So Blue Honey Bear - Am reproducing this story, as all this stuff
links....dead children at Littleton, and the killers were victims
also.....so see this artist who painted this mural at Denver and read
attached on Littleton.

Now.....who was the artist who made the Madonna with Dung.....is this
the same guy for my memory escapes me here.    Hilliar Clinton though
his work should be displayed while Giullian wanted to cut off the
milllions of dolars in funds.

Now Masons from what I hear - well I wil forwrd something on that too,
for there is something so sick about this mural and I think the Masons
were somehow used and this Artist is the sickest of the lot....note the
classes in death at Littleton and the preoccupatio with death at this
Airport with this mural......these are evil sick people and the children
are being affected by this suff.

If that is art - well to each his own, but this makes thew hole city
look sick.   Murder and death of children anothr art form for these kids
at Littleton made a movie first, with helpt of this FBI agents
son....who then invesigated Littleton.
Well that is show biz....arts and sciences wonder why particular pont
made to make them constitutional entities....Article I, Section 8
.....sounds like Hogarth and Benjamin Franklin hand here, for Hogarth
had copyright law enacted in England and Benjamin was in this Hells Fire
Club with him, a Satanist Illuminati group today called Bohemian
Club.....and they have I believe, the heart of Paul Whitehead.

Hogarths copper plates melted and put into bombs and dumped over
England......also they have a Hells Fire Bomb....see connection here
between Phineas and Sons of Eli and boy they were bad stuff.

Symbolism....keyed to murder, war, mayhem, assassinations, drugs....its
all there.

A Saba



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columbine - tragedy and recovery
'Journey's' travels seek peaceful end
By Karen E. Crummy
Special to The Denver Post
July 27 - They call it "The Journey,'' and the five young Colorado
artists who created the giant, two-sided mural say it symbolizes the
first steps toward ridding the world of violence, hate and other
negative forces.
"It is our way of making a positive step towards the future,'' artist
Valerie Wolny, 24, said Monday at the Boys and Girls Club of Metro
Denver's branch on Inca Street. "We believe that if you can heal a
community, you can heal the world.''
Wolny, who worked with inmates through Platte Valley Correction Services
to paint a mural on prison walls last year, and the other artists say
the Columbine High massacre affected them and provided inspiration for
the work, which is 12 feet high and 16 feet wide.
They won an $8,500 grant from Assets for Colorado Youth to help finish
the artwork at the University of Northern Colorado and take it around
the state through next year. They'll complete it at the Boys and Girls
Club Pope branch this week, and then it will be on view at Cole Middle
School in north Denver through Aug. 7.
When the mural rolls into communities across Colorado, students will be
able to create butterflies and flowers and attach them to it.
"It gives others a chance to participate in the positive transformation
from war and gangs to hope and growth,'' said artist Craig Adams, 18, a
recent graduate of South High School who plans to attend Red Rocks
Community College.
Supervised by muralist and UNC Professor Leo Tanguma, artists Wolny,
Adams, Frank Garza, Travis Klopf and Eleanor Yates are finishing up the
wood-framed, sandbased colorful mural. It depicts people of all races
and many ethnic backgrounds and represents community and world problems.
On the "world'' side of the mural, racially diverse mothers and famous
people such as Eleanor Roosevelt and Nelson Mandela are pushing down
symbols of war and greed.
As they try to suppress the negative influences, their arms and bodies
rise from a cocoon to a butterfly.
On the "community'' side, gang members, negative media images, and guns
attempt to hold down young people. Chains break from the bodies of the
captured as they free themselves from the evil forces. They rise from
seeds to col umbine flowers blooming under a dove. A mirror is carved in
the shape of a root leading from the seed to the open flower.
"We want young people to look at themselves in this mirror and see that
they want to move up and beyond, not stay stuck underground,'' said
Garza, 25.
Copyright 1999 The Denver Post. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy



A. Saba
Dare To Call It Conspiracy

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