Saturday, March 29, 2008

New York Times continues spurious campaign to allege sinister Venezuelan cooperation with Colombia's FARC rebels

Totally ignoring the Venezuelan government's long-standing efforts to act as a mediator between the rightwing fascist Colombian government and FARC rebels, the New York Times continues its sortid attempt to allege sinister cross-border motives: "Files provided by Colombian officials from computers they say were captured in a cross-border raid in Ecuador this month appear to tie Venezuela’s government to efforts to secure arms for Colombia’s largest insurgency. Officials taking part in Colombia’s investigation of the computers provided The New York Times with copies of more than 20 files, some of which also showed contributions from the rebels to the 2006 campaign of Ecuador’s leftist president, Rafael Correa. If verified, the computer files would offer rare insight into the cloak-and-dagger nature of Latin America’s longest-running guerrilla conflict, including what appeared to be the killing of a Colombian government spy who had microchips implanted in her body, a crime apparently carried out by the guerrillas in their jungle redoubt."

1 comment:

  1. Another job like the one Blair did for the New York Times. Anyone remember Blair, the journalist that created news without ever leaving his home? Well it looks like the New York Times has hired a new Blair to write fiction.

    Now the the New York Times not only has people writing fiction, but also believing the garbage that they write.

    Of course in Bush's America anything is possible. Don't forget Bush made up the Weapons of Mass Destruction that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein never had, and now the New York Times creates the link between Venezuela and FARC cooperating which has never existed. But I ask you is this reality, or a figment of a very active imagination?

    Perhaps it's time for the New York Times to shut down as a newspaper and re-open as a publisher of Fairy Tales. Because right now their forte s writing Fairy Tales. So you people who own the New York Times go for it! After all it's your only chance to achieve the success that was lacking in your newspaper.

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