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Special: The Truth About Vox
Sander Hicks,  January 31, 2003

ISLIP, Long Island- Lance Schotte works at night, so he wasn't quite
awake when some three dozen Secret Service agents and Suffolk County
police officers stormed into his apartment at 10 a.m.

"I woke up to this huge banging noise-it sounded like people were
pounding on the back door, the front door and the side door
simultaneously," recalls the Islip resident. "I opened the door. I
wasn't expecting what happened."

It was December 13 when a handful of unmarked cars and a couple of
cruisers pulled up in front of the house where Schotte, a computer
programmer for a Nassau online retailer, rented a one-bedroom
apartment. Not knowing what was up, he opened the door. "Five or six
of them got in my face. 'SHOW ME I.D.' is what they kept saying,"
says Schotte. "I said, 'Who are you?' They just kept saying 'SHOW ME
I.D.'"

Schotte asked for a search warrant.

"We don't need one, you let us in," was the reply. He was confined to
his living room and hammered with a barrage of questions, while
elsewhere agents rifled through his closets and drawers.

"The whole time, I was asking, 'What is this about?' They were
extremely belligerent, they were hostile, in demeanor, in attitude,
in intrusiveness." Schotte assumed the agents were looking for an
escaped criminal, so at first he was cooperative. But when his I.D.
didn't placate them, he began to suspect the search had something to
do with his landlord, who owned the house but lived in various
places.

"Right before they left, they said, 'We want to talk with Stuckey,'"
he says. That would be Mr. Harry "Vox" Stuckey, the 39-year-old
founder of VoxNyc.com. Scion of a staunchly Republican New York
family, Vox was once considered for grooming as a potential
Republican congressional candidate. By his own account he made a mint
working in commercials instead, renting out his equipment and
creative expertise at high prices through the high-flying '90s.
Pressed, he admits to creating a very successful advertising campaign
for global financial house ING Barings.

Although the money was good, he hated the work, and has been almost
grateful at the plunge in advertising since 9-11 that helped nudge
him to other endeavors. Vox had been writing wild exposés of the
secrets of the Bush family under the pseudonym "VoxFux" since
establishing his website devoted to leftist political theories and
commentary in 2001.

When the Associated Press published a report under the headline "CIA
Can Kill Citizens Who Aid Al-Qaida: Bush Doesn't Exempt Americans" by
John J. Lumpkin, on Dec. 4, 2002, Vox recoiled at the CIA's new
powers. He published an article pointing out that by this logic, the
Bush family could be worthy of an instant CIA hit themselves. Both
Presidents Bush have had business dealings with Salem bin Laden, the
now-dead, once-beloved older brother of Osama. They got to know Salem
bin Laden through their Texas pal James Bath and the Bank of Credit
and Commerce International, the now-busted Saudi front for buying
political power in the United States.

Although Vox's argument about Bush was adequately made in the
article, he now admits he might have poked the hornet's nest by
publishing it with the following sensationalist headline:

"By Bush's Own Policy, He Must Be Immediately Terminated: No Trial,
No Explanation, No Warning-Just Immediate Obliteration:

The text went on to read:

By the administration's own policy, both Bushes must be immediately
destroyed. No trial, no explanation, no warning - Just immediate
obliteration.

According to White House officials the President's policy is
that "association" alone, with ANY suspected Al Queda or terrorist,
is sufficient enough justification for immediate extermination by the
CIA or US military.

Yet there is NO other family in America today who has had closer ties
with the Bin Ladens than the Bush family. And that bears repeating.

THERE IS NO OTHER FAMILY IN AMERICA WHICH HAS HAD CLOSER ASSOCIATIONS
AND SUSPICIOUS DEALINGS WITH THE BIN LADEN FAMILY THAN GEORGE BUSH
SENIOR AND JUNIOR. NO OTHER AMERICANS! Period. Prove us wrong . . .

by voxfux

(The original photo accompanying the story is unavailable.)

It's likely that the Secret Service was not interested in the nuances
of Vox's argument about Bush, and interpreted his headline as a
direct threat on the president's life. Brian Marr, official spokesman
for the Secret Service, confirmed that the raid had happened but
refused to discuss it on the record, since the "investigation is
still ongoing."

The Long Island Press contacted the local office, and got a similar
non-denial denial. "I kind of have to give you a pat answer on this
issue," explained Martin Walsh, resident agent of the Melville Secret
Service office. "We don't make a comment on issues of protective
intelligence."

In some ways, Vox shouldn't have been surprised. High-profile
attorney Ron Kuby, who has taken up Vox's case, casually states, "It
seems like every year some sophomore at some remote Midwest
university writes what they think is a clever article about killing
the president. The Secret Service knocks on their door, they have a
little interview, and then the student writes the follow-up
article: 'My Visit with the Secret Service.'" But what Lance Schotte
described hardly seems like "a little interview."

Furthermore, Vox's website was quietly and quickly taken down. On
Tuesday, January 21, Network Solutions, the site's domain provider,
took www.VoxNyc.com off the Internet, claiming nonpayment, and
transferred ownership to a Hong Kong company. Vox says they did take
payment and he's got the cancelled check to prove it. He said he
plans to sue Verisign/Network Solutions.

Vox believes he is a victim of the war on terrorism. Critics say that
new measures like the USA Patriot Act are draconian and have expanded
the powers of the police and government so much that legitimate
political satire, free speech and dissent-even the Constitution
itself-are threatened.

Legal scholar Jennifer Van Bergen, an adjunct teacher at the New
School University and board member of the Broward, Fla. chapter of
the ACLU, has called the USA Patriot Act "an insult to
Americans...complete abdication of democratic law and principles. It
should be called the Constitution Shredding Act."

If Vox is right, the raid on his website is the Constitution
Shredding Act in practice: the suppression of free speech under the
guise of fighting "domestic terrorism." Right-wing politicians admit
the USA Patriot Act contradicts civil liberties. But if you believe
in the war of terrorism, you're supposed to believe in the war on
liberty in the USA:

"I would not have voted for this bill prior to 9-11," admits Peter
King, the Republican congressman Seaford, Long Island who has been
highly visible in his support of the administration. "But the
presence of terrorist infiltrators on our shores is a clear and
present danger to the national security of America and makes certain
restrictions of civil liberties essential."

Vox might indeed fit the definition of a "domestic terrorist" because
of the government's fuzzy definition of that new category. Nancy
Chang, senior litigation attorney at the Center for Constitutional
Rights in New York City, says that vigorous protest activities could,
under current law, be construed as terrorist actions: "A 'terrorist'
these days is anyone who engages in activities that (according to the
Patriot Act) 'appear to be intended...to influence the policy of a
government by intimidation or coercion' that are 'dangerous to human
life' or 'a violation of the criminal laws.'"

Thus, she explains, your little brother caught for fighting the
police at an anti-globalization protest could now be tried and
sentenced as a "domestic terrorist." Attorney General John Ashcroft,
sworn to uphold the Constitution, has warned that dissenting about,
or debating the merits of the USA Patriot Act would "erode our
national unity...diminish our resolve...give ammunition to America's
enemies, and pause to America's friends." Conceivably, any patriotic
dissent from the administration line could earn one the label of
terrorist-and the consequent loss of liberties and constitutional
protections.

VOX ON THE ROCKS

So the Secret Service wants to talk to Vox. But the federal agency
hasn't been able to find him. Since December, he has lived like a
fugitive, sleeping on friends' couches in New York City. I had a
connection, though: I tracked him down and he agreed to meet at a
café on the Lower East Side.

Flying down the L.I.E. on my way to see him in my rickety used
minivan, I look up at my favorite billboard, the one near Exit 33,
where the radical chic "End Minimum Balance Oppression" bank ad has
been attacked with spray paint and turned into "Stop Bush's War
Against Iraq." Cutesy corporate neo-radicalism has been covered in
purple spray paint hearts and demands for peace. It occurs to me that
just like in physics, for every action, there's an equal and opposite
reaction. Cool.

I begin to realize why Vox is on the lam. These days anyone who might
be a "terrorist" as the government describes it is up for some harsh
treatment. Hundreds of immigrants under suspicion are being detained
indefinitely, imprisoned and held in solitary confinement. They don't
always get to talk to a lawyer, and can be held and interrogated for
a week before being allowed access to counsel.

And it isn't just immigrants. Vox must know that U.S. citizens are
also under heavy scrutiny. Since 9-11, some of the government's
jitters are understandable, perhaps even justified. Yet Big Brother
certainly seems to overreact at times. On December 2, Richard
Humphreys was sentenced to more than three years in prison in South
Dakota for commenting, in a bar, that "God might speak to the world
through a burning Bush" when the president visited a nearby city.
That same week, Mike Maginnis, a freelance photographer in Denver,
Colo., was held in jail for 10 hours, his camera confiscated and film
destroyed, for taking pictures of the outside of a hotel where Dick
Cheney happened to be staying. Those are merely a taste of such
events that occurred in a single recent month.

My friend Colin walks by, gives me a few pointers. Colin writes for
The New York Times, and other places, as a freelancer. He's taught me
a few things, like you can't call the Bushes "criminal" because
technically you have to be convicted of a crime to actually be
a "criminal" per se. Ah ha! I take notes. Of course, most Americans
already know that President Bush the First was the former director of
the CIA. But do they know that due to Bush's negligence (or possibly
worse) the left-wing Chilean, Orlando Letelier, was mysteriously
murdered in Washington, DC during Bush's tenure at CIA? Letelier was
a fierce critic of U.S. foreign policy, which had backed a right-wing
military coup of his democratically elected leader, Salvador Allende.
Most remember Bush Senior grinning and claiming he was "out of the
loop" when the Iran/Contra scandal was tarnishing the Reagan White
House. But who recalls that Bush had a key role in the illegal arms
and hostage-swapping, according to General Richard Secord? Who
recalls Bush white-washing his own record by pardoning four major
Iran Contra indicted suspects on Christmas Eve right before he left
office?

I meet up with Vox in a café in the Lower East Side. I hadn't seen
him in three years. He used to be friends with the downtown
performance artist, LaRuocco, whose book, Document Zippo, I edited.
The book was wild, artful and sexy. The small press who put it out
were hoping it would make a splash, but then the author and her
boyfriend (yep, it was Vox) decided on a whim to take this gonzo
cross-country trip across Vietnam and Cambodia on small motorbikes. I
wasn't surprised when I heard Vox was back in town, waging an info-
war on the CIA. He looked tired, and a little apprehensive when I
walked in. But in a black leather peacoat and fur cap, he was in good
spirits, looking a little like Ghengis Khan.

HICKS: I know you have gone back to Islip once or twice to check out
what happened to your house, right?

VOX: Yes I have, to photograph the scene. And to secure it and remove
the valuable items. These klutzes left the doors open when they left.

HICKS: Was there anything missing?

VOX: Yeah, videos of theatre performances of friends at the
performance-art space Surf Reality [in the Lower East Side]. What
else they took, I can't be sure.

HICKS: But they didn't take your computers?

VOX: The computers were at my Brooklyn location, the raid was on Long
Island. When I found out about the raid, I cleared everything out of
Brooklyn.

HICKS: How did you know to do that?

VOX: I was tipped off.

HICKS: What? Who?

VOX: I can't say, exactly. She's female, maybe inside State
Department, but that's all I can say. I haven't been contacted by her
since, and I don't expect to be.

HICKS: That reminds me of the way you described the raid.

VOX: I was told that half of the agents and police were gung-ho, and
the other half were less sure, disinterested. There is dissent among
their ranks, I promise you. Not everyone wants Bush's war on the
Constitution.

HICKS: But some people could interpret this incident as a legitimate
threat on the president's life, and that you got what you deserved.

VOX: If you read the article, it's crystal clear what I said. I
simply closed a logical loop. I said that if the Bush
administration's policy is that it's all right to kill anyone
for 'associating' with terrorists, then Bush sets forth a process of
self-annihilation. There is no other duo in America with closer ties
to terrorists, and in particular the bin Laden family, than Bush and
his dad. These two go back thirty years with the bin Ladens. The
relationship is littered with corporate sleaze and dead bin Laden
family members in mysterious plane crashes in, you guessed it, Texas.

HICKS: Even MSNBC reports that Osama bin Laden worked for the CIA and
the United States all throughout the '80s, when Reagan and Bush were
funneling weapons into the region, to Iraq, to Iran, to Afghanistan.
Now, on your website you also draw attention to the Bush/Hinckley
family association and the 1981 assassination attempt on the life of
President Reagan.

VOX: As we know, ex-CIA chief George Bush was v.p. at the time, a
heartbeat away from the top slot. Well, in the early hours after the
attempt on Reagan it was revealed that Scott Hinckley, the brother of
would-be assassin John Hinckley Jr., was scheduled to dine that
evening at the home of Neil Bush, the son of then-Vice President
George Bush.

NBC's John Chancellor had the information, but received orders not to
mention the dinner date. He defied orders with his newscast, an
astonished look on his face. I remember, I saw it as it happened.
When I looked for developments and follow-ups to the story, there
were none. Zippo. Never mentioned again on the television medium,
ever. Newsweek included the fact under some small article
about 'Kooky Conspiracy Theories,' a sidebar mentioned at the end of
their reporting on the attempt.

HICKS: So you think this was a major story that Newsweek and the
networks missed?

VOX: There's an expression, "Where there's smoke, there's fire." Well
there's an inferno raging about this one! The most fishy moment in
Bush family history. It was further revealed that Papa Bush and
Hinckley's father were friends and fellow oilmen in Texas and
Colorado. Hinckley claimed to have supported Reagan, so no suspicion
there right? Wrong. Not only did that turn out to be a lie, it turns
out that he financed Bush's bid for the nomination against Reagan!

But there's more. It was revealed that while George Junior [George W.
Bush] was running for Congress in Lubbock, Texas. with his brother
Neil as manager, guess who else lived in Lubbock? John Hinckley
Junior. When probed as to whether the Bush boys had ever met Hinckley
during their Lubbock days, our current president said that it
was 'conceivable' that they had met. Do you know what that means?
That's politician-speak for 'they met.' What should have been the
biggest, most investigated story of the Eighties was wiped clear from
the face of history.

FACTS & FEARS

It's a lot to absorb, but in fact a lot of what he says checks out.
Newsweek did write a story mentioning that Hinckley's brother was
scheduled to dine with Neil Bush on the day of the Reagan
assassination attempt. John Chancellor did mention the same fact on
the air. Vox's website was not the only one reporting the
Bush/Hinckley family link. Nathaniel Blumberg, dean of the University
of Montana School of Journalism and founder of the Montana Journalism
Review, has also reported this on his home page,
NathanielBlumberg.com.

"I have never been a conspiracy theorist; I am an analyst of press
performance with credentials extending over four decades," Blumberg
explains. In his view, the Neil Bush/Hinckley story "was censored by
NBC News and the other organs of the national news media [for] 10
years. And even in the several months of extensive coverage of Neil
Bush's part in the massive Savings and Loan fraud, no mention was
made of his role in the continuing cover-up of the most significant
story in the 1980s."

The USA Patriot Act was passed in October of 2001, while the country
was maddened by mysterious anthrax attacks. Free-speech advocates
immediately called it an assault on the Bill of Rights. Within five
days of Bush signing it into law, Electronic Frontier Foundation
published an analysis that noted much of the Patriot Act eradicated
the 1974 laws that limited FBI surveillance and the policing of
dissent.

The 1974 reforms were created to combat real and serious problems of
government over-reach. The Watergate scandal was still a fresh scar;
Vietnam had taught us the limits of international aggression; and on
Capitol Hill, the Church Committee was preparing to issue two years
worth of reports on the secret crimes and surveillance techniques of
U.S. intelligence. The public was shocked to learn that the FBI had
spied on over 10,000 U.S. citizens, including Martin Luther King, who
was sent anonymous letters urging him to commit suicide. In 1974,
legislators responded by pulling back the leash on the secret police.
Almost 30 years later, those reforms have been gutted.

Which leads us to this downtown café. "I've talked a lot but I don't
feel like I've made my main point," Vox says as he sits back down at
the table. "The biggest commodity is fear. The amount of time
Americans spend in a haze of fear represents money spent. I'm trying
to tell everyone, there's no need to fear. I'm gonna fight these
bastards standing up. These people have zero, they are hollow.
Replace fear with courage, and you're free."

Vox has a habit of building up so much momentum when he talks that he
sacrifices facts for the sake of his passion. Sometimes facts aren't
even there, just passionate suspicions. He kept talking about
the "Bush Death List," insisting that a Bush cabal had killed
Americans. But when pressed, he cited only one specific death:
Senator Paul Wellstone's.

What's the evidence? "With these kinds of things, you cannot expect
to find evidence," he says. "There's never a direct order, the
dimwitted president wouldn't even need to give a direct order."

His attorney, Kuby, isn't fazed by such half-thoughts. "Even
paranoids have real enemies," he points out with cheerful
determination. Kuby says that Vox himself may be overreacting. "The
Secret Service is not contending that he is guilty of threatening the
life of the president. They have not even obtained a warrant for his
arrest." Kuby sees the brouhaha as a matter of procedure. "The Secret
Service is like a big computer, you publish the words, 'President,
kill, death' on the Internet, and it starts a program that has to go
to its end."

But it begs the question: Why the heavy-handed approach? If the feds
just want to ask a few questions, why send a force of 30 to batter
down the doors? Do they come down on those Midwestern college kids
like that?

According to Donna Lieberman, director of the New York Civil
Liberties Union, Vox and Schotte were subjected to a "bad
search." "Just because you let them in doesn't give them the right to
ransack the place. The police need a warrant," she says. "Whatever
you could say about the wisdom of the headline [of Vox's article],
speech cannot be criminalized unless it incites lawless activity.
This is a post 9-11 police action that violates individual rights."

Brzezinski to Vox: "No, Luke I AM your father"?

As part of his political education in the GOP, Vox claims that he was
allowed to audit the class of Zbigniew Brzezinski, then teaching at
Columbia. Columbia has a record of him, but no records of classes
attended. It's unclear whether this might be an exaggeration under
the influence of the Brzezinski analysis of leading internet
publisher Michael Ruppert (copvcia.com). Vox reports he had quite a
rapport with Brzezinski. But Brzezinski, contacted through his
assistant, doesn't recall meeting him. (The assistant politely
explains that Doctor Brzenzinski has almost 20 years of teaching
experience, and a lot of students were fond of him.)

But whether or not Vox actually studied with Brzezinski, Brzezinski's
is a influential right-wing ideologue, its worth stopping to look at
how his writings are relevant are relevant to today's global
politics. Brzezinski was a foreign policy advisor to Carter, Reagan
and Bush, and today is one of the top experts of the future of the
U.S. foreign policy. He also pushes all the buttons of the
conspiratorial: he was founder of the Trilateral Commission, a member
of the Council on Foreign Relations, and goes to Bilberberger
meetings. My sources inside the State Department tell me his name is
often associated with his old pal, Henry Kissinger. B.'s 1997
book "The Grand Chessboard" has become an influential tome in
Washington and beyond. It might be able to help explain to the
layperson what's going on in the brains of our leaders.

"The Grand Chessboard" is quite a trip, Brzezinski talks like a
British imperialist who walked out of a late-night rerun of something
on PBS. He wants U.S. Foreign Policy to focus on controlling Eurasia,
in order to destablize Russia and China and prevent the emergence of
any other superpower other than the U.S. The point is "to keep the
barbarians from coming together" he's a modern day Caesar with a
new "divide and conquer."

But controlling Eurasia is not just important politically, there are
natural resources to think of: "The Eurasian Balkans are infinitely
more important as a potential economic prize: an enormous
concentration of natural gas and oil reserves is located in the
region, in addition to important minerals, including gold."

America, according to Brzezinski is "fixated on mass entertainment...
heavily dominated by hedonistic and socially escapist themes." But
since the USA is such a "increasingly multi-cultural society" and the
average people are not inclined to support any more Vietnams, the
only thing that will motivate massive emotional support for foreign
wars is something like "the shock effect of the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor." America will likely "find it more difficult to fashion
a consensus on foreign policy issues, except in the circumstance of a
truly massive and widely perceived direct external threat."

Just like Bush's "thousand points of light," the brutality of the
power politics are dressed up with a positive spin. At the end of the
book, Brzezinski vaguely predicts that America will "eventually will
give up the empire for 'an enduring framework of global geopolitical
cooperation."

Last Call

Is Vox for real? Sometimes it's hard to tell. But one thing's for
sure: What he's saying and publishing earned him not only a raid from
the Secret Service, but also a tip-off from intelligence insiders.
Parody and political speech are protected by the First Amendment.
Maybe Vox isn't the most polished publisher or political commentator,
but the First Amendment is supposed to protect the abrasive as well
as the established. If his lawyers can make the case that the "Bush
Family...Obliterated" piece was legitimate political commentary, then
Harry Vox can stop living on couches, and go back to making films and
publishing his website.

Kuby is trying to negotiate a sit-down between his client and the
Secret Service-in fact, he's looking forward to it. "I want to know
what the interview questions are going to be," he comments. "I'm
fascinated to know what the protocol is to determine whether someone
is a threat to the president." But there are a few roadblocks. Not
surprisingly, Vox is keen to have both witnesses and an accurate
record. The government is demanding total control of the tape
recorder and tapes. Talks have since cooled. Kuby says: "I'm getting
the sense that they have decided that Vox and Kuby are more a threat
to their mental health then either are a threat to the president."

Sander Hicks founded Soft Skull Press in 1992, and worked there until
2001, most notably on "Fortunate Son," the controversial biography of
George W. Bush. On a leave of absence, he is working on a biography
of Bush White House strategist Karl Rove. He is the lead singer of
White Collar Crime, a playwright, and a political activist. His home
page is www.sanderhicks.com.

A shorter, edited version of this originally appeared in print in the
Long Island Press. Thanks to Edith Updike, News Editor, L.I.P. for
the feedback in development of this article.


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