All Posts Are Listed Below...Sidebar,fonts and colour are quite Unpredictable with Firefox..Images and Videos appear good


Your pages should resemble this image..If it does NOT...You will require a "add on".. see below for download and set-up..
Hit 'Coral IE Tab' in browser main menu.There should be a RH sidebar..see below

If it does NOT resemble this image ...hit 'Coral IE Tab' in main menu..see below

Mozilla (Firefox.Sea Monkey etc)have realised that Bill Gates
Boys(BGB)are not as yet going to revise their code to W3C standards
and thereby facilitate the W3C compliant Mozilla Engine..What the benevolent and eleemosynary Mozilla has done is to provide an "add on" that incorporates a RH menu bar/tab button for IE..Advise strongly its download, else carry additional browsers DOWNLOAD HERE..
Install..then run Firefox..Click View...Page Style...then Basic Page Style
Right click(the current open page) and look for Coral IE tab on the Firefox menu then click 'Switch Rendering Engines'.and/or put the Coral IE tab on the Main Toolbar by right clicking the menu bar(top)..select "customise" and drag the Coral IE tab to the Navigation bar(back/forward/reload/stop/home etc)...this keeps you with Mozilla...
To switch to Internet Explorer, right click Mozilla page and select.IE.

You may need to do this on ANY page that do not seemed to have rendered correctly.
Just hit 'Coral IE Tab'in browser main menu.
You then should have a RH column with menus and other goodies...at least for this site:-)

Searching for words on a Firefox page ..Just press Ctrl +F


Important
Move pointer slowly OVER images(LH button down) for maximum
effectiveness...Agendums may be codified for black-op pre-emptiveness..:-)

Most pages carry hidden messages.When the pointer moves over an image it shows the hidden message
which Mozilla does not do(blame W3C)...so there is an "add-on" for Firefox,Netscape 7 and Mozilla alternate image.
Please go IE Here to download the open source add-on.It only takes a second and its well worth it.

CAUTION:Browser Differences
As the internet's "Good Engineers Entrusted Kingdom
shows"(GEEKs),Microsoft(IE) is kinda reluctant to be controlled by
the "World Wide Web Consortium(W3C)"..the Establishment that wants to
"fulfill the potential of the Internet" by "effective and economic
standardisation", so overcoming problems when browsers render
differently(WYSIWYG-what you see is what you get)...with the user(you
mate/mati) throwing up their arms in anguish particularly if you are
developing your own website..

Some calender dates have been changed to facilitate arrangement
order of stories. Actual date of composition would be at the inside
top of each story.. or inside story..The story content itself being
the 'Identifier' for time period.


All stories listed....HERE



see EYE aye.....eff bee EYE.....em EYE five...EYE don't know ..u  dcEYEd


Ich dien (I serve),the motto of the Black Prince (Edward III..Welsh born son)the 'Prince of Wales'..When the House of Windsor 'acquired' their name and left their German roots behind..the German motto remained..Charles the current Prince of Wales speaks Welsh, but will not translate the motto into the language of the Welsh..which is 'Eich Dyn' meaning 'Your Man'...ask yourself why


An eye for an eye...will make us all blind -Ghandi



Quote of the decade

"Because of the American skepticism about Islamist goals, I postponed publishing an article on this subject until immediately after 9/11, when I expected receptivity to the subject would be greater..Daniel Pipes Front Page Magazine..(it was published in November 2001as “The Danger Within...Militant Islam in America”). HERE..If for some rational'e the ragazine is asking for registration etc...go to Daniel's site as he is at least honest Here with himself. ..Good for him.
If for some reason it gets "unplugged" let Troedyrhiw(Troy-der-rue) know.

and HERE for Troedyrhiw's reply To D.P




Fox News...Spying in the US of A ?....The Cameron
Reports-Video
Double click video to go directly to the
Youtube site(smaller image)

Part 1


Part 2


Part 3


Part 4


CNN and Paula Zahn(Cohen) and
911


Did you ever wonder why Paula Zahn(Cohen) left CNN
so suddenly..Was it the finding out of her husbands indiscretions or
was it this programme that she and her Producer decided to air..As
expected Christopher Bollyn is here up front and centre but only for
a moment..The rest of the piece is of four Jewish people crying over
911... For an insight into how smearing tactics and hate will
exercise itself in the future please go Here



BACK

All Posts


Main Page
Bush and Blair trial with the Lord Justice Himself
The British 60's Invasion.. Videos:The Moody Blues-The Searchers-The Hollies and more.
Essiac v Prosiac..The Essenes versus The Pro's..The Good v The Bad
Reply to William Saletan's Race-Genes-Intelligence
Bush-Blair Trial-2nd Sessions(in camera)
British Union Jack carries no Welsh Emblem..
Michael Hoffman..and that loving feeling..Righteous-but Misplaced
When outnumbered
Long Boats

The History of Money
Saddam's letter to the American People
Special Pics

Troedyrhiw...Who or What is it

Doug Herman ..A Resume of deceit... Mockery versus the Truth
Circulation of the Nimmo-Madsen Syndrome-NMS(Not My Schtick)
Last day in the life of Princess Diana..by Gordon Thomas
Polls-show-American-people-dumber-than Bush
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard...A 2009 Financial prediction
Ron Paul's Interview With Charles Davis and Video with Lee Rogers(the Browns and the IRS)
Response to Prof Daniel McGowan's 'What Does Holocaust Denial 'Really Mean'
Ancient Kings of Britain Part1
Ancient Kings of Britain Part2
Alan Wilson and King Arthur(1st & 2nd) and the Britons
Shadows and Cliff
So this is Judeo-Christianity...Was Jesus a "Jew" or Judean
The Ultimate Tergiversatism..TUT-tut (beating around the Bush)
Constant Amended War Rhetoric
Letter to David Lindorff at Counterpunch.Org
BBC-Where Holocaust denial is Welcomed
Can you Answer these 911 Questions...Can you??
The Welsh and the Monkey on their Back
Saddam has a Dream...What should we Do?...A Pythonic Conference
INTERESTING VIDEOS

Crucifixion of jews must stop





    and Now for Something Much More of Significance and Importance..this Video




Football in the Historical Sense...Really
Strike one to Mahmood Ahmadi-Najad... Iranis Letter to Mr Bush
The Hate of Daniel Pipes turns Full Circle
Joe Vialls..Who Will Now Follow This Man Of Eutectic Steel
A Quick Look At The Welsh
GematriaMathematics--The Science Code That Provided Leonardo from "Da Vinci" the Inspiration
For once, George Bush is Absolutely Correct..I say not as Yet'??
Greg Szymanski asks.."Is This The Last Memorial Day..et al"?
Letter to William Safire.....Stop telling lies Already
Something To Cry About

Ph.D's out of their Depth..and will not Admit it.
Rebuttal of Wayne Madsen's Hyperbolic Iran Affair
Paul Craig Roberts and William Clark..WHAT a Difference in Understanding
Larry David..Disgrace to the Race..Mist-er Pisser
Wash.Post's...Steven Pearlstein..."Can 'Old' Europe Preserve Its Prosperity"
King Caradoc(Caractacus) and the Cymry
Scottish Herald's Neil Mackay doing a Thomas-No doubt About it.
A Reply To Greg Palast On George Galloway
Freedoms and Rights -Canada..USA..UN..Britain


Back To Top









    Links to the Heavies



Note!...



Some links may be temporary suspended until such
time as that trust/truth is re-established











Back to the Top ??

Labels: , , , , ,

Dr Ron Paul's interviews with Charles Davis and video with Lee Rogers


images by Troedyrhiw..Drag pointer slowly OVER images for maximum effectiveness(with Left Hand Mouse button down))...



Firstly...as a sidebar..

View Part 1 of Dr Ron Paul talking about the IRS's dilemma and the Brown's brave fight in protection their US Constitutional rights with host Lee Rogers ..Runtime =2.42 min ....... Lee has a website..For the full 4 Part interview go Here
Requires Shockwave-Flash



Part #1



A Conversation With an Unusual Man.... by Charles Davis


Dr Ron Paul is not your typical Republican. The Libertarian Party’s presidential nominee in 1988, he believes in limited government and a "live and let live" social policy. He voted against going to war in Iraq back in 2002, and he strongly opposes Now where will this man be able to get good people to run that White House..When manics like Rove and Lieberman, Frum and Prince Perle will be lingering around the dark shadowed streets of Washington..Who will be his protectors?
any military action against Iran. In fact, Paul’s considered to be the most consistent antiwar member of Congress. Though that position may be out of step with today's Republican Party, Paul has enjoyed enormous success online. In the following conversation, Paul talks about his campaign, the issues he’s focused on, and the fallout from his exchange in the South Carolina Republican debate with former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani over the role United States foreign policy may have played in providing motivation for the attacks of 9/11.

Davis: Why are you running for president?

Dr Paul: I’m running to win and to promote the cause of individual liberty and limited government. And my goal is to shrink the size of the government and maximize the freedoms of each individual.

Davis: Is there a specific issue that you would say your campaign is focused on?

Dr Paul: It didn’t purposely start out that way, but the number one issue in the country is the war in Iraq. So this has given me an opportunity to talk about foreign policy overall, because Iraq is just a consequence of foreign policy process. And so therefore I get to talk about the noninterventionist foreign policy and what I’ve written about and talked about for a lot of years, and it’s right now in the forefront. And the debates have helped me and its brought a lot of attention to it, so a lot of the debate that’s going on right now I’m very pleased with.

Davis: I noticed your exchange in the South Carolina debate with This man is more dangerous than Bush..
Giuliani which has gotten you a lot of press lately. So I’m wondering, what would you say is the blowback, if you will, from that amongst your Republican colleagues? Your fellow candidates weren’t very receptive to you, but how about the actual Republican people?

Dr Paul: On the House floor I would say that people who are quiet probably didn’t approve. But dozens and dozens have come up and been very complimentary, both Republicans and Democrats, but more Democrats than Republicans. And outside, of course the discussion on the Internet has been overwhelmingly favorable and has literally been a tremendous boost to the campaign. And it’s coming from a lot of people who are just frustrated, people who left the Republican Party or independents, Democrats who are frustrated with the Democrats not doing the job that they were just elected to do. And this morning on C-span I heard somebody come on and said, "I used to be a Democrat but I’m a Republican now, but only because Ron Paul is running." I hear a lot of that, and of course the number of people that visit our website now is growing by leaps and bounds.

Davis: I wanted to talk to you about that. How are you overcoming your lack of resources compared to the Mitt Romney’s and John McCain’s of the world? The shame of grown men,,Restated..The growth of shamed men
How are you getting your message out successfully lacking that name recognition and those resources?

Dr Paul: I would say the Internet’s been a tremendous help, it’s sort of a secret weapon for a grassroots campaign. But I guess the debates have been the most helpful, because this has drawn attention to the beliefs that I have that are different but still traditional Republican. And that’s my argument, that you can be a conservative and still be opposed to the war, and be a conservative and believe in civil liberties, and be a conservative and believe in free enterprise. So this is a very attractive position. Republicans are tired with what’s happened, [the] budget didn’t get balanced, and everybody’s tired with the war. Even those who want to keep fighting it are tired of the war and wish it would end. But it’s a political position right now that is powerful, and I just think a candidate cannot win next year if they don’t have a strong position and a plan to do something different in Iraq.

Davis: Could you sum up what your stance is and why you believe that a foreign policy of interventionism is not conservative or is not Republican? And could you explain what your foreign policy is and why it is conservative?

Dr Paul: I think it used to be conservative and I think Republicans have lost their way. Traditionally Republicans have been more of the peace party than the war party, and we’ve been known to traditionally try to end wars like Korea and Vietnam. Even President Bush ran on a program which to me was sort of non-intervention, and sort of the peace side, and he complained about Clinton and Kosovo and Somalia. So I think that’s very traditional for Republicans, but it seems like they forget easily. Matter of fact, the Republican Party was very strong on thisCan you see the sheriff letting these guys go home with just an ankle bracelet on...Don't answer that yet..Stranger things do happen in the Democracy of the United States of America House floor against what Clinton was doing in Bosnia. So it’s interesting that sometimes it becomes more partisanship than thinking out on principle. The noninterventionist policy was traditionally Republican; I think it’s very conservative. I don’t see how you can come up with any other policy than that if you’re a strict constitutionalist. It tells you that you shouldn’t go to war unless there’s a declaration of war, you shouldn’t go to war under UN resolutions, [and] it should be only under the direction of Congress. But we just haven’t done that. And all of a sudden, because of the frustration with the war, people are looking at that and saying, "you know, that makes sense."

Davis: There was a recent bill on the House floor that would have required U.S. troops to be withdrawn from Iraq within three months. You were one of two Republicans to vote for that bill, the only other one was Congressman John Duncan from Tennessee. But he says that he could support a candidate who expounds a neoconservative foreign policy because it’s only one issue and he could agree with the other candidates on most other things. Do you think you could support someone who backs an interventionist, some would call it a neoconservative foreign policy, because maybe you agree with them on economic issues? Or do you see foreign policy as the number one issue, and that everything else kind of flows from that?

Dr Paul: A radical neoconservative I can’t support, because I think they’re very dangerous and they’re very aggressive for starting preemptive war. I could support one who has a more moderate viewpoint, which they call the realists. I think Wayne Gilchrest might fall into that category. He’s not ultra-conservative, but he and I work closely together and he has a reasonable approach. Jim Leach was one like that. That is, they promote diplomacy. You know, my purest program is probably not going to happen overnight and you’re going to have to settle for something less. But I wouldn’t accept an aggressive neoconservative. But a realist, and the realists were really the ones who controlled George Bush Sr.. One of the reasons, even though this was international law and I don’t particularly like the justification for the Persian Gulf war, George Bush Sr. said you know my mandate was Can you imagine what it will be like in Iraq when they find the time to bury their lossesto push Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait, I had no other authority to do that [regime change]. So he respected the mandate [as opposed to] "lets remake the Middle East and lets just march in." So I think those who are realists and believe in diplomacy and don’t go shooting up from the hip, I think I could support somebody like that when I would think that would at least be toning down this rhetoric. And maybe they would start talking to the Iranians. Maybe they would move the Navy a little bit away from their shores rather than marching up there with the Navy and threatening them, and not willing to take anything off the table including a nuclear-first strike. That is very dangerous rhetoric.

Davis: Now while the neoconservatives may be more extreme, aren’t the realists the ones that are responsible for the 50 years of foreign policy you’ve railed against?

Dr Paul: Yeah, I think that’s true. But I’m talking about where we are and which way we move. The realists now all of a sudden look like reasonable people compared to the radical neoconservatives. But yeah, you’re right. So you have an Don't ever forget these two conspirators against human kind...Give them a playing cardEisenhower, who was probably closer to being in the realist camp, but he was the one who condemned the military-industrial complex, he wouldn’t go to war in the Suez canal, and yet he was behind the CIA getting rid of Mossadeq. So, yes it’s far from perfect. But the fact that at least half the time they may be right, that would be better than having somebody who believed in preemptive war.

Davis: What are the obstacles to you getting your message out there in a presidential campaign, compared to all the other candidates with their resources and name recognition?

Dr Paul: Probably raising enough money if you have to have some advertising. But the Internet’s the secret weapon, and it helps a lot. It’s going to help get the message out and help raise money too. And also I think the greatest threat is sort of, I got a taste of it and the country witnessed it, is that if you are saying things that challenge the status quo and challenging the essence of foreign policy, they twist it around and they try to paint you as being un-American. So I think that’ll be the toughest problem because I’m expecting that I’ll get more of that. So I have to work very hard to make sure the message is louder than their accusations that I’m in some way not loyal and that for some reason I blame America. I mean, to me that’s nonsense.

Davis: Now if that exchange [with Giuliani] is the high mark of your campaign, do you think that you were successful in that you have at least raised the issue of foreign policy in general American debate?

Dr Paul: Oh yeah, I think its been worthwhile, but I’d like to think that was just the beginning, not the high-water mark.

Davis: How can you move your campaign to the next step up?

Dr Paul: Well, we’ll be in all the debates, and we’re still building an army of people on the Internet, and there’s so many things going on spontaneously that we don’t even know about. There’s so much activity every day, there’s somebody coming up with a new website, so it’s pretty amazing what’s happening.

Davis: Speaking of being in the debates, what did you make of the head of the Michigan GOP trying to start that ill-fated petition to kick you out?

Dr Paul: In a way it backfired just like Giuliani’s attack backfired. Because immediately there was our petition going up, and I don’t think it took him even 48 hours to back away from that. I mean it was ridiculous to try to silence somebody because he made a point that maybe we’re not as conservative as we claim. I think that totally backfired. So you don’t like it, you don’t enjoy it, but maybe there’s more benefit. You know, when that first thing hit with Giuliani I thought "well, you know, this is terrible, it’s so embarrassing," yet it turned out to be probably the best thing that could’ve happened to us.

Davis: Do you think that the way the primary system works, and the whole political system in the United States, it’s kind of stacked to support the establishment candidates in both parties so there can’t really be a groundswell of support for a maverick?

Dr Paul: More so all the time, especially the way they’re bunching up the primaries so people with big money have the advantage. And also if you look at the opportunities for anybody to do it in a third party, it’s practically impossible because the two establishment parties make it so difficult to even get on ballots. I mean you have to be a Ross Perot to get on the ballot and spend millions and millions of dollars. So it’s amazing that we go around the world using force to spread democracy and we have a few infractions here at home. And sometimes we become less democratic as we’re fighting overseas to promote democracy.

Davis: Congressman Dennis Kucinich is kind of similar in that he is one of the more vocal antiwar critics on the Democratic side of the debates. I know you guys probably disagree on a load of things, but you’ve come together a lot toThe weak shall inherit the earth work on issues of war and peace. So could you talk about your relationship with Congressman Kucinich over the past couple years, what it’s been like, what you think of him?

Dr Paul: We’re close friends, and we certainly agree [on the war]. And I think we may end up voting closely all the time on the war issue. Sometimes some of these funding bills are a little bit complex, and even Walter Jones and I will disagree even though we agree on what we’re supposed to be doing, but the interpretation will be a little bit different. But I think Dennis and I usually come down on the same side of it. That is, if you don’t want the war you quit the funding, and that’s our responsibility and it’s not the president’s authority to do what he wants because we have the purse strings, so you have to vote against the spending. So we get along very well on that, and since it’s such a major issue I think I will continue to work with him the best we can. And you know, take some of the liberal welfare spending that Dennis might support more than I. But you know, I’m not hostile toward that. If I can save the money from overseas, put some of it against the deficit, end up with a net reduction in the size of the budget, at the same time stopping a war, I may well be very open to funding some of these programs. Because I’m not out to gut some of these programs that have taught people to be very dependant on the government, like medical care. I mean, that’s not my goal. I’ve never run for office with the goal of slashing [those programs] even though philosophically I don’t think it’s the best way to deliver services and prosperity to poor people.

Davis: So can we look forward to a Paul-Kucinich 2008 ticket?

Dr Paul: Not likely, but I think that Paul and Kucinich will continue to work together and do the kind of work that we’ve been doing for a couple years now.

Davis: Finally, I was talking to Congressman Duncan (R-TN) and he told me that, more than anyone in Congress, he probably agrees with Ron Paul the most. But yet he still says he’s going to endorse Fred Thompson because he has a chance to win. How do you combat that mindset that says "well, you know, I might agree with you but these other people have a better chance?"

Dr Paul: We have to convince them by our campaign getting bigger and more credible, and that we go up in the polls. So only time will tell.

June 8, 2007
Charles Davis is a freelance journalist in Washington, DC. More of his work may be found on his personal website. http://charliedavis.blogspot.com/...He is 22 years of age


Troedyrhiw




Labels: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

<><><><><><>
Convert your money

Double-Click any word for Meaning..

<><><><><><>

counter
create hit
<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
PicoSearch

-

-

-

-

Back to the Top