Drug Lobbyists Are Attacking Larouche

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Drug Lobbyists Are Attacking Larouche Click here for Full Issue of EIR Volume 13, Number 14, April 4, 1986 Suall has ordered demo�strations against LaRouche us­ ing drug pusher Dana Beal elf the Youth International Party (Yippies), Dean Latimer, an editor for High Times, and Mor­ decai Levy, a protege of the founder of the Jewish Defense League, Meir Kahane. Bea� served a brief stint in jail for Drug lobbyists are bombing the offices of the Soho News in New York, after it exposed his involvement in a jrnultimillion-dollar internation­ al marijuana-smuggling ring, attacking LaRouche Suall specializes in arranging "anti-Semitic acts" to en­ rich ADL coffers. One of his paid agents, Jimmy Rosenberg, Ever since victories by his supporters in the March 18 Illinois a.k.a. Jimmy Mitchell, a.k.it. Jimmy Anderson, belongs to primary, the news media, which had wholly blacked him out the KKK and the Christian Patriots Defense League, and for years, have been making the mime of Lyndon LaRouche attempted to organize the bombing of the Trenton, N.J .. chap­ into a household word. The same news media, as often as ter ofthe NAACP. Another, Mordecai Levy, was exposed in not, have been featuring interviews with "experts" on La-· Philadelphia. in 1979 posing as "Nazi James Guttman," is� Rouche, in particular, the talk-show television hosts: Irwin suing death threats to Jews. Suall on the Phil Donahue Show; Dennis King on Ted Kop­ In 1961, while national secretary of the Socialist Party; pel's Nightline; and Chip Berlet on the "little league" circuit, Suall, using the pseudonym lohn P. Graham, Jr., authored a mostly Chicago television news affiliates of NBC and ABC. pamphlet, "The American Ultras: The Extreme Right and the LaRouche, they say, is "extreme right-wing," "extreme left­ Military Industrial Complex,'!' defaming Ronald Reagan, then wing," "funded by the KGB," and "anti-Semitic." an employee of General Electric. He also slandered Reagan Suall, King, and Berlet have two things in common, for "ultra-right" views to ex�cutives of General Electric. besides being liars-they are left-wing socialists and they are tied into drug-pushing networks. Dennis King and Chip Berlet Dennis King is a drug-user, and is diagnosed as a para­ Irwin Soall noid obsessive consumed by oedipal rage. Sources say he Irwin Suall is the head of the Fact-Finding Division of was recruited as an FBI informant during the 1960s, while a the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai Brith. The ADL is the member of the Maoist Prog�ssive Labor Party. As "Caspar organization created at the tum of the century to protect those the Friendly Ghostwriter," he was arrested in 1979 for sale organized-crime networks which came to be headed by Mey­ of a term paper to a Columbia University student. King's er Lansky. Kenneth Bialkin, ADL national chairman, was "connections" allowed him tb elude prosecution. the 1970s lawyer and business partner of Robert Vesco in His only credentials as a "journalist" arise from contri­ Investors Overseas Services, Meyer Lansky's dirty money butions to the High Times drug magazine, and his deployment laundry which bilked investors of hundreds of millions. Ves­ by Suall and the ADL to attack LaRouche. It began with a Cel, who absconded with the funds, now runs cocaine out of series in Our Town, an East Side New York throwaway a base in Fidel Castro's Havana, Cuba. In 1981, Bialkin's .owned by Edward Kayatt,who served time in prison for Wilkie, Farr, and Gallagher lawfirm was fined $35 milli.on savings-bond forgery. Kayatt's attorney is Roy Cohn, New as restitution to lOS investors. York's best known mob lawyer. Suall is an ideological socialist, identified with the So­ In Our Town, King first stated his bizarre charge that cialist Internationaland the British socialists who trained him LaRouche's vision of uplifting man to the level of Reason­ at the John Ruskin Labor College in 1948. what Plato called the creation of "golden" souls-was a The young Irwin Suall· was arrested and convicted in manifestation of Nazi race science. 1942, 1945, and 1956 for untoward behavior in demonstra­ In May 1981, High Times published an attack on La­ tions. He was a member of the Young People's Socialist Rouche by Chip Berlet, King's sidekick, under the headline: League, and an aide to Norman Thomas, Socialist Party "War on Drugs: The Strange Story of Lyndon LaRouche: presidential candidate. Today, in addition to his ADL posi­ They Want to Take Your Drugs Away!" tion, he sits on the board of the League for Industrial Democ­ Berlet, of a Swiss family, is a former contributing editor racy, which created the 1960s Students for a Democratic of High Times, a cocaine-user, and an employee of the Na­ Society. tional Lawyers Guild, a terr�rist-attorneys' front of the Com.' He has run a "dirty tricks" unit against LaRouche since munist Party U.S.A. Based in Chicago, he was hired by the 1978, when the publication of the book Dope, Inc., commis­ Anti-Defamation League and Irwin Suall to spread slanders sioned by LaRouche, exposed many ADL leaders, among about LaRouche at approximately the same time that Dennis others. King was hired in New York. 56 National EIR April 4, 1986 © 1986 EIR News Service Inc. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission strictly prohibited..
Recommended publications
  • ELCOCK-DISSERTATION.Pdf
    HIGH NEW YORK THE BIRTH OF A PSYCHEDELIC SUBCULTURE IN THE AMERICAN CITY A Thesis Submitted to the College of Graduate Studies and Research in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon By CHRIS ELCOCK Copyright Chris Elcock, October, 2015. All rights reserved Permission to Use In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for a Postgraduate degree from the University of Saskatchewan, I agree that the Libraries of this University may make it freely available for inspection. I further agree that permission for copying of this thesis in any manner, in whole or in part, for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor or professors who supervised my thesis work or, in their absence, by the Head of the Department or the Dean of the College in which my thesis work was done. It is understood that any copying or publication or use of this thesis or parts thereof for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. It is also understood that due recognition shall be given to me and to the University of Saskatchewan in any scholarly use which may be made of any material in my thesis. Requests for permission to copy or to make other use of material in this thesis in whole or part should be addressed to: Head of the Department of History Room 522, Arts Building 9 Campus Drive University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 5A5 Canada i ABSTRACT The consumption of LSD and similar psychedelic drugs in New York City led to a great deal of cultural innovations that formed a unique psychedelic subculture from the early 1960s onwards.
    [Show full text]
  • It's a Beautiful Addiction
    Eagles win last Get ready for FORUM home game the MS Walk Asians will get better ‘reforms’ ..........Page A-6 ............Page A-3 ................................Page A-4 INSIDE Mendocino County’s World briefly The Ukiah local newspaper .......Page A-2 Tomorrow: Mostly sunny 7 58551 69301 0 FRIDAY May 5, 2006 50 cents tax included DAILY JOURNAL ukiahdailyjournal.com 148 pages, Volume 148 Number 26 email: [email protected] GAO: Hopland Drug plan THE IRIS SOCIETY AT 50 YEARS school hotline no help ready to By REBECCA VESELY rebuild The Oakland Tribune MediaNewsGroup Seeking bids for Operators at the toll-free hotline for Medicare’s new $3 million in repairs drug benefit gave inaccurate, By LAURA CLARK incomplete or inappropriate responses to one in three The Daily Journal callers, according to a federal The Ukiah Unified School report issued Wednesday - District has submitted plans fueling more requests from for the rebuilding of the critics to extend the enroll- Hopland Elementary School ment deadline past May 15. to the Division of State The nonpartisan Architecture, and is seeking Government Accountability bids for the job. Office placed 500 calls to 1- The little country school 800-MEDICARE, the tele- was reportedly hit harder than phone hotline that is touted as any other school in the state an easy and reliable way for during the New Year’s Eve seniors to get personalized weekend floods, sustaining an information about which of estimated $2 million to $3 the dozens of new drug plans million in damage. offered through Medicare are Dozens of volunteers, staff right for them.
    [Show full text]
  • Physical Education Credits Made Optional for Fall '72 by LORIE GROSSKOPF Than Four Hours of PE As Be Taken for Credit, Pass-Fail Credits Toward Graduation Electives
    VOL. 94 NO. 10 UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE, NEWARK, DELAWARE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1971 ·-physical Education Credits Made Optional For Fall '72 By LORIE GROSSKOPF than four hours of PE as be taken for credit, pass-fail Credits toward graduation electives. It is the option of or grade. in physical education are no each college to accept the Salsbury also raised the longer mandatory for · four credit maximum. question of the necessity of entering freshmen beginning T h e p h y s i c a 1 Delaware history as a inthefallof1972. education department (ContinuedtoPage2) In a meeting of the supported the idea from the ··· ·.·.·.·.·.,.,.,,,,:,:, .·.:·:·:-=·:-=-=-=-=-=·:.:.:::: ·'''''''''''''''''''''''"'''''''"'''''''"'"'···· Faculty-Senate last Monday beginning. They are in favor afternoon, Dr. Stephen of a voluntary program to SGA Voting Salsbury, chairman of the promote students' interest in committee of undergraduate PE as a "lifetime sports Voting on the Student studies, presented the program. The department was Government Association's assembly with the proposal of very cooperative, said seven Revision Task Force an optional PE program. Plans Salsbury, and was a decisive proposals, scheduled to have formulated last. sprmg force in the final decision taken place this week. will be were passed by · members of within the committee about postponed until next Friday the senate last Monday after a the program. because the Department of detailed discussi·on As it is now planned, the Elections failed to deliver the concerning principles and program is effective only for voting machines on time. R eview photo wording. students matriculating after RETIRING--Or. George M. Worrilow looks back over his 44 June, 1972.
    [Show full text]
  • Michigan NORML Michigan NORML
    M i c h i g a n NORML Leaflet For and about our members Spring/Summer 2011 Michigan NORML chapters Antrim County, Rev. Kristin Kay Goddard, 231.760.7153, [email protected] Benzie County, Rev. Steven B. Thompson, 231.882.4496, [email protected] Berrien County, Don Barnes, 269.684.6437, [email protected] Branch County, Robert Coleman, 517.227.2582, [email protected] Central Michigan NORML, Jerico Simon, 231.622.1423 after 7:00 p.m. please, or Doug Nowiski, 989.327.5448, [email protected] Chippewa County, Kat Compton, 906.630.3268, [email protected] Delta County, Joshua Montgomery, 906.553.2762, [email protected] Detroit NORML, Corey Zinberg, 248.515.3288, [email protected] Emmet County, Gene Foley, 231-420-3737, [email protected] Genesee County, Brian Morrisey, 810.814.6130, [email protected] Grand Traverse County, Marc Ryan,231.409.3501, [email protected] Hillsdale County, Trena Moss, 517.869.2694, [email protected] Hope College (Holland, MI), Chelsea Tarnas, 248.420.2007, [email protected] Ingham County, Richard Clement, 517.908.2454, [email protected] Ionia County, Elizabeth Brandt, 616.717.8745, [email protected] Jackson County, Sean Murphy, 517.917.0606, [email protected] Kalamazoo County, Daniel J. Corse, 269.375.4399, [email protected] Kalkaska County, Archie Kiel, 231.676.0123, [email protected] Kent County, Apryl Coleman, 616.818.8505, [email protected] Lake County, Apryl Coleman, 616.818.8505, [email protected] Lapeer County, Olen Rush, 810.338.6305, [email protected] Leelanau County, Griffin Cypher, 231.256.1495,[email protected] Livingston County, Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Issue-11 for Press
    INSIDE@CANNABISHEALTH www.cannabishealth.com The Cannabis Health Foundation was formed in the spring of Editorial ........................................................................................... 4 2002 as a non-profit foundation. Our mandate as a non-profit foundation is to provide accurate up-to-date information Letters.................................................................................................................................. 5 on Cannabis Marijuana and Cannabis Hemp in a conservative style magazine that appeals to the general public. We are pleased to announce the journal is now being made available to: Government health organizations, patient support groups, medical The Reluctant Activist................................................................................................ 6 associations, research foundations and other cannabis related corporations at the very low bulk distribution rate of: $1.00 per copy + shipping by J.P. King Advertisers in the journal receive up to 300 free copies per issue. For advertising information use phone or fax or e-mail: [email protected]. Maritimers Unite for Medical Marijuana...........................................................7 SUBSCRIPTION / DISTRIBUTION INFORMATION If you would like to receive 6 copies per year of the most informative resource for Society sponsors Hemp Festival in Annapolis Valley medical marijuana available, subscribe to Cannabis Health by sending your name and address to Cannabis Health Foundation, P.O.Box 1481, Grand Forks,
    [Show full text]
  • Donald Grove
    A PROGRAM OF MIX – THE NEW YORK LESBIAN & GAY EXPERIMENTAL FILM FESTIVAL Interviewee: Donald Grove Interview Number: 089 Interviewer: Sarah Schulman Date of Interview: July 1, 2008 © 2010 The New York Lesbian & Gay Experimental Film Festival, Inc. ACT UP Oral History Project Interview of Donald Grove July 1, 2008 SARAH SCHULMAN: So if you could start by saying your name, your age, today’s date and where we are. DONALD GROVE: Okay. My name is Donald Grove. My age is forty- seven for at least six or seven more hours. It’s July 1, 2008, and we are in my office here in Dumbo. SS: Okay. Where were you born, Donald? DG: I was born in Ione, California, a little – it used to be called Bedbug. It was a mining town, and then they got like pretentious and changed the name to Ione, and that’s where I was born in 1960. SS: Where is it? DG: It’s up – it’s close to Lake Tahoe. It’s right where, there’s a sort of V or that angle in the two straight sides of California? {LAUGHS} JAMES WENTZY: Straight sides. {LAUGHS} DG: That’s right in there. SS: How did your family come to be there? Are they old Californians? DG: My dad was working in a ceramics factory there, putting enough money together to go to grad school, and very shortly after, I was like two when we left Ione and proceeded to – then he was going to UCLA, and we lived in Westwood, which back then was not the pissy neighborhood it is now or we couldn’t have lived there.
    [Show full text]
  • 11Th National Harm Reduction Conference November 3-6, 2016, San Diego, Ca
    11TH NATIONAL HARM REDUCTION CONFERENCE NOVEMBER 3-6, 2016, SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2016 LOCATION: Grande Ballroom A/B 10:30 AM - 12:45 PM: Welcome Allan Clear, Office of Drug User Health, NYSDOH/AIDS Institute / New York, NY Monique Tula, Harm Reduction Coalition / Oakland, CA Opening Plenary Panel Harm Reduction that Heals the Most Harmed: A Call to Action Moderator: asha bandele is Drug Policy Alliance’s Senior Director of Grants, Partnerships and Special Projects and lives in New York City Panelists: ● Patrisse Cullors is an artist, organizer, freedom fighter, cofounder of Black Lives Matter, and lives in Los Angeles ● Crystal Lee, enrolled member of the Navajo Tribe, is a Postdoctoral Fellow at UCLA School of Medicine, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Psychiatry and founder of United Natives. Crystal lives in Los Angeles and Las Vegas ● Tanagra María Melgarejo Pulido is an Adjunct Instructor at Universidad del Turabo and Permanent Housing Coordinator at Proyecto Matria in San Juan, Puerto Rico ● Deborah Small is a Public Health Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, founder of Break the Chains, and lives in the Bay Area 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM: Lunch (on your own) 2:15 PM - 3:45 PM: LOCATION: Grande Ballroom A PANEL: High-tech Harm Reduction ○ Using Text Messages to Engage People Living with HIV Who Also Use Drugs in Medical Care ■ Lara Coffin, HIV, ID and Global Medicine Division / UCSF, San Francisco, CA ○ The Effectiveness of Internet and Field Based Approaches to Recruit Young Adults who use Prescription Opioids Non-Medically:
    [Show full text]
  • A Reexamination of US Heroin Policy Daniel Fogel Claremont Mckenna College
    Claremont Colleges Scholarship @ Claremont CMC Senior Theses CMC Student Scholarship 2011 A Reexamination of US Heroin Policy Daniel Fogel Claremont McKenna College Recommended Citation Fogel, Daniel, "A Reexamination of US Heroin Policy" (2011). CMC Senior Theses. Paper 126. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/cmc_theses/126 This Open Access Senior Thesis is brought to you by Scholarship@Claremont. It has been accepted for inclusion in this collection by an authorized administrator. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CLAREMONT McKENNA COLLEGE A REEXAMINATION OF UNITED STATES HEROIN POLICY SUBMITTED TO PROFESSOR LYNCH AND DEAN GREGORY HESS BY DANIEL FOGEL FOR SENIOR THESIS SPRING 2011 APRIL 25 i ii TABLE OF CONTENTS CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION AND STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM CHAPTER II THE HISTORY OF HEROIN USE IN THE UNITED STATES CHAPTER III THE CYCLE OF ADDICTION AND INCARCERATION CHAPTER IV METHADONE CHAPTER V IBOGAINE: THE MIRACLE CURE? CHAPTER VI NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS CHAPTER VII THE BENEFITS OF EDUCATION CHAPTER VIII DECRIMINALIZATION, LEGALIZATION, AND MANDATORY REHABILITATION CHAPTER IX CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS iii CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION AND STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM The drug policy in the United States is in shambles. No matter what one’s political leanings, it is clear that the country is in dire need of drug policy reform. Initiatives such as Proposition 19, which attempted to legalize marijuana in California in 2010, have gained national attention, and much of the media’s focus on drug reform revolves around efforts to medicalize, decriminalize, or legalize marijuana. However, many of the laws and policies that regulate other drugs have even more devastating consequences, both for those who use them and for the rest of society.
    [Show full text]
  • HITTING the ^ Q ^ SPOTS O
    BREAD & CIRCUSEsee page three S HITTING THE ^Q^ SPOTS o Page 2, Kaleidoscope no.99 NEWS BLURTS FREEWAYIN' FRANKLIN of these exclusive God Freaks- since repression will only draw Arch-enemy of the freeway. more people into their move­ Jay Franklin, is on the prowl ment. (Nero learned that lesson). again. This time Jay has launch­ Right now the glitter is coming ed a two-pronged attack on the off the Jesus Movement for many freeway. (For those of you who people and the best tactic would don't remember the freeway, it's be to just let them die of their that big concrete thing that's going own accord. through our community just N. GET A JOB of Ogden) This most* recent attack started with ' an all out The most common remark heard charge on Asst. D.A. Wm. Gard­ about welfare recipients is "Why ner's office by about a dozen peo­ don't they get a job and support ple. They charged that the free­ themselves like the rest of us way had violated certain laws, and have to do". So, a group of^ demanded that the criminals be welfare mothers went to a place brought to trial. Mr. Gardner called Ethnic Enterprises. The said he would investigate their s company location across the charges. street from the welfare office Then the dirty dozen moved on 12th and Miet is very con­ across the plaza to the court­ venient considering the nature of house. There they moved on their business. They do sub­ Judge Landry's court and in one contract work for Allen-Bradley, quick move asked for a John and American Motors.
    [Show full text]
  • Glossary of Cannabis Terms
    Glossary of cannabis terms A cannabis plant Terms related to cannabis include: 0–9 2 long Slang name for a cannabis cigarette.[1] [See joint.] 420 A code-term that refers to the consumption of cannabis. 710 A slang name for hash oil, the word OIL flipped upside-down.[2] [See cannabis edibles and extracts.] A April 20 in Vancouver, British Columbia, in 2012 Acapulco Gold An heirloom variety of cannabis originally grown in the mountains of western Mexico. [See cannabis strains.] adult use Any use of cannabis by adults, whether for medicine, pleasure, religious purposes, or otherwise. Incorporated in some legislation such as the California Adult Use of Marijuana Act. agent provocateur A person who, out of their own sense of duty or employed by the police, commits or provokes others to commit illegal or inappropriate activity, or falsely implicates them in a criminal act. [See informant.] alcohol prohibition Laws in some jurisdictions banning the production or sales of beverage alcohol in an attempt to prevent its use. These bans have been criticized because they create a black market, leading to corruption and violence. Nationwide, constitutional prohibition in the United States, established by the 18th Amendment in 1920, ended in 1933, repealed by the 21st Amendment. Alice B. Toklas 1. Alice B. Toklas (1877–1967) was author of an autobiographical book, The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook, first published in 1954, which includes a recipe for "Hashish Fudge." 2. A slang name for a cannabis edible.[3] amotivational syndrome A supposed medical syndrome of lack of motivation in cannabis consumers, which has been challenged.
    [Show full text]
  • I / EI I (SEE PAGE 2)
    jiiPj!^.j|^ Mut^Po^r*idE S0S2S IM *a9"Jm^MxT^ BULK RATE PAID PERMIT NO. 33 suourpsuopjof) Port Washington, Wis. WE DON'T NEED A PRESIDENT I -CHOOSE YR OWN I I / EI i (SEE PAGE 2) LINKLETTER P.3 GARBAGE P. 6 REV.EWS P. 7 POWER -P. 2 FAB. FREEKS P. 12 POETRY P. 9 t$BLi$f agatf^/ This Is Issue No. 104 and fs alsojthe anniversary, of our Fourth Vear et publishing. It's still hard to baftevel Itiere's been a lot of hype and a lot of guff lately about. the "righteous** concept of FREE newspapers. First of sll, " ICALEIDOSGOPE sttU costs a quarter. and If by some miracle we could affords print,an average of 10,000 copies an issuefce hype!) without charging for It we would still have second thoughts. <- \ , Last year, (no "hype * y&n can. inspect our books) almost .8,000 doHars(not counting the 20 per. cent rip-off rate that we have to deal with) was earned by freaks lr» the com­ munity. That's a lot of money that would be lost to our brothers and sisters if we gave K-scope away tree* "*• We can't afford it, and neither can the community. Others can hype what they* want^, 1 guess-If you can't sell it you HAVE to give it away. Besides, the amount of Utter 04i. Bradv St. is, quite sufficient. Enough $sid* "the Glebbies are doing a terrific job, in case you've been oat of touch, with both their recycling truck and the FREE MEAL every Thursday night -at 6pm at the Gommun- ; ity Center,911 E, Ogden.
    [Show full text]
  • National News
    Click here for Full Issue of EIR Volume 8, Number 12, March 24, 1981 NationalNews were too harsh. Although cocaine is tech­ Intelligence sources estimate that the nically not a "narcotic" it is listed as a U.S. deployment of Socialist Interna­ dangerous drug under federal controlled tional assets into what the Yipsters term Mont Pelerin says substances regulations. a new "International Liberation Move­ Evidence uncovered by the antidrug ment" is a harbinger of U.S.-based ter­ it runs Stockman group reveals that the "medical expert" rorist upsurge. This analysis is especially George C. Roche III, president of Hills­ testimony in the trial is identical to guide­ bolstered by the involvement of more dale College in Hillsdale, Michigan, told lines suggested in a Playboy-funded professional terrorist operations, such as reporters on March II that his institu­ handbook titled "Cocaine, Legal and the American Indian Movement. tion, a semi-official affiliate of the mo­ Technical Defenses" published by the netarist Mont Pelerin Society, launched National College of Criminal Defense the career of David Stockman, director Lawyers and Public Defenders. of the Office of Management and Budg­ According to the handbook's intro­ Republican Senate group et. duction, the "team effort" "resulted di­ Stockman, whom Roche described as rectly from a grant by the Playboy Foun­ breaks with Stockman a "Fabian socialist of the older-style von dation, which would not have been made Republican Senators controlling the Hayek type, " got his start in public life without
    [Show full text]