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Conspiracy Parrot


Send me your conspiracy news and spare peanuts to e-mail (without the spaces):
conspiracyparrot @ myway.com
Technorati Profile
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| Terrorist explosive blows up without flames |
| 01.31.05 (6:42 pm) [edit] |
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An explosive sometimes used by terrorists does not burn when it detonates. Instead, its molecules simply fall apart. The chemist who has discovered this is so concerned by its implications that he has decided to abandon this line of research.
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| How real is the terrorism threat today? |
| 01.30.05 (2:00 pm) [edit] |
A plane crashing into Canary Wharf, an explosion in a West End nightclub, a suicide bomb attack on Heathrow. These are some of the scenarios that have been presented by politicians, police officers and newspapers over the past months. But how real is the threat and who would carry it out?
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| Centuries' old UFO coin remains mystery |
| 01.29.05 (8:18 am) [edit] |

After decades of seeking possible answers about a mysterious UFO-like design on a 17th century French copper coin, a prominent numismatic expert says it remains just that: an unidentified flying object. After a half-century of research, the design has defied positive identification by the numismatic community.
"It was made in the 1680s in France and the design on one side certainly looks like it could be a flying saucer in the clouds over the countryside," said Kenneth E. Bressett of Colorado Springs, Colorado, a former President of the 32,000-member American Numismatic Association and owner of the curious coin.
"Is it supposed to be a UFO of some sort, or a symbolic representation of the Biblical Ezekiel's wheel? After 50 years of searching, I've heard of only one other example of it, and nothing to explain the unusual design."
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| Britain "sliding into police state" |
| 01.28.05 (3:01 pm) [edit] |
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The home secretary, Charles Clarke, is transforming Britain into a police state, one of the country's former leading anti-terrorist police chiefs said yesterday.
George Churchill-Coleman, who headed Scotland Yard's anti-terrorist squad as they worked to counter the IRA during their mainland attacks in the late 1980s and early 1990s, said Mr Clarke's proposals to extend powers, such as indefinite house arrest, were "not practical" and threatened to further marginalise minority communities.
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| No confidence in intelligence services |
| 01.27.05 (2:03 pm) [edit] |
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A year after the Hutton report into the death of Dr. David Kelly, there is still a lack of confidence in the intelligence services both in Britain and the United States.
Having predicted that there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq -- and none having been found -- the whole intelligence community has been left with a credibility problem.
Efforts to put things right since have not yet been wholly convincing.
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| Looks like the second war is coming soon |
| 01.27.05 (1:57 pm) [edit] |
The US Air Force is playing a dangerous game of cat and mouse with Iran's ayatollahs, flying American combat aircraft into Iranian airspace in an attempt to lure Tehran into turning on air defense radars, thus allowing US pilots to grid the system for use in future targeting data, administration officials said.
"We have to know which targets to attack and how to attack them," said one, speaking on condition of anonymity.
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| French find the answer to UFO power? |
| 01.26.05 (10:32 am) [edit] |
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Three leading French physicists claim to have made a "sensational breakthrough" into the mysteries of how UFOs are powered.
Dr. Jean-Pierre Petit, Dr. Claude Poher and Dr. Maurice Viton, have constructed what they term a "UFO engine" or The Petit-Viton Magnetohydrodynamic Motor, by using (so they say) a combination of both electromagnetic and nuclear energy.
The French scientists claim fantastic results and tremendous power output in the order of 1,000 million watts. The UFO engine was built at the Astronomical Observatory in Marseilles.
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| Photographs of the former potential relocation site for Government in War |
| 01.25.05 (8:21 pm) [edit] |
Part of a government underground site near Corsham in Wiltshire (UK), which was a potential relocation site for Government in War has now been declassified. The site remains part of the MoD estate.
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| I am the Walrus. I am the Badgeman. |
| 01.25.05 (8:18 pm) [edit] |
This guy has gone into some very detailed photo-analysis of what he claims is the real assassin of JFK, and names him too.

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| Nuking you, nuking me... aha! |
| 01.25.05 (2:10 pm) [edit] |
Mossad chief Meir Dagan warned yesterday that by the end of this year, Iran will have reached the point of no return in its technology for manufacturing nuclear bombs. Three to four years later, he told the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, the Iranians will be able to build a nuclear bomb.
Dagan said there are hints of nuclear programs under way in other Middle Eastern countries, such as Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia. He said that Egypt has capabilities in the realm of nuclear technology, but it only uses nuclear power for civilian purposes. In Syria, there are hints of nuclear projects, he said, and while Saudi Arabia does not have nuclear capabilities, it might have contracts for materiel relevant to a nuclear program.
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| Michael Chertoff, Homeland nominee, aided a 911 terrorist |
| 01.24.05 (3:15 pm) [edit] |
Allegedly.
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| I spy with my little eye, something beginning with P |
| 01.24.05 (3:12 pm) [edit] |
The Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency since 2002 has run a beefed-up intelligence-gathering and support unit that has authority to operate clandestinely anywhere in the world where it is ordered to go in support of anti-terrorism and counter-terrorism missions, a senior defense official said Sunday.
The official said the role of the Strategic Support Branch -- described first in Sunday's Washington Post -- "is to provide an intelligence capability for field operation units" including the US military's secretive special forces unit.
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| Is that a UFO old chap? |
| 01.22.05 (9:10 pm) [edit] |
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They contain Britain's very own X-Files: thousands of classified documents detailing credible observations of unidentified flying objects reported by RAF personnel, British Airways pilots and senior police officers.
Now under the Freedom of Information laws, files previously held by the Ministry of Defence's special UFO department, known as SF4, are being released to the public.
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| Even Spider-Man's doing it |
| 01.22.05 (9:08 pm) [edit] |
Seems like everyone these days is saluting Satan -- from Bush to Spider-Man.

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| You think I'm a terrorist, eh? What's that aboot? |
| 01.21.05 (3:19 pm) [edit] |
Dozens of people from Canada have been turned back at the US border or prevented from boarding US-bound airplanes in recent months because of suspected links to terrorism, sensitive US government documents show.
The incidents are detailed in a series of daily briefs published between September and this month by the Department of Homeland Security's operations centre. They contain no classified information but are generally intended to remain secret.
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| Eyes to the skies |
| 01.20.05 (1:24 pm) [edit] |
This Web site has some striking pictures of alleged chemtrails.

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| Don't make any plans for the year 2070 |
| 01.19.05 (3:22 pm) [edit] |
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According to some computer models an early indication is given that an asteroid is headed towards the earth that may crash on its surface in the year 2070 or earlier.
The data received is vague and is yet to be confirmed but the size and shape of the series of asteroids coming earth’s way is very scary.
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| The military are going to be all over this one |
| 01.19.05 (11:33 am) [edit] |
Troy Hurtubise has done the seemingly impossible with his newest invention and defied all known rules of physics, he says.
The Angel Light -- Hurtubise claims the concept came to him in a recurring dream -- can reportedly see through walls, as if there was no barrier at all.
That’s not all, though.
Hurtubise, 41, said the device detects stealth technology.
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| Why do UFOs need lights? |
| 01.18.05 (1:36 pm) [edit] |
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As I was running from the usual black ops helicopters hovering over my house this morning, I got to thinking about UFOs. If they really are from another world, or dimension, why the hell do they need lights?
I assume that they travel at the speed of light (at least) so wouldn't that mean lights are useless? Do they need to pick out errant asteroids two million miles in the distance, in case of collisions? Don't think so.
In my opinion, the UFOs that we see lit up like a Christmas tree in blurry photos on the Web are mainly fakes. I put more credibility in the silver, metallic-looking discs, orbs and other "boring" type of flying vehicles.
On a similar note, why do they need windows? If we have one-way glass in our technology, you can bet they can see out from the inside -- through whatever metal or organic material they use.
That leads me onto steering wheels, etc... (I better stop there; could analyze this all day.)
My point is... the more boring the UFO, the more real I think it is.
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| Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to -- oh, you don't exist |
| 01.17.05 (1:53 pm) [edit] |
Marking the 50th Anniversary of "the operating base near Groom Lake" (official name of the popularly known Area 51 base), several celebrations will be held in the month of May, 2005. The construction of this sprawling complex in Nevada, the world's most well-known but misunderstood "secret base", began in the month of May of 1955.
Needless to say, the "official" celebrations, closed to the public, will all be held at the base itself, including the Base Headquarters (or, officially, Building #269, according to the Security Manual of the base entitled DET 3 SP), the Administration Building (Bldg. #265), the Dining Hall (Bldg. #267) and at Building #170, which contains the officers' lounge/bar known as "Sam's Place", the gymnasium and the swimming pool.
However, there will be other "private" celebrations at diverse aerospace facilities both in Nevada and in Southern California, including the Air Force Flight Test Centre at Edwards Air Force Base, whose Detachment 3 operations are allegedly tied in with the Nevada base.
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| US has been conducting secret missions inside Iran |
| 01.17.05 (1:49 pm) [edit] |
The United States has been conducting secret reconnaissance missions inside Iran to help identify potential nuclear, chemical and missile targets, The New Yorker magazine reported Sunday.
The article, by award-winning reporter Seymour Hersh, said the secret missions have been going on at least since last summer with the goal of identifying target information for three dozen or more suspected sites.
Hersh quotes one government consultant with close ties to the Pentagon as saying, "The civilians in the Pentagon want to go into Iran and destroy as much of the military infrastructure as possible."
One former high-level intelligence official told The New Yorker, "This is a war against terrorism, and Iraq is just one campaign. The Bush administration is looking at this as a huge war zone. Next, we're going to have the Iranian campaign."
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| FBI retires Carnivore |
| 01.17.05 (1:46 pm) [edit] |
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FBI surveillance experts have put their once-controversial Carnivore Internet surveillance tool out to pasture, preferring instead to use commercial products to eavesdrop on network traffic, according to documents released Friday.
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| Man accused of "zombie" Web blitz |
| 01.16.05 (9:05 am) [edit] |
A man has been arrested on suspicion of launching attacks over the Internet after an operation between Scottish police and the US Secret Service.
A number of houses were searched in the Elgin area of north east Scotland on Friday and computers seized.
Officers were investigating attacks in which compromised computers -- known as zombies -- are used to flood Web sites with useless traffic.
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| Simple snoop-proof e-mail launched |
| 01.15.05 (8:38 am) [edit] |
Software that aims to make encrypted e-mail communications simple enough for even computer novices to use was released on Tuesday.
Encryption is the science of securing communications against eavesdropping by converting the content of a message into a code, or cipher, which can only be unlocked using a secret "key." But modern cryptography often involves using complex mathematical algorithms and convoluted key exchanges to protect messages against skilled code-crackers.
Ciphire, developed by Ciphire Labs in Munich, Germany, uses a technique called "public key cryptography" to sign and encrypt e-mail messages. Once loaded on to a computer hard drive the software performs all of the complex tasks involved behind the scenes. Ciphire also works with almost any e-mail software client -- like Microsoft Outlook, for example -- without requiring prior configuration.
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| MI6 journalist? |
| 01.14.05 (9:18 pm) [edit] |
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The Croatian media are abuzz about the continued employment of a journalist reportedly outed as a MI6 (British overseas intelligence) agent and disinformation agent.
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| Do a Google search for spooks |
| 01.14.05 (8:47 pm) [edit] |
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These guys allege that Google has hired ex-NSA staff. It's possible, I suppose; after all, Page and Brin could hire anyone they wanted being worth $6 billion apiece.
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| US Secret Service data compromised in T-Mobile hack |
| 01.14.05 (8:42 pm) [edit] |
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A malicious hacker penetrated the network of mobile phone company T-Mobile USA Inc. and accessed information on 400 of the company's customers, including sensitive information from the account of a US Secret Service agent, according to statements by T-Mobile and the Secret Service.
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| FBI rejects its new case file software |
| 01.14.05 (2:59 pm) [edit] |
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The FBI said yesterday that a nearly $170 million computer system intended to help agents share data about terrorist threats and other criminal cases is seriously deficient and will be largely abandoned before it is launched.
The software, known as Virtual Case File, was supposed to provide a modern database for storing and indexing all case information and entries by agents, enabling them to share files electronically and search easily for links between cases that might not otherwise seem connected.
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| MI6 to be overhauled after Iraq fiasco |
| 01.12.05 (1:34 pm) [edit] |
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THE new chief of MI6, John Scarlett, has announced the biggest shake-up of the intelligence service since the cold war amid the resignations of some of its most senior spy masters.
Scarlett’s changes are designed to prevent a repeat of the “45-minute” debacle when MI6 was forced to withdraw intelligence in the government’s Iraq dossier after admitting that it was unreliable and based on just one source. The shake-up is a tacit admission that MI6’s credibility has been seriously dented.
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| Former US spies want to come in from the cold |
| 01.12.05 (1:23 pm) [edit] |
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They claim to be the spies who were left out in the cold by their handlers at the CIA. And now they're fighting back.
Going by the pseudonyms of John Doe and his wife Jane, a pair of onetime defectors from a former Soviet bloc nation took their case to the US Supreme Court yesterday in an effort to force the CIA to pay them the lifetime compensation they say they were promised years ago.
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| US gives up search for Iraq WMD: Shock and awe! |
| 01.12.05 (1:10 pm) [edit] |
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Intelligence officials have confirmed the US has stopped searching for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
They say the chief US investigator, Charles Duelfer, is not planning to return to the country.
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| Hyperdimensional hurricanes? |
| 01.11.05 (7:13 pm) [edit] |
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Some weird geometry in hurricanes of recent years. Hyperdimensional... or just hype? (And Photoshop.)
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| Let Bin Laden stay free, says CIA man |
| 01.11.05 (6:35 pm) [edit] |
THE world may be better off if Osama Bin Laden remains at large, according to the Central Intelligence Agency’s recently departed executive director.
If the world’s most wanted terrorist is captured or killed, a power struggle among his Al-Qaeda subordinates may trigger a wave of terror attacks, said AB "Buzzy" Krongard, who stepped down six weeks ago as the CIA’s third most senior executive.
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| Welcome to Conspiracy Parrot |
| 01.11.05 (1:10 pm) [edit] |
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Hello, and welcome to my new blog. I am the Conspiracy Parrot, and will be trawling the Web looking for interesting, weird and unusual news that you might not see in the mainstream press.
Feel free to e-mail me (spaces added to deter spam bots!) at conspiracyparrot @ myway.com
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