This conversation recorded in late 1996 or early 1997 clearly shows that the "shadow government" was running America and that the "Republic" existed only for show, that another agenda was being carried out, and it wasn't the agenda of We The People. The last 17 years are perfectly predictable IF you understand the reality and content of this conversation.
http://www.amazon.com/Deadly-Deceits-My-Years-CIA/dp/0940380021/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1400783774&sr=1-2&keywords=deadly+deceit
In late 1996 / early 1997, Mike Levine and 3 fellow federal agents with CIA, FBI and DEA, came together for a broadcast, whose purpose was to warn America that those agencies we were trusting to protect us against terrorism were too inept and badly run to do the job - and that mainstream media's inability to sound the alarm and an easily manipulated congress, would ensure that 'horrific terrorist acts and the loss of our rights as citizens, would surely follow.' Hear those prophetic words now, because nothing has changed.
While the fidelity of the actual recording leaves much to be desired, the conversation is striking to say the least. It predicts much of what has since come to pass.
It is, in many respects, one of the most important broadcasts in the history of the show.
The three participants:
Dennis Dayle -- DEA
He began his federal career working for the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs in Chicago, a forerunner of the Drug Enforcement Administration, where he continued to distinguish himself. From the mid-1970s to 1980s, Dayle led investigations into international drug smuggling for the DEA, heading up Centac, which were chronicled in 1986 in a best-selling book, The Underground Empire: Where Crime and Governments Embrace, by James Mills.
Ralph McGehee -- CIA
a 25 year veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency enlightened us with this following paragraph from his 1983 book "Deadly Deceits," which edifies a familiar pattern of deception that we have witnessed but we never understood. He stated the following about the CIA:
"The CIA is not an intelligence agency. In fact, it acts largely as an anti-intelligence agency, producing only that information wanted by policymakers to support their plans and suppressing information that does not support those plans. As the covert action arm of the president, the CIA uses disinformation, much of it aimed at the U.S. public, to mold opinion. It employs the gamut of disinformation techniques from forging documents to planting and discovering "communist" weapons caches. But the major weapon in its arsenal of disinformation is the "intelligence" it feeds to policymakers.
Instead of gathering genuine intelligence that could serve as the basis for reasonable policies, the CIA often ends up distorting reality, creating out of the whole cloth "intelligence" to justify policies that have already been decided upon. Policymakers leak this "intelligence" to the media to deceive us all and gain our support."
Wesley Swearingen -- FBI
Former FBI Special Agent from 1951 to 1977, M. Wesley Swearingen wrote "FBI Secrets". This important work traces his FBI career in "domestic counter-intelligence" from the time he signed on after World War II to his retirement and beyond.
Swearingen began his career doing "black bag jobs" on Communists in Chicago. In Kentucky and New York City, he spent years doing serious criminal investigations, which had been his goal in joining the FBI. But J. Edgar Hoover fixated on the threat posed by such groups as the Black Panthers and the Weathermen -- Swearingen is more explicit than most on the FBI's unconstitutional role in an important pattern of political corruption and illegal repression of U.S. Civil Rights in the 1960s, under his one-time mentor, Hoover.
He is interviewed in the documentary films All Power to the People! and The U.S. vs. John Lennon.
In late 1996 / early 1997, Mike Levine and 3 fellow federal agents with CIA, FBI and DEA, came together for a broadcast, whose purpose was to warn America that those agencies we were trusting to protect us against terrorism were too inept and badly run to do the job - and that mainstream media's inability to sound the alarm and an easily manipulated congress, would ensure that 'horrific terrorist acts and the loss of our rights as citizens, would surely follow.' Hear those prophetic words now, because nothing has changed.
While the fidelity of the actual recording leaves much to be desired, the conversation is striking to say the least. It predicts much of what has since come to pass.
It is, in many respects, one of the most important broadcasts in the history of the show.
The three participants:
Dennis Dayle -- DEA
He began his federal career working for the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs in Chicago, a forerunner of the Drug Enforcement Administration, where he continued to distinguish himself. From the mid-1970s to 1980s, Dayle led investigations into international drug smuggling for the DEA, heading up Centac, which were chronicled in 1986 in a best-selling book, The Underground Empire: Where Crime and Governments Embrace, by James Mills.
Ralph McGehee -- CIA
a 25 year veteran of the Central Intelligence Agency enlightened us with this following paragraph from his 1983 book "Deadly Deceits," which edifies a familiar pattern of deception that we have witnessed but we never understood. He stated the following about the CIA:
"The CIA is not an intelligence agency. In fact, it acts largely as an anti-intelligence agency, producing only that information wanted by policymakers to support their plans and suppressing information that does not support those plans. As the covert action arm of the president, the CIA uses disinformation, much of it aimed at the U.S. public, to mold opinion. It employs the gamut of disinformation techniques from forging documents to planting and discovering "communist" weapons caches. But the major weapon in its arsenal of disinformation is the "intelligence" it feeds to policymakers.
Instead of gathering genuine intelligence that could serve as the basis for reasonable policies, the CIA often ends up distorting reality, creating out of the whole cloth "intelligence" to justify policies that have already been decided upon. Policymakers leak this "intelligence" to the media to deceive us all and gain our support."
Wesley Swearingen -- FBI
Former FBI Special Agent from 1951 to 1977, M. Wesley Swearingen wrote "FBI Secrets". This important work traces his FBI career in "domestic counter-intelligence" from the time he signed on after World War II to his retirement and beyond.
Swearingen began his career doing "black bag jobs" on Communists in Chicago. In Kentucky and New York City, he spent years doing serious criminal investigations, which had been his goal in joining the FBI. But J. Edgar Hoover fixated on the threat posed by such groups as the Black Panthers and the Weathermen -- Swearingen is more explicit than most on the FBI's unconstitutional role in an important pattern of political corruption and illegal repression of U.S. Civil Rights in the 1960s, under his one-time mentor, Hoover.
He is interviewed in the documentary films All Power to the People! and The U.S. vs. John Lennon.
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