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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (misc.activism.progressive co-moderator)
- Subject: THE OCTOBER SUPRISE: "Probes and Possibilities" (2)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov7.015931.11093@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Organization: misc.activism.progressive on UseNet ; ACTIV-L@UMCVMB
- Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1992 01:59:31 GMT
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-
- THE OCTOBER SUPRISE: "Probes and Possibilities" (2)
-
-
- "It doesn't have sex in it, but it has morality, human suffering,
- wrongdoing in high places and an issue people are going to be
- concerned about -- the future of our democracy. What we have here
- are men who were willing to sacrifice the liberty and health of
- their fellow Americans to win an election. This is a very basic
- moral issue.
-
- "There has to be signals sent to members of Congress who are
- coming up for re-election that they want to be on the right side
- of the issue. People are outraged. This is going to spread."
-
- =============================
- T H E F I R S T S T O N E
- =============================
- By Joel Bleifuss
- [In These Times, May 1-7, 1991, page 4]
-
-
- =================
- c o n t i n u e d
- =================
-
- According to former hostage Moorehead Kennedy, there are
- two legal grounds on which to bring suit. Kennedy, who
- graduated from Harvard Law School but chose a career with the
- foreign service, explains, "Number one, this is kidnapping, and an
- accessory or a co-conspirator to a kidnapping has the same guilt
- as one who has been involved since the beginning. Two, there is
- an old-fashioned tort called false imprisonment." Kennedy is
- hopeful that the hostages and their attorneys can all "pull to-
- gether on this."
-
- Besides Weinglass, two other lawyers may be possible counsels
- to the former hostages -- Los Angeles attorney Jim Davis, who
- represented 13 hostages in a 1981 suit that contested the U.S.
- government's negotiated settlement with Iran, and Alan
- Dershowitz, the Harvard Law School professor who represented
- Claus von Bulow and who now has been consulted by some hos-
- tages.
-
- ON ALL FRONTS: Kennedy is the director of the Moorehead Ken-
- nedy Institute, an educational organization that gives seminars on
- political ethics. He is also an Episcopal lay minister and the Re-
- publican Party's deputy district leader in Lower Manhattan, an
- area of the city that he claims is home to some yuppies who are
- closet Republicans.
-
- In addition to legal recourse by former hostages, Kennedy ad-
- vocates a probe by a non-partisan citizens' committee, as well as
- the formation of a hostages' committee. This committee, as he
- envisions it, would publicize the issue by raising money and put-
- ting ads in newspapers and on TV.
-
- Further, he says, pressure should be put on Congress. "There
- has to be signals sent to members of Congress who are coming
- up for re-election that they want to be on the right side of the
- issue. People are outraged. This is going to spread. It doesn't
- have sex in it, but it has morality, human suffering, wrongdoing in
- high places and an issue people are going to be concerned
- about -- the future of our democracy. What we have here are men
- who were willing to sacrifice the liberty and health of their fellow
- Americans to win an election. This is a very basic moral issue.
-
- "Some people are concerned that, with the pressures that the
- Bush administration are under, anybody who is critical is going
- to pay for it," he continues. "But this just shows the state of our
- democracy that people would express such an idea."
-
- "I have good old-fashioned Christian faith. I believe in original
- sin. I'm not surprised and it doesn't bother me when people do
- bad things. But I am Bothered when they end up in high places
- and nobody dares to criticize them,' says Kennedy "We've got to
- purge this."
-
- SERVANT OF POWER? One news organization that has recently
- covered the 1980 Reagan-Bush campaign is the Washington Post.
- On April 21 it featured an opinion piece in its "Outlook" section
- by Mark Hosenball, the same journalist who in October 1988
- deemed the 1980 arms-for-hostages story "a rumor that just won't
- die," one that was being spread by "aficionados of intrigue" and
- "rumor mongers." (See In These Times, Oct. 19,1988.)
-
- Picking up where he left off two and a half years ago, Hosenball
- wrote on April 21. "The allegations have knocked around in fash-
- ionable publications and among the chattering classes in New
- York, Washington and Hollywood for years, but last week they hit
- the big time. The New York Times article by former Carter admin-
- istration official Gary Sick, and the subsequent PBS [Frontline]
- broadcast gave a new lease on life .... to a story which has ob-
- sessed a small brigade of conspiracy theorists and journalistic
- gadflies for years ... a mischevous interpretation of highly cir-
- cumstantial evidence."
-
- As a result of these and other articles, a new verb has entered
- the Washington lexicon -- "Hosenballed."
-
- Can't they find a new person?" wonders Robert Parry, the
- former Newsweek journalist who reported the Frontline expose.
- It became sort of a pattern. Any journalist who would quote or
- investigate these charges is attacked by Hosenball. The effect of
- having Hosenball in the 'Outlook' section is to delegitimize the
- story. When reporters feel they are going to be ridiculed in
- Washington in this snotty, sophomoric way, they pull away from
- following leads.
-
- "As the psy-ops [psychological operations] people always tell
- you, the best way to neutralize your opponent is to make them an
- object of ridicule. The effect of such ridicule has kept this story
- from being seriously treated for years, and right now Hosenball is
- working overtime being sure it goes back to the fringes."
-
- Parry believes that someone miscalculated when they assigned
- Hosenball the story. "I think this is a rear-guard action," says
- Parry "There are now millions of Americans who think the elec-
- tion was interfered with and that they were denied the use of
- their franchise. And a democracy can't let that continue."
-
- ******************************************************************
- In These Times
- 1912 Debs Avenue
- Mt. Morris, IL 61054
- ******************************************************************
- "For a free issue of the national weekly newspaper In These Times,
-
- [email me and I'll send you the electronic copy of their "please sent
- me a free issue" card or their tel number]
-
-
-