Russo on 9/11 - His conversation with Nicholas Rockefeller
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I was not aware of this video but am not too surprised with the content. Like many Libertarians Russo suspected conspiracy - pointing out serious flaws with the 9/11-industry of lies and deceptions, as he and others have put it. In this video however he was able to name Nicholas Rockefeller of the Rockefeller dynasty. Nick is a very powerful man who works behind the scene and is in advisory board of many think tanks like the CFR.
Here are some info about Russo from the internet:
Russo was born in Brooklyn in 1943 and raised in Long Island . He began promoting rock and roll shows at a local theater while still in high school and boosted the careers of some of the most successful rock acts of the 1960s, including Janis Joplin and The Grateful Dead. He was also manager of fusion band The Manhattan Transfer. Longtime movie producer and 2004 Libertarian presidential candidate Aaron Russo died at age 64, having succumbed to cancer in August of 2007.
The Hollywood veteran made his name with popular films such as "Trading Places," starring Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd, and Bette Midler's "The Rose." In later years, his interests and energies=2 0turned to political activism.
Russo joined the Libertarian Party after losing the Nevada GOP gubernatorial primary to Kenny Guinn in 1998. Russo picked up 26 percent of the vote in a four-way race and planned to run an independent campaign in 2002, but was forced to pull out to concentrate on overcoming bladder cancer, which, in 2003, he said he had done.
Russo came back in 2003, launching a bid for the presidency, first as an independent and later as a Libertarian. "I want to do what Ross Perot did, what Jesse Ventura did, and I want to come out and speak the truth – be plain-spoken, tell it like it is, and bring America back to its Constitution and Bill of Rights," Russo said in 2003.
Russo will be best remembered for “ America : Freedom to Fascism..” It is one dynamite documentary, in which Russo embarks on a “Roger & Me” search for the law – any law – that legitimatizes the U.S. government's ability to tax a working-man's wages. Haunting the halls of Congress, the Department of the Treasury, and the Federal Reserve, Aaron Russo found any legitimate requirement for Americans to pay tax on their wages as elusive as Michael Moore found former General Motors chairman Roger Smith to be. It was “somewhere,” but nobody could say where.
In the process he met any number of characters, from tax protesters to Libertarians (presidential candidate and Texas congressman Ron Paul, and Idaho's own Rep. Phil Hart are interviewed) to some gutsy former IRS agents proclaiming the whole U.S. income tax scheme a sham, a fraud. But nowhere, nowhere, could anybody cite an actual law that gave the United States government any claim on income from wages.
I was not aware of this video but am not too surprised with the content. Like many Libertarians Russo suspected conspiracy - pointing out serious flaws with the 9/11-industry of lies and deceptions, as he and others have put it. In this video however he was able to name Nicholas Rockefeller of the Rockefeller dynasty. Nick is a very powerful man who works behind the scene and is in advisory board of many think tanks like the CFR.
Here are some info about Russo from the internet:
Russo was born in Brooklyn in 1943 and raised in Long Island . He began promoting rock and roll shows at a local theater while still in high school and boosted the careers of some of the most successful rock acts of the 1960s, including Janis Joplin and The Grateful Dead. He was also manager of fusion band The Manhattan Transfer. Longtime movie producer and 2004 Libertarian presidential candidate Aaron Russo died at age 64, having succumbed to cancer in August of 2007.
The Hollywood veteran made his name with popular films such as "Trading Places," starring Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd, and Bette Midler's "The Rose." In later years, his interests and energies=2 0turned to political activism.
Russo joined the Libertarian Party after losing the Nevada GOP gubernatorial primary to Kenny Guinn in 1998. Russo picked up 26 percent of the vote in a four-way race and planned to run an independent campaign in 2002, but was forced to pull out to concentrate on overcoming bladder cancer, which, in 2003, he said he had done.
Russo came back in 2003, launching a bid for the presidency, first as an independent and later as a Libertarian. "I want to do what Ross Perot did, what Jesse Ventura did, and I want to come out and speak the truth – be plain-spoken, tell it like it is, and bring America back to its Constitution and Bill of Rights," Russo said in 2003.
Russo will be best remembered for “ America : Freedom to Fascism..” It is one dynamite documentary, in which Russo embarks on a “Roger & Me” search for the law – any law – that legitimatizes the U.S. government's ability to tax a working-man's wages. Haunting the halls of Congress, the Department of the Treasury, and the Federal Reserve, Aaron Russo found any legitimate requirement for Americans to pay tax on their wages as elusive as Michael Moore found former General Motors chairman Roger Smith to be. It was “somewhere,” but nobody could say where.
In the process he met any number of characters, from tax protesters to Libertarians (presidential candidate and Texas congressman Ron Paul, and Idaho's own Rep. Phil Hart are interviewed) to some gutsy former IRS agents proclaiming the whole U.S. income tax scheme a sham, a fraud. But nowhere, nowhere, could anybody cite an actual law that gave the United States government any claim on income from wages.
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