“There’s no such thing as al Qaeda, or al Qaida, or however you want to spell it. It’s a fraud perpetrated on the American people by our own government to scare us into submission. This is a clip from the excellent three-part BBC documentary ‘The Power of Nightmares.’ You can watch the whole thing on Google Video or download it at scholarsfor911truth.org.”*Smartvideochannel.com/Todd
Rat Says: Council on Foreign Affairs predicts Al Qaeda will carry out a false flag in the near future. Al Qaeda is their creation so who is really going to carry out the attacks? Foreignaffairs.org
A Washington, D.C., dry cleaners says it’s their business a longtime customer is taking to the cleaners.
A $10 dry cleaning bill for a pair of trousers has ballooned into a $67 million civil lawsuit…..
Plaintiff Roy Pearson, a judge in Washington, D.C., says in court papers that he’s been through the ringer over a lost pair of prized pants he wanted to wear on his first day on the bench.
He says in court papers that he has endured “mental suffering, inconvenience and discomfort.”
He says he was unable to wear that favorite suit on his first day of work.
He’s suing for 10 years of weekend car rentals so he can transport his dry cleaning to another store.
The lawsuit is based in large part on Pearson’s seemingly pained admission that he was taken in by the oldest and most insidious marketing tool in the dry cleaning industry arsenal.
“Satisfaction Guaranteed.”
Pearson did not return numerous calls from ABC News for comment.
It’s the kind of lawsuit that makes liability reform advocates’ temples throb.
“People in America are now scared of each other,” legal expert Philip Howard told ABC News’ Law & Justice Unit. “That’s why teachers won’t put an arm around a crying child, and doctors order unnecessary tests, and ministers won’t meet with parishioners. It’s a distrust of justice and it’s changing our culture.”
The civil trial, set for June, has the scope of a John Grisham courtroom thriller and the societal importance of a traffic ticket.
Pearson plans to call 63 witnesses.
Defending themselves against the suit — for two years running — are Korean immigrants Jin and Soo Chung and their son, who own Custom Cleaners and two other dry cleaning shops in the Fort Lincoln section of Washington, D.C……. full article: ABCnews.go.com/TheLaw
“….Do Things, Do Things, Do Bad Things With It…..”