By John Kaminski on January 10, 2004
It’s not just rhetoric – we need a revolution to survive!
Posted in Miscellaneous
By on January 9, 2004
Another US helicopter has crashed near the troubled town of Falluja
Posted in Iraq
By on January 9, 2004
Although it says that it has no hostile intentions, Iran’s nuclear program has prompted serious concern in Israel. In response, it has now been reported that Israel is trying to acquire more submarines to beef up its nuclear strike capability
Posted in Miscellaneous
By on January 9, 2004
U.S. Marines execute an Iraqi to the cheers of fellow marines. Warning: this video should only be viewed by a mature audience
Posted in Iraq
By Robert Fisk on January 8, 2004
‘The British said my son would be free soon’ says Lieutenant Col. Mousa of the Iraqi police. ‘Three days later I had his body’ Thereafter, the British authoriiies initially offered $3000 in compensation
Posted in Iraq
By on January 7, 2004
The Los Lunas stone, pictured below, would not have been out of place in an Indiana Jones adventure. Situated a few miles west of Los Lunas, in New Mexico, the stone would seem to defy all conventional notions concerning history and the discovery of the Americas. The inscription is an abridged version of the Decalogue […]
Posted in Hidden and Revisionist History
By on January 6, 2004
It is now official: the stand down orders on Air France’s Christmas flights from Paris to Los Angeles were based on fabricated information. Bear this in mind, because BA’s flight 223 to Washington has been delayed 3 times in a row, over security fears
Posted in "The War on Terror"
By on January 6, 2004
“War is a racket…It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives”
Posted in Behind The "News"
By on January 6, 2004
Just because you cannot see the slave-chains doesn’t mean they are not there. Chains made of steel are obvious, but chains made of beliefs are not always recognized for what they are.
Posted in Miscellaneous
By Robert Fisk on January 5, 2004
The neocons have outlined their plans for the future of Iraq. It is, writes Robert Fisk, an astonishing combination of simplicity and ruthlessness. And a recipe for more ethnic conflict
Posted in Iraq
By on January 5, 2004
A scientist and writer explains why he admires the historian and why his recent court case was distorted through the filtered lens of the mainstream media.
Posted in Behind The "News"
By on January 4, 2004
Bright, noisy and enthusiastic: a charity appeal has opened up a whole new world for these kids
Posted in Miscellaneous
By on January 4, 2004
A 17-year-old Palestinian pallbearer, was pronounced clinically dead in Nablus, after soldiers shot him in the head as he helped carry the coffin of his 15-year-old cousin, shot earlier by Israeli troops
Posted in Miscellaneous
By on January 4, 2004
The daughter of a slain Iraqi opposition leader says that the US helped Saddam to quash coup attempt in 1993
Posted in Iraq
By on January 4, 2004
Although the occupation authorities deny it exists, recent satellite photos of Iraq, reveal what may be a secret pipeline, pumping oil from the country
Posted in Iraq
By Robert Fisk on January 3, 2004
“At least under Saddam there was security – now we are afraid to go to work,” one young Iraqi tells Robert Fisk. “At least under Saddam, the innocent didn’t suffer.”
Posted in Iraq
By on January 2, 2004
Iran has threatened to retaliate with missiles in the event of an Israeli strike
Posted in Miscellaneous
By wmw_admin on January 2, 2004
It was Thomas Jefferson who said, “banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies”. And as Kieron McFadden reveals, he was not being alarmist
Posted in Essential Reading, Hidden and Revisionist History
By Christopher Bollyn on January 1, 2004
Christopher Bollyn on Israel’s so-called ‘apartheid wall': a fortified barrier running for 400 miles, paid for by US taxpayers and supported by the US government
Posted in Miscellaneous
By Robert Fisk on January 1, 2004
19 men were killed in the Karbala massacre: 11 policemen, five Bulgarian soldiers, two Thai soldiers and a civilian – one of the highest death tolls for suicide bombings in Iraq since the country was “liberated” last April.
Posted in Iraq