BTW they don't have the dole where I'm living

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According to the testimony of Tim Russert in the Scooter Libby trial, regardless of what conversation he had with Mr. Libby, the information regarding Plame had long been known.
Despite Ambassador Joe Wilson's proclamations to the contrary, the Washington Post editorial by Robert Novak in June, 2003, was not the first public disclosure of his wife's role in undercover operations.While allegations of Wilson's own loose lips in the Fox News green room to two retired military officers has also made headlines, AP has learned that Ms. Plame played a key role in the first outing of both herself and the "cover" corporation that she worked for.
Ms. Plame wrote a screen play that was turned into a movie in the early 1980's under the psuedonym "Emmit Fitzhume." The movie included disclosure of CIA insertion operations, selection of operatives, and the name of an until then CIA run agency called the "Ace Tomato Corporation." However, the credits to the movie include her name as the "CIA technical advisor," and her actual role was played by Donna Dixon, a role that used her name.
While Ms. Plame had her lead character use her pseudonym for the screenplay, her part in the operation used the cover of a Red Cross Nurse working in the mountains of Pakistan along the Afghanistan border. Red Cross officials launched an investigation and broke ties with the CIA after the movie to prevent the appearance of impartiality. Plame also drew criticism from the CIA for releasing information about common sexual practices of agents on assignment.
Ms. Plame has said that the screenplay was vetted by the CIA prior to her submission to Warner Brothers films.
The movie, which was titled Spies like Us, nearly ended the presidency of Ronald Reagan in 1985 due to the disclosure of rogue military officers trying to launch a nuclear war with the Soviet Union. Additionally, the CIA was forced to changed the name of the under cover corporation to the "Acme Tomato Corporation."
Special Prosecutor Fitzgerald has indicated that he was aware of this disclosure, and it was the primary reason that he did not indict any current officials for violations of the Undercover Agent Act.
Neither Chevy Chase nor Dan Akroyd, the producers and lead actors in the film would comment, citing "national security."
was released and a student at Penn State.
Donna Dixon's plays a character called "Karen Boyer".
Plames name is mentioned nowhere in the credits -
The film itself is on the level of an "Animal House" comedy, though not as funny. Lot's of potty humour.
"National Security" has not stopped the movie from being sold for $9.45 at amazon.com
Do you guys make this stuff up?
" 'cause in the mind
of Ronald Reagan
wheels they turn
and gears they grind....
buildings collapse
in slow motion
Everything is fine
Everything is fine
Everything is fine"
Trifecta wrote:PP, your firm stance that this cannot be proven, thus impossible (improbable) is a clear indication that you have not done the research. If you can get your magnificent brain (sarcasm) around metadata, keywords, taxonomy, folksonomy, semantic webs etc, well I bow down to you sir. But, until then, here's a little story.While Ms. Plame had her lead character use her pseudonym for the screenplay, her part in the operation used the cover of a Red Cross Nurse working in the mountains of Pakistan along the Afghanistan border. Red Cross officials launched an investigation and broke ties with the CIA after the movie to prevent the appearance of impartiality. Plame also drew criticism from the CIA for releasing information about common sexual practices of agents on assignment.
Ms. Plame has said that the screenplay was vetted by the CIA prior to her submission to Warner Brothers films.
The movie, which was titled Spies like Us, nearly ended the presidency of Ronald Reagan in 1985 due to the disclosure of rogue military officers trying to launch a nuclear war with the Soviet Union. Additionally, the CIA was forced to changed the name of the under cover corporation to the "Acme Tomato Corporation."
So I finally got around to watching the Valerie Plame movie this weekend.If I didn't know better the filmmakers seemed to be throwing a bone to HMW
Disney World is just like Vegas for kidz. - Joe Wilson
KWHing gets even more convuluted
viewtopic.php?f=17&t=32946
Posted 24 June 2009 - 03:17 PM
I'd be willing to bet that the title of the novel and movie was a pun on "LeMay." I mean, it could have been "Seven Days in June" or "Seven Days in August."
I remember seeing the movie a couple of times, wondering how they came up with such a believable story about an attempted coup d'etat in America. It was preposterous, such a thing could never happen here, but they made it seem so realistic! That's how naive or stupid I was back then.
I was also a big fan of The Twilight Zone. It would never have occurred to me back then that the government would care what was being written or shown in the entertainment world. (I had no idea, for example, that the government was out to get the editor of Mad Magazine!) Weren't there more important things to worry about? I remember reading about how the "insane" Ernest Hemingway, who was just a novelist who enjoyed hunting and bullfights, was convinced that the FBI was spying on him. How crazy can you get!?
http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index ... ntry168834
viewtopic.php?p=461747#p461747
IanEye wrote:and furthermore, does that make Warren Beatty
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewt ... 923#138923
Felix Leiter?
As of 2012, it has yet to be released on DVD in North America, although it has been released on DVD in Europe...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishtar_%28film%29
IanEye wrote:
eye guess in the end, we met somewhere between Never-Neverland and Wonderland.
Joe Hillshoist wrote:IanEye wrote:
eye guess in the end, we met somewhere between Never-Neverland and Wonderland.
That is brilliant IanEye.
Cheers.
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