In memoriam : RI Obituaries

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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby semper occultus » Thu Dec 24, 2015 10:50 am

In Memory of Maurice P. Terry Jr.

Obituary


Maurice P. (Maury) Terry, 69, died on December 10, 2015 following a brief illness. He was born on June 29, 1946 to Maurice and Regina Newbrand Terry. He graduated from Sacred Heart grammar and high schools and attended Iona College. In his younger days he was a skilled and competitive athlete.

Maury was a talented writer, television news producer and award-winning investigative journalist. His best-known work was his book, "The Ultimate Evil." He spent most of his professional life seeking to uncover the truth, and his efforts touched many lives throughout the country. Maury was a font of rock-and-roll knowledge and was as passionate about sports and politics as he was about his work. He was a loyal fan of both the New York and San Francisco Giants, sticking with his teams for decades through good years and bad.

Maury was predeceased by his brothers Robert and Joseph. He is survived by his parents, his sister Kay Amicone, his brother-in-law Phil, his nephews Joseph, Brendan, and Matthew and their families, including six great-nieces and -nephews. He was laid to rest on Dec. 14. He will be missed by his family and his many friends.

http://obits.dignitymemorial.com
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby Grizzly » Sun Dec 27, 2015 12:15 pm

“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Dec 29, 2015 7:23 pm

Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby Nordic » Tue Dec 29, 2015 9:05 pm

I never knew how popular Motörhead was until today. I'd never heard of this guy. I'm so uncool.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby chump » Wed Dec 30, 2015 1:31 am

Image


http://www.wsj.com/articles/meadowlark-lemon-1451432014
Meadowlark Lemon
A skilled basketball player and master entertainer.
Dec. 29, 2015 6:33 p.m. ET

Wilt Chamberlain called him the “most sensational, awesome, incredible basketball player” he’d ever seen. Announcers introduced him as “the Clown Prince of Basketball.” In 1986 the most famous Harlem Globetrotter gained a new title—Pastor Meadowlark Lemon—when he became an ordained Christian minister.

Meadowlark Lemon, who died Sunday at age 83, said God’s plan for him became clear at age 11 in a segregated North Carolina movie theater. There he saw a newsreel featuring the Globetrotters, a basketball team made up of talented players who had the same color skin he did. He left the theater resolving to be a Globetrotter...
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby 82_28 » Thu Dec 31, 2015 12:13 pm

Nordic » Tue Dec 29, 2015 5:05 pm wrote:I never knew how popular Motörhead was until today. I'd never heard of this guy. I'm so uncool.


Maybe you'd be uncool in a mall arcade in 1984. I never liked the name when I was a kid so I never checked them out. I've heard the "main" songs but thought they sucked. I think the only metal band I ever got into was Slayer -- oh and Suicidal Tendencies and a little bit Metallica. But I'd never heard of the guy either. You're still "hip."
There is no me. There is no you. There is all. There is no you. There is no me. And that is all. A profound acceptance of an enormous pageantry. A haunting certainty that the unifying principle of this universe is love. -- Propagandhi
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby chump » Sun Jan 10, 2016 10:29 pm

Kellia Ramares


http://www.globalresearch.ca/a-tribute- ... on/5500362
A Tribute to Kellia Ramares-Watson. A Powerful Voice in the Alternative Media
By Michael Welch, Kéllia Ramares, and Bonnie Falkner
Global Research, January 10, 2016

It was October 12, 2001, barely a month following the most devastating terrorist attack on U.S. Soil in that country’s history.

Radio station KPFA in Berkeley, California was broadcasting an interview with Mike Ruppert, an investigative journalist, whistle-blower and former LAPD narcotics detective. Ruppert was broaching the subject of fore-knowledge of the September 11 attacks. The discussion (see the transcript here) presented one of the first bullet-proof arguments outlining U.S. Government foreknowledge of the terrorist attacks.

Following this broadcast, talks followed. One of the most important being Mike Ruppert’s talk at Portland State University in Oregon, entitled “The Truth and Lies of 9-11.”

Guns and Butter broke important new journalistic ground at a critical time in world history. And according to the current host of the show, the driving force behind Guns and Butter was Kellia Ramares.

That broadcast journalist passed away in August of 2015 at the age of 60.

Kellia Ramares would start breaking stories related to environmental collapse, peak oil, the so-called War on Terrorism, and alternative economics. She has contributed to a number of independent media outlets including The Women’s International News Gathering Service (WINGS), Online Journal, Free Speech Radio News, National Native News, Workers Independent News, Global Public Media, and Global Research.

This week’s episode of the Global Research News Hour is dedicated to the memory of reporter that embodied the spirit of independent journalism, in a media age when such devotion to the truth can be an impediment to media careers. Indeed, she struggled to make a living from her immense output of high quality work.

The links below provide samples of her work, starting with an archive of her contributions to Global Research, including a talk and a handful of interviews which aired over the last year on the radio show.

Feedback is welcome. Please email globalresearchnewshour@gmail.com

Kellia Ramares-Archive

http://wings.org

https://www.patreon.com/kellia?ty=h
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby semper occultus » Sat Feb 20, 2016 8:51 pm

Umberto Eco, writer and scholar - obituary

Professor of semiotics and literary star who wrote clever bestsellers such as The Name of the Rose and Foucault’s Pendulum

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/12166142/Umberto-Eco-writer-and-scholar-obituary.html

Image

9:30AM GMT 20 Feb 2016

Umberto Eco, who has died aged 84, became Italy’s “best known literary export” when his medieval murder mystery The Name of the Rose (1980) became a surprise international best-seller; he so boosted his country’s literary reputation that publishers described his influence on sales as “l’Effetto Eco”.
Eco was 48 when he wrote the book, an Agatha Christie-style whodunnit spiced up with arcane medieval lore, after a publisher asked him to contribute to a series of short thrillers by prominent Italians who had never written fiction. He eventually agreed because “I felt like poisoning a monk”, but insisted the book would be set in the middle ages and be more than 500 pages long.

Eco thought the initial print-run of 30,000 overambitious, but the book – which was attacked by the Vatican as a “narrative calamity that deforms, desecrates and offends the meaning of faith” – sold two million copies in Italy and went on to sell 10 million copies in 30 languages. The English translation by William Weaver was published in 1983. In 1986 it was made into a film by Jean-Jacques Annaud, starring Sean Connery as Eco’s monk-detective, William of Baskerville.

Eco’s day job was as a professor of an abstruse branch of literary theory known as semiotics, developed by the postmodernist French theorist Roland Barthes, which sees all culture as a web of signs – messages to be decoded for hidden meanings. Critics complain that it accords world-historical significance to trivia. Certainly there was nothing so ephemeral that Eco disdained to subject it to semiotic deconstruction. As a result he was able to position himself as a sort of portmanteau intellectual, giving his views on everything from how to eat peas with a plastic fork to changing concepts of beauty.

Among other things Eco decoded James Bond novels, Peanuts and pulpy strip-cartoons such as The Savage Sword of Conan the Barbarian, and even subjected the porn star La Cicciolina to semiotic scrutiny. In one memorable essay he analysed the cultural significance of his own denims: “Well, with my new jeans life was entirely exterior: I thought about the relationship between me and my pants, and the relationship between my pants and the society we lived in. I had achieved epidermic self-awareness.” Mickey Mouse, he proclaimed “can be perfect in the sense that a Japanese haiku is”.

Before Eco became an international literary superstar, he had castigated Ian Fleming and other thriller writers for cynically devising entertainments for a reading public both “popular and serious”. Yet The Name of the Rose appealed to exactly the same readership, and some accused Eco of – equally cynically – using his knowledge of the formula for bestsellers to manufacture one himself. Will Self argued that Eco occupied a “perverse and tendentious position” as a writer of “superficially 'intellectual’ books that … convince a great number of people they are reading something with a certain cachet. This is a loathsome confidence trick.”

Eco’s subsequent novels continued to sell well. In Foucault’s Pendulum (1988), three editors at a Milan publishing house try to link every conspiracy theory in history, from the Knights Templar to the Nazis, into a hidden Plan that would give control of the Earth. The Island of the Day Before (1994), was a metaphysical conundrum about time and space centred around a 17th-century shipwrecked sailor who is unable to reach a nearby desert island both because he cannot swim and because it is across the international date line. In his fourth novel, Baudolino (2000), Eco returned to the middle ages with a protagonist, a “little liar who could concoct bigger lies”, whose narrative raises questions about historical truth.

As time went on, however, the suspicion arose, supported by newspaper “polls”, that, like Stephen Hawking’s Brief History of Time, Eco’s novels were more bought than read. Certainly his novels, full of postmodern irony and symbolism, received mixed reviews and their author was often accused of being too “clever” by half. While Lorna Sage commended Eco’s investment in the “sanitising power of mockery, irony, laughter”, and his “personal tradition of carnival scepticism”, Salman Rushdie found himself irritated by Foucault’s Pendulum, a “fiction about the creation of a piece of junk fiction that then turns knowingly into that piece of junk fiction”, pronouncing it humourless and devoid of characterisation or credible dialogue. “Reader: I hated it,” he concluded.

“I was always defined as too erudite and philosophical, too difficult,” Eco reflected in later life. “Then I wrote a novel that is not erudite at all, that is written in plain language, The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana (2004), and among my novels it is the one that has sold the least. So probably I am writing for masochists.”

That certainly seemed to apply to his sixth novel, The Prague Cemetery, published in English in 2011. The plot concerned the creators of the so-called Protocols of the Elders of Zion (a document which emerged in Russia in the early 1900s, purporting to describe a meeting at which Jewish leaders discussed their plans for world domination, but later proved to be a pernicious fraud), but critics were troubled by the full-throated diatribes against Jews which Eco put into the mouths of some of his characters.

A stinging review in the Vatican’s L’Osservatore Romano newspaper complained: “Forced to read disgusting things about the Jews, the reader remains tainted”, adding that it was “possible that someone may think that maybe there’s some truth” in the story.

Although, as a good postmodernist, Eco was a fervent defender of the reader’s right to interpret a book how they choose, regardless of authorial “intentions”, it clearly did not apply in this case. He could not be held responsible, he said, for “weak readers” who misunderstood him.

Umberto Eco was born on January 5 1932 at Alessandria, a small industrial town in the Piedmont region of Italy where his father was chief accountant at the local iron works. His early life, he recalled later, had been shaped by Mussolini. He recalled being proud of his fascist uniform, and at 10 won first prize in a writing competition “for young Italian fascists”. It was only with the fall of fascism that “like a butterfly from a chrysalis, step by step I understood everything”. During the German occupation of northern Italy he experienced starvation and recalled dodging bullets traded by the SS, fascists, and partisans.

As a teenager, he explored American literature and jazz, took up the trumpet and, aged 14, joined the Catholic youth organisation, of which by the age of 22 he had become a national leader, but from which he resigned in 1954 during protests against the strongly conservative Pope Pius XII. Subsequently he abandoned Catholicism in favour of a sort of unfocused religiosity and secular morality.
Eco’s passion for medieval thought began as a student at Turin University, where his doctoral thesis (published in 1956) was on St Thomas Aquinas. After leaving university he made cultural programmes for the television network RAI and, following military service in 1958, joined the Milan publishers Bompiani, where he worked as a senior non-fiction editor from 1959 to 1975.

From 1956 Eco lectured in aesthetics, architecture, visual communications and semiotics at universities in Turin, Florence, Milan and Bologna, where he became Professor of Semiotics in 1975. In 1959 he began a monthly column full of literary spoofs and pastiches in Il Verri, an organ of the “neo-avant-garde”, some of which were later published in English in Misreadings (1993) and How to Travel With a Salmon (1994).

In the 1960s he became a founder-member of Gruppo 63, a radical and disputatious avant-garde group of young Italian writers opposed to what they called the “neo-capitalistic” language of traditional literary and poetic texts, who developed a line in meaningless (“non-significanza”) verses and promoted the idea of “art as a plaything in itself.”
As his contribution to the cause, Eco wrote Open Work, one of the first texts to advocate “the active role of the interpreter [the reader] in the reading of texts” – in other words the reader’s right to interpret a book how they choose, regardless of authorial “intentions” – a “postmodern” idea which, to the regret of many, has infected university English and History departments. It was at about this time, too, that he began defying the taboo against serious analysis of popular culture, finding a unifying theme in the theory of semiotics which he set out in books such as A Theory of Semiotics (1976) – written in English – and The Role of the Reader (1979). In addition he wrote several works on langauge and the use of words

A unifying theme in both Eco’s fiction and academic works was the power of human fantasy ( “It’s a fundamental human activity to lie more than to tell the truth”) to shape human endeavour – Captain Cook looking for the Terra Incognita; Christopher Columbus searching for India – a mechanism he explored in such works as Faith in Fakes (1984), Kant and the Platypus (1999) and The Book of Legendary Lands (2013), a work described by one critic as “a rumination on utopias – with a generous helping of piffle”.

Throughout his career as a novelist, Eco continued to teach semiotics at Turin University, where he became founder director of the Institute of Communications Disciplines. In addition to novels and academic books, from 1985 he had a regular column in L’Espresso magazine and later wrote for the Guardian. His final novel, Numero Zero, a satire on the popular press, was published in 2015.

Eco was an important Left-wing voice in debates on abortion, the mafia and corruption. He was a prominent critic of the former Italian president Sylvio Berlusconi, whom he once compared to Hitler and whose 90 per cent monopoly of Italian television he described as a “tragedy for a democratic country”. Nevertheless, his suggestions of how “Berlusconismo” might be counteracted (“a series of continuous, positive proposals could give the public a glimpse of another way of governing”) were somewhat vague.

Short, plump, bearded and bespectacled, Eco was an amusing and energetic raconteur with that sort of studied nonchalance which Italians call sprezzatura. Though his novels made him rich and famous, he disdained his writing of them as a “hobby” and confessed that fame had its drawbacks: “I have lost the freedom of not having an opinion.”
He married, in 1962, the German-born Renate Ramge, a graphic designer, with whom he had a son and a daughter.

Umberto Eco, born January 5 1932, died February 19 2016
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Sun Feb 21, 2016 7:57 am

Apparently Harper Lee died the same day as Eco.
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby KUAN » Wed Mar 09, 2016 7:57 am

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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Mar 09, 2016 8:25 am

I hung out with these guys a bit back in the day :)

I can't stop the music


'All Shook Up' (1980)

Cheap Trick

The endlessly infectious yet multifaceted power pop featured on Cheap Trick’s first few albums always marked the Rockford, Ill. rockers as eager and unashamedly earnest students of everything Beatles. So, it was no surprise when they jumped at the chance to collaborate with Martin on their fifth studio LP, All Shook Up. It proved to be one of their most distinctive and experimental efforts. What’s more, songs like "Stop This Game" (with its droning piano intro) and "Baby Loves to Rock" (jetliner sound effects behind a lyric about Russia) were filled with subtle acts of Fab reverence.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uB4n6rAvHU8

and then there's this


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiOPvOBd8IA
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby chump » Wed Feb 15, 2017 4:14 pm

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http://drrimatruthreports.com/general-b ... r-you-are/
General Bert died today on his 87th birthday. He died not from heart disease, not from kidney failure, not from multiple infections and pneumonias. He died from a lack of health freedom: freedom of Informed Consent, to choose to have nutrients, food and Vitamin C imposed by a system designed to sell drugs, keep people sick and then kill them. It is called “Allopathic Medicine” and is the product and tool of the massive, and massively evil, globalist agenda.
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Let me explain.
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General Bert developed a serious swallowing problem of unknown origin back in Chile where he lost so much weight that his immune system was compromised. That meant that he was vulnerable to infections, including aspiration pneumonia and septicemia, for which he was hospitalized on September 1 of last year at JFK Medical Center in Edison NJ.
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Because of the bacteria in his blood, his kidneys were no longer able to function and he would required dialysis for the rest of his life.
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I knew from the first day of admission, and so did his attending physician, that Vitamin C intravenous drips would support him so powerfully that he could likely heal at all levels.
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But Vitamin C is a forbidden substance in hospitals precisely because it WILL do what I just said!
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I also knew that if I could get enough nutrition into him, that is, both supplements and foods, he could overcome the tremendous damage done to his body by the starvation caused by his swallowing problems and by everything that followed in the hospital.
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I wanted a feeding tube placed in his stomach but the hospital apparently opposed me, delaying its placement while he became weaker and more septic every day. “He’s just another old guy who is going to die so let him die.” seemed to be the attitude.
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That is known as a lethal self fulfilling prophecy! His attending physician continued to fight for nutritional support but the battle was enormous.
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Before the tube was placed I could only spray nutrients like Nano Silver and a special product made from the non-sugary parts of sugar cane into the lining of his mouth. After the tube was placed, I could pour liquefied foods and carefully chosen supplements -lots of them- into him and he began responding exactly as you would expect: by getting better and stronger.
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He was breathing on his own and was within days of having the trach tube removed, too!
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But the hostility to this program was enormous and one day, the Medical Director of the Hospital simply issued an edict, an Executive Order, if you will, and stopped his nutrients. He got, not surprisingly, weaker and weaker.
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We tried to reason with the hospital but that was impossible and finally we sought the protection of the Court. The judge gave permission for me to give him food and nutrients again and I did so with tears of gratitude in my eyes.
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All this time, the interruption in nutrients had a significant negative impact on Gen Bert and he began to fail again.
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When the Court Order came in, we started pumping his nutrients again and, sure enough, he started making forward progress again.
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In the meantime, he had made significant backward movement, from which he had to recover to get back to baseline.
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This happened over and over again, sapping his strength and making healing harder and harder. He repeatedly fought-off “antibiotic resistant infections” he contracted in the hospital… with a little help for his immune system from Nano Silver.
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Still he was motivated, hopeful, positive and working hard on getting well.
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When I tried to give him late night feedings the staff, even after the Court Order, threatened to call Security if I did not leave!
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It was, as a good friend observed, hand to hand combat on a daily basis.
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Then, a month ago, General Bert was suddenly transferred to another hospital. There, instead of combat we had welcoming, helpful staff supporting General Bert’s recovery.
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But Vitamin C drips? No! Vitamin C is not in the Formulary! Sterile water for infusion is not there, either!
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It took the good doctor attending him (another good doctor like the good doctor attending him at the previous institution) 3 weeks to get permission to do what the patient (General Bert) and the Next of Kin (in this case, me, his wife) wanted: give Vitamin C drips.
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And it took about three days for me to round up some ingredients. His first Vitamin C drip was Thursday afternoon of this past week. By Friday he was visibly better.
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His next Vitamin C drip was Friday afternoon. By Saturday, when Counsel Ralph came to visit, Gen. Bert was alert, vibrant, lively and participatory. He was committed to getting well and getting back to our life and work.
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By Sunday evening he was well enough for me to run out and replace the blender that I used to liquefy his food without anxiety.
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Suddenly, about 45 minutes after I left, I knew something was wrong. I called and was told that 5 minutes ago he had ‘some heart issues’.
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I raced back arrived to find that he had “coded”, that is, his heart had stopped and the medical team was trying to restart it.
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He was holding my hand, kissing me and looking at me alertly, grimacing in pain appropriately and showing that he was “there” the whole time, which is pretty unusual when someone’s heart has stopped!
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He recovered and the code team left. He coded again. And again. And again and, finally, at about 4 AM, there was no more life left in this valiant, loving and noble man.
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Even at the very end, he was trying desperately to stay alive but his heart simply gave out. He was resuscitate multiple times over the 10 hours of his dying. I was with him the entire time telling him how much I loved him. He knew.
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You see, the first two times this happened, I asked him why he came back. He looked at me very clearly and very deeply and said, “I came back for you.”
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He was my love, my rock, my friend, my partner, my inspiration and my guide.
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We had very definite plans for the future personally and for health freedom.
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General Bert died because he, like you, did not have the right to choose his health options freely and without interference.
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I will continue his work at the Natural Solutions Foundation along with Counsel Ralph. He would want it very much that way.
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I miss him beyond measure. You and your loved ones should not have to experience anything like this.
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Spread the word. Health Freedom is YOUR battle. We need to win it for all of us so no more people have to die like General Bert, wanting to live, but not permitted to by a system that imposes its will on them.
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Yours in health and freedom,
.
Dr. Rima
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PS – Please share with this link: http://drrimatruthreports.com/general-b ... r-you-are/ — all of the medical bulletins are here: http://drrimatruthreports.com/general-b ... -bulletin/





The Subtitle for this episode is "Men Who Stare at Scapegoats".

General Bert is a graduate of the U.S. Military Academy (West Point, class of 52) who enjoyed a distinguished 32 year career in the U.S. Army. He retired as the Commanding General of the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM). Prior to this assignment he commanded the US Army Electronics Research and Development Command (ERADCOM). During his active duty career he commanded soldiers at every level. After his retirement he served as the VP for Intelligence Systems with BDM, a major defense contractor. He has brought these experiences to leading-edge medical research and development in collaboration with his wife Rima E. Laibow, M.D
He is a long-term out-of-the-box thinker who redesigned the U.S. Army's Intelligence Architecture while serving as the Commanding General of the U.S. Army's Intelligence School and Center. This intelligence restructuring earned him his place in the Intelligence Hall of Fame.
Among his other accomplishments, he participated in a special task force which defined the requirements of the U.S. Army for future conflict. Many of the innovations he developed helped the U.S. to conduct the First Gulf War effectively and swiftly with a very low casualty rate.
Having defended his country for 32 years and having then worked for the remainder of his career to build better ways of being and becoming well, Bert is determined not to let the forces which are threatening American's health freedoms prevail. Formerly a warrior for America's military, now he is a warrior for America's health and personal freedom.
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby Rory » Mon Mar 20, 2017 11:04 am

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/20/busi ... .html?_r=0

David Rockefeller, the banker and philanthropist with the fabled family name who controlled Chase Manhattan bank for more than a decade and wielded vast influence around the world even longer as he spread the gospel of American capitalism, died on Monday morning at his home in Pocantico Hills, N.Y. He was 101.
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Re: In memoriam : RI Obituaries

Postby elfismiles » Thu May 10, 2018 12:27 pm

Brad Steiger Dies, As Well As “Eric Norman” Too
Brad E. Steiger February 19, 1936 ~ May 6, 2018.
Image
http://www.cryptozoonews.com/steiger-obit/

The Passing of Brad Steiger
Paul Seaburn May 10, 2018
http://mysteriousuniverse.org/2018/05/t ... d-steiger/

Philip K. Dick’s Phylogenic Memory and the Divine Fire
By Brad Steiger
http://mysterious-america.com/philipdick-brads.html

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Image

Pahrump-based radio host Art Bell dies at 72
https://www.reviewjournal.com/local/loc ... ies-at-72/

Art Bell Dead: Radio Host Dies, Cause of Death Unclear
https://heavy.com/news/2018/04/art-bell ... -dies-how/

R.I.P. ART BELL from Joseph Farrell
https://gizadeathstar.com/2018/04/r-i-p-art-bell/

Art Bell Makes His Final Exit On Friday the 13th
http://copycateffect.blogspot.com/2018/ ... riday.html

Art Bell Interviews Robert Anton Wilson 7/17/1997 – Floyd Anderson

https://vimeo.com/104812656
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