Hassan Ali, The US$8 Billion Tax Evader (Adnan Khashoggi connection)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ic0DhMoYc8
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodi_Fayed
Excerpt:
Born in Alexandria, Egypt, Fayed was the son of billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed (Arabic: محمد الفايد), former owner of Harrods department store and owner of Fulham Football Club and the Hôtel Ritz Paris. His mother was Samira Kashoggi, sister of Turkish Saudi-born arms dealer billionaire Adnan Khashoggi. Fayed was a student at Collège Saint Marc before attending the Institut Le Rosey in Switzerland. He also briefly attended Sandhurst. Fayed was the executive producer of the films Chariots of Fire, Breaking Glass, F/X, F/X2, Hook, and The Scarlet Letter. He also served as the Executive Creative Consultant for the F/X television series. Fayed also worked for his father on Harrods' marketing.[1] Fayed was of Egyptian descent from his father and Spanish, Turkish and Arab descent from his mother.
http://www.vanityfair.com/society/features/1997/12/dodi-fayed-199712 (I didn't know the man but from the few paragraphs I've read here, this mag plays him down as a no gooder, hmmmmmmm) ...cal
Excerpt:
At the time of Dodi Fayed’s birth, on April 15, 1955, in Alexandria, Egypt, his father was working for $280 a month as a “commercial manager” for a furniture-importing company owned by Adnan Khashoggi, a Saudi Arabian who would later become a multimillionaire arms dealer. Mohamed had met Adnan’s sister Samira on Stanley Beach in Alexandria in 1953, and they married on July 16, 1954.
The Khashoggis had a good pedigree: Adnan and Samira’s father had been private physician to the king of Saudi Arabia. Although Dodi’s father would later claim to have been born into an old Egyptian family enriched by shipping, land, and industry, he was actually the son of an Alexandria schoolteacher. Business documents list Mohamed’s birthplace variously as Al Fayedia, Dubai, Alexandria, and Cairo.
http://www.dianaqueenofheaven.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?noframes;read=35
Excerpt:
Dodi Fayed was not "just a playboy" as the mainstream media has labeled him. Take a look at some of the films he produced. You will be surprised. Had he lived, he would be a force to be reckoned with in Hollywood.
1. The Scarlet Letter (1995) (executive producer)
Demi Moore ... Hester Prynne
Gary Oldman ... Rev. Arthur Dimmesdale
Robert Duvall ... Roger Chillingworth
2. Hook (1991) (executive producer)
Director: Steven Spielberg
Dustin Hoffman Capt. Hook
Robin Williams ... Peter Banning
Julia Roberts ... Tinkerbell
Bob Hoskins ... Smee
Maggie Smith ... Granny Wendy
Caroline Goodall ... Moira Banning
3. F/X2 (1991) (producer)
... aka F/X 2: The Deadly Art of Illusion
... aka FX2
4. F/X (1986) (producer)
... aka F/X - Murder by Illusion
... aka Murder by Illusion
Bryan Brown ... Roland 'Rollie' Tyler
Brian Dennehy ... Lt. Leo McCarthy
Diane Venora ... Ellen
Cliff De Young ... Lipton
Mason Adams ... Col. Mason
Jerry Orbach ... Nicholas DeFranco
A movie special effects man is hired to fake a real-life mob killing for a witness protection plan, but finds his own life in danger.
5. Chariots of Fire (1981) (executive producer) The story of two British track athletes, one a determined Jew, and the other a devout Christian who compete in the 1924 Olympics.
Won 4 Oscars. Another 12 wins & 15 nominations
6. Breaking Glass (1980) (executive producer)
A rock singer is determined to rise to the top of the profession, letting nothing stand in the way of that goal.
http://imdb.com/name/nm0269689/#producer
The tabloids had already begun writing about Dodi and Diana moving to Hollywood. If they had lived, Dodi would have had a career in Hollywood bigger than any producer who has ever lived. Dodi had his father's money, he had his Uncle's money and he had money from a hundred different members of various royal families who wanted to have a part in Hollywood in order to tell THEIR side of the story.
Dodi and Diana could have opened the largest film studio in Hollywood since the days of MGM and United Artists.
By the time I ran through my list of reasons why someone would want Dodi Fayed dead, my telephone rang. It was a contact in Houston who called to ask me if I thought someone was trying to kill Diana.
I told him that I thought someone was trying to get Dodi out of the way so "they" could marry her off to one of their choosing. I was still explaining things to him when I saw that Princess Diana had died.
"She's dead!" I screamed to my friend. "How could that be? She was up walking around. They reported it. They even showed her sitting up in the back of the ambulance. How could she have died?"
My friend, a long time political corruption researcher said, "They wanted her dead. Her Muslim boyfriend was an embarrassment to the throne."
I looked at the clock. It was not quite midnight when I heard that Diana was dead. In France, the date of her death was August 31st, but here in the United States, I heard the news that she had died on August 30th, my 8th wedding anniversary.
What were you doing when you heard Princess Diana was dead?
http://www.novelguide.com/a/discover/egd_01/egd_01_00181.html
Excerpt:
The Communist International in 1933 defined fascism in power as "the open terrorist dictatorship of the most reactionary, most chauvinistic, most imperialist elements of finance capital." Others have interpreted fascism as a middle-class radical movement, a cultural revolution, a state power independent of classes, and as a reaction to or a force for modernization.
The Communist International in 1933 defined fascism in power as "the open terrorist dictatorship of the most reactionary, most chauvinistic, most imperialist elements of finance capital." Others have interpreted fascism as a middle-class radical movement, a cultural revolution, a state power independent of classes, and as a reaction to or a force for modernization.
Fascism is an ultra-right movement that emerged in a period of crisis in European society. Like other right-wing parties and movements before World War II, fascism opposed democracy, liberalism, socialism, and communism and emphasized support for hierarchy, nationalism, militarism, aggressive imperialism, and women's subordination. In seeking power, fascist movements were organized around a charismatic leader, used the techniques of mass politics to win support from the middle strata of war veterans, shop owners, artisans, and white-collar workers, and sought to control
the streets with the use of paramilitary bands. When they came to power, fascists ended parliamentary systems and terrorized their opponents. The Nazi variant claimed a race-based superiority for "Aryans" and embraced a virulent anti-Semitism both to designate a scapegoat for Germany's problems and to be able to bribe supporters with property and positions taken from German Jews.
The first fascist movement was that of Italy's Benito Mussolini, who came to power with the aid of conservative elites seeking to put down the revolutionary workers' movement arising after World War I. The international influence of fascism greatly increased when the Nazis assumed power in Germany in 1933 in the midst of the Great Depression. Significant fascist movements arose in Hungary, Austria, and Romania, and smaller fascist movements, such as the Falange in Spain, became important with support from Germany and Italy. Germany's power led many authoritarian leaders in Europe to ally with the Nazis. Support for the fascist example existed in Latin America, but only Argentina favored the Axis in World War II. The third Axis power, Japan, was authoritarian, militaristic, nationalist, anticommunist, and aggressive, but its attempt at a fascist mass politics, the Imperial Rule Assistance Association, had limited impact.
Fascism had limited appeal in the United States in the 1930s, but, given its growth internationally, liberals and leftists were worried about the potential for it. Important cultural manifestations of this fear were Sinclair Lewis's play It Can't Happen Here, performed simultaneously by seventeen Federal Theatre Project troupes in 1935, and such films as Anatole Litvak's Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939) and Frank Capra's Meet John Doe (1941).
Small, distinctly fascist organizations in the United States included the Silver Shirt Legion and the Defenders of the Christian Faith, but more important were ethnic-based groups. Mussolini received favorable press coverage in the United States before his alliance with Adolf Hitler, and there was majority support for his government in Italian-American communities on nationalist grounds. Most Italian-American newspapers supported Mussolini, and fascist organizations were influential in the community. However, Italian Americans opposed the anti-Semitic decrees issued by Mussolini in 1938. The German-American Bund, which emphasized anti-Semitism, anti-communism, and alleged unfair treatment in the United States of German Americans, gained a degree of control over some German-American community groups. Recalling the negative attacks on everything German in the World War I period, German-American organizations were slow to criticize the Nazis. In 1938, with increased criticism of Nazi anti-Semitism and fears rising that Nazism was an external and internal danger to the United States, German Americans spoke out against Nazism.
Important movements that may be regarded as semi-fascist include the National Union for Social
Justice led by Father Charles Coughlin. Emerging as an important radio personality in the early Depression years, Coughlin's organization was anti-communist and organized around devotion to him personally. Coughlin was stridently anti-Semitic and hostile to the Allied cause in World War II. Whether the movement led by Huey Long can also be characterized as fascist or semi-fascist is in dispute. Long was authoritarian in his conduct of the government of Louisiana, anti-communist, and demagogic in his calls to make "Every Man a King" and "Share Our Wealth." On the other hand, Long opposed the oligarchy in Louisiana, called for taxing the rich, and did not appeal to racism in a region in which movements of the political right usually emphasized racism.
Important Americans who lent support to fascism included Henry Ford, who disseminated the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion forgery in the 1920s, employed the leader of the Bund, and accepted a medal from Nazi Germany in 1938. Famed aviator and isolationist Charles Lindbergh likewise accepted a medal, as did IBM president Thomas J. Watson, although Watson returned his in 1940.
Fascism is an ultra-right movement that emerged in a period of crisis in European society. Like other right-wing parties and movements before World War II, fascism opposed democracy, liberalism, socialism, and communism and emphasized support for hierarchy, nationalism, militarism, aggressive imperialism, and women's subordination. In seeking power, fascist movements were organized around a charismatic leader, used the techniques of mass politics to win support from the middle strata of war veterans, shop owners, artisans, and white-collar workers, and sought to control
the streets with the use of paramilitary bands. When they came to power, fascists ended parliamentary systems and terrorized their opponents. The Nazi variant claimed a race-based superiority for "Aryans" and embraced a virulent anti-Semitism both to designate a scapegoat for Germany's problems and to be able to bribe supporters with property and positions taken from German Jews.
The first fascist movement was that of Italy's Benito Mussolini, who came to power with the aid of conservative elites seeking to put down the revolutionary workers' movement arising after World War I. The international influence of fascism greatly increased when the Nazis assumed power in Germany in 1933 in the midst of the Great Depression. Significant fascist movements arose in Hungary, Austria, and Romania, and smaller fascist movements, such as the Falange in Spain, became important with support from Germany and Italy. Germany's power led many authoritarian leaders in Europe to ally with the Nazis. Support for the fascist example existed in Latin America, but only Argentina favored the Axis in World War II. The third Axis power, Japan, was authoritarian, militaristic, nationalist, anticommunist, and aggressive, but its attempt at a fascist mass politics, the Imperial Rule Assistance Association, had limited impact.
Fascism had limited appeal in the United States in the 1930s, but, given its growth internationally, liberals and leftists were worried about the potential for it. Important cultural manifestations of this fear were Sinclair Lewis's play It Can't Happen Here, performed simultaneously by seventeen Federal Theatre Project troupes in 1935, and such films as Anatole Litvak's Confessions of a Nazi Spy (1939) and Frank Capra's Meet John Doe (1941).
Small, distinctly fascist organizations in the United States included the Silver Shirt Legion and the Defenders of the Christian Faith, but more important were ethnic-based groups. Mussolini received favorable press coverage in the United States before his alliance with Adolf Hitler, and there was majority support for his government in Italian-American communities on nationalist grounds. Most Italian-American newspapers supported Mussolini, and fascist organizations were influential in the community. However, Italian Americans opposed the anti-Semitic decrees issued by Mussolini in 1938. The German-American Bund, which emphasized anti-Semitism, anti-communism, and alleged unfair treatment in the United States of German Americans, gained a degree of control over some German-American community groups. Recalling the negative attacks on everything German in the World War I period, German-American organizations were slow to criticize the Nazis. In 1938, with increased criticism of Nazi anti-Semitism and fears rising that Nazism was an external and internal danger to the United States, German Americans spoke out against Nazism.
Important movements that may be regarded as semi-fascist include the National Union for Social
Justice led by Father Charles Coughlin. Emerging as an important radio personality in the early Depression years, Coughlin's organization was anti-communist and organized around devotion to him personally. Coughlin was stridently anti-Semitic and hostile to the Allied cause in World War II. Whether the movement led by Huey Long can also be characterized as fascist or semi-fascist is in dispute. Long was authoritarian in his conduct of the government of Louisiana, anti-communist, and demagogic in his calls to make "Every Man a King" and "Share Our Wealth." On the other hand, Long opposed the oligarchy in Louisiana, called for taxing the rich, and did not appeal to racism in a region in which movements of the political right usually emphasized racism.
Important Americans who lent support to fascism included Henry Ford, who disseminated the Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion forgery in the 1920s, employed the leader of the Bund, and accepted a medal from Nazi Germany in 1938. Famed aviator and isolationist Charles Lindbergh likewise accepted a medal, as did IBM president Thomas J. Watson, although Watson returned his in 1940.
See Also: COUGHLIN, CHARLES; DICTATORSHIP; EUROPE, GREAT DEPRESSION IN; HITLER, ADOLF; MUSSOLINI, BENITO; SPANISH CIVIL WAR.
http://www.maxstandridge.net/rocky.htm
Excerpt:
"Our American sources insist that the Jews simply laid their cards on the table for Nelson to read and 'blackmailed the hell out of him.'. . .In 1936, the Rockefellers entered into partnership with Dulles's Nazi front, the Shroder Bank of New York, which. . .was the key institution in the Fascist economic 'miracle.' In 1939 the Rockefeller-controlled Chase National Bank secured $25 million for Nazi Germany and supplied Berlin with information on ten thousand Nazi sympathizers in the US. Except for a few months' interruption, the Rockefeller-owned Standard of New Jersey company shipped oil to the Nazis through Spain all throughout the war.
"The roster of the Rockefellers' known pro-Nazi behavior is horrendous. As previously outlined, in 1942 Senator Truman described the behavior of the Rockefellers' company as treasonous. . .Under the US Constitution, giving aid and comfort to the enemy in time of war is treason. On September 22, 1947, Federal Judge Charles Clark issued the following opinion in a civil case: 'Standard Oil can be considered an enemy national in view of its relationship with I.G. Farben after the United States and Germany became active enemies.' The date is significant. Two months later, just as Nelson Rockefeller was hoping that the damage could be limited to a few corporate scapegoats, the Jews arrived in his office with proof that he personally had committed treason against the United States of America.' (Loftus and Aarons 165-71).
http://sovereignty.net/p/sd/strong.html
Excerpt:
He ran away from home at 14. His father retrieved him from Vancouver. But in 1945, after completing the 11th grade, Strong was off again to become an apprentice fur trader in Hudson Bay. Strong's business success was remarkable. At 19, he was an investment analyst. At 25, he was Vice President of Dome Petroleum. At 31, he became the President of Power Corporation of Canada. He headed both Petro Canada and Hydro Canada, and made a few deals on the side as well, one of which was the acquisition in 1978 of the Colorado Land & Cattle Company which owned 200,000 acres of San Luis Valley in Colorado -- from Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi.[3]
The ranch, called Baca, sat on the continent's largest fresh water aquifer. Strong intended to pipe the water to the desert southwest, but environmental organizations protested and the plan was abandoned. Strong ended up with a $1.2 million settlement from the water company, an annual grant of $100,000 from Laurance Rockefeller, and still retained the rights to the water.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lockton#Arizona_Colorado_Land_.26_Cattle_Company_.28Amex:AZL.29
Excerpt:
Arizona Colorado Land & Cattle Company (Amex:AZL)
Co-Founder, Director 1965 – 1975
AZL was the largest integrated cattle/feeding/land company in the US. Subsequently acquired by a Canadian conglomerate. Purchased with four partners a bankrupt cattle company and grew to $120 million in sales and $8.5 million in after-tax profits in five years. Now owned by Tosco.
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/1998/0112/6101046a.html
Excerpt:
By 1981 he had moved on to Denver oil promoter AZL Resources, where, as chairman and the largest shareholder, he was sued for allegedly hyping the stock ahead of a merger that eventually failed. Strong says he settled for $4.2 million at the insistence of his insurance company.
Nonetheless Strong came out a winner. AZL, which owned a number of western ranches, merged with oil refiner Tosco Corp. in 1983. Tosco unloaded some AZL ranch land at fire sale prices, and Strong got the Baca Ranch-160,000 acres in south central Colorado. Today Baca houses the Manitou Foundation.
http://webfairy.org/constantine/part1.htm
Excerpt:
Khashoggi's empire, raised on a bed of gold, metastisized rapidly. In 1973,
he dropped in his burgeoning portfolio a company in possession of nearly two
million acres of prime real estate, the Arizona-Colorado Land & Cattle
Company -- not far from the 100,000 acre Paloma Ranch near Gila Bend, deeded
to the CIA's Kermit Roosevelt and John B. Anderson.6
Two years later, in cahoots with Sheik Kamal Adham -- then director of Saudi
intelligence (1963-79), brother-in-law of King Faisal and the CIA's key
liaison to the Arab world -- Khashoggi founded Oryx.
But the Saudi Sheik's thieving bonds with Khashoggi and the CIA were forged
decades earlier, with the incorporation of Barrick. The company's seed
investors were Saudis with Agency ties, including Shiek Kamal Adham, Adnan
Khashoggi, and Prince Nawaf bin Abdul Aziz (a major investor in Barrick,
code-named "Tumbleweed" by his CIA contacts).7 By 1978, Adham was worth
roughly $134 million.
http://www.maxstandridge.net/rocky.htm
Excerpt:
"Our American sources insist that the Jews simply laid their cards on the table for Nelson to read and 'blackmailed the hell out of him.'. . .In 1936, the Rockefellers entered into partnership with Dulles's Nazi front, the Shroder Bank of New York, which. . .was the key institution in the Fascist economic 'miracle.' In 1939 the Rockefeller-controlled Chase National Bank secured $25 million for Nazi Germany and supplied Berlin with information on ten thousand Nazi sympathizers in the US. Except for a few months' interruption, the Rockefeller-owned Standard of New Jersey company shipped oil to the Nazis through Spain all throughout the war.
"The roster of the Rockefellers' known pro-Nazi behavior is horrendous. As previously outlined, in 1942 Senator Truman described the behavior of the Rockefellers' company as treasonous. . .Under the US Constitution, giving aid and comfort to the enemy in time of war is treason. On September 22, 1947, Federal Judge Charles Clark issued the following opinion in a civil case: 'Standard Oil can be considered an enemy national in view of its relationship with I.G. Farben after the United States and Germany became active enemies.' The date is significant. Two months later, just as Nelson Rockefeller was hoping that the damage could be limited to a few corporate scapegoats, the Jews arrived in his office with proof that he personally had committed treason against the United States of America.' (Loftus and Aarons 165-71).
http://sovereignty.net/p/sd/strong.html
Excerpt:
He ran away from home at 14. His father retrieved him from Vancouver. But in 1945, after completing the 11th grade, Strong was off again to become an apprentice fur trader in Hudson Bay. Strong's business success was remarkable. At 19, he was an investment analyst. At 25, he was Vice President of Dome Petroleum. At 31, he became the President of Power Corporation of Canada. He headed both Petro Canada and Hydro Canada, and made a few deals on the side as well, one of which was the acquisition in 1978 of the Colorado Land & Cattle Company which owned 200,000 acres of San Luis Valley in Colorado -- from Saudi arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi.[3]
The ranch, called Baca, sat on the continent's largest fresh water aquifer. Strong intended to pipe the water to the desert southwest, but environmental organizations protested and the plan was abandoned. Strong ended up with a $1.2 million settlement from the water company, an annual grant of $100,000 from Laurance Rockefeller, and still retained the rights to the water.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lockton#Arizona_Colorado_Land_.26_Cattle_Company_.28Amex:AZL.29
Excerpt:
Arizona Colorado Land & Cattle Company (Amex:AZL)
Co-Founder, Director 1965 – 1975
AZL was the largest integrated cattle/feeding/land company in the US. Subsequently acquired by a Canadian conglomerate. Purchased with four partners a bankrupt cattle company and grew to $120 million in sales and $8.5 million in after-tax profits in five years. Now owned by Tosco.
http://www.forbes.com/forbes/1998/0112/6101046a.html
Excerpt:
By 1981 he had moved on to Denver oil promoter AZL Resources, where, as chairman and the largest shareholder, he was sued for allegedly hyping the stock ahead of a merger that eventually failed. Strong says he settled for $4.2 million at the insistence of his insurance company.
Nonetheless Strong came out a winner. AZL, which owned a number of western ranches, merged with oil refiner Tosco Corp. in 1983. Tosco unloaded some AZL ranch land at fire sale prices, and Strong got the Baca Ranch-160,000 acres in south central Colorado. Today Baca houses the Manitou Foundation.
http://webfairy.org/constantine/part1.htm
Excerpt:
Khashoggi's empire, raised on a bed of gold, metastisized rapidly. In 1973,
he dropped in his burgeoning portfolio a company in possession of nearly two
million acres of prime real estate, the Arizona-Colorado Land & Cattle
Company -- not far from the 100,000 acre Paloma Ranch near Gila Bend, deeded
to the CIA's Kermit Roosevelt and John B. Anderson.6
Two years later, in cahoots with Sheik Kamal Adham -- then director of Saudi
intelligence (1963-79), brother-in-law of King Faisal and the CIA's key
liaison to the Arab world -- Khashoggi founded Oryx.
But the Saudi Sheik's thieving bonds with Khashoggi and the CIA were forged
decades earlier, with the incorporation of Barrick. The company's seed
investors were Saudis with Agency ties, including Shiek Kamal Adham, Adnan
Khashoggi, and Prince Nawaf bin Abdul Aziz (a major investor in Barrick,
code-named "Tumbleweed" by his CIA contacts).7 By 1978, Adham was worth
roughly $134 million.
Thanks for the reference to my research; the Loftus and Aarons book in question is _The Secret War Against the Jews_.
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