From:  http://www.swans.com/

This recent article truly lays out the non-stop lies
repeated without question in the media about genocide and
cleansing in Yugoslavia.  BTW, now that spring is here, why
haven't we heard anything else about finding all those mass
graves??? ~ VR




May 22, 2000



Trade liberty for safety or money and you'll end up with neither. Liberty,
like a grain of salt, easily dissolves.
The power of questioning -- not simply believing -- has no friends. Yet
liberty depends on it.




Note from the Editor:  The Peter Weiz Price, an award funded by the German
Marshall Fund, was won this year by Steven Erlanger of The New York Times.
According to The Times, the prize, worth $10,000, "rewards excellence and
originality in reporting and analyzing European and transatlantic affairs."
Excellence and originality in reporting? What was excellent about the lies
and disinformation passed on to the US public but the lies and the
disinformation? And what originality did this reporter, this Bureau Chief,
demonstrate in the war zones of Serbia and Kosovo? Didn't he simply
regurgitate whatever propaganda his NATO masters provided him on a daily
basis? Read our lead article, written by Michael Parenti. Then you'll
understand that when journalists serve the interests of their masters they
get a recompense. It's a win-win situation. It's a self-serving system doing
the rounds. Meantime the truth has gone AWOL.





The Media and Their Atrocities
by Michael Parenti







"Believe nothing,
no matter where you read it,
or who said it, no matter if
I have said it, unless it agrees
with your own reason and
your common sense."
-- Buddha



For the better part of a decade the U.S. public has been bombarded with a
media campaign to demonize the Serbian people and their elected leaders.
During that time, the U.S. government has pursued a goal of breaking up
Yugoslavia into a cluster of small, weak, dependent, free-market
principalities. Yugoslavia was the only country in Eastern Europe that would
not dismantle its welfare state and public sector economy. It was the only
one that did not beg for entry into NATO. It was--and what's left of it,
still is--charting an independent course not in keeping with the New World
Order.

Targeting the Serbs

Of the various Yugoslav peoples, the Serbs were targeted for demonization
because they were the largest nationality and the one most opposed to the
breakup of Yugoslavia. But what of the atrocities they committed? All sides
committed atrocities in the fighting that has been encouraged by the western
powers over the last decade, but the reporting has been consistently
one-sided. Grisly incidents of Croat and Muslim atrocities against the Serbs
rarely made it into the U.S. press, and when they did they were accorded only
passing mention. 1 Meanwhile Serb atrocities were played up and sometimes
even fabricated, as we shall see. Recently, three Croatian generals were
indicted by the Hague War Crimes Tribunal for the bombardment and deaths of
Serbs in Krajina and elsewhere. Where were the U.S. television crews when
these war crimes were being committed? John Ranz, chair of Survivors of the
Buchenwald Concentration Camp, USA, asks: Where were the TV cameras when
hundreds of Serbs were slaughtered by Muslims near Srebrenica? 2 The official
line, faithfully parroted in the U.S. media, is that Bosnian Serb forces
committed all the atrocities at Srebrenica.

Are we to trust U.S. leaders and the corporate-owned news media when they
dish out atrocity stories? Recall the five hundred premature babies whom
Iraqi soldiers laughingly ripped from incubators in Kuwait? A story repeated
and believed until exposed as a total fabrication years later. During the
Bosnian war in 1993, the Serbs were accused of pursuing an official policy of
rape. "Go forth and rape" a Bosnian Serb commander supposedly publicly
instructed his troops. The source of that story never could be traced. The
commander's name was never produced. As far as we know, no such utterance was
ever made. Even the New York Times belatedly ran a tiny retraction, coyly
allowing that "the existence of 'a systematic rape policy' by the Serbs
remains to be proved." 3

Bosnian Serb forces supposedly raped anywhere from 25,000 to 100,000 Muslim
women, the stories varied. The Bosnian Serb army numbered not more than
30,000 or so, many of whom were engaged in desperate military engagements. A
representative from Helsinki Watch noted that stories of massive Serbian
rapes originated with the Bosnian Muslim and Croatian governments and had no
credible supporting evidence. Common sense would dictate that these stories
be treated with the utmost skepticism--and not be used as an excuse for an
aggressive and punitive policy against Yugoslavia.

The "mass rape" propaganda theme was resuscitated in 1999 to justify the
continued NATO slaughter of Yugoslavia. A headline in the San Francisco
Examiner (April 26, 1999) tells us: "SERB TACTIC IS ORGANIZED RAPE, KOSOVO
REFUGEES SAY." No evidence or testimony is given to support the charge of
organized rape. Only at the bottom of the story, in the nineteenth paragraph,
do we read that reports gathered by the Kosovo mission of the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe found no such organized rape policy.
The actual number of rapes were in the dozens "and not many dozens,"
according to the OSCE spokesperson. This same story did note in passing that
the U.N. War Crimes Tribunal sentenced a Bosnian Croat military commander to
ten years in prison for failing to stop his troops from raping Muslim women
in 1993--an atrocity we heard little about when it was happening.

A few dozen rapes is a few dozen too many. But can it serve as one of the
justifications for a massive war? If Mr. Clinton wanted to stop rapes, he
could have begun a little closer to home in Washington D.C., where dozens of
rapes occur every month. Indeed, he might be able to alert us to how women
are sexually mistreated on Capitol Hill and in the White House itself.

The Serbs were blamed for the infamous Sarajevo market massacre. But
according to the report leaked out on French TV, Western intelligence knew
that it was Muslim operatives who had bombed Bosnian civilians in the
marketplace in order to induce NATO involvement. Even international
negotiator David Owen, who worked with Cyrus Vance, admitted in his memoir
that the NATO powers knew all along that it was a Muslim bomb. 4

On one occasion, notes Barry Lituchy, the New York Times ran a photo
purporting to be of Croats grieving over Serbian atrocities when in fact the
murders had been committed by Bosnian Muslims. The Times printed an obscure
retraction the following week. 5

The propaganda campaign against Belgrade has been so relentless that even
prominent personages on the Left--who oppose the NATO policy against
Yugoslavia--have felt compelled to genuflect before this demonization
orthodoxy, referring to unspecified and unverified Serbian "brutality" and
"the monstrous Milosevic." 6 Thus they reveal themselves as having been
influenced by the very media propaganda machine they criticize on so many
other issues. To reject the demonized image of Milosevic and of the Serbian
people is not to idealize them or claim that Serb forces are faultless or
free of crimes. It is merely to challenge the one-sided propaganda that laid
the grounds for NATO's aggression against Yugoslavia.

The Ethnic Cleansing Hype

Up until the NATO bombings began in March 1999, the conflict in Kosovo had
taken 2000 lives altogether from both sides, according to Kosovo Albanian
sources. Yugoslavian sources put the figure at 800. Such casualties reveal a
civil war, not genocide. Belgrade is condemned for the forced expulsion
policy of Albanians from Kosovo. But such expulsions began in substantial
numbers only after the NATO bombings, with thousands being uprooted by Serb
forces especially from areas where KLA mercenaries were operating

We should keep in mind that tens of thousands also fled Kosovo because it was
being mercilessly bombed by NATO, or because it was the scene of sustained
ground fighting between Yugoslav forces and the KLA, or because they were
just afraid and hungry. An Albanian woman crossing into Macedonia was eagerly
asked by a news crew if she had been forced out by Serb police. She
responded: "There were no Serbs. We were frightened of the [NATO] bombs." 7 I
had to read this in the San Francisco Guardian, an alternative weekly, not in
the New York Times or Washington Post.

During the bombings, an estimated 70,000 to 100,000 Serbian residents of
Kosovo took flight (mostly north but some to the south), as did thousands of
Roma and others. 8 Were the Serbs ethnically cleansing themselves? Or were
these people not fleeing the bombing and the ground war? Yet, the refugee
tide caused by the bombing was repeatedly used by U.S. war makers as
justification for the bombing, a pressure put on Milosevic to allow "the safe
return of ethnic Albanian refugees." 9

While Kosovo Albanians were leaving in great numbers--usually well-clothed
and in good health, some riding their tractors, trucks, or cars, many of them
young men of recruitment age--they were described as being "slaughtered." It
was repeatedly reported that "Serb atrocities"--not the extensive ground war
with the KLA and certainly not the massive NATO bombing--"drove more than one
million Albanians from their homes." 10 More recently, there have been hints
that Albanian Kosovar refugees numbered nowhere near that number.

Serbian attacks on KLA strongholds or the forced expulsion of Albanian
villagers were described as "genocide." But experts in surveillance
photography and wartime propaganda charged NATO with running a "propaganda
campaign" on Kosovo that lacked any supporting evidence. State Department
reports of mass graves and of 100,000 to 500,000 missing Albanian men "are
just ludicrous," according to these independent critics. 11 Their findings
were ignored by the major networks and other national media.

Early in the war, Newsday reported that Britain and France were seriously
considering "commando assaults into Kosovo to break the pattern of Serbian
massacres of ethnic Albanians." 12 What discernible pattern of massacres? Of
course, no commando assaults were put into operation, but the story served
its purpose of hyping an image of mass killings.

An ABC "Nightline" show made dramatic and repeated references to the "Serbian
atrocities in Kosovo" while offering no specifics. Ted Kopple asked a group
of angry Albanian refugees, what specifically had they witnessed. They
pointed to an old man in their group who wore a wool hat. One of them
reenacted what the Serbs had done to him, throwing the man's hat to the
ground and stepping on it-"because the Serbs knew that his hat was the most
important thing to him." Kopple was appropriately horrified about this "war
crime," the only example offered in an hour-long program.

A widely circulated story in the New York Times, headlined "U.S. REPORT
OUTLINES SERB ATTACKS IN KOSOVO," tells us that the State Department issued
"the most comprehensive documentary record to date on atrocities." The report
concluded that there had been organized rapes and systematic executions. But
as one reads further and more closely into the article, one finds that State
Department reports of such crimes "depend almost entirely on information from
refugee accounts. There was no suggestion that American intelligence agencies
had been able to verify, most, or even many, of the accounts . . . and the
word 'reportedly' and 'allegedly' appear throughout the document." 13

British journalist Audrey Gillan interviewed Kosovo refugees about atrocities
and found an impressive lack of evidence or credible specifics. One woman
caught him glancing at the watch on her wrist, while her husband told him how
all the women had been robbed of their jewelry and other possessions. A
spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees talked of mass rapes
and what sounded like hundreds of killings in three villages, but when Gillan
pressed him for more precise information, he reduced it drastically to five
or six teenage rape victims. But he had not spoken to any witnesses, and
admitted that "we have no way of verifying these reports." 14

Gillan notes that some refugees had seen killings and other atrocities, but
there was little to suggest that they had seen it on the scale that was being
reported. One afternoon, officials in charge said there were refugees
arriving who talked of sixty or more being killed in one village and fifty in
another, but Gillan "could not find one eye-witness who actually saw these
things happening." Yet every day western journalists reported "hundreds" of
rapes and murders. Sometimes they noted in passing that the reports had yet
to be substantiated, but then why were such unverified stories being so
eagerly reported in the first place?

The Disappearing "Mass Graves"

After NATO forces occupied Kosovo, the stories about mass atrocities
continued fortissimo. The Washington Post reported that 350 ethnic Albanians
"might be buried in mass graves" around a mountain village in western Kosovo.
They "might be" or they might not be. These estimates were based on sources
that NATO officials refused to identify. Getting down to specifics, the
article mentions "four decomposing bodies" discovered near a large ash heap.
15

It was repeatedly announced in the first days of the NATO occupation that
10,000 Albanians had been killed (down from the 100,000 and even 500,000
Albanian men supposedly executed during the war). No evidence was ever
offered to support the 10,000 figure, nor even to explain how it was arrived
at so swiftly and surely while NATO troops were still moving into place and
did not occupy but small portions of the province.

Likewise, repeatedly unsubstantiated references to "mass graves," each
purportedly filled with hundreds or even thousands of Albanian victims also
failed to materialize. Through the summer of 1999, the media hype about mass
graves devolved into an occasional unspecified reference. The few sites
actually unearthed offered up as many as a dozen bodies or sometimes twice
that number, but with no certain evidence regarding causes of death or even
the nationality of victims. In some cases there was reason to believe the
victims were Serbs. 16

On April 19, 1999, while the NATO bombings of Yugoslavia were going on, the
State Department announced that up to 500,000 Kosovo Albanians were missing
and feared dead. On May 16, U.S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen, a former
Republican senator from Maine now serving in President Clinton's Democratic
Administration, stated that 100,000 military-aged ethnic Albanian men had
vanished and might have been killed by the Serbs. 17 Such widely varying but
horrendous figures from official sources went unchallenged by the media and
by the many liberals who supported NATO's "humanitarian rescue operation."
Among these latter were some supposedly progressive members of Congress who
seemed to believe they were witnessing another Nazi Holocaust.

On June 17, just before the end of the war, British Foreign Office Minister
Geoff Hoon said that "in more than 100 massacres" some 10,000 ethnic
Albanians had been killed (down from the 500,000 and 100,000 bandied about by
U.S. officials)." 18 A day or two after the bombings stopped, the Associate
Press and other news agency, echoing Hoon, reported that 10,000 Albanians had
been killed by the Serbs. 19 No explanation was given as to how this figure
was arrived at, especially since not a single war site had yet been
investigated and NATO forces had barely begun to move into Kosovo. On August
2, Bernard Kouchner, the United Nations' chief administrator in Kosovo (and
organizer of Doctors Without Borders), asserted that about 11,000 bodies had
been found in common graves throughout Kosovo. He cited as his source the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Republic of Yugoslavia (ICTY).
But the ICTY denied providing any such information. To this day, it is not
clear how Kouchner came up with his estimate. 20

As with the Croatian and Bosnian conflicts, the image of mass killings was
hyped once again. Repeatedly unsubstantiated references to "mass graves,"
each purportedly filled with hundreds or even thousands of Albanian victims
were publicized in daily media reports. In September 1999, Jared Israel did
an internet search for newspaper articles, appearing over the previous three
months including the words "Kosovo" and "mass grave." The report came back:
"More than 1000-- too many to list." Limiting his search to articles in the
New York Times , he came up with eighty, nearly one a day. Yet when it came
down to hard evidence, the mass graves seemed to disappear.

Thus, in mid-June, the FBI sent a team to investigate two of the sites listed
in the war-crimes indictment against Slobodan Milosevic, one purportedly
containing six victims and the other twenty. The team lugged 107,000 pounds
of equipment into Kosovo to handle what was called the "largest crime scene
in the FBI's forensic history," but it came up with no reports about mass
graves. Not long after, on July 1, the FBI team returned home, oddly with not
a word to say about their investigation. 21

Forensic experts from other NATO countries had similar experiences. A Spanish
forensic team, for instance, was told to prepare for at least 2,000
autopsies, but found only 187 bodies, usually buried in individual graves,
and showing no signs of massacre or torture. Most seemed to have been killed
by mortar shells and firearms. One Spanish forensic expert, Emilio Perez
Puhola, acknowledged that his team did not find one mass grave. He dismissed
the widely publicized references about mass graves as being part of the
"machinery of war propaganda." 22

The Washington Post reported that 350 ethnic Albanians "might be buried in
mass graves" around a mountain village in western Kosovo. Or they might not.
Such speculations were based on sources that NATO officials refused to
identify. Getting down to specifics, the article mentions "four decomposing
bodies" discovered near a large ash heap, with no details as to who they
might be or how they died. 23

In late August 1999, the Los Angeles Times tried to salvage the genocide
theme with a story about how the wells of Kosovo might be "mass graves in
their own right." The Times claimed that "many corpses have been dumped into
wells in Kosovo . . . Serbian forces apparently stuffed...many bodies of
ethnic Albanians into wells during their campaign of terror." 24 Apparently?
Whenever the story got down to specifics, it dwelled on only one village and
only one well--in which one body of a 39-year-old male was found, along with
three dead cows and a dog. Neither his nationality nor cause of death was
given. Nor was it clear who owned the well. "No other human remains were
discovered," the Times lamely concluded. As far as I know, neither the Los
Angeles Times nor any other media outlet ran any more stories of wells
stuffed with victims.

In one grave site after another, bodies were failing to materialize in any
substantial numbers-or any numbers at all. In July 1999, a mass grave in
Ljubenic, near Pec (an area of concerted fighting), believed to be holding
some 350 corpses, produced only seven after the exhumation. In Djacovica,
town officials claimed that one hundred ethnic Albanians had been murdered,
but there were no bodies because the Serbs had returned in the middle of the
night, dug them up, and carted them away, the officials seemed to believe. In
Pusto Selo, villagers claimed that 106 men were captured and killed by Serbs
at the end of March, but again no remains were discovered. Villagers once
more suggested that Serb forces must have come back and removed them. How
they accomplished this without being detected was not explained. In Izbica,
refugees reported that 150 ethnic Albanians were executed in March. But their
bodies were nowhere to be found. In Kraljan, 82 men were supposedly killed,
but investigators found not a single cadaver. 25

The worst incident of mass atrocities ascribed to Yugoslavian leader Slobodan
Milosevic allegedly occurred at the Trepca mine. As reported by U.S. and NATO
officials, the Serbs threw a thousand or more bodies down the shafts or
disposed of them in the mine's vats of hydrochloric acid. In October 1999,
the ICTY released the findings of Western forensic teams investigating
Trepca. Not one body was found in the mine shafts, nor was there any evidence
that the vats had ever been used in an attempt to dissolve human remains. 26

By late autumn of 1999, the media hype about mass graves had fizzled
noticeably. The many sites unearthed, considered to be the most notorious,
offered up a few hundred bodies altogether, not the thousands or tens of
thousands or hundreds of thousands previously trumpeted, and with no evidence
of torture or mass execution. In many cases, there was no certain evidence
regarding the nationality of victims. 27 No mass killings means that the
Hague War Crimes Tribunal indictment of Milosevic "becomes highly
questionable," notes Richard Gwyn. "Even more questionable is the West's
continued punishment of the Serbs." 28

No doubt there were graves in Kosovo that contained two or more persons
(which is NATO's definition of a "mass grave"). People were killed by bombs
and by the extensive land war that went on between Yugoslav and KLA forces.
Some of the dead, as even the New York Times allowed, "are fighters of the
Kosovo Liberation Army or may have died ordinary deaths"-- as would happen in
any large population over time. 29 And no doubt there were grudge killings
and summary executions as in any war, but not on a scale that would warrant
the label of genocide and justify the massive death and destruction and the
continuing misery inflicted upon Yugoslavia by the western powers.

We should remember that the propaganda campaign waged by NATO officials and
the major media never claimed merely that atrocities (murders and rapes)
occurred. Such crimes occur in every war, indeed, in many communities during
peacetime. What the media propaganda campaign against Yugoslavia charged was
that mass atrocities and mass rapes and mass murders had been perpetrated,
that is, genocide, as evidenced by mass graves.

In contrast to its public assertions, the German Foreign Office privately
denied there was any evidence that genocide or ethnic cleansing was ever a
component of Yugoslav policy: "Even in Kosovo, an explicit political
persecution linked to Albanian ethnicity is not verifiable. . . . The actions
of the [Yugoslav] security forces [were] not directed against the
Kosovo-Albanians as an ethnically defined group, but against the military
opponent and its actual or alleged supporters." 30

Still, Milosevic was indicted as a war criminal, charged with the forced
expulsion of Kosovar Albanians, and with summary executions of a hundred or
so individuals, again, alleged crimes that occurred after the NATO bombing
had started, yet were used as justification for the bombing. The biggest war
criminal of all is NATO and the political leaders who orchestrated the aerial
campaign of death and destruction. But here is how the White House and the
U.S. media reasoned at the time: Since the aerial attacks do not intend to
kill civilians, then presumably there is no liability and no accountability,
only an occasional apology for the regrettable mistakes-as if only the intent
of an action counted and not its ineluctable effects. In fact, a perpetrator
can be judged guilty of willful murder without explicitly intending the death
of a particular victim--as when the death results from an unlawful act that
the perpetrator knew would likely cause death. George Kenney, a former State
Department official under the Bush Administration, put it well: "Dropping
cluster bombs on highly populated urban areas doesn't result in accidental
fatalities. It is purposeful terror bombing." 31

In sum, through a process of monopoly control and distribution, repetition
and image escalation, the media achieve self-confirmation, that is, they find
confirmation for the images they fabricate in the images they have already
fabricated. Hyperbolic labeling takes the place of evidence: "genocide,"
"mass atrocities," "systematic rapes" and even "rape camps"--camps which no
one has ever located. Through this process, evidence is not only absent, it
becomes irrelevant.

So the U.S. major media (and much of the minor media) are not free and
independent, as they claim, they are not the watchdog of democracy but the
lapdog of the national security state. They help reverse the roles of victims
and victimizers, warmongers and peacekeepers, reactionaries and reformers.
The first atrocity, the first war crime committed in any war of aggression by
the aggressors is against the truth.

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

Michael Parenti is the author of Against Empire and America Besieged. His
most recent book is History as Mystery (City Lights Books).

Notes:

1. For instance, Raymond Bonner, "War Crimes Panel Finds Croat Troops
'Cleansed' the Serbs," New York Times, March 21, 1999, a revealing report
that has been ignored in the relentless propaganda campaign against the
Serbs.
2. John Ranz in his paid advertisement in the New York Times, April 29, 1993.
3. "Correction: Report on Rape in Bosnia," New York Times, October 23, 1993.
4. David Owen, Balkan Odyssey, p. 262.
5. Barry Lituchy, "Media Deception and the Yugoslav Civil War," in NATO in
the Balkans, p. 205; see also New York Times, August 7, 1993.
6. Both Noam Chomsky in his comments on Pacifica Radio, April 7, 1999, and
Alexander Cockburn in the Nation, May 10, 1999, describe Milosevic as
"monstrous" without offering any specifics.
7. Brooke Shelby Biggs, "Failure to Inform," San Francisco Bay Guardian, May
5, 1999, p. 25.
8 Washington Post, June 6, 1999.
9. See for instance, Robert Burns, Associated Press report, April 22, 1999.
10. For example, New York Times, June 15, 1998.
11. Charles Radin and Louise Palmer, "Experts Voice Doubts on Claims of
Genocide: Little Evidence for NATO Assertions," San Francisco Chronicle,
April 22, 1999.
12. Newsday, March 31, 1999.
13. New York Times, May 11, 1999.
14. Audrey Gillan "What's the Story?" London Review of Books, May 27, 1999.
15. Washington Post, July 10, 1999.
16. See for instance, Carlotta Gall, "Belgrade Sees Grave Site as Proof NATO
Fails to Protect Serbs," New York Times, August 27, 1999.
17. Both the State Department and Cohen's figures are reported in the New
York Times, November 11, 1999.
18. New York Times, November 11, 1999.
19. Associate Press release, June 18, 1999. Reuters (July 12, 1999) reported
that NATO forces had catalogued more than one hundred sites containing the
bodies of massacred ethnic Albanians.
20. Stratfor.com, Global Intelligence Update, "Where Are Kosovo's Killing
Fields?" Weekly Analysis, October 18, 1999.
21. Reed Irvine and Cliff Kincaid, "Playing the Numbers Game"
(www.aim.org/mm/1999/08/03.htm).
22. London Sunday Times, October 31, 1999.
23. Washington Post, July 10, 1999.
24. Los Angeles Times, August 28, 1999.
25. Stratfor.com, Global Intelligence Update, "Where Are Kosovo's Killing
Fields?" Weekly Analysis, October 18, 1999.
26. Richard Gwyn in the Toronto Star, November 3, 1999.
27. See for instance, Carlotta Gall, "Belgrade Sees Grave Site as Proof NATO
Fails to Protect Serbs," New York Times, August 27, 1999.
28. Richard Gwyn in the Toronto Star, November 3, 1999.
29. New York Times, November 11, 1999.
30. Intelligence reports from the German Foreign Office, January 12, 1999 and
October 29, 1998 to the German Administrative Courts, translated by Eric
Canepa, Brecht Forum, New York, April 20, 1999.
31. Teach-in, Leo Baeck Temple, Los Angeles, May 23, 1999.


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


Resources on the War in Yugoslavia and its Aftermath

Articles Published on Swans Regarding the War in Yugoslavia and its Aftermath





"Don't use that foreign word 'ideals.'
We have that excellent native word 'lies.' "
--Henrik Ibsen




<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths,
misdirections
and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and
minor
effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said,
CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html
<A HREF="http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to