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- From the Detroit Free Press (Nov. 30, 1989) in an article written by
- Dennis Niemiec, we read: "It was payday at Dodge City Complex at
- Warren. Archie Jordan reported for the second shift at his job
- carrying dark blue coveralls and a paper bag. The bag didn't hold his
- lunch, it contained cocaine, heroin, and marijuana. His pockets and
- socks bulged with $4,782 in cash. He also had a list of twenty-five
- names with dollar amounts written along side each name. Tipped-off
- security officials waited for him to walk through the plant turnstile.
-
- After a chase through the plant, Jordan was detained until the Warren
- police arrived and arrested him." Archie Jordan is a "soul brother"
- (like the one the Vietnamese contacted back in the seventies in
- Vietnam and brought heroin into the United States army).
-
- Now we read that the workplace "has become the high stakes
- battleground in the war against drugs. Studies indicate that drug
- abuse on the job costs American business as much as 150 million
- dollars a year." At General Motors the annual drug abuse tab is more
- than one billion dollars.
-
- Well that's all right.
-
- The integrated school system has cost the American taxpayer more money
- than that in a year just to pay for assaults on teachers and pupils
- and vandalism, not to mention a gasoline bill for enforced segregation
- of well over one million dollars a week. The Civil Rights Act of 1964
- was aimed in a certain direction when it was passed and has never
- deviated from this course once. The Civil Rights Act--the most
- massive Communist bill ever passed by bureaucrats for the destruction
- of democracy--is designed to deprive you of every "right" you have,
- and among them the right to run your own business.
-
- At present, you could be sued for
- refusing to hire a homosexual. With a few little
- finishing touches done on the job, the government can eventually
- arrest you for refusing to hire a drug addict. You will be
- "discriminating" against people who "can't help their habit." They
- were "just born that way," etc.
-
- Every child of God should read the definitive work on "the Drug
- Business" which was never printed in any newspaper in the world. The
- reason why it was never printed was because at that time the news
- media was engaged as they are today twenty-four hours a day pushing
- racial integration.
-
- They didn't dare print the material. It was written
- by Westin and Shaffer and was published in 1972 by Pocket
- Books and was called Heroes and Heroin. The first drug connection was
- with the black troops (p. 18-21) called "soul brothers." Captain
- Brian Joseph explained that drugs were necessary to a Harlem
- population (p. 30). In 1965 there was a change in the type of troops
- the Marines were getting. This was due to the Civil Rights Act passed
- the year before. From 1968 on, the enlisted men threatened officers
- who tried to stop the dope traffic in the army, and the govemment
- would back them up if they were black (pp. 58-59). Before the "soul
- brothers" got through, the army had to spend four million dollars for
- rehabilitation centers for drug addicts in the service (pp. 70-76).
-
- The author said that drugs in Philadelphia came from blacks (p. 103)
- who got hooked in Vietnam (p. 112), and they had all re-enlisted to
- get more dope (p. 115). The Command in the United States army had to
- go by the news media position. John Murphy of New York, after touring
- installations in the Far East, offered a bill (March 16, 1971) that
- stated the entire army was not able to handle its own narcotic problem
- (p. 253). So why should Detroit or Michigan be able to handle its
- problem? They can't, and they won't.
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