Hizbullah is a key Component of Lebanon's national Security
HIZBULLAH IS KEY COMPONENT OF LEBANON'S NATIONAL SECURITY
NEW YORK, NEW YORK * 13 MAY 2008 Citizen of the USA Stephen M. St. John addresses the international community in Washington and here in New York City, members of the US Congress as well as other organizations and individuals, public and private, and notes the fulsome hypocrisy evinced by the most recent meddling in Lebanon by the USA and Zionist state – the same combination that mauled Lebanon in 1982.
In the USA, Zionist entities such as Amdocs and Comverse have joined with telecommunications corporations to conduct illegal surveillance. Such clear violations of the law are compounded by equally illegal attempts to erase criminal and civil liabilities with ex post facto laws and outright flight to the Zionists' safe haven. So it is only natural that unchecked criminality surfaces elsewhere.
While most Americans and Lebanese remain behind the learning curve with respect to the diabolical ultra high tech applications of real time digital voice morphing (whereby, for example, the great Lebanese singer Farouz could pick up a telephone and sound exactly like Syrian President Bashar al Asad), the Hizbullah, with its private telecommunications network, remains immune from these criminal impersonations that very likely figured in the downing of EgyptAir 990, 9/11 and the Hariri murder. As such, Hizbullah's infrastructure is a key component of Lebanon's national security.
Americans still have not awoken to the telling fact that they have never seen ANY credible video surveillance of ANY passengers – let alone hijackers – at ANY of the three airports from which the flights of 9/11 are said to have departed. Such a loose end in the 9/11 investigation, which requires examination of the Zionist-run Dutch airport security company ICTS-International, does not give pause to the US Government's pressure to sack the head of security at Beirut's airport for supposed ties to Hizbullah! The boys of 1982 apparently want their own man at Beirut's airport to facilitate the comings and goings of their special groups.
"There is no shame in dealing with one's enemy." King Hassan II of Morocco
(See "Part I" at http://www.show-the-house.com/id1.html)
Stephen M. St. John
Post Office Box 449
New York, NY 10185
metatron.metatron@verizon.net



