Re: [CTRL] Boy's death spotlights bias in coverage of gays

2001-03-24 Thread Prudence L. Kuhn

-Caveat Lector-

In a message dated 03/23/2001 6:16:59 PM Eastern Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:

In an editorial, Voice writer Chris Crain scolded those who "shrug our
 shoulders and file away Jesse's murder as the random act of twisted minds
 that just so happen to be gay."
 

But isn't that just what it is?  Perverts come in all sexes, ages, colors and
even faiths.  This boy was killed by two perverts who happened to be gay. The
most amazing thing is how these creeps find each other.  I'm most reminded of
the Moor murders in England some years ago.  In that case the perpetrators
were a man and a woman.  Their victims were little girls.  They were so
dispicable that the jailers hated to have to speak to them.   Think of the
poor lawyers who have to defend this case.

Prudy

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, mis-
directions 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, CTRLgives 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://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 A HREF="http://peach.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



Re: [CTRL] Boy's death spotlights bias in coverage of gays

2001-03-24 Thread Aleisha Saba

-Caveat Lector-

Prudy - An Inspector Tyrell of Scotland Yard, his parents lived near me
here in this area - but he was one who helped breat Moors
Murders..he noted on a shelf (that is where to look, what one reads)
a Book of Psalms, rather out of place - he picked it up, and in the
binding found a note with locker number - leading as you may remember to
the tapes of the little girl being murdered..bells rang, and the
song Santa Claus is Coming to Town played..happened at Christmas and
I have always believed that somehow this connects to murders of Jon
Benet Ramsey.a Santa Claus involved there and a book was made before
the crime written by the Santa Claus or his wife.

These murders were somehow ritualistic and the book of psalms played a
big role in the ritual murder.

This Tyrell came into the area for somehow he believe these murders
somehow linked to others including JFK murderthis was way back in
1969 that he came from England to visit his parents

Too long for me to remember all this - year of Jubilee brought out Jack
the Ripper and a lot of biblical slaughter keyed to ritual murders and
this is why the Ripper was called a slaughterman and a mason and even
the Duke of Clarence who seemed to be dying of a wasting disease - but
then the men in Victoria's line had hemopheliathis stuff all sounds
so repetitious - polluted blood and stories of vampires prevailed in
those days as the royal familes including son of Czar experienced the
impact of needed blood transfusions - but not enough knowledge 

There was a sleazy woman, bleached blonde involved in these murders and
these people were the low life of the world.

Pornography involved - and I wondered often if pictures were not taken
when little Jon Benet was murdered - remember the guy who worked in the
morgue taking pictures of dead bodies arrange in peculiar scenes as if a
morgue was not bad enough?

Tried to find the Moors Murder book I have but had to get rid of so many
booksthis Tyrell must be dead by now.

Imagine now, a Book of Psalms led to the solving of Moors Murders - but
I have always wondered for whom the tapes were to be delivered?

When I think of bicycles now I think of Jon Benet's little bicycle
parked outside the house and of Waco with little tricycles bull dozed
along with bodies of children...

Nobody ever thought much of homosexuals - until Gay Pride was permited
to fly their flag over the State House while the Confederate Flag is
being "desecrated"..if we would use terms of this new house
bill..

Wonder what role drugs may have played if any in Moors Murders - but it
was a time here in the 60 periods when Cleaver was writing "the
iniquities of the fathers will be visited upon the children" and one
sniper, who was taking shots at people threatened to have shootout with
school buses for target practice...

Same secret societie at work here.Zebra murders?  Columbine?  Kids
murdering kids and life is now so cheap.

Thing that teed me off was this old rerun of Barney Miller, where this
"man from the future" was arrested, an obvious way out intellectual with
appearance of a college professor from the liberal side of fence stated
homosexuality wthin  20 years we be form of birth control and
depopulation etcwhile two cutsie pooh homos had been arrested on
other charges

So all is planned even the slaughter of the innocents and I am reminded
of this elusive Tarot Card Assassins Cult - my old friend took all I had
on them, so have to rely on memory here but she saw what I saw - the
Tarot Cards are linked to bible readings.

Are we going to end up having to protect our children from these
sodomists?   Why the push to get them into the boy scouts and little cub
scouts where they have direct influence over children?

Why would this Inspector conclude JFK asssassinations linked to Moors
Murders but then at the time, I thought they were too and hooked up to
rosicrucianism.the slaughter of the white roses  (that Titanic was
example of true White Rose Society)

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, mis-
directions 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, CTRLgives 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://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html"Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]/A


[CTRL] Boy's death spotlights bias in coverage of gays

2001-03-23 Thread Bill Richer

-Caveat Lector-

WJPBR Email News List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Boy's death spotlights bias in coverage of gays
By Robert Stacy McCain
THE WASHINGTON TIMES


 There were no nationally televised candlelight vigils for Jesse
Dirkhising. No Hollywood celebrities mourned the passing of the 13-year-old
Arkansas boy. Top Stories
• Frustration over campaign bill hobbles Senate
• ABA's role on judges ruled out
• China chided for detaining U.S. boy
• Moscow threatens retaliation over ousters
• Metro balks over station naming


 The New York Times hasn't reported how Jesse died of asphyxiation in
1999 after prosecutors say he was bound, gagged and sodomized by a homosexual
couple. And the seventh-grader's death has not caused powerful Washington
activists to lobby for new federal laws to punish such crimes.
 While the 1998 death of Matthew Shepard in Wyoming provoked a blizzard
of media coverage about the death of the homosexual college student, the
Dirkhising case is just "a local crime story," one TV network spokesman
explains.
 Joshua Macabe Brown, one of two men accused of killing Jesse, was
convicted yesterday of rape and first-degree murder in a trial that began
March 13.
 Through yesterday afternoon, Brown's weeklong trial produced a combined
total of zero stories from the New York Times, the Washington Post, USA
Today, CBS, ABC, NBC and CNN.
 Conservatives comparing coverage of the Shepard and Dirkhising cases,
which both involve homosexuality, have scolded the media for ignoring Jesse's
murder. But the disparity in reporting on the two murders is now provoking
comment even from homosexual critics.
 "This discrepancy isn't just real. It's staggering," Andrew Sullivan
wrote in a column in the April 2 issue of the liberal New Republic magazine.
 Mr. Sullivan, who is homosexual, cited Nexis database statistics showing
3,007 media stories about the Shepard killing in the month after the Wyoming
murder, but just 46 stories about Dirkhising's murder in the month after the
Arkansas boy's death.
 Outside of Arkansas, the Tulsa World and the Memphis Commercial Appeal
were the only large newspapers to carry daily Associated Press coverage of
Brown's trial. The Washington Times has carried the Arkansas
Democrat-Gazette's reports on the trial in Bentonville, Ark.
 The only TV network to report on the trial has been Fox News Channel,
where "O'Reilly Factor" host Bill O'Reilly featured a segment on the
Dirkhising case titled "Is There a Double Standard in Coverage of Hate
Crimes?" on his Monday broadcast.
 By contrast, the Shepard murder made front-page news — and the cover of
Time magazine — in October 1998. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and Rep. Richard A.
Gephardt were among the politicians who appeared with Hollywood stars like
Ellen Degeneres at a candlelight vigil on Capitol Hill to mourn Mr. Shepard's
death and demand new hate crimes laws to protect homosexuals.
 TV networks featured footage of a weeping Miss DeGeneres —whose
televised "coming out" as a lesbian made headlines in 1997 —telling the crowd
at the Capitol Hill vigil, "I'm begging heterosexuals to see this as a
wake-up call to help us end the hate. Please raise your children with love
and nonjudgment. . . . This is a war, we need your help."
 Critics have charged that "political correctness" explains the different
media treatment of the Shepard and Dirkhising murders. News organizations
deny any such bias.
 "Absolutely not," responded CBS News spokeswoman Sandy Genelius.
 "Every day we have 22 minutes to fill on the 'CBS Evening News,' and
every day the producers and the senior production staff have to determine
what stories make the broadcast and which don't," said Ms. Genelius.
 "Obviously, we can't cover every story that happens in this country
every day," the CBS spokeswoman said Wednesday, "so each day we make an
editorial judgment and, on the days when [the Dirkhising murder] story was
unfolding, the overall editorial judgment was that it couldn't fit into the
broadcast that day."
 "We've been watching the trial and will continue to monitor it," ABC
News spokesman Todd Polkes said Wednesday. "Currently, we have no plans to
report it in our national newscasts. It appears to be a local crime story
that does not raise the kind of issues that would warrant our coverage."
 After yesterday's guilty verdict for one of Jesse's accused killers, Mr.
Polkes said there were still "no plans to [report the verdict] on 'World News
Tonight.' "
 "We've been monitoring the trial," CNN spokeswoman Megan Mahoney said
Wednesday. "We have an affiliate [in Fort Smith, Ark.]. But it has not been
on our air yet. . . . Every day, we're striving for fair, accurate and
objective reporting."
 After yesterday's verdict, Miss Mahoney said CNN was receiving coverage
from its Arkansas affiliate, although no decision had been made whether the
story would be 

[CTRL] Boy's death spotlights bias in coverage of gays.

2001-03-23 Thread Nurev Ind Research

-Caveat Lector-

The Washington Times is a very conservative newspaper.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.---  J2

===
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
http://www.washtimes.com/

Boy's death spotlights bias in coverage of gays

http://www.washtimes.com/national/default-2001323224241.htm

March 23, 2001
By Robert Stacy McCain

There were no nationally televised candlelight vigils for Jesse
Dirkhising.  No Hollywood celebrities mourned the passing of the
13-year-old Arkansas boy.

The New York Times hasn't reported how Jesse died of asphyxiation
in 1999 after prosecutors say he was bound, gagged and sodomized
by a homosexual couple.  And the seventh-grader's death has not
caused powerful Washington activists to lobby for new federal
laws to punish such crimes.

While the 1998 death of Matthew Shepard in Wyoming provoked a
blizzard of media coverage about the death of the homosexual
college student, the Dirkhising case is just "a local crime
story," one TV network spokesman explains.

Joshua Macabe Brown, one of two men accused of killing Jesse, was
convicted yesterday of rape and first-degree murder in a trial
that began March 13.

Through yesterday afternoon, Brown's weeklong trial produced a
combined total of zero stories from the New York Times, the
Washington Post, USA Today, CBS, ABC, NBC and CNN.

Conservatives comparing coverage of the Shepard and Dirkhising
cases, which both involve homosexuality, have scolded the media
for ignoring Jesse's murder.  But the disparity in reporting on
the two murders is now provoking comment even from homosexual
critics.

"This discrepancy isn't just real.  It's staggering," Andrew
Sullivan wrote in a column in the April 2 issue of the liberal
New Republic magazine.

Mr.  Sullivan, who is homosexual, cited Nexis database statistics
showing 3,007 media stories about the Shepard killing in the
month after the Wyoming murder, but just 46 stories about
Dirkhising's murder in the month after the Arkansas boy's death.

Outside of Arkansas, the Tulsa World and the Memphis Commercial
Appeal were the only large newspapers to carry daily Associated
Press coverage of Brown's trial.  The Washington Times has
carried the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette's reports on the trial in
Bentonville, Ark.

The only TV network to report on the trial has been Fox News
Channel, where "O'Reilly Factor" host Bill O'Reilly featured a
segment on the Dirkhising case titled "Is There a Double Standard
in Coverage of Hate Crimes?" on his Monday broadcast.

By contrast, the Shepard murder made front-page news — and the
cover of Time magazine — in October 1998.

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and Rep. Richard A. Gephardt were among
the politicians who appeared with Hollywood stars like Ellen
Degeneres at a candlelight vigil on Capitol Hill to mourn Mr.
Shepard's death and demand new hate crimes laws to protect
homosexuals.

TV networks featured footage of a weeping Miss DeGeneres —whose
televised "coming out" as a lesbian made headlines in 1997
—telling the crowd at the Capitol Hill vigil, "I'm begging
heterosexuals to see this as a wake-up call to help us end the
hate.  Please raise your children with love and nonjudgment.  .
.  .  This is a war, we need your help."

Critics have charged that "political correctness" explains the
different media treatment of the Shepard and Dirkhising murders.
News organizations deny any such bias.

"Absolutely not," responded CBS News spokeswoman Sandy Genelius.

"Every day we have 22 minutes to fill on the 'CBS Evening News,'
and every day the producers and the senior production staff have
to determine what stories make the broadcast and which don't,"
said Ms. Genelius.

"Obviously, we can't cover every story that happens in this
country every day," the CBS spokeswoman said Wednesday, "so each
day we make an editorial judgment and, on the days when [the
Dirkhising murder] story was unfolding, the overall editorial
judgment was that it couldn't fit into the broadcast that day."

"We've been watching the trial and will continue to monitor it,"
ABC News spokesman Todd Polkes said Wednesday.  "Currently, we
have no plans to report it in our national newscasts.  It appears
to be a local crime story that does not raise the kind of issues
that would warrant our coverage."

After yesterday's guilty verdict for one of Jesse's accused
killers, Mr. Polkes said there were still "no plans to [report
the verdict] on 'World News Tonight.' "

"We've been monitoring the trial," CNN spokeswoman Megan Mahoney
said Wednesday.  "We have an affiliate [in Fort Smith, Ark.].
But it has not been on our air yet.  .  .  . Every day, we're
striving for fair, accurate and objective reporting."

After yesterday's verdict, Miss Mahoney said CNN was receiving
coverage from its Arkansas affiliate, although no decision had
been made whether the story would be reported on the cable news
giant.

Powerful lobbying organizations like the Gay and Lesbian