by Dreams End » Fri Oct 14, 2005 2:58 pm
Well, why don't you have a look around for all the OTHER Ruppert threads. It gets repetitious. <br><br>Reprint from one of those threads:<br><br>This is a fascinating look at why Dale Allen Pfeiffer left Mike Ruppert's From the Wilderness. The email exchanges he published between himself and Ruppert support all the negative views I've read about Ruppert. In addition, the main reason he cites as leaving is of interest. Besides not being allowed to write about anything but Peak Oil, he has a very long account of his dispute with one of the editors of FTW. Pfeiffer says he wanted to call for a general strike as a response to Peak Oil and the other editor, Jamey Hecht, disagreed entirely with this idea and said things generally disparaging of the working class in general:<br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr> Quote:<br> Previous entries in this blog explain my dissatisfaction with FTW. Unfortunately everything came to a head in the months of August, after our move to Appalachia. The final row began when I wrote an article for FTW about peak oil and the working class. In this article, I stated that the working class needed to band together to achieve the eventual goal of a general strike and the transformation of society into a true democracy. Evidently, Mike Ruppert and Jamey Hecht both disagreed with this article. I am sure Mike Ruppert has no desire to see his own staff unionize, much less turn FTW into a democratically run business.<br><br><br><br>Please note, Pfeiffer, as far as I can tell, is not repudiating the Peak Oil theory, but simply it's use in non-progressive ways. So this is about Ruppert and not about Peak Oil. But he does end with this:<br><br> Quote:In the month since I left FTW, Mike Ruppert has tried to milk the Energy Roundtable list for the information he used to receive from me. He has also printed editorials stating that the US is going to collapse within the next few months, implying that all of the recent hurricanes were created intentionally through weather control technology, and suggesting the need for legislated population regulation.<br><br> Numerous people have told me they have no use for Mike Ruppert and that his website is going down the tubes. And since leaving, I have learned of other former employees who received even worse treatment from him than I did, along with others who have had very bad encounters with Mike Ruppert. I even found out about a lawsuit for defamation of character which was filed against Mike Ruppert last year. I have not heard how this lawsuit was decided, and Mike has certainly never mentioned it. If the plaintiff won, then I can see why Mike has no money.<br><br> Perhaps I was wrong in my accusation about how Mike used me. Maybe he was right. I drew the only conclusions I could based upon what was happening. He kept me out of the loop on most of the business at FTW, including articles dealing with subjects that I was being retained to edit. Other people have told me that I did not draw the wrong conclusions. Mike used me to become a noted authority on peak oil and to lend credibility to his speculations. And he has done a very good job of muddying up and sensationalizing the issue of energy depletion.<br><br><hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>Pfeiffer's link to his blog no longer works. Usually I post a link so people can read the entire article. I think his entire blog is down. <br><br>Now, please, go look around on this board for more of this...no one is just randomly picking on Ruppert, he has a history and it has been explored in depth here. Not saying everyone agrees...that is certainly NOT the case, but just that there have been very long discussions on this topic as to why some of us think him a charlatan. <br> <p></p><i></i>