Pearls for Swine: Who Bought the Magna Carta?

G

Gandalf Grey

Guest
Pearls For Swine: Who Bought the Magna Carta?

By Stephen Pizzo

Created Jan 2 2008 - 9:20am


There's this newspaper clipping that's been sitting among the flotsam of my
desktop for the last week or so. I tore it out of the December 20 Wall
Street Journal because it struck me. Struck me how? Well, that's pretty much
what I've been trying to figure out since then.

Having lived through the last seven years of you-know-what, I figured I'd
been rendered immune further from shock or awe. And I was sure I'd exceeded
my lifetime supply of irony-spotting.

Then I saw the story in question. It couldn't have been considered very
important by WSJ editors, because it was buried on an inside page. But it
sure jumped out to me. The headline asked:

Who Bought the Magna Carta?

The story answered it's own question:

"Talk about your historic takeovers. David Rubenstein, co-founder of the
private-equity firm Carlyle Group [1], bought a 710-year-old copy of the
Magna Carta [2] for $21.3 million on Tuesday." (Full Story [3])

If you've put up with my rants for any time at all, you know I'm no lover of
conspiracy theories. And so that's not where I;m going with this. The
Carlyle Group has replaced the Trilateral Commission as the
conspiracy-minded's invisible hand of all things devious and evil. I don't
see it that way at all. Instead I see the Carlyle Group for what it is --
America's preeminent conduit of the fruits of crony capitalism.

Founded in 1987 with $5 million, the Washington-based merchant bank controls
nearly $14 billion in investments, making it the largest private equity
manager in the world. Carlyle doesn't dabble in investments. It buys and
sells entire companies the way most other investment firms trade shares of
stock.

I'm not saying that the Magna Carta's new owner, David Rubenstein, is a bad
man. I did some research and he gives a lot of (tax deductible) money to
worthy charities. But then, why not? If members of this exclusive group have
anything in excess, it's money. At any point in time, Carlyle and it's
investors have vested interests virtually any thing important that's going
down in the world.

Wars are bullish for Carlyle. Which is why Carlyle's board of directors and
advisor's has read like a Who's Who of all things that go BANG -- and
KA-CHING.

Oh, and all things Bush too.

Former president George H.W. Bush is a Carlyle adviser, as is former British
prime minister John Major who heads its European arm. Former secretary of
state James Baker is senior counselor, former White House budget chief
Richard Darman is a partner, former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt is senior
adviser -- the list goes on.

Carlyle has, from time to time, played the role of power-legacy incubator,
as it did when asked to find a no-work job for George H. Bush's
good-for-nothing son, George W. George and Barbara Bush are close to the
Rubensteins. David, his wife and three children tagged along on an African
safari with Barbara Bush.

Four years before George W. Bush's first run for Texas Governor, Rubenstein
was asked to find a soft spot for Georgie to cool his heels and earn some
easy money. Carlyle had just purchase Caterair, a company that provided food
service to the airlines. A Bush family confident came to Rubenstein and
pitched young George.

"...we were putting the board together, somebody [Fred Malek [4]] came to
me and said, look there is a guy who would like to be on the board. He's
kind of down on his luck a bit. Needs a job. Needs a board position. Needs
some board positions. Could you put him on the board? Pay him a salary and
he'll be a good board member and be a loyal vote for the management and so
forth...We put him on the board and [he] spent three years. Came to all the
meetings. Told a lot of jokes. Not that many clean ones. " (David
Rubenstein)

(Irony alert: Fred Malek received his 15 minutes of fame in the 1970s as
deputy director of CREEP (Committee to Re-elect the President), the Nixon
White House operation behind Watergate.)

Did Carlyle's managers laugh at George's jokes? Hard to say. More likely
they just grinned and bore it, which paid off a decade and half later:

April 2003: Directors of one of the world's largest armament companies are
planning on meeting in Lisbon in three weeks time. The American based
Carlyle Group is heavily involved in supplying arms to the Coalition forces
fighting in the Iraqi war.

It also holds a majority of shares in the Seven Up company and Federal
Data Corporation, supplier of air traffic control surveillance systems to
the US Federal Aviation Authority. The 12 billion dollar company has
recently signed contracts with United Defense Industries to equip the
Turkish and Saudi Arabian armies with aviation Defense systems.

Top of the meeting's agenda is expected to be the company's involvement in
the rebuilding of Baghdad's infrastructure after the cessation of current
hostilities. Along with several other US companies, the Carlyle Group is
expected to be awarded a billion dollar contract by the US Government to
help in the redevelopment of airfields and urban areas destroyed by
Coalition aerial bombardments. (Full Story [5])

And, talk about being in on the ground floor of the "War on Terror:" On
September 11, 2001, the day two planes crashed into the World Trade Center
the Carlyle Group was hosting an investors conference at the nearby
Ritz-Carlton, a conference attended by none other than Osama bin Laden's
brother. George H. Bush attended the conference the day before and had met
personally with the bin Laden kin.

No, I'm not siding with the 9/11 conspiracy folks. I still think they're
nuts. I am simply making the point that when it, if it's big, or promises to
be big, the Carlyle Group makes sure it has an arm lock on good hunk of the
action.

Former Secretary of State James Baker is (of course) a member of Carlyle's
inner circle and he bristles at the notion that the company somehow
manipulates world events.

"I say that's bullshit, and you can print it!" Baker snapped at a
reporter. "Somebody would say, 'well, you had one of the bin Laden brothers
as an investor.' Well, that's exactly right," he says, adding that the bin
Ladens are one of the wealthiest families in the Middle East and have
disowned Osama.

(Duh Alert: After 9/11 Rubenstein announced he had returned the bin Ladens'
$2 million investment.)

Rubenstein has stopped trying to deny the benefits of his company's toady
hyper-connectedness:

"We've actually replaced the Trilateral Commission" as the darling of
conspiracy theorists," Rubenstein jokes.

(Irony alert: Rubenstein is also a member of said Trilateral Commission
[6].)

So there we are. The new owner of one of the most important documents in
mankind's march towards democracy has been purchased by Carlyle co-founder
David Rubenstein. His new acquisition will be housed and conserved, at
taxpayer expense, at the National Archives.

Rubensteins copy of the Magna Carta is sure to continue to rise, even as the
paradigm-shattering rights it was the first to enshrine into law slip, one
by one, from our lives today.
_______
newsforreal.com



--
NOTICE: This post contains copyrighted material the use of which has not
always been authorized by the copyright owner. I am making such material
available to advance understanding of
political, human rights, democracy, scientific, and social justice issues. I
believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material as
provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107

"A little patience and we shall see the reign of witches pass over, their
spells dissolve, and the people recovering their true sight, restore their
government to its true principles. It is true that in the meantime we are
suffering deeply in spirit,
and incurring the horrors of a war and long oppressions of enormous public
debt. But if the game runs sometimes against us at home we must have
patience till luck turns, and then we shall have an opportunity of winning
back the principles we have lost, for this is a game where principles are at
stake."
-Thomas Jefferson
 
On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 10:02:01 -0800, "Gandalf Grey"
<valinor20@gmail.com> wrote:

>Pearls For Swine: Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>
>By Stephen Pizzo
>
>Created Jan 2 2008 - 9:20am
>
>
>There's this newspaper clipping that's been sitting among the flotsam of my
>desktop for the last week or so. I tore it out of the December 20 Wall
>Street Journal because it struck me. Struck me how? Well, that's pretty much
>what I've been trying to figure out since then.
>
>Having lived through the last seven years of you-know-what, I figured I'd
>been rendered immune further from shock or awe. And I was sure I'd exceeded
>my lifetime supply of irony-spotting.
>
>Then I saw the story in question. It couldn't have been considered very
>important by WSJ editors, because it was buried on an inside page. But it
>sure jumped out to me. The headline asked:
>
>Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>
>The story answered it's own question:
>
> "Talk about your historic takeovers. David Rubenstein, co-founder of the
>private-equity firm Carlyle Group [1], bought a 710-year-old copy of the
>Magna Carta [2] for $21.3 million on Tuesday." (Full Story [3])
>
>If you've put up with my rants for any time at all, you know I'm no lover of
>conspiracy theories. And so that's not where I;m going with this. The
>Carlyle Group has replaced the Trilateral Commission as the
>conspiracy-minded's invisible hand of all things devious and evil. I don't
>see it that way at all. Instead I see the Carlyle Group for what it is --
>America's preeminent conduit of the fruits of crony capitalism.
>
>Founded in 1987 with $5 million, the Washington-based merchant bank controls
>nearly $14 billion in investments, making it the largest private equity
>manager in the world. Carlyle doesn't dabble in investments. It buys and
>sells entire companies the way most other investment firms trade shares of
>stock.
>
>I'm not saying that the Magna Carta's new owner, David Rubenstein, is a bad
>man. I did some research and he gives a lot of (tax deductible) money to
>worthy charities. But then, why not? If members of this exclusive group have
>anything in excess, it's money. At any point in time, Carlyle and it's
>investors have vested interests virtually any thing important that's going
>down in the world.
>
>Wars are bullish for Carlyle. Which is why Carlyle's board of directors and
>advisor's has read like a Who's Who of all things that go BANG -- and
>KA-CHING.
>
>Oh, and all things Bush too.
>
>Former president George H.W. Bush is a Carlyle adviser, as is former British
>prime minister John Major who heads its European arm. Former secretary of
>state James Baker is senior counselor, former White House budget chief
>Richard Darman is a partner, former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt is senior
>adviser -- the list goes on.
>
>Carlyle has, from time to time, played the role of power-legacy incubator,
>as it did when asked to find a no-work job for George H. Bush's
>good-for-nothing son, George W. George and Barbara Bush are close to the
>Rubensteins. David, his wife and three children tagged along on an African
>safari with Barbara Bush.
>
>Four years before George W. Bush's first run for Texas Governor, Rubenstein
>was asked to find a soft spot for Georgie to cool his heels and earn some
>easy money. Carlyle had just purchase Caterair, a company that provided food
>service to the airlines. A Bush family confident came to Rubenstein and
>pitched young George.
>
> "...we were putting the board together, somebody [Fred Malek [4]] came to
>me and said, look there is a guy who would like to be on the board. He's
>kind of down on his luck a bit. Needs a job. Needs a board position. Needs
>some board positions. Could you put him on the board? Pay him a salary and
>he'll be a good board member and be a loyal vote for the management and so
>forth...We put him on the board and [he] spent three years. Came to all the
>meetings. Told a lot of jokes. Not that many clean ones. " (David
>Rubenstein)
>
>(Irony alert: Fred Malek received his 15 minutes of fame in the 1970s as
>deputy director of CREEP (Committee to Re-elect the President), the Nixon
>White House operation behind Watergate.)
>
>Did Carlyle's managers laugh at George's jokes? Hard to say. More likely
>they just grinned and bore it, which paid off a decade and half later:
>
> April 2003: Directors of one of the world's largest armament companies are
>planning on meeting in Lisbon in three weeks time. The American based
>Carlyle Group is heavily involved in supplying arms to the Coalition forces
>fighting in the Iraqi war.
>
> It also holds a majority of shares in the Seven Up company and Federal
>Data Corporation, supplier of air traffic control surveillance systems to
>the US Federal Aviation Authority. The 12 billion dollar company has
>recently signed contracts with United Defense Industries to equip the
>Turkish and Saudi Arabian armies with aviation Defense systems.
>
> Top of the meeting's agenda is expected to be the company's involvement in
>the rebuilding of Baghdad's infrastructure after the cessation of current
>hostilities. Along with several other US companies, the Carlyle Group is
>expected to be awarded a billion dollar contract by the US Government to
>help in the redevelopment of airfields and urban areas destroyed by
>Coalition aerial bombardments. (Full Story [5])
>
>And, talk about being in on the ground floor of the "War on Terror:" On
>September 11, 2001, the day two planes crashed into the World Trade Center
>the Carlyle Group was hosting an investors conference at the nearby
>Ritz-Carlton, a conference attended by none other than Osama bin Laden's
>brother. George H. Bush attended the conference the day before and had met
>personally with the bin Laden kin.
>
>No, I'm not siding with the 9/11 conspiracy folks. I still think they're
>nuts. I am simply making the point that when it, if it's big, or promises to
>be big, the Carlyle Group makes sure it has an arm lock on good hunk of the
>action.
>
>Former Secretary of State James Baker is (of course) a member of Carlyle's
>inner circle and he bristles at the notion that the company somehow
>manipulates world events.
>
> "I say that's bullshit, and you can print it!" Baker snapped at a
>reporter. "Somebody would say, 'well, you had one of the bin Laden brothers
>as an investor.' Well, that's exactly right," he says, adding that the bin
>Ladens are one of the wealthiest families in the Middle East and have
>disowned Osama.
>
>(Duh Alert: After 9/11 Rubenstein announced he had returned the bin Ladens'
>$2 million investment.)
>
>Rubenstein has stopped trying to deny the benefits of his company's toady
>hyper-connectedness:
>
>"We've actually replaced the Trilateral Commission" as the darling of
>conspiracy theorists," Rubenstein jokes.
>
>(Irony alert: Rubenstein is also a member of said Trilateral Commission
>[6].)
>
>So there we are. The new owner of one of the most important documents in
>mankind's march towards democracy has been purchased by Carlyle co-founder
>David Rubenstein. His new acquisition will be housed and conserved, at
>taxpayer expense, at the National Archives.
>
>Rubensteins copy of the Magna Carta is sure to continue to rise, even as the
>paradigm-shattering rights it was the first to enshrine into law slip, one
>by one, from our lives today.
>_______
>newsforreal.com



Ironic that the Magna Carta has a monetary value at the same time it's
value as a social contract has been rendered null and void.
 
Hop wrote:
> On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 10:02:01 -0800, "Gandalf Grey"
> <valinor20@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Pearls For Swine: Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>>
>> By Stephen Pizzo
>>
>> Created Jan 2 2008 - 9:20am
>>
>>
>> There's this newspaper clipping that's been sitting among the flotsam of my
>> desktop for the last week or so. I tore it out of the December 20 Wall
>> Street Journal because it struck me. Struck me how? Well, that's pretty much
>> what I've been trying to figure out since then.
>>
>> Having lived through the last seven years of you-know-what, I figured I'd
>> been rendered immune further from shock or awe. And I was sure I'd exceeded
>> my lifetime supply of irony-spotting.
>>
>> Then I saw the story in question. It couldn't have been considered very
>> important by WSJ editors, because it was buried on an inside page. But it
>> sure jumped out to me. The headline asked:
>>
>> Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>>
>> The story answered it's own question:
>>
>> "Talk about your historic takeovers. David Rubenstein, co-founder of the
>> private-equity firm Carlyle Group [1], bought a 710-year-old copy of the
>> Magna Carta [2] for $21.3 million on Tuesday." (Full Story [3])
>>
>> If you've put up with my rants for any time at all, you know I'm no lover of
>> conspiracy theories. And so that's not where I;m going with this. The
>> Carlyle Group has replaced the Trilateral Commission as the
>> conspiracy-minded's invisible hand of all things devious and evil. I don't
>> see it that way at all. Instead I see the Carlyle Group for what it is --
>> America's preeminent conduit of the fruits of crony capitalism.
>>
>> Founded in 1987 with $5 million, the Washington-based merchant bank controls
>> nearly $14 billion in investments, making it the largest private equity
>> manager in the world. Carlyle doesn't dabble in investments. It buys and
>> sells entire companies the way most other investment firms trade shares of
>> stock.
>>
>> I'm not saying that the Magna Carta's new owner, David Rubenstein, is a bad
>> man. I did some research and he gives a lot of (tax deductible) money to
>> worthy charities. But then, why not? If members of this exclusive group have
>> anything in excess, it's money. At any point in time, Carlyle and it's
>> investors have vested interests virtually any thing important that's going
>> down in the world.
>>
>> Wars are bullish for Carlyle. Which is why Carlyle's board of directors and
>> advisor's has read like a Who's Who of all things that go BANG -- and
>> KA-CHING.
>>
>> Oh, and all things Bush too.
>>
>> Former president George H.W. Bush is a Carlyle adviser, as is former British
>> prime minister John Major who heads its European arm. Former secretary of
>> state James Baker is senior counselor, former White House budget chief
>> Richard Darman is a partner, former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt is senior
>> adviser -- the list goes on.
>>
>> Carlyle has, from time to time, played the role of power-legacy incubator,
>> as it did when asked to find a no-work job for George H. Bush's
>> good-for-nothing son, George W. George and Barbara Bush are close to the
>> Rubensteins. David, his wife and three children tagged along on an African
>> safari with Barbara Bush.
>>
>> Four years before George W. Bush's first run for Texas Governor, Rubenstein
>> was asked to find a soft spot for Georgie to cool his heels and earn some
>> easy money. Carlyle had just purchase Caterair, a company that provided food
>> service to the airlines. A Bush family confident came to Rubenstein and
>> pitched young George.
>>
>> "...we were putting the board together, somebody [Fred Malek [4]] came to
>> me and said, look there is a guy who would like to be on the board. He's
>> kind of down on his luck a bit. Needs a job. Needs a board position. Needs
>> some board positions. Could you put him on the board? Pay him a salary and
>> he'll be a good board member and be a loyal vote for the management and so
>> forth...We put him on the board and [he] spent three years. Came to all the
>> meetings. Told a lot of jokes. Not that many clean ones. " (David
>> Rubenstein)
>>
>> (Irony alert: Fred Malek received his 15 minutes of fame in the 1970s as
>> deputy director of CREEP (Committee to Re-elect the President), the Nixon
>> White House operation behind Watergate.)
>>
>> Did Carlyle's managers laugh at George's jokes? Hard to say. More likely
>> they just grinned and bore it, which paid off a decade and half later:
>>
>> April 2003: Directors of one of the world's largest armament companies are
>> planning on meeting in Lisbon in three weeks time. The American based
>> Carlyle Group is heavily involved in supplying arms to the Coalition forces
>> fighting in the Iraqi war.
>>
>> It also holds a majority of shares in the Seven Up company and Federal
>> Data Corporation, supplier of air traffic control surveillance systems to
>> the US Federal Aviation Authority. The 12 billion dollar company has
>> recently signed contracts with United Defense Industries to equip the
>> Turkish and Saudi Arabian armies with aviation Defense systems.
>>
>> Top of the meeting's agenda is expected to be the company's involvement in
>> the rebuilding of Baghdad's infrastructure after the cessation of current
>> hostilities. Along with several other US companies, the Carlyle Group is
>> expected to be awarded a billion dollar contract by the US Government to
>> help in the redevelopment of airfields and urban areas destroyed by
>> Coalition aerial bombardments. (Full Story [5])
>>
>> And, talk about being in on the ground floor of the "War on Terror:" On
>> September 11, 2001, the day two planes crashed into the World Trade Center
>> the Carlyle Group was hosting an investors conference at the nearby
>> Ritz-Carlton, a conference attended by none other than Osama bin Laden's
>> brother. George H. Bush attended the conference the day before and had met
>> personally with the bin Laden kin.
>>
>> No, I'm not siding with the 9/11 conspiracy folks. I still think they're
>> nuts. I am simply making the point that when it, if it's big, or promises to
>> be big, the Carlyle Group makes sure it has an arm lock on good hunk of the
>> action.
>>
>> Former Secretary of State James Baker is (of course) a member of Carlyle's
>> inner circle and he bristles at the notion that the company somehow
>> manipulates world events.
>>
>> "I say that's bullshit, and you can print it!" Baker snapped at a
>> reporter. "Somebody would say, 'well, you had one of the bin Laden brothers
>> as an investor.' Well, that's exactly right," he says, adding that the bin
>> Ladens are one of the wealthiest families in the Middle East and have
>> disowned Osama.
>>
>> (Duh Alert: After 9/11 Rubenstein announced he had returned the bin Ladens'
>> $2 million investment.)
>>
>> Rubenstein has stopped trying to deny the benefits of his company's toady
>> hyper-connectedness:
>>
>> "We've actually replaced the Trilateral Commission" as the darling of
>> conspiracy theorists," Rubenstein jokes.
>>
>> (Irony alert: Rubenstein is also a member of said Trilateral Commission
>> [6].)
>>
>> So there we are. The new owner of one of the most important documents in
>> mankind's march towards democracy has been purchased by Carlyle co-founder
>> David Rubenstein. His new acquisition will be housed and conserved, at
>> taxpayer expense, at the National Archives.
>>
>> Rubensteins copy of the Magna Carta is sure to continue to rise, even as the
>> paradigm-shattering rights it was the first to enshrine into law slip, one
>> by one, from our lives today.
>> _______
>> newsforreal.com

>
>
> Ironic that the Magna Carta has a monetary value at the same time it's
> value as a social contract has been rendered null and void.


Who ****ing cares when Israel controls our government?

http://www.josephsbusiness.com/War/War.shtml

In service of God and Country

Joseph
 
Hey guys, someone is posting this stuff in my name. They did that before
before they tried to kill me, and used CNN and the NYP to set me up. They
had previously used Seattle Police to set me up to get my 2nd Amendment Righ
taken away.

Well, some fool thinks it is funny to impersonate me and try to motive
others to try to discredit and kill me, whom were already trying to
discredit and take my Liberty and my Life, because the US Government took
away my 2nd Amendment Right with falsehood.

No doubt them Tax and Spend Democrats and them Borrow until Economic
Collapse Republicans will be responsible for my death, as well as the death
of other innocent Americans, because they instigated these Crimes against
the People of these United States.

In service of God and Country

Joseph



"Joseph R Loegering" <JosephLoegering@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:X8SdnVAfM9eWHuDanZ2dnUVZ_ommnZ2d@giganews.com...
> Hop wrote:
>> On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 10:02:01 -0800, "Gandalf Grey"
>> <valinor20@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Pearls For Swine: Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>>>
>>> By Stephen Pizzo
>>>
>>> Created Jan 2 2008 - 9:20am
>>>
>>>
>>> There's this newspaper clipping that's been sitting among the flotsam of
>>> my
>>> desktop for the last week or so. I tore it out of the December 20 Wall
>>> Street Journal because it struck me. Struck me how? Well, that's pretty
>>> much
>>> what I've been trying to figure out since then.
>>>
>>> Having lived through the last seven years of you-know-what, I figured
>>> I'd
>>> been rendered immune further from shock or awe. And I was sure I'd
>>> exceeded
>>> my lifetime supply of irony-spotting.
>>>
>>> Then I saw the story in question. It couldn't have been considered very
>>> important by WSJ editors, because it was buried on an inside page. But
>>> it
>>> sure jumped out to me. The headline asked:
>>>
>>> Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>>>
>>> The story answered it's own question:
>>>
>>> "Talk about your historic takeovers. David Rubenstein, co-founder of
>>> the
>>> private-equity firm Carlyle Group [1], bought a 710-year-old copy of the
>>> Magna Carta [2] for $21.3 million on Tuesday." (Full Story [3])
>>>
>>> If you've put up with my rants for any time at all, you know I'm no
>>> lover of
>>> conspiracy theories. And so that's not where I;m going with this. The
>>> Carlyle Group has replaced the Trilateral Commission as the
>>> conspiracy-minded's invisible hand of all things devious and evil. I
>>> don't
>>> see it that way at all. Instead I see the Carlyle Group for what it
>>> is --
>>> America's preeminent conduit of the fruits of crony capitalism.
>>>
>>> Founded in 1987 with $5 million, the Washington-based merchant bank
>>> controls
>>> nearly $14 billion in investments, making it the largest private equity
>>> manager in the world. Carlyle doesn't dabble in investments. It buys and
>>> sells entire companies the way most other investment firms trade shares
>>> of
>>> stock.
>>>
>>> I'm not saying that the Magna Carta's new owner, David Rubenstein, is a
>>> bad
>>> man. I did some research and he gives a lot of (tax deductible) money to
>>> worthy charities. But then, why not? If members of this exclusive group
>>> have
>>> anything in excess, it's money. At any point in time, Carlyle and it's
>>> investors have vested interests virtually any thing important that's
>>> going
>>> down in the world.
>>>
>>> Wars are bullish for Carlyle. Which is why Carlyle's board of directors
>>> and
>>> advisor's has read like a Who's Who of all things that go BANG -- and
>>> KA-CHING.
>>>
>>> Oh, and all things Bush too.
>>>
>>> Former president George H.W. Bush is a Carlyle adviser, as is former
>>> British
>>> prime minister John Major who heads its European arm. Former secretary
>>> of
>>> state James Baker is senior counselor, former White House budget chief
>>> Richard Darman is a partner, former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt is senior
>>> adviser -- the list goes on.
>>>
>>> Carlyle has, from time to time, played the role of power-legacy
>>> incubator,
>>> as it did when asked to find a no-work job for George H. Bush's
>>> good-for-nothing son, George W. George and Barbara Bush are close to the
>>> Rubensteins. David, his wife and three children tagged along on an
>>> African
>>> safari with Barbara Bush.
>>>
>>> Four years before George W. Bush's first run for Texas Governor,
>>> Rubenstein
>>> was asked to find a soft spot for Georgie to cool his heels and earn
>>> some
>>> easy money. Carlyle had just purchase Caterair, a company that provided
>>> food
>>> service to the airlines. A Bush family confident came to Rubenstein and
>>> pitched young George.
>>>
>>> "...we were putting the board together, somebody [Fred Malek [4]] came
>>> to
>>> me and said, look there is a guy who would like to be on the board. He's
>>> kind of down on his luck a bit. Needs a job. Needs a board position.
>>> Needs
>>> some board positions. Could you put him on the board? Pay him a salary
>>> and
>>> he'll be a good board member and be a loyal vote for the management and
>>> so
>>> forth...We put him on the board and [he] spent three years. Came to all
>>> the
>>> meetings. Told a lot of jokes. Not that many clean ones. " (David
>>> Rubenstein)
>>>
>>> (Irony alert: Fred Malek received his 15 minutes of fame in the 1970s as
>>> deputy director of CREEP (Committee to Re-elect the President), the
>>> Nixon
>>> White House operation behind Watergate.)
>>>
>>> Did Carlyle's managers laugh at George's jokes? Hard to say. More likely
>>> they just grinned and bore it, which paid off a decade and half later:
>>>
>>> April 2003: Directors of one of the world's largest armament companies
>>> are
>>> planning on meeting in Lisbon in three weeks time. The American based
>>> Carlyle Group is heavily involved in supplying arms to the Coalition
>>> forces
>>> fighting in the Iraqi war.
>>>
>>> It also holds a majority of shares in the Seven Up company and Federal
>>> Data Corporation, supplier of air traffic control surveillance systems
>>> to
>>> the US Federal Aviation Authority. The 12 billion dollar company has
>>> recently signed contracts with United Defense Industries to equip the
>>> Turkish and Saudi Arabian armies with aviation Defense systems.
>>>
>>> Top of the meeting's agenda is expected to be the company's involvement
>>> in
>>> the rebuilding of Baghdad's infrastructure after the cessation of
>>> current
>>> hostilities. Along with several other US companies, the Carlyle Group is
>>> expected to be awarded a billion dollar contract by the US Government to
>>> help in the redevelopment of airfields and urban areas destroyed by
>>> Coalition aerial bombardments. (Full Story [5])
>>>
>>> And, talk about being in on the ground floor of the "War on Terror:" On
>>> September 11, 2001, the day two planes crashed into the World Trade
>>> Center
>>> the Carlyle Group was hosting an investors conference at the nearby
>>> Ritz-Carlton, a conference attended by none other than Osama bin Laden's
>>> brother. George H. Bush attended the conference the day before and had
>>> met
>>> personally with the bin Laden kin.
>>>
>>> No, I'm not siding with the 9/11 conspiracy folks. I still think they're
>>> nuts. I am simply making the point that when it, if it's big, or
>>> promises to
>>> be big, the Carlyle Group makes sure it has an arm lock on good hunk of
>>> the
>>> action.
>>>
>>> Former Secretary of State James Baker is (of course) a member of
>>> Carlyle's
>>> inner circle and he bristles at the notion that the company somehow
>>> manipulates world events.
>>>
>>> "I say that's bullshit, and you can print it!" Baker snapped at a
>>> reporter. "Somebody would say, 'well, you had one of the bin Laden
>>> brothers
>>> as an investor.' Well, that's exactly right," he says, adding that the
>>> bin
>>> Ladens are one of the wealthiest families in the Middle East and have
>>> disowned Osama.
>>>
>>> (Duh Alert: After 9/11 Rubenstein announced he had returned the bin
>>> Ladens'
>>> $2 million investment.)
>>>
>>> Rubenstein has stopped trying to deny the benefits of his company's
>>> toady
>>> hyper-connectedness:
>>>
>>> "We've actually replaced the Trilateral Commission" as the darling of
>>> conspiracy theorists," Rubenstein jokes.
>>>
>>> (Irony alert: Rubenstein is also a member of said Trilateral Commission
>>> [6].)
>>>
>>> So there we are. The new owner of one of the most important documents in
>>> mankind's march towards democracy has been purchased by Carlyle
>>> co-founder
>>> David Rubenstein. His new acquisition will be housed and conserved, at
>>> taxpayer expense, at the National Archives.
>>>
>>> Rubensteins copy of the Magna Carta is sure to continue to rise, even as
>>> the
>>> paradigm-shattering rights it was the first to enshrine into law slip,
>>> one
>>> by one, from our lives today.
>>> _______
>>> newsforreal.com

>>
>>
>> Ironic that the Magna Carta has a monetary value at the same time it's
>> value as a social contract has been rendered null and void.

>
> Who ****ing cares when Israel controls our government?
>
> http://www.josephsbusiness.com/War/War.shtml
>
> In service of God and Country
>
> Joseph
>
>
 
"Joseph R Loegering" <JosephLoegering@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:X8SdnVAfM9eWHuDanZ2dnUVZ_ommnZ2d@giganews.com...
> Hop wrote:
>> On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 10:02:01 -0800, "Gandalf Grey"
>> <valinor20@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Pearls For Swine: Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>>>
>>> By Stephen Pizzo
>>>
>>> Created Jan 2 2008 - 9:20am
>>>
>>>
>>> There's this newspaper clipping that's been sitting among the flotsam of
>>> my
>>> desktop for the last week or so. I tore it out of the December 20 Wall
>>> Street Journal because it struck me. Struck me how? Well, that's pretty
>>> much
>>> what I've been trying to figure out since then.
>>>
>>> Having lived through the last seven years of you-know-what, I figured
>>> I'd
>>> been rendered immune further from shock or awe. And I was sure I'd
>>> exceeded
>>> my lifetime supply of irony-spotting.
>>>
>>> Then I saw the story in question. It couldn't have been considered very
>>> important by WSJ editors, because it was buried on an inside page. But
>>> it
>>> sure jumped out to me. The headline asked:
>>>
>>> Who Bought the Magna Carta?
>>>
>>> The story answered it's own question:
>>>
>>> "Talk about your historic takeovers. David Rubenstein, co-founder of
>>> the
>>> private-equity firm Carlyle Group [1], bought a 710-year-old copy of the
>>> Magna Carta [2] for $21.3 million on Tuesday." (Full Story [3])
>>>
>>> If you've put up with my rants for any time at all, you know I'm no
>>> lover of
>>> conspiracy theories. And so that's not where I;m going with this. The
>>> Carlyle Group has replaced the Trilateral Commission as the
>>> conspiracy-minded's invisible hand of all things devious and evil. I
>>> don't
>>> see it that way at all. Instead I see the Carlyle Group for what it
>>> is --
>>> America's preeminent conduit of the fruits of crony capitalism.
>>>
>>> Founded in 1987 with $5 million, the Washington-based merchant bank
>>> controls
>>> nearly $14 billion in investments, making it the largest private equity
>>> manager in the world. Carlyle doesn't dabble in investments. It buys and
>>> sells entire companies the way most other investment firms trade shares
>>> of
>>> stock.
>>>
>>> I'm not saying that the Magna Carta's new owner, David Rubenstein, is a
>>> bad
>>> man. I did some research and he gives a lot of (tax deductible) money to
>>> worthy charities. But then, why not? If members of this exclusive group
>>> have
>>> anything in excess, it's money. At any point in time, Carlyle and it's
>>> investors have vested interests virtually any thing important that's
>>> going
>>> down in the world.
>>>
>>> Wars are bullish for Carlyle. Which is why Carlyle's board of directors
>>> and
>>> advisor's has read like a Who's Who of all things that go BANG -- and
>>> KA-CHING.
>>>
>>> Oh, and all things Bush too.
>>>
>>> Former president George H.W. Bush is a Carlyle adviser, as is former
>>> British
>>> prime minister John Major who heads its European arm. Former secretary
>>> of
>>> state James Baker is senior counselor, former White House budget chief
>>> Richard Darman is a partner, former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt is senior
>>> adviser -- the list goes on.
>>>
>>> Carlyle has, from time to time, played the role of power-legacy
>>> incubator,
>>> as it did when asked to find a no-work job for George H. Bush's
>>> good-for-nothing son, George W. George and Barbara Bush are close to the
>>> Rubensteins. David, his wife and three children tagged along on an
>>> African
>>> safari with Barbara Bush.
>>>
>>> Four years before George W. Bush's first run for Texas Governor,
>>> Rubenstein
>>> was asked to find a soft spot for Georgie to cool his heels and earn
>>> some
>>> easy money. Carlyle had just purchase Caterair, a company that provided
>>> food
>>> service to the airlines. A Bush family confident came to Rubenstein and
>>> pitched young George.
>>>
>>> "...we were putting the board together, somebody [Fred Malek [4]] came
>>> to
>>> me and said, look there is a guy who would like to be on the board. He's
>>> kind of down on his luck a bit. Needs a job. Needs a board position.
>>> Needs
>>> some board positions. Could you put him on the board? Pay him a salary
>>> and
>>> he'll be a good board member and be a loyal vote for the management and
>>> so
>>> forth...We put him on the board and [he] spent three years. Came to all
>>> the
>>> meetings. Told a lot of jokes. Not that many clean ones. " (David
>>> Rubenstein)
>>>
>>> (Irony alert: Fred Malek received his 15 minutes of fame in the 1970s as
>>> deputy director of CREEP (Committee to Re-elect the President), the
>>> Nixon
>>> White House operation behind Watergate.)
>>>
>>> Did Carlyle's managers laugh at George's jokes? Hard to say. More likely
>>> they just grinned and bore it, which paid off a decade and half later:
>>>
>>> April 2003: Directors of one of the world's largest armament companies
>>> are
>>> planning on meeting in Lisbon in three weeks time. The American based
>>> Carlyle Group is heavily involved in supplying arms to the Coalition
>>> forces
>>> fighting in the Iraqi war.
>>>
>>> It also holds a majority of shares in the Seven Up company and Federal
>>> Data Corporation, supplier of air traffic control surveillance systems
>>> to
>>> the US Federal Aviation Authority. The 12 billion dollar company has
>>> recently signed contracts with United Defense Industries to equip the
>>> Turkish and Saudi Arabian armies with aviation Defense systems.
>>>
>>> Top of the meeting's agenda is expected to be the company's involvement
>>> in
>>> the rebuilding of Baghdad's infrastructure after the cessation of
>>> current
>>> hostilities. Along with several other US companies, the Carlyle Group is
>>> expected to be awarded a billion dollar contract by the US Government to
>>> help in the redevelopment of airfields and urban areas destroyed by
>>> Coalition aerial bombardments. (Full Story [5])
>>>
>>> And, talk about being in on the ground floor of the "War on Terror:" On
>>> September 11, 2001, the day two planes crashed into the World Trade
>>> Center
>>> the Carlyle Group was hosting an investors conference at the nearby
>>> Ritz-Carlton, a conference attended by none other than Osama bin Laden's
>>> brother. George H. Bush attended the conference the day before and had
>>> met
>>> personally with the bin Laden kin.
>>>
>>> No, I'm not siding with the 9/11 conspiracy folks. I still think they're
>>> nuts. I am simply making the point that when it, if it's big, or
>>> promises to
>>> be big, the Carlyle Group makes sure it has an arm lock on good hunk of
>>> the
>>> action.
>>>
>>> Former Secretary of State James Baker is (of course) a member of
>>> Carlyle's
>>> inner circle and he bristles at the notion that the company somehow
>>> manipulates world events.
>>>
>>> "I say that's bullshit, and you can print it!" Baker snapped at a
>>> reporter. "Somebody would say, 'well, you had one of the bin Laden
>>> brothers
>>> as an investor.' Well, that's exactly right," he says, adding that the
>>> bin
>>> Ladens are one of the wealthiest families in the Middle East and have
>>> disowned Osama.
>>>
>>> (Duh Alert: After 9/11 Rubenstein announced he had returned the bin
>>> Ladens'
>>> $2 million investment.)
>>>
>>> Rubenstein has stopped trying to deny the benefits of his company's
>>> toady
>>> hyper-connectedness:
>>>
>>> "We've actually replaced the Trilateral Commission" as the darling of
>>> conspiracy theorists," Rubenstein jokes.
>>>
>>> (Irony alert: Rubenstein is also a member of said Trilateral Commission
>>> [6].)
>>>
>>> So there we are. The new owner of one of the most important documents in
>>> mankind's march towards democracy has been purchased by Carlyle
>>> co-founder
>>> David Rubenstein. His new acquisition will be housed and conserved, at
>>> taxpayer expense, at the National Archives.
>>>
>>> Rubensteins copy of the Magna Carta is sure to continue to rise, even as
>>> the
>>> paradigm-shattering rights it was the first to enshrine into law slip,
>>> one
>>> by one, from our lives today.
>>> _______
>>> newsforreal.com

>>
>>
>> Ironic that the Magna Carta has a monetary value at the same time it's
>> value as a social contract has been rendered null and void.

>
> Who ****ing cares when Israel controls our government?
>
> http://www.josephsbusiness.com/War/War.shtml
>
> In service of God and Country
>
> Joseph
>
>


Someone endeavoring to turn the "Swine" against me hacked my Computer,
beginning in 2003, and made my Personal Writings Public.

They sent my History, my Military, my Criminal, and my Medical Records to
both Russia and China, trying to get "Swine" to turn and rend me. They sent
e-mails to Politicians in my name, and they rewrote what I was writing, as
soon as I clicked the send or post icon, I could see the writing change as
it was being sent. They used both the FBI and CNN to set me up with false
accusations, and though I committed no crime, they locked me up and forced
treated me with drugs that other Doctors had told me not to take because
that they were killing me. And they blocked any investigation as to who set
me up, because People taking over the US Government were involved in setting
me up.

Unlike Joe Wilson, I cannot afford security, and all security has been taken
away from me by the US Government. Like Bhutto, they will deny that they had
anything to do with it, if and when anything happens, but they are the ones
controlling it.

Whoever started this thread using my name, knew they principle that "Pearls
cast before Swine, will cause them to turn and rend you!" That is why they
impersonated me before, and now, trying to get me robbed, jailed, locked up
as a nut, and or killed.

This form of Government has become destructive of the Life, and Liberty, of
every real American, because they deliberately allow large Corporations
filled with Foreign Works, to hack our Computers, and destroy our lives!

Matthew 7:6

"Give not that which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast ye your pearls
before swine, lest they trample them under their feet, and turn again and
rend you."

In service of God and Country

Joseph
 
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