Paul Krassner interview mixes satire, Trump anecdotes and historical claims
Paul Krassner interview mixes satire, Trump anecdotes and historical claims The passage is an informal interview that offers colorful opinions and unverified anecdotes about Donald Trump, past presidents, and media figures. While it mentions potential misconduct (e.g., alleged book‑sales manipulation, hired actors at rallies) it provides no concrete evidence, dates, or transaction details. The content is largely speculative, anecdotal, and already public, limiting investigative value. Key insights: Krassner alleges Trump bought 20,000 copies of his own book to secure a NYT bestseller.; Claims that Trump’s 2016 rally participants were hired actors (≈50).; Mentions possible Russian ‘useful idiot’ link and compares to J. Edgar Hoover blackmail tactics.
Summary
Paul Krassner interview mixes satire, Trump anecdotes and historical claims The passage is an informal interview that offers colorful opinions and unverified anecdotes about Donald Trump, past presidents, and media figures. While it mentions potential misconduct (e.g., alleged book‑sales manipulation, hired actors at rallies) it provides no concrete evidence, dates, or transaction details. The content is largely speculative, anecdotal, and already public, limiting investigative value. Key insights: Krassner alleges Trump bought 20,000 copies of his own book to secure a NYT bestseller.; Claims that Trump’s 2016 rally participants were hired actors (≈50).; Mentions possible Russian ‘useful idiot’ link and compares to J. Edgar Hoover blackmail tactics.
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From: paul krassner
Alleged British Intelligence (Tavistock) and LaRouche Network Ties to 1950s Pornography and 1970s Anti‑Nuclear Protest Briefings
Alleged British Intelligence (Tavistock) and LaRouche Network Ties to 1950s Pornography and 1970s Anti‑Nuclear Protest Briefings The passage links a historic British intelligence institute (Tavistock) to U.S. political activist Lyndon LaRouche’s private intelligence network and claims they briefed state police on a 1970s anti‑nuclear protest. It provides specific names and a concrete event, offering a potential investigative angle (e.g., archival search for Tavistock‑related projects, LaRouche intelligence files, police briefing records). However, the claims are vague, lack dates, documents, or transaction details, and the Tavistock‑pornography connection is a long‑standing conspiracy trope, reducing novelty and verifiability. Key insights: Paul Krassner allegedly recruited by the Tavistock Institute in the early 1950s for pornographic satire.; Lyndon LaRouche’s private intelligence network reportedly briefed a state police lieutenant before a 1970s Seabrook nuclear plant protest.; The U.S. Labor Party’s newsletter was allegedly subscribed to by police departments nationwide.
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Alleged British Intelligence (Tavistock) and LaRouche Network Ties to 1950s Pornography and 1970s Anti‑Nuclear Protest Briefings
The passage links a historic British intelligence institute (Tavistock) to U.S. political activist Lyndon LaRouche’s private intelligence network and claims they briefed state police on a 1970s anti‑n Paul Krassner allegedly recruited by the Tavistock Institute in the early 1950s for pornographic sat Lyndon LaRouche’s private intelligence network reportedly briefed a state police lieutenant before
From: paul krassner
From: paul krassner <
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