Re: Aleeuns Blocking RV: Satellites Tampered With Aleeuns Say Buh Bye:) Re: good ufo movies
Subject: Re: Aleeuns Blocking RV: Satellites Tampered With Aleeuns Say Buh Bye:) Re: good ufo movies
From: HUGE POOLS OF MOLTEN BECHTEL
Date: 06/08/2004, 06:54
Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo,alt.ufo.reports,alt.alien.research,alt.alien.visitors

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 17:28:59 +1200, Sir Gilligan Horry <GM@ga7rm5er.com>
wrote:

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 04:46:18 GMT, HUGE POOLS OF MOLTEN BECHTEL
<be@nice.com> wrote:

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 16:45:51 +1200, Sir Gilligan Horry <GM@ga7rm5er.com>
wrote:

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 04:24:46 GMT, HUGE POOLS OF MOLTEN BECHTEL
<be@nice.com> wrote:

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 16:23:44 +1200, Sir Gilligan Horry <GM@ga7rm5er.com>
wrote:

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 03:36:24 GMT, HUGE POOLS OF MOLTEN BECHTEL
<be@nice.com> wrote:

On Fri, 06 Aug 2004 05:37:03 +0200, "Dr. Flonkenstein"
<gregoriy_raspoutine_NOSPAM_@hotmail.com> wrote:

Anyway, that reminds me, the documentary called "Expose: Who Killed
Marilyn Monroe?" the other night had the ultimate conclusion that Marilyn
Monroe killed Marilyn Monroe by accident.

And was that a 1st degree "accident"? 

Sure, mind control.

No, there were many ko0ky theorists giving their 2 cents worth in that
TV documentary, including a possible "CIA enema".
It's all in the TV documentary.

She was programmed to OD.

So, what are you and I programmed to DO.

some times we just like to watch

<IBC>  [ABCNews @ 1:18 am ET]
- Planet Earth Begins Anti-Terror Military Drill -
http://abcnews.go.com/wire/World/reuters20040806_2.html

Our Beloved Bechtel Corporation Loves Forced Labor Camps of China:

http://www.indybay.org/news/2004/03/1674087.php
http://www.conway.com/ssinsider/bbdeal/bd000918.htm

http://www.thenewamerican.com/tna/1998/vo14no16/vo14no16_corporate.htm

Captive Workforce

Wu points to Red China’s dreaded laogai ("reform through labor") camps as
another illustration of the kinship between the Beijing regime and Hitler’s
totalitarian Reich. The laogai gulag system encompasses some 1,100 labor
camps, in which an estimated ten million prisoners serve terms of forced
labor. The laogai population includes common criminals, accused individuals
awaiting trial (pre-trial detention often lasts as long as ten years), and
political offenders sentenced to "reform through labor." "The Chinese
government says that political offenders are an ‘administrative’ matter and
aren’t to be counted as prisoners," Wu told THE NEW AMERICAN. The laogai
also plays host to an unspecified number of "former" prisoners who are
forced to settle permanently in the camps after their sentence expires. "If
the original crime is ‘counter-revolutionary’ in nature, the prisoners often
can never go home," according to Wu. "They’re compelled to remain as
laborers in state-run enterprises."

Apologists for Beijing often dismiss criticism of the laogai system by
comparing it to the "hard labor" sentences often imposed on American
convicts. The chief distinction between these systems resides in the fact
that slave labor is used to "reform" the thinking of political prisoners,
rather than to punish those who have committed crimes against persons or
property. The Beijing regime’s Criminal Reform Handbook, published in 1988,
explains that among the laogai’s primary functions is "organizing criminals
in labor and production, thus creating wealth for our society." The regime’s
official statement of labor policy, as cited in Harry Wu’s testimony before
the European Parliament, offers this chilling summary: "Our economic theory
holds that the human being is the most fundamental production force. Except
for those who must be exterminated physically out of political
considerations, ‘human beings’ must be utilized as ‘productive forces’ with
submissiveness as the prerequisite. The laogai system’s fundamental policy
is ‘Forced Labor as a means, while Thought Reform is our basic aim.’ Our
laogai facilities force prisoners to labor … [with the] aim of reforming
prisoners to new, socialist people."

Among the "counter-revolutionaries" to be reformed into "new, socialist
people" can be found Christians and other religious believers who worship in
unregistered congregations. "In China, all religious bodies have to register
with the government, and be supervised by the Party," Wu told THE NEW
AMERICAN. "Unregistered bodies like ‘house churches’ are defined as ‘illegal
gatherings against social order,’ they’re raided by the Public Security
police, and their members are sent to the laogai," where they are put to
work creating goods for export to the West.

Among the goods produced by Chinese Christians imprisoned in the laogai are
the Christmas decorations sold by many American retail stores every
Christmas season. "Let there be no mistake about it — China persecutes
Christians," Wu declared. "Yet it is the largest manufacturer and exporter
of Christmas products to the United States."

But the export of laogai goods is hardly a seasonal enterprise. "According
to the Chinese government itself, 200 different kinds of laogai products are
exported to the international market," stated Wu. Describing the laogai
system as "an integral part of the national economy," Wu has documented that
"one third of China’s tea is produced in laogai camps; sixty percent of
China’s rubber vulcanizing chemicals are produced in a single laogai camp in
Shenyang; the first and second chain hoists to receive direct export
authority are laogai camps in Zhijiang Province; one of the largest and
earliest exporters of hand tools is a camp in Shanghai; an unknown but
significant pipe works in the country is a laogai camp...." Another
illustration of the economic role played by the laogai system is found in
the recent discovery that "auto components from the Beijing laogai were
being used at the Beijing Jeep joint venture involving Chrysler."