-Caveat Lector-

From: "Aleisha Saba" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> This is a Conspiracy Theory List.....speculation, based on facts, is
> still theory.

That doesn't mean that one is exempt from presenting the facts and documentation 
behind one's theory...

> You ask people to prove everything they say?

No, one doesn't have to PROVE everything they say, only present the documentation 
behind their theory, and if
one doesn't have such facts and documentation then their theory should be clearly 
labeled as their personal
opinion.


> My work according to
> Henry Regnary, a man named Domick Abel, was extremely provocative, and
> highly original.....for I claimed the Mafia got JFK, RFK, and tried to
> get Teddy based on a bible code used as communications which also was
> linked to sabotage and KGB.....

Aleisha, you go on and on about the Kennedys and the Mafia, what do you know about 
Richard M. Nixon and his
close ties with organized crime?

I'm currently reading "Arrogance of Power" by Anthony Summers, and he goes into some 
details how 'in bed'
Nixon was with both the Mafia and the big oil companies...and the book mentions an 
intriguing period in
Nixon's early years, just after he'd married Pat (who really was named 'Thelma', much 
to my surprise, and who
apparently had her own skeleton-in-a-closet when she met Nixon)...but unfortunately 
the book skips over this
strange episode in his early life (unless perhaps the author gets back to it later in 
the book)...

Nixon graduated from Duke University law school in the late 1930s; now ostensibly he 
was just some geeky
hayseed from the hicks of southern California, but upon graduation from law school he 
applied at 3 places, and
seemingly only 3 places, for work...

And very interesting places they were, indeed.  The first 2 were the most prestigious 
law firms at the time,
both in NYC; according to available documents and the recollections of those involved 
in the process (altho
not from the actual participants, Nixon included, themselves), Nixon's interview at 
the first firm went very
well; it is not clear why Nixon did not end up working there.

According to Summers, Nixon really had his sights set on the 2nd firm he interviewed 
with, and there are no
documents remaining of that interview process, nor anyone who was involved in it who 
was willing to discuss
what went on; but it can be surmised that it must have gone well, based on Nixon's 
close alliance in later
years with those who were involved in the interviewing...

And yet, for some reason, Nixon did not end up working at this 2nd firm, either.

Now, what is intriguing about all this is that the first firm was the firm of William 
"Wild Bill" Donovan, who
would later go on to create the OSS (precursor to the CIA) in WWII; the 2nd firm, the 
one where Nixon
apparently really wanted to work, was the firm of John Foster Dulles and Allan Dulles, 
who apparently were
involved in interviewing Nixon.

So it is very strange that the only 2 law firms this geeky hayseed from the sticks 
applies to upon graduation
from college are run by the very men who would later go on to create the major spy 
agencies...

Now, as mentioned before, Nixon seemingly applied to THREE places upon graduation; his 
3rd application was
made to the FBI, and apparently most of the documents pertaining to his application 
still exist.  And
according to these documents, Tricky Dick did very well.  So well in fact that his 
application was 'booted
upstairs' for a 2nd round of interviews, and in fact notations are on his application 
papers showing that he
was in fact approved to be hired by the FBI to be an agent...

Yet suddenly the approval was withdrawn, and he was turned down by the FBI...

Now the book details all of the above fairly thoroughly; though intriguing, its what 
happens next in Nixon's
life I find really interesting, and which the book seemingly ignores...

For Nixon then heads back to Whittier, and takes a job working for a small, bohunk, 
backwater law firm in
Whittier run by a friend of Nixon's father....

And by all accounts, Nixon was less than impressive; in fact he bungled his first 
court case so badly that the
presiding judge threatened to have him disbarred for life...

During this time Nixon also was involved in some questionable business deal with a 
couple of buddies, a
venture that went bust and ostensibly left Nixon with barely a nickle in his pocket...

And yet, after courting Pat for over a year, he gets married and immediately after 
their marriage they start
on a jaunt, lasting almost a year, that took them throughout the western states, and 
then eventually to
Havana, Cuba, of all places which, according to Summers, Nixon said he enjoyed 
thoroughly...

And it is THAT intriguing galavanting like gypsies for a year that I find so 
interestng, and which Summers
just lets go with a mention in a paragraph, without pursuing further.

How could this bumbling backwater lawyer, who supposedly barely had a nickle to his 
name, suddenly be able to
afford to schlep around the west for the better part of a year, and then end up for a 
month or two in Havana,
Cuba?

Who paid their way?

As I said, Summers doesn't delve into this strange roadtrip of the Nixons, but my 
guess is that Nixon had
already gotten involved with the Mafia and the big oil companies, because immediately 
after the war he
supposedly was tapped by this cartel to run for Congress, in part so that he could 
help stop legislation that
was pending that would have put curbs on the oil industry...

And I doubt that this cartel just discovered Nixon in 1945; I suspect that he had 
become involved with it
before the war, and that the roadtrip that lasted a year and ended up bringing him to 
Cuba was given a cover
of being an extended honeymoon, but that it gave Nixon the opportunity to conduct 
business for the big guns
who'd eventually back him in his runs for various political offices...

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