Monday, November 01, 2004

More News You Don't Need To Know - Kerry's Discharge Is Questioned

You will not hear about this article or it's contents on ABC, CBS, NBC or CNN. You will probably not hear it on FOX either. Not because there isn't proof. There IS proof.

You will not hear about Mr. Lipscomb's previous article revealing the documents uncovered in the Vietnam archives that prove John Kerry is a traitor to this country.

Apparently, the collective determination was made that people do not care about the fact that Kerry was cooperating with the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War or that he received an undesirable discharge before Carter fixed it for him.

It won't resonate with the voters.

Of course, letting the voters decide if they care about it or not is out of the question. Decissions have been made for them. They do not need to know.

And there you have it.

Tomorrow most of America will go cast their vote without ever knowing that one of the candidates is a communist collaborator. A traitor who has caused more harm to our armed forces than any other single person in history.

The people don't care about "all that old stuff".

When did it happen that the press decided what the American voters get to care about? When did they get to decide what we needed to know? When did the United States of America become a place where the information the public gets is censored and controlled?
Kerry's Discharge Is Questioned by an Ex-JAG Officer
BY THOMAS LIPSCOMB - Special to the Sun
November 1, 2004

A former officer in the Navy's Judge Advocate General Corps Reserve has built a case that Senator Kerry was other than honorably discharged from the Navy by 1975, The New York Sun has learned.

The "honorable discharge" on the Kerry Web site appears to be a Carter administration substitute for an original action expunged from Mr. Kerry's record, according to Mark Sullivan, who retired as a captain in the Navy's Judge Advocate General Corps Reserve in 2003 after 33 years of service as a judge advocate. Mr. Sullivan served in the office of the Secretary of the Navy between 1975 and 1977.

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