Karl Marx on Money

Discussion in 'Politics' started by harrytrader, May 9, 2003.

  1. hey harry,

    ms. robins is quite cute. thanks for posting the link.

    surfer:)
     
    #11     May 10, 2003
  2. Don't fall in love with her she's a dangerous girl :D

     
    #12     May 10, 2003
  3. Babak

    Babak

    I've noticed that you use this a lot (WHARF WHARF ) what does it mean? a French expression? a secret code? or was your father a short sighted fisherman who crashed his boat and the last thing you remember as a child was your mother's desperate cries?

    I guess we'll never know...
     
    #13     May 10, 2003
  4. yeah it's french same as LOL if you want but sounds more funny :D

     
    #14     May 10, 2003
  5. WARF, WARF? Isn't that what Arsenio used to say?

    Or was it Captian Picard?
     
    #15     May 10, 2003
  6. Kerry made his Bones in secret club - like Bush

    by Andrew Miga
    Thursday, May 15, 2003

    WASHINGTON - Sen. John F. Kerry expounds on many issues in his presidential campaign, but he's completely silent on one topic: his membership in Skull and Bones, Yale's infamous secret society.

    ``John Kerry has absolutely nothing to say on that subject. Sorry,'' said Kerry spokeswoman Kelley Benander.

    Kerry is a respected senator and a decorated Vietnam War combat veteran, but 36 years after he was initiated into what has been called the ``ultimate old boy network,'' he's wary of breaking the ultra-exclusive club's strict secrecy code.

    There's also another high-profile member of the club: President Bush.

    Bonesmen already are buzzing over the prospect of the first Bones vs. Bones presidential race should Kerry win his party's nomination and face Bush in 2004.

    ``Bones don't care who wins,'' said author Alexandra Robbins, whose book ``Secrets of the Tomb'' pierced the secrecy shrouding the 171-year-old society. ``If Kerry wins, it's still a Bones presidency.''

    Robbins calls the group ``probably the most secretive and successful club in America,'' and adds, ``It's also pretty bizarre.''

    Every year, 15 Yale juniors are tapped for the club, which holds meetings twice a week in a crypt-like building known as the ``Tomb.''

    Robbins described the interior, replete with skulls and skeletons, as a cross between the ``Addams Family'' and a slightly shabby English men's club.

    There are bizarre initiation rites, including a ceremony where new members must spend an evening before a roaring fire in the Tomb recounting details of their sexual history to fellow members.

    Kerry was tapped for the club in 1968, two years after Bush, whose father and grandfather were also Bonesmen. Kerry's brother-in-law from his first marriage, David Thorne, was Bones. So was the late husband of Kerry's current wife, Teresa Heinz Kerry. The Bones alumni roster is flush with CIA officials, business moguls, congressmen and Supreme Court justices. The club owns a secluded 40-acre island retreat on the St. Lawrence River.

    In 1986, Kerry allegedly tried to recruit Jacob Weisberg, then a college-age intern at ``The New Republic'' magazine.

    Weisberg, now Slate magazine editor, said Kerry made his pitch during a private meeting in his Senate office. Weisberg declined, pointedly asking Kerry how he squared his liberalism with membership in such an elitist club that refused to admit women. ``Kerry got sort of flustered and said, `I've marched with battered women,' '' Weisberg told the Herald.

    Five years later, Kerry was among those voting to force the club to admit women after a bitter court fight.
     
    #16     May 15, 2003
  7. The problem is less their secrecy than their satanic ideology of human race is just slaves for them. And one can question about fake democracy when all candidates come from this sect. I think that even Scientology can't beat them in craziness they don't organise satanic ritual each year for their members at the famous so called bohemian club and clubs alike.

     
    #17     May 15, 2003