FROM CANADA WITH LOVE -- IT HAS BEGUN --
Thanks to Noah for finding this --
I looked for this article this morning but could not find it -- and I even knew what papers to look in.
After you read this, you will see that an old scandal from the Reagan/Bush days is popping up again. Q told us it would, Q also told us (in another article) that "The Ghosts of the Past Reappear. In the article of the same name, he started with a poem -- "The Ghosts of the Past Reappear, Casting their Shadows from Hull to Nir."
The names John Hull and Amiram Nir are well known to researchers of the crimes of the 80's. But is Q trying to tell us something else?
Remember Lt Col Jeremiah Mathis? Here is an article from the RMNews Egroups web page:
http://www.egroups.com/message/RMNEWS_DAILY_EMAILS/2947
Lt Col Jeremiah Mathis served as a senior intelligence officer in the U.S. Army and had access to top-secret information. He defected to Israel last week to be with his girlfriend, Rivka Artzi-Nir. And there is the Nir name again -- remember was Q said, "The Ghosts of the Past Reappear."
When Q write things, he/they don't write them for ALL the readers of Rumor Mill -- their things are written for a select few who will understand the hidden messages.
The article that Q sent is posted on the Forum. Here is the link:
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/config.pl?read=4186
The article is about the "suicide" of S&L operative Robert Corson. He supposedly killed himself in an El Paso hotel. In one of the articles about Lt Col Mathis, it said he lived in El Paso. All the other articles said he was from San Antonio.
When you read the following article from the Canadian newspaper remember what my sources have said -- "The Canadian reporters have it wrong -- not ALL wrong -- just wrong. The playing field is right, they just don't have the right players yet."
Regular readers of Rumor Mill News will remember that I have written quite a bit about the "back door" of the Promis software. This is how the infamous "fifth column" led by Chuckie Hayes was able to drain many bank accounts belonging to the crooks who call themselves our leaders.
I also wrote that the Promis back door is the way that Faction Two and Three convinced many banks to redo their software in order to patch the "back door".
The new software blocked the United States goverment and Israel from having open access to all the countries and institutions they used to spy on. But the new patch also had a back door -- the new "back door" gave Faction Two and Faction Three access to banks, justice files, and anything else that their "patch" was designed to protect.
Can you begin to see that the best laid plans of mice and men are beginning to come undone?
Stay tuned -- this may be the official beginning -- but I assure you -- It has barely begun! The best is yet to come.
Rayelan
###
From Noah --
: Here's something from Canada: Canada said probing possible
: spying by U.S., Israel
: Updated 11:54 AM ET August 25, 2000
: OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian police are investigating whether
: U.S. and Israeli spies used rigged computer software to hack
: into
: Canada's top secret intelligence files, the Toronto Star
: newspaper
: said Friday.
: The paper said the probe revolved around Promis, a software
: program first developed to assist prosecutors in the United
: States
: Department of Justice which was the centre of a U.S. scandal a
: decade ago.
: The Star said police were probing whether the software -- used
: by
: the Mounties and Canada's spy service to co-ordinate secret
: investigations -- had been rigged with a so-called "trap
: door"
: allowing unauthorized access to sensitive data.
: "That could include economic intelligence on trading
: partners,
: detailed information on the whereabouts of terrorism suspects
: in
: Canada or strategic information on the positions Canada
: intends to
: take in international relations," it said.
: The Mounties did not return calls seeking comment on the
: allegations and no one was immediately available at the
: Israeli or
: U.S. embassies.
: Promis was developed by U.S. company Inslaw Inc., which
: alleged
: in the late 1980s that the U.S. government had stolen their
: software
: and -- working with Israel -- pedaled pirated versions to
: intelligence
: agencies around the world. The case was eventually thrown out
: of
: court.
: The Toronto Star said the Mounties had interviewed a number of
: people linked to the Promis affair to see whether there might
: have
: been a breach in Canadian national security.
: Canada's national counterintelligence agency said in a June
: report
: that friendly nations were making concerted efforts to steal
: sensitive
: technology and information.
: The Canadian Security Intelligence Service said outsiders were
: particularly interested in aerospace, biotechnology,
: chemicals,
: communications, information technology, mining and metallurgy,
: nuclear energy, oil and gas, and the environment.
: ^ REUTERS@
: Here's something from Canada: Canada said probing possible
: spying by U.S., Israel
: Updated 11:54 AM ET August 25, 2000
: OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canadian police are investigating whether
: U.S. and Israeli spies used rigged computer software to hack
: into
: Canada's top secret intelligence files, the Toronto Star
: newspaper
: said Friday.
: The paper said the probe revolved around Promis, a software
: program first developed to assist prosecutors in the United
: States
: Department of Justice which was the centre of a U.S. scandal a
: decade ago.
: The Star said police were probing whether the software -- used
: by
: the Mounties and Canada's spy service to co-ordinate secret
: investigations -- had been rigged with a so-called "trap
: door"
: allowing unauthorized access to sensitive data.
: "That could include economic intelligence on trading
: partners,
: detailed information on the whereabouts of terrorism suspects
: in
: Canada or strategic information on the positions Canada
: intends to
: take in international relations," it said.
: The Mounties did not return calls seeking comment on the
: allegations and no one was immediately available at the
: Israeli or
: U.S. embassies.
: Promis was developed by U.S. company Inslaw Inc., which
: alleged
: in the late 1980s that the U.S. government had stolen their
: software
: and -- working with Israel -- pedaled pirated versions to
: intelligence
: agencies around the world. The case was eventually thrown out
: of
: court.
: The Toronto Star said the Mounties had interviewed a number of
: people linked to the Promis affair to see whether there might
: have
: been a breach in Canadian national security.
: Canada's national counterintelligence agency said in a June
: report
: that friendly nations were making concerted efforts to steal
: sensitive
: technology and information.
: The Canadian Security Intelligence Service said outsiders were
: particularly interested in aerospace, biotechnology,
: chemicals,
: communications, information technology, mining and metallurgy,
: nuclear energy, oil and gas, and the environment.
: ^ REUTERS@