Anybody interested in Project Paperclip should probably stay away from the Jacobson book
Joseph Tracy
brook7 at sover.net
Tue Mar 4 08:51:18 CST 2014
What about this from wikipedia? And isn't it possible that Truman actually knew but established plausible deniability for political reasons?
To circumvent President Truman's anti-Nazi order and the Allied Potsdam and Yalta agreements, the JIOA worked independently to create false employment and political biographies for the scientists. The JIOA also expunged from the public record the scientists' Nazi Party memberships and régime affiliations. Once "bleached" of their Nazism, the scientists were granted security clearances by the U.S. government to work in the United States. Paperclip, the project's operational name, derived from the paperclips used to attach the scientists' new political personae to their "US Government Scientist" JIOA personnel files.[3]
On Mar 4, 2014, at 7:39 AM, Monte Davis wrote:
> "The New York Times, Newsweek and other media outlets exposed Paperclip as early as December 1946. Albert Einstein, Eleanor Roosevelt and Rabbi Steven Wise publicly opposed the program, and according to a Gallup poll, most Americans at the time considered it a “bad” idea."
>
> The Deep State sure kept us in the dark on that one, eh?
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 4:11 AM, Mark Thibodeau <jerkyleboeuf at gmail.com> wrote:
> Here is what some "serious" conspiracy minded people think of Ms
> Jacobson and her work...
>
> http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=37827
>
> YOPJerky
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> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?list=pynchon-l
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