Video & Multimedia
Related: About this forumCult Leader Thinks He's Jesus (Documentary Exclusive)
I will admit, after watching this video, he is the best cult leader I have ever heard of. Looks like a nice guy and a nice place to live and he doesn't force people to stay. The girls school and the girls "roles" is complete BS though and not buying any of the religious stuff of course.
blm
(114,657 posts)Of course, it helps to be in cahoots with the Bush family for nearly 50 years.
consortiumnews.com
The GOP's $3 Billion Propaganda Organ
By Robert Parry (A Special Report)
December 27, 2006
The American Right achieved its political dominance in Washington over the past quarter century with the help of more than $3 billion spent by Korean cult leader Sun Myung Moon on a daily propaganda organ, the Washington Times, according to a 21-year veteran of the newspaper.
George Archibald, who describes himself as the first reporter hired at the Washington Times outside the founding group and author of a commemorative book on the Times first two decades, has now joined a long line of disillusioned conservative writers who departed and warned the public about extremism within the newspaper.
In an Internet essay on recent turmoil inside the Times, Archibald also confirmed claims by some former Moon insiders that the cult leader has continued to pour in $100 million a year or more to keep the newspaper afloat. Archibald put the price tag for the newspapers first 24 years at more than $3 billion of cash.
At the newspapers tenth anniversary, Moon announced that he had spent $1 billion on the Times or $100 million a year but newspaper officials and some Moon followers have since tried to low-ball Moons subsidies in public comments by claiming they had declined to about $35 million a year.
The figure from Archibald and other defectors from Moons operation is about three times higher than the $35 million annual figure.
The apparent goal of downplaying Moons subsidy has been to quiet concerns that Moon was funneling vast sums of illicit money into the United States to influence the American political process in ways favorable to right-wing leaders and possibly criminal cartels around the world.
Though best known as the founder of the Unification Church, Moon, now 86, has long worked with right-wing political forces linked to organized crime and international drug smuggling, including the Japanese yakuza gangs and South American cocaine traffickers.
Moon insiders, including his former daughter-in-law Nansook Hong, also have described Moons system for laundering cash into the United States and then funneling much of it into his businesses and influence-buying apparatus, led by the Washington Times.
The Times, in turn, has targeted American politicians of the center and left with journalistic attacks sometimes questioning their sanity, as happened with Democratic presidential nominees Michael Dukakis and Al Gore. Those themes then resonate through the broader right-wing echo chamber and into the mainstream media.
Washington Times articles are routinely cited by C-SPAN, for instance, without explanations to viewers that the newspaper is financed by an ultra-right religious cult leader, a convicted tax fraud and a publicly identified money-launderer. Most American listeners just think theyre getting straightforward news.
The Times also has led attacks on investigators who threatened to expose crimes committed by Republican and right-wing operatives. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Times targeted Iran-Contra special prosecutor Lawrence Walsh, who recounted in his memoir Firewall the importance of the Times in protecting the Reagan-Bush administrations legal flanks.
When journalistic and congressional investigations began uncovering evidence of drug trafficking by the Nicaraguan contra rebels, the Washington Times counter-attacked, too, although in that case the Moon organization may have had a direct interest in containing the probes that could have exposed its relationship with South American drug lords.
Buying Influence
Besides the estimated $3 billion-plus invested in the Washington Times, Moon has spread money around to influential right-wingers, often coming to their rescue when they are facing financial ruin as happened with Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell in the mid-1990s. [See below.]
Moon also has paid lucrative speaking fees to political figures, such as former President George H.W. Bush who has appeared at Moon-organized functions in the United States, Asia and South America. At the launch of Moons South American newspaper in 1996, Bush hailed Moon as the man with the vision.
>>>>>>>>>
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2006/122706.html
BTW....Robert Parry allows his work to be posted in full at DU, though this is just an excerpt.
fasttense
(17,301 posts)What a load of crap.
What is it with men who make up religions that the only religions they can conceive have to make women into feudal servants, baby machines or sex toys?
All the major religions, and now this one, have got to keep women in her place much like the uber rich keep the poor in their place.
Quixote1818
(31,155 posts)
magical thyme
(14,881 posts)That far north, that is a lot of work.
Too bad that they need to keep women "in their place." Ironic that his last advice is to not try to be superior to others because that is the road to death. Apparently that doesn't apply to men being superior to women.
Other than that, it looks like a dream place to live. I could do it. I would like to do it right about where I am...
jtuck004
(15,882 posts)JNelson6563
(28,151 posts)Quixote1818
(31,155 posts)stlsaxman
(9,236 posts)"Finished our journey here- going back to New York City, pollution and terrible people..."
uh- what was he just told...?
"Do not try to be superior to the people around you. That intention leads to death."
Good luck with all those "terrible people", dude!
SummerSnow
(12,608 posts)MrMickeysMom
(20,453 posts)Most of us don't, either. The ones that claim to be able to tell you, leave you with the same advice
I think we can be in Siberia right here-ee-yah