity - as well as people’s neighbors, and “the community” more generally - supplying services that are now typically provided by government; both in general, and specifically in regards to medical care.
      While I commend him for this, I believe that churches, private charities, and communities, are too narrow a set of organizations to name, in order to successfully drive the point home that a plethora of non-governmental agencies could step in to provide services where the government has failed to do so.
      In addition to private charities and religious organizations, I would advocate that services now typically provided by government, be supplied by non-profits, not-for-profits, consumer awareness and advocacy groups, mutuals and consumer cooperatives, mutual aid societies, egalitarian labor-managed firms (E.L.M.F.s, i.e., cooperatives), and labor unions.
      Being a laissez-faire free-market capitalist, Paul and other libertarians are not as inclined as the anti-authoritarians of the left are, to advocate direct-action tactics or mutual aid societies. Libertarians all too often recommend that “the private sector” supply services typically provided by “the public sector” (i.e., government), and using this nomenclature and this dichotomy, unfortunately, only serves to confuse the distinction between profit-oriented capitalist agencies and agencies founded on the principle of voluntary cooperation.



7. The Federal Reserve System
      Although Ron Paul was the only candidate in the 2008 presidential election supporting an audit of the Federal Reserve, and one of the few prominent political figures to bring this issue to the forefront of public discussion to date, I would criticize Paul for stating that he does not think it is necessary to abolish the Federal Reserve altogether.
      Although Paul wrote a book entitled End the Fed, and many of his supporters want to see the agency abolished, Paul has not been consistent about his opposition to the Federal Reserve’s existence. While I agree with Paul and other libertarians that increased congressional oversight over the agency is needed, I do not believe that Congress should control the agency, as that would leave monetary policy subject to politicization.
      I believe that there is no formal constitutional authority for the Federal Reserve to exist, and that generations have fought to end the central banks of their day. I believe that interest rates should be chosen through negotiations between borrowers and lenders, that the federal government should not insure bank deposits, and that the supervision and regulation of banks should and can be performed through negotiation between their employees and their customers.
      I also believe – contrary to Paul’s position that the country should return to a gold standard - that gold should not become the nation’s only currency, but instead that in the absence of a central bank and an official currency, ordinary people who engage in trade will produce a wide variety of commodities and contracts to perform the functions of currencies, including precious metals, gems, non-perishable foods, local currencies, crypto-currencies and e-currencies, and mutuum checks (which combine features of paper currencies, checks, and contracts).



8. U.S.-Israeli Foreign Policy
      Although Paul has sufficiently emphasized the need for the federal government to end military and domestic foreign aid to all countries, and pointed out on the floor of the U.S. House that Israel encouraged Hamas (which the U.S. regards as a terrorist group) to run in a Palestinian election, I would criticize Paul for neglecting to mention the roles which the State of Israel has played in exposing the United States to various dangers.
      Paul has not publicly mentioned the U.S.S. Liberty incident, an incident during the Six-Day War of 1967 when Israeli planes sank an American marine vessel in the Mediterranean Sea, killing all 34 onboard, and blaming the bombing on Syria, which was at that time united with Egypt as one nation, the United Arab Republic.
      Paul has not treated the State of Israel as what it is; the only sovereign Middle Eastern country that has successfully attacked an American military target, and the only Middle Eastern country (aside from Pakistan) to possess undeclared nuclear weapons, and to be a non-signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
      Although Paul was one of the politicians who was the most critical of Israel during his tenure, he has neglected to criticize the influence of the American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee (A.I.P.A.C.) on American politics. He has also neglected to criticize the disproportionate amount of Jewish Americans, Zionists, and American-Israeli dual citizens serving in the Supreme Court, the presidential cabinet, and the U.S. Congress.
      Paul has said that he wants to “respect Israel’s sovereignty”, and that it is no business of his whether Israel chooses to relocate its foreign embassy from Tel-Aviv to Jerusalem, or whether “the City of Jerusalem, whole and undivided, shall be the capital of Israel”. While I agree that such decisions should generally be the prerogative of the sovereign nation in question, I believe that the 1967 “annexation” of East Jerusalem by Israel, was actually a conquest, illegal under international law, and that, therefore, the State of Israel does not have the right to the entire city, whether as its capital or as any portion of its territory.
      Additionally, although Paul met with Rabbi Yisroel Dovid Weiss of the anti-Zionist Jewish activist group Neturei Karta, Paul does not seem to have learned anything from the meeting. If he had, he would have emerged from the meeting saying that man-made government shall not exist among the Jews, save for submission to the laws of foreign nations, and constitution of community courts under the Sanhedrin, with duly-ordinated rabbis serving in courts of 23 in small communities, and 71 in Jerusalem.



10. U.S.-Iranian Foreign Policy
      Although Paul has sufficiently emphasized that the Islamic Republic of Iran has never attacked the United States - and that the U.S. has, in fact, provoked Iran in the past, first by overthrowing their democratically-elected leader Mossadegh in 1953, and later, in the 1980s, by supporting and arming (with Israel's help) both sides in the Iraq-Iran War – Paul has not defended Iran as much as I would like him to.
      Additionally, although I would commend Paul for his openness to Obama’s 2015 “Iran deal” regarding that country’s nuclear weapons program, I do not agree with his support of the deal, being that it would require the U.S. to help Iran protect their weapons. I do not believe that supporting the Iran deal for this reason is a true “laissez-faire” stance as applied to foreign policy. I believe that any obligation on the part of the U.S. to help protect another country militarily (including our membership in N.A.T.O.), constitutes an example of the type of “entangling alliance” against which George Washington warned us.
      While Paul has stated that there is no evidence that Iran is developing nuclear weapons, I feel that he has not sufficiently emphasized that Iran has signed the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, while the State of Israel has not. I feel that the juxtaposition of Iran with Israel is important regarding this issue, being that Israel’s safety is often given as the justification for ginning up fear of a nuclear-armed Iran.
      However, I would commend Paul for attempting to push back against right-wing insistence that “Ahmadinejad said Iran wants to push Israel into the sea”, clarifying that the original quote was from the Ayatollah - not Ahmadinejad – and that the Ayatollah said “the regime which is currently occupying Jerusalem shall vanish from the pages of history,” rather than a quote directly calling for violence against the State of Israel or the Jewish people.



11. The Conflict in Libya
      Although I admire Paul for his insistence that there was no congressional authorization for the 2011 bombing of Libya by the U.S., I believe that there was congressional authorization, however, there was no explicit declaration of war by Congress. I agree with Paul that a declaration of war by Congress would have been necessary to justify that action, and I would commend his opposition to N.A.T.O. commission of U.S. troops.
      I would criticize Ron Paul for saying “we don’t know who we’re fighting” in Libya, “we could be helping al-Qaeda”. While I agree that we shouldn’t be involved in the Middle East because we don’t know who we’re fighting - and because we often train, fund, and arm one group of rebels, or a government, which uses our money and arms to fight another group of rebels or a potential government – I would argue that not only could we be helping al-Qaeda; we are al-Qaeda. Al-Qaeda – meaning “the base” - was established in the 1980s under the Reagan Administration as a base of mujahideen fighters in Afghanistan and Pakistan, which we trained, funded, and armed, in order to fight the Soviets.
      Additionally, Paul apparently had no knowledge that one of the purposes of U.S. intervention in Libya was to back up French and Italian oil interests in the region, as well as Western interest in the country's gold reserves. If he knew about those things, he certainly didn’t mention it publicly.



12. Issues Pertaining to the Events of September 11th, 2001
      Although I would commend Paul for his support for a new investigation of the 9/11 attacks, I believe that he has some of his facts wrong on the attacks, and also that he has been inconsistent about whether the Bush Administration had foreknowledge of the attacks, and/or was involved in its planning.
      Although one of his aides claimed that on September 11th, 2001, Paul told members of his staff that   the Bush Administration had foreknowledge of the attacks, he has refused to take a consistent position about this publicly.
      Paul has stated that he believed that Osama bin Laden claimed responsibility for the attacks. Although it is true that bin Laden praised the attacks, he denied responsibility for them twice on video. Paul was wrong on this, and he has also declined to bring up the business (oil) connections between the bin Laden and Bush families.
      Additionally, Paul has never publicly entertained the possibility that the State of Israel helped carry out the attacks, nor that it at least had something to do with the planning, even though Israel, along with Russia and Italy, was one of the countries that warned the U.S. of possible upcoming attacks before September 2001.



13. Issues Pertaining to Obama’s Citizenship and Eligibility for the Presidency
      I would criticize Paul for never having publicly entertained the possibility that Barack Obama is not a natural-born citizen of the United States (and thus ineligible for the presidency), and for declining to recommend that Obama be investigated for covering up his past and suppressing the publication of his identification, Social Security, travel and passport, and education records.
     I would like to see a formal congressional investigation of Obama's eligibility, and in the event that a lawsuit concerning that matter were to end up in the Supreme Court, I would like to see justices Sotomayor and Kagen recuse themselves from the case. I also support Reverend James David Manning's "C.I.A. Columbia Obama trial", I believe that the case has standing under the 10th Amendment, and I would like to see Barack Obama face his accusers in a New York State court.



14. Abolition of Federal Departments
      Although I agree with Ron Paul’s support of abolishing the Department of Commerce, the Department of Energy, the Department of Education, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, I would criticize him for neglecting to support the abolition of the Department of Labor, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Health and Human Services, and the Department of Homeland Security, as well as for supporting the abolition of the Department of the Interior.
      There is no specifically enumerated constitutional authority for federal involvement in labor affairs, agriculture, nor health. While Paul supports abolishing the Department of Commerce, it would seem natural that he would also oppose the Department of Labor, being that both of these agencies were created as parts of a single agency (the Department of Commerce and Labor), just over a hundred years ago, separating during a progressive period of expanding federal government.
      Additionally, I do not believe that a Department of Homeland Security is necessary to support the coordination of the activities of the F.B.I., C.I.A., and N.S.A.. Paul has advocated returning military spending to pre-2001 levels, so it would seem natural that he also support returning the scope of the security state to levels before the creation of the D.H.S.. However, although he opposes many of the N.S.A.’s activities, and opposes C.I.A. intervention in the affairs of foreign governments, he has not suggested that the Department of Homeland Security be abolished.
      I disagree with Paul’s support of abolishing the Department of the Interior, being that the agency was established in 1849, making it among the first five federal executive departments. Also, I believe that the Department of the Interior does have an arguable reason to exist, being that the federal government has the authority to regulate commerce with Native American tribes.



      To summarize, I believe that the key differences between Ron Paul and myself are as follows: (1) Paul is more pro-life than I am; (2) I am more supportive of gay marriage than Paul is; (3) Paul has been inconsistent on immigration, and I am more pro-immigration than he is; (4) I have suggested reforming the secret-ballot election system to an open-ballot one, while Paul has not; (5) I support abolishing the taxation of personal income, while Paul has been inconsistent on that issue; (6) I have been more specific than Paul has about the set of organizations which can and should provide services that are now typically provided by government; (7) I support abolishing the Federal Reserve, while Paul has been inconsistent on that issue; (8) I have been more openly critical of the State of Israel than Paul has; (9) Paul and I have disagreed on several points of U.S.-Iranian foreign policy, although there is no consistent trend in these policy differences that show us to be on different “sides” of the issue of Iran in general; (10) Paul and I have disagreed on several points concerning the 2011 intervention in Libya, although there is no consistent trend in these policy differences that show us to be on different “sides” of the issue of Libya in general; (11) I have been more outspoken than Paul has in suggesting possible Bush Administration and Israeli involvement in planning the 9/11 attacks; (12) I have been more outspoken than Paul has concerning Obama’s citizenship and eligibility for the presidency; and (13) Paul and I differ about which federal departments ought to be abolished, and which should not.

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