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Caliope ago

This article in "RADAR" Magazine is pretty good. The author, Christopher Ketcham, is an anti-establishment character who writes very cogent and well-researched prose. "RADAR" is the usual muck-raking uber-left publication right out of the cloaca which is the leftist, jew-sponsored, press.

This story, about the "MAIN LOGIC" or "MAIN CORE" data base, actually describes what has long been named "The APEX Folder" -- APEX being "THE LIST" of everyone thought to be subversive or anti-government, -- or what the hell -- just someone unlikable by the Homeland Security lackeys and stumble-bums.

Ketcham, the author, has been doing hit-pieces on a whole variety of subjects which reflect badly upon local, state or Federal government activities. Oh, and he hits the "Big Money Corporations too", of course; well OK, he hits anything and everything which has the least connection to an "Authority".

Ketcham is a person who loathes authority. Authority meaning elected governments all the way down to a cop directing traffic -- even traffic lights threaten his existence. One way to describe his philosophy is that he is an "indignant anti-establishment contrarian".

I draw a parallel between Ketcham and Ted Kaczynski the Uni-Bomber. Both of them are members (at least in their minds) of the philosophy of Anarcho-primitivism.

Kaczynski was a bomb-thrower in the real sense. Ketcham is a journalistic bomb-thrower in the actual sense that all of his writings are anti-something. Themes filled with fear and loathing of whatever good (however tiny) might exist in the activity about which he has written.

He can't see the diamonds which are hidden by the mud -- a very common affliction of the Anarcho-primitivism mentality.

Caliope ago

I neglected to add this bit of info (from Wikipedia) about "Radar Magazine":

The magazine Radar, which published articles on entertainment, fashion, politics, and human interest, was founded and edited by Maer Roshan in September 2003. After a series of three test issues, he relaunched it in 2005 and again in 2006 with help from investors and family members. Radar was awarded a General Excellence nomination by the American Society of Magazine Editors in 2007. Its website, Radar Online, earned an audience of one million a month soon after it launched.

A flop from the start, the print magazine was suddenly shuttered in 2008, after its primary backer, billionaire Ron Burkle, who owned a substantial interest in Star and National Enquirer publisher American Media, withdrew. Radar Online was relaunched in March 2009 with a rebranding, focusing on celebrity items about gossip, fashion and pop culture. All of the articles previously published by Radar Online were erased from the site.

You'll notice how the (((Jews))) started the magazine, got their (((Shekels))) out after buggering the company and moved on to the usual "celebrity dirt" soft-core porn stuff. (I meeeean, Selena Gomez in an over-stuffed bikini with fat-rolls everywhere and a beaner mustache? Oh Baby Jebus Pluck Out Mine Eyes!).