Paul Fromm’s Edmund Burke Society was a National Police operation under Soviet Agent Pearson and Pierre Elliott Trudeau (Part II)

Part II:
The Fromm-Proos attack on Alan Stang
1971

PART I is here.


Referring to Alan Stang’s article in the April 1971 American Opinion (“Canada How The Communists Took Control”), Fromm’s writer, Januus Proos, says:

“A telegram, reproduced on the article’s centerfold, reputed to have been sent by Jean-Louis Gagnon is an outright forgery.  A similar telegram was sent but not this one.  Which brings up the point, that by carelessly using false information that can be disproved, Stang has afforded the enemy the opportunity to discredit the remaining 99% fact in the article.”

However, Proos did not go on to “disprove” the reality of the telegram that Stang had published “in the centerfold”.  Nor did Proos “disprove” any other facts alleged by Stang, including the fact that Pearson had been outed to the FBI as a Soviet agent by Elizabeth Bentley, defecting from Soviet military intelligence.

Why did Proos say “A similar telegram was sent but not this one”?  Why did Proos not disprove the alleged Stang “forgery” by noting that Straight Talk! itself had published the real telegram sent by Gagnon, also in April 1971.  Why not say, here’s the real one!  We published it!

Perhaps because EBS readers might have noticed the one Fromm had published is identical to the one Stang had published that Proos called an “outright forgery”.

if we are to believe Proos that Stang published an “outright forgery”, something that Proos and Fromm certainly would not do (right?), Fromm would have published the REAL telegram, or else, the consequence, according to Proos denouncing Stang, would be to DISCREDIT “the remaining 99% fact”, and this time, not merely in a single article, but in the whole of the supposedly expert anti-communist journal of Paul Fromm, StraightTalk!

So, either Fromm’s EBS published the same “forgery”; and both telegrams are “outright forgeries”, or both telegrams are authentic, and Proos and Fromm had falsely accused Alan Stang of publishing a forgery.  In fact, the latter is the case.  Fromm and Proos lied about Stang.  What would the effect be of that kind of a lie?  It would discredit Stang and drive him off Canadian turf, where the Communist operation has long been well underway on the street, and inside government.

Fromm and Proos published an authentic May-Day Telegram by Soviet agent Jean-Louis Gagnon.  It’s absolutely identical to the one that Stang published.  We will see this clearly down below with a line-by-line graphic demonstration, proving that Stang did not publish a forgery.

It happens that in 1971, the original author of the telegram, known Soviet agent Jean-Louis Gagnon, was employed by Pierre Trudeau in Information Canada; as noted by Stang who points to Gagnon’s pro-Soviet May-Day telegram.

Stang correctly observes the high concentration of communist agents in the federal government of Canada, including Pierre Trudeau, Jean-Louis Gagnon, and Lester Bowles Pearson himself, outed by Bentley in the U.S. McCarran hearings.

Stang planned a mass-mailing to warn Canadians of a Communist takeover from the top-down, inside the federal government of Canada.

That mass-mailing was a threat to Fromm’s main boss, Lester Pearson, for whom Canada’s national police had recruited F. Paul Fromm to set up the Edmund Burke Society as a national surveillance and police front in February of 1967.

That mass-mailing was a threat as well to Pierre Elliott Trudeau, another Communist who jointly bossed Canada’s national police with Pearson, and who therefore also was Paul Fromm’s boss.  Stang’s planned mass-mailing was a threat to the top-down Communist operation in Canada.

Surely, Stang had to be frightened away.  Falsely accusing him of publishing a forgery, while telling him to stick to his own side of the border, was the public method chosen.

To prove to you that Fromm published the same telegram that Stang published in April 1971, I will compare the two published telegrams and you can see for yourself that they are identical.

Here is the May-Day Telegram of Communist Party member, Jean-Louis Gagnon, published by Fromm top-right on page 7 of Straight Talk! in April, 1971 (Volume III, No. 7):

Straight Talk!
April, 1971 (Volume III, No. 7)

The Telegram published by Straight Talk! in April 1971


The Telegram published by Fromm, top-right on page 7
of Straight Talk!  in April 1971, Volume III, No. 7.

“The Red Red Record of Trudeau's Propaganda Minister” (Jean-Louis Gagnon)

“The Red Red Record of Trudeau’s Propaganda Minister” (Jean-Louis Gagnon), Straight Talk!, April 1971


The picture of the telegram in Straight Talk! with a caption under it, isolated on a page by itself, is a clumsy way to begin a cover story on the infamous May-Day Telegram of Jean-Louis Gagnon, praising the “Great Soviet Union”.  The caption (the fine print) begins the story, which continues in larger dark print in the middle of the page, and then says “continued page 8)”.

The bottom-third of page 8 begins:  “(THE RED, RED RECORD OF TRUDEAU’S MINISTER OF PROPAGANDA, continued from page 7)”.  The expose says “Former R.C.M.P. undercover agent, Pat Walsh, knew Gagnon was the right-hand man in Quebec to Soviet spy and former member of Parliament, Fred Rose.”  And it goes on to end in the top-fourth of page 9.

Indeed, Pat Walsh, in his 1982 pamphlet, “Inside the Featherbed File? Canada’s Watergate, The Story of Treason in Ottawa“, in the segment “Comintern Penetrates Federal Civil Service” says:

“… the Royal Commission Report dealing with Soviet espionage in the ’40s revealed that other Soviet spies active in the External Affairs Department had either fled the country (Jean-Louis Gagnon fled to Brazil, with the cooperation of Mitchell Sharp, then a director of Brazilian Traction Corporation) or could not be positively identified because only their code names were known.”

See, also, “The Jean-Louis Gagnon Case” in that same article.

 

The Telegram from Straight Talk!, enlarged

The telegram published by Fromm as authentic:

The Telegram published by Straight Talk! in March 1971

The Telegram published by Straight Talk! in March 1971


The Telegram from American Opinion, enlarged

The telegram published by Stang as authentic:

The Telegram published by Stang in American Opinion, also in April 1971

THE TELEGRAM PUBLISHED BY STANG IN AMERICAN OPINION IN APRIL 1971

Above is the May Day Telegram of Communist Jean-Louis Gagnon published by Alan Stang in American Opinion top-left on page 14 in April, 1971.

The Telegram Stang published in April 1971 — denounced by Fromm and Proos as being an “outright forgery” — is in fact part of the April 1971 cover story of Paul Fromm’s Straight Talk! while Fromm is the editor.  Fromm is responsible for publishing this Telegram as authentic to denounce Jean-Louis Gagnon as a Soviet agent.

The bill for the Alan Stang offprint.

The bill for the Alan Stang offprint.

For the best possible comparison, I purchased a clean copy of Stang’s Canada story as an American Opinion offprint and had it shipped in order to scan the original flat to the glass.  The only partial copy online had not been scanned flat.  This aids the comparison of the telegram published by Fromm in March 1971 with the telegram published by Stang in April 1971.

Above-left is the bill for the offprint.  Fromm, who is outed by me as a Communist agent working to overthrow Canada (we’ll see a few of his efforts in Part III of this article), can come and shoot me.  My address is right on the bill, the bill is authentic.  Invoice by Willis Monie – Books, 139 Main Street, Cooperstown, NY 13326.  Date of invoice 10/29/19.  “Stang – Canada”.  Amount: $5.00, Shipping: $10.00, Total: $15.00.

Robert E. Updike (signature) on Stang's ““Canada” offprint, 1971

Robert E. Updike (signature) on Stang’s ““Canada” offprint, 1971

The particular offprint once belonged to Robert E. Updike, whose signature was on the cover (see above).  The original offprint has been donated to the Quebec Archives.  I removed the signature from the scan of the “Canada” offprint online here, at the present web site.  And that is all I removed.

The Telegram in the centerfold of Stang’s
“Canada” offprint (top-left) April 1971

The Telegram, top-left in the double-page spread in the center-fold of Stang's Canada offprint of April 1971.

The Telegram, top-left in the double-page spread in the center-fold of Stang's Canada offprint of April 1971.

The Telegram, top-left in the double-page spread in the center-fold of Stang’s Canada offprint of April 1971.[/caption]

Preparing to compare the Stang and Fromm Telegrams

First, here’s how I prepared the two publications of the Telegram to prove they are one and the same.  I purchased a clean copy of Alan Stang’s CANADA How The Communists Took Control and scanned the Telegram.  I sized the scan to match a print-screen of the same Telegram in Straight Talk! online at archive.org, taken from the scan made by the Thomas Fisher Rare Books Library.  The Fisher describes itself at archive.org:  “The Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library is a library in the University of Toronto, constituting the largest repository of publicly accessible rare books and manuscripts in Canada.”

I put both copies of the Telegram into MovieMaker in Windows XP Pro and used an automatic “wipe” transition with a red bar to gradually reveal one telegram, line by line, overlaid on the other.  I save the video, then I shot stills from the video and assembled them as a gif in ulead gif animator (free edition: it’s quirky, but it works).  You can thus read the two telegram images one line at a time, top to bottom, to see for yourself that the telegrams are identical.

After scanning the Stang pamphlet, I donated the original to the Quebec Archives, whose rare books department gladly accepted it as an authentic original offprint.  Mr. Daniel Chouinard, Librarian in charge of acquisitions over on 2275 Holt Street in Montreal, acknowledged receipt in email, on 11/11/2019, in French, as follows:

“RE: Alan Stang, CANADA How The Communists Took Control (1971)

Bonjour Madame,

J’ai bien reçu l’exemplaire de la brochure intitulée Canada : How the Communists Took Control.

Je vous remercie de ce don qui contribuera à enrichir notre collection.

Cordiales salutations.

Daniel Chouinard
Bibliothécaire
Direction du dépôt légal et des acquisitions
Direction générale de la Bibliothèque nationale
Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec

2275, rue Holt
Montréal (Québec) H2G 3H1

Téléphone : 514 873-1101, poste 3740
Sans frais : 1 800 363-9028
Télécopieur : 514 873-7286
daniel.chouinard@banq.qc.ca
http://www.banq.qc.ca”

Translation:  “I received the copy of the brochure entitled Canada: How the Communists Took Control. / Thank you for this donation which will contribute to enriching our collection.”

Canada: How the Communists Took Control, Alan Stang, 1971

Canada: How the Communists Took Control, Alan Stang, 1971

The document is now in the BAnQ’s catalogue, with the words “en traitement” bottom-left.  That’s French for “it’s being processed” to make it publicly available in the collection.  The words above that, “Grande Bibliothèque – Collection nationale – Livres” mean the “book” or document is in the Rare Books Division, through this portal:

The Quebec Archives, entrance to special collections, rare books and government documents

The Quebec Archives, entrance to special collections, rare books and government documents

We now can be sure we are looking at “Stang’s” copy of the telegram from an actual, meaning authentic, copy of American Opinion.
 

Now, let’s compare them.

EBS white telegram on top of Stang grey telegram

I will lay the EBS (white) telegram over the Stang (grey) telegram, and then remove the white one, a line at a time, to reveal the grey one, proving both are identical.

The scan of the Stang Telegram is grey to aid comparison.  The animated gif below gradually exposes Stang’s grey telegram by removing Fromm’s white telegram laid over it.

You can therefore see, the Telegrams are identical.

There is no doubt Paul Fromm as editor of Straight Talk in April 1971, published an outright lie by Januus Proos while accusing Alan Stang of publishing “an outright forgery”:  for, if Stang published a “forgery”, then so did Paul Fromm.

 

The Telegram:  Stang -vs- Fromm

Top-down wipe done in Moviemaker in XP Pro

The Fromm-Stand Telegrams - Animated Comparison

The Fromm-Stand Telegrams – Animated Comparison


Fromm and Proos lied savagely

Fromm and Proos lied savagely, even risking exposure of their own publication of the same Telegram, to avert Stang’s mass-mailing that might have exposed Canada’s top-down Communist operation.

Fromm, himself, would also have been exposed as one of their agents.
 

Q.:  Why was Fromm concerned about
Stang’s mass-mailing?

A.:  It would have been a Big Success!

Let me return you to my wrap-up of PART I of this multi-part article on FROMM and the EBS as a national police front under Soviet Agent Pearson and Communist PIerre Elliott Trudeau.  Click that link and scroll down to read my sum-up entitled “CONCLUSION – Part I”, where I prove to you that a prior mass-mailing by Ron Gostick, in which FROMM himself participated with the EBS, was a massive success.

And that is why F. Paul FROMM, and his writer Janus PROOS, smeared American patriot ALAN STANG in Straight Talk! in 1971:  to prevent a similar “major conservative grass-roots upsurge” and a top-down clean-out of the communist-penetrated federal government of Canada, including the exposure of little red FROMM, himself.

F. Paul Fromm, who set up the Edmund Burke Society as a police front for Soviet agent Lester Bowles Pearson, and who also worked for Communist mole Pierre Elliott Trudeau, and reported to Trudeau’s red Solicitor General of Canada in charge of the national police and national security of Canada, Jean-Pierre Goyer from December 22, 1970 to November 26, 1972, is a Communist agent.

As V.I. Lenin said:  “We’ll run our own opposition”.

F. PAUL FROMM is controlled opposition.

F Paul Fromm, Communist Agent

F Paul Fromm, Communist Agent


 
… To be continued.
 

“Did Radicals Aim to Overthrow Government?”  Soviet Agent Jean-Pierre Goyer “Blows Whistle” on Red Friends of Red Mole Pierre Trudeau

Did Radicals Aim To Overthrow Government?

Did Radicals Aim To Overthrow Government?  The Winnipeg Free Press, 27 January 1977, Front Page.

This article, “Did Radicals Aim To Overthrow Government?”, in the The Winnipeg Free Press of 27 January 1977, is careful to exclude most names of individuals and of the “radical” organization subject of Solicitor-General Jean-Pierre Goyer’s “letter” “warning” government departments of subversive activities.  However, the reference to a $68,000 federal-government grant to the “radical group” by Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, identifies the unnamed radical organization working to overthrow the government of Canada as Praxis Corporation, also then known as the “Research Institute for Social Change”.

One name the WFP does reveal is that of Walter Rudnicki, described by the WFP as “policy planning director of Central Mortgage and Housing Corp”.  That raises my question, was Rudnicki responsible for the CMHC award to Praxis of the $68,000, its main operating budget?

The question is important because just prior to Rudnicki’s employment with the CMHC, he was an official in the Privy Council Office of Canada which conducts research to advise the Prime Minister.

Rudnicki’s official biography (a short one, to cover his personal and professional archives on file with the Archives, University of Manitoba in Winnipeg), describes his positions with the PCO and then the CMHC this way:

“Rudnicki also worked within government as Secretary of the Social Policy Committee, in the Privy Council Office (PCO), and as a senior policy advisor for Cabinet Minister Robert Andras (1968-1970).  In 1969 he left the PCO and became the Executive Director of the Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) and advised the Minister on housing and urban development.”

Rudnicki will figure in an upcoming post on the Edmund Burke Society, founded in 1967 by three men, including University of Toronto student, F. Paul Fromm as an “anticommunist” group.  Information that I currently have indicates that Walter Rudnicki exposed the Edmund Burke Society as a national police operation (a front) of the federal government of Canada.  Therefore, this initial post will help to connect Rudnicki himself to the Trudeau federal government.

In this article in the 1977 Winnipeg Free Press, Jean-Pierre Goyer, Solicitor General in 1971, identifies Rudnicki as one of 21 “subversives” linked to the Communist Praxis Corporation, working to overthrow the government of Canada.  Somehow, Rudnicki cleared himself, and returned to work for the federal government and its agencies.

Meanwhile, why did Solicitor-General Jean-Pierre Goyer decide to blow the whistle, naming some twenty-one individuals as likely “radicals” (subversives) involved in a plot at Praxis to overthrow the government of Canada?  The question is important, because, as American anticommunist Alan Stang reveals in the April 1971 issue of American Opinion, Jean-Pierre Goyer himself was a communist.  Said Stang:

Another thing you need if you are imposing a dictatorship is control of the police.  In Canada, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are controlled by the Solicitor-General.  So Trudeau made Jean-Pierre Goyer the Solicitor-General — when Parliament was not in session and could not question him.  Goyer, it goes without saying, was a regular contributor to Cité Libre.  Isn’t everybody? He was once arrested for staging a sit-in outside the office of the Premier of Quebec.  He has been involved in several pro-Communist fronts.  And he has attended Communist meetings behind the Iron Curtain.  Like his friend Trudeau, he is a revolutionary.

This is the man now running the national police of Canada.

In the same long article, in a section headed “The Poor War Revolution”, Stang also talks about Praxis.  He says, “Praxis is what the Communists call an “agit-prop” outfit (agitation and propaganda), egging people on to Marxist revolution.”

The Poor People’s Conference run by Praxis had been financed by the federal government of Pierre Elliott Trudeau through funds contributed by Trudeau’s Minister of Health and Welfare John Munro, through such federal agencies as the National Council of Welfare.

Stang quotes from a speech by Alex Bandy to the Poor People’s Conference run by Jerry [Ferry] Hunnius via Praxis:

“… The way Munro tells it, the government is really, secretly, on our side.  It’s everybody else who is against us and that’s why the government can’t help us.  So, the master plan is to give us money to organize and demonstrate and win popular support, then the government will move ….”  [Emphases added.]

Obviously, the de facto federal government of Pierre Elliott Trudeau was not at all hostile to Praxis Corporation.

Stang describes the kind of “social change” that Praxis “radicals” were working for:

… in March, 1970, Praxis had run another conference, on “industrial democracy,” at which Gerry Hunnius, who runs Praxis, said workers should “control the means and processes of production.”  What that means, said Hunnius, is this:  “It should be obvious that a fully operational system of workers’ self-management cannot operate within a Capitalist system …. ”

In October, 1970, Praxis had run still another Conference — this one on “Workers’ Control and Community Control” — at which a demand was made to destroy Capitalism by revolution.  Capitalism would be replaced by “radical Socialism.”  Confrontation is obsolete, the conferees were told.  What they should do now is “infiltrate,” and, like “microbes,” destroy Canada from within.”

Furthermore, Stang links Hunnius to Pierre Elliott Trudeau:

It is interesting to note that in 1962, Gerry Hunnius, who runs Praxis, which ran the Conference Pierre paid for, was in Moscow at the World Congress for General Disarmament and Peace, sponsored by the Communist World Peace Council – which had sponsored Trudeau’s trip to Moscow ten years before.  In 1963, Hunnius went to work as European representative of the Canadian Peace Research Institute, which the Canada Council supports with public funds — and two directors of which, at one time, were Trudeau and Pelletier.  Another director, named in 1962, was Communist Jean-Louis Gagnon.  [Emphases added.]

Which brings us full-circle to our equally Communist Solicitor-General, and back to my question, why would Jean-Pierre Goyer (appointed by Trudeau “when Parliament was not in session and could not question him” said Stang) “blow the whistle” on the radicals at Praxis?  Goyer himself, like Pierre Elliott Trudeau and Jean-Louis Gagnon are penetrated Communists working “like microbes” to “destroy Canada” … for the Yugoslav system of Communist “worker control” or “industrial democracy”.

According to my original research, the Trudeau objective is excactly the Praxis objective:  Yugoslav-style Communist “Worker Control”, aka “industrial democracy” of the kind practiced under Marshall Tito.  That information comes from a reading of the 1972 manifesto of the Parti Québécois for a Communist state of Quebec — which I have translated into English — together with a 1972 Radio-Canada transcript and audio tape — which I have also translated into English — in which the manifesto is identified as calling for Yugoslav-style Communism for Quebec.

For a free download of the 1972 manifesto and the radio show in one zip file, see the Download button on the top menu.

Furthermore, the Parti Québécois was set up by Lévesque (1967-1968) on orders of Trudeau and other embedded Reds under Soviet Agent Lester Bowles Pearson.  That news emerges from a 1967 dispatch of American CIA agent Edward C. Bittner, then stationed in Ottawa; confirmed by Jean-François Lisée (a main PQ strategist and prolific author of state-funded political pot-boilers) in circa 1990 by interviews with parties mentioned in the dispatch.  the Bittner dispatch, said Lisée, revealed the existence of a “secret committee” of “Liberals”  most being cabinet ministers from Quebec in the Lester Pearson federal government.  On the committee were Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Jean Marchand, Maurice Sauvé and others  [translation]:

“the Committee encouraged René Lévesque and his sympathisers within and outside the Liberal Party of Québec to set up a distinct party, which would be soundly defeated in an electoral showdown.”  [Emphasis added.]

“Electoral” meaning “referendum”.  And thus we have the true source of our Quebec “independence” or “sovereignty” referendums.

Obviously, the “radicals'” plan to penetrate and destroy Canada “like microbes” had long been well under way at the federal level.  Lester Bowles Pearson was in fact a Soviet agent, exposed in the U.S. McCarran hearings and to the FBI by defecting GRU Elizabeth Bentley (formerly with Soviet military intelligence).

Jean-François Lisée — a known Communist — is now the elected leader of the Communist PQ [7 October 2016], succeeding multimillionaire Pauline Marois, Lucien Bouchard, Bernard Landry, Jacques Parizeau and René Lévesque in their goal of making the province of Quebec into a Communist banana republic attached to the “rest of Canada” and to the “USA” by “trade agreements”.

I have read that the Canada Council was actually funded or majority funded from the outset by David Rockefeller (whose Chase Manhattan bank co-funded the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution), but I haven’t got the footnote handy right now.  However, and cautiously, a few words on Praxis from the Lyndon Larouche group.  “Former” Marxist Lyndon Larouche’s Executive Intelligence Review (EIR) of July 12, 1977, Vol. IV, No. 28 (ISSN 0146-9614), referring to EIR’s own research (“Praxis:  The Institute for Policy Studies’ Canadian Extension”), has alleged:

A preliminary investigation of the actual nature of the Praxis Corp. network reveals it to be the centerpiece in a broad-based, largely Rockefeller-inspired, conspiracy directed at all phases of the Canadian policy making process.  Information on Praxis and associated networks gathered in Canada and gridded against the extensively documented activities of the terrorist controllers at the U.S.-based Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) both in North America and in Europe show the Praxis Corp. to be an IPS-Canadian front organization.

The EIR concludes:

This iden­tification, matched in turn against known official Rockefeller policy options for Canada, allows the ef­ficient assemblage of the complete profile of Rockefeller and allied network agencies of subversion directed at Canadian national sovereignty.

 
READ The Winnipeg Free Press:  “Did Radicals Aim To Overthrow Government?” (27 January 1977.
 
READ “Goyer Cites Destructive ‘New Left'”, also on the front page.

Wicked Willy: The Chancellor of the West German Government

Foreword: This old reprint from 1971 shines a light on the so-called “Willy Brandt”.

“Wicked Willy” was written over a decade before René Lévesque asked Brandt to admit the veiled Communist Parti Québécois (PQ) to the Socialist International (SI), whose mandate is world government.

Willy Brant and David Rockefeller, 18 June 1971

Interesting image from 1971 of Willy Brandt with Soviet-apologist David Rockefeller of the Chase Bank which helped to finance the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917. In 1964, Rockefeller called for “free trade” between USA and Canada. That was an early step toward North American Soviet Union

Source: Straight Talk! Published by the Edmund Burke Society

Editor: F. Paul Fromm
Associate Editor: Kastus Akula
Writers: E.B.S. Members and friends
Directors: The Council of the E.B.S.

The Edmund Burke Society is a movement dedicated to preserving and promoting the basic virtues of Western Christian Civilization — individual freedom; individual responsibility; a self-sacrificing love of country; and a willing­ness to work and pay one’s own way and not be a burden on others. These virtues have made our civilization great. Communism, socialism, and welfare-state liberalism are tearing it apart. The Edmund Burke Society stands for a regeneration of Western Civilization and firm action against all its enemies.

The E.B.S. is financed mainly through small donations from generous Canadians. Straight Talk! is produced by voluntary labour.

Volume III No. 6, March 1971


WICKED WILLY

The Chancellor of the West German government is a dan­gerous threat to Western Christian civilization. The following are a few quotations inserted into the American Congressional Record from a document by Congressman Rarick, entitled Willy Brandt:

“How did Herbert Frahm, the illegitimate son of a shopgirl in the Baltic Ger­man port of Lubeck, a member of the Red Falcons and functionary of the far-left Socialist Workers’ Party, said by an old acquaintance to be ‘as close to Red as you can get without actually being Red’, be­come, in less than five years, Willy Brandt, a ‘correspondent’ with the Communist forces in the Spanish Civil War, under a forged Nor­wegian passport?…

How did Willy Brandt, a German hiding out the war in Sweden, become a naturalized Norwegian while the government of Norway was in exile in London?…

How did Brandt next surface as a Nor­wegian reporter at the Nuremburg Trials acting as a go-between and translator for half of the foreign press corps?

How did Brandt next appear at Allied headquarters in Berlin, not as a German, but as a Norwegian Major in 1946?” The record goes on and on and on…

_____

Afterword: Interesting that Communist René Lévesque was a ‘correspondent’ with the American forces in WWII. Reporters, editors, journalists and correspondents are frequently occupations of choice for spies and agents. This gives them news control, to slant what we hear and read. They are at the nerve center of current events, able to re-write history as it happens.

Quebec’s left and far left have typically had their agents in all our press and broadcast media, which for lack of a better term, creates a grave conflict of interest. For example, in 1963, a reporter from the La Presse newspaper used $5,000 to bail an alleged FLQ terrorist, Françcois Mario Bachand, out of jail. Bachand then vanished.

The reporter had helped to make the news; but his job was to observe and report the news, not get involved.

Reporters must influence the course of events by getting at the truth of events as best they can. Too much involvement in making events is a conflict of interest.

In the 1950s and 60s in Quebec, La Presse owners fired journalists who were exposed as Communists and were slanting the news. These Reds also wrote for leftist magazines. In response to the firings, other journalists involved in subversive activities began to publish in the local Red press under pseudonyms.

A specific example is the historically documented use of pseudonyms by La Presse reporters contributing to an extreme left new journal being launched from the basement of André Laurendeau’s home by two Trudeau-Pelletier friends and employees at the pro-Soviet Cité Libre who were about to quit CL to lead an FLQ terrorist cell.*

Laurendeau’s son also wrote for the review they were launching in Laurendeau’s basement: Révolution Québécoise. Moreover, at the time, far-left Laurendeau was co-chairing Soviet agent Lester Bowles Pearson’s Royal Commission on Bilingualism and Biculturalism.

This means that by at least this one channel — in my view, there must have been others — a pipeline existed directly from Pearson through Laurendeau to the about-to-be Communist terrorist leaders.

The Pearson government was supposedly fighting the terrorist infiltration; however, it could also have been “placing orders” for “designer violence” at particular times to suit a developing agenda.

Pearson’s main agenda — which has been the agenda ever since — was to restructure Canada, using Quebec as the pretext. Now, how would a Red like to restructure Canada? Something along the lines of the Soviet Union? That’s what the infamous “Bi & Bi” Commission was for. To lend a “legalistic” facade to an unconstitutional policy to destroy the founding peoples of Canada for Jewish-Bolshevik multiculturalism fed by illegal mass immigration. The Reds were turning Canada into a tribal, multicultural Soviet-style region, one careful stage at a time.

The pretext for the Bi & Bi Commission was the Communist FLQ terror in Quebec which began in early 1963.

Communist terrorist activities were always mis-portrayed as those of “ultra-nationalist French Canadians”. In other words, in Canada’s press and media — tightly controlled, then as now — it was made to seem as though millions of Quebec Catholic conservatives hated “racist”, “imperialist” Canada and wanted out.

However, the majority of French Canadians never supported the terrorists; and therefore, Pearson’s desire to accommodate “Quebec’s aspirations” (pretending the terrorism was an ethnic revolt) was in fact a Communist at the top using Communist terrorists at the bottom as an excuse to replace Confederation with the new world socialist system. And pretend this was being done as a “favor” to millions of French Canadians who would never have requested it, and would never have approved of it, had they known.

_____
* Louis Fournier, F.L.Q. Histoire d’un mouvement clandestin (1982). See Chapter 6, the segment Révolution québécoise (Vallières et Gagnon), page 91. Fournier is a partisan of the left; he calls the FLQ killers “political prisoners” when they are jailed. Nonetheless, there is a lot of useful information in this book, which is free online at http://classiques.uqac.ca/