The poor sheep ranchers didn’t understand what was happening. Cable Television was just a rumor, but, everyone that surrounded George W. Bush was in on the Big Secret, because his father owned Big Gulp and Little Gulp, two pipelines that brought oil from Texas to the Northeast during WW2 because German U-Boats were sinking oil tankers. Well, here’s your right of way across America. Guess who else owned pipes – in Canada?
Aerie Network signed an agreement with Nortel owned by the Bin Laden
Group, and thus the family. This happened a month before Bush was
elected. Richard Kinder of Kinder & Moragn founded Aerie – and the
Bush Pioneers that helped put Bush in the White House. Kinder left
Enron to form KM and Aerie. Did he do so in a secret deal with the
Laden family, before 911? Was Osama aware of this deal?
Google just paid a billion dollars for Nortel that went bankrupt. Why?Everytime you use google, and if your computer is hooked up to cable, the Bushwhack Boys make a pretty penny!
Yep! These Big Texas Parasites are bleeding the Little People dry, those plain American folks who used to own most of the Public Utilities in America, until the Queen of Englanc sent Baroness Thatcher here to see what this misquito could suck back to Britian – that did not want to be a member of the European Union!
How can Clint Eastwood be a cowboy and a Republican at the same time? Oh, that’s right, he is a Hollywood Cowboy – like Ronald Reagan – who wined and dined Batoness Margaret Thatcher, opened up the West for her. Traitor!
Is it any wonder these Robber Barons paid good money to get Jesus on their side, so as to put the fooled American Public back to sleep – when they wake up!
Jon Presco
Brampton, Ont.-based Nortel Networks has denied any ties to Osama bin Laden, the terrorist accused of the Sept. 11 attacks on the U.S., through its dealings with a Saudi Arabian company owned by his family.
Topics :
Nortel , Saudi Binladin Group , Baud Telecommunications , Baud , Middle East
The Jidda, Saudi Arabia-based Baud Telecommunications is owned by the Saudi Binladin Group, which is a collection of firms owned by bin Laden’s extended family.
Baud is a licensed reseller of Nortel products in the Middle East.
In its defense, Nortel said its relationship with the company is legitimate because bin Laden’s family has denounced his actions and does not have any connection to him. As well, according to the Wall Street Journal bin Laden does not hold any stake in Baud or the Binladin Group.
A spokesperson for Nortel said the company would not do business with Baud if it suspected it was involved in terrorist activity.
The Journal also reported that British pager manufacturer Multitone Electronics PLC has suspended business with Baud until it is sure the company has no ties to terrorist activity.
BUCKEYE PARTNERS, L.P. ANNOUNCES
SALE OF TRANSMIX PROCESSING BUSINESS
Emmaus, PA October 13, 2000 . . . Buckeye Pipe Line Company,
General Partner of Buckeye Partners, L.P. (NYSE: BPL), today
announced that it has entered into a purchase agreement to sell its
transmix refining business to Kinder Morgan Energy Partners, L.P.
(“Kinder Morgan”) for $37 million in cash plus net working capital
on the closing date of the transaction. Buckeye and Kinder Morgan
also will enter into a long-term agreement whereby Kinder Morgan
will purchase from Buckeye transmix generated in connection with
Buckeye’s pipeline operations.
Richard Kinder was born in Cape Girardeau, Missouri in 1944.[5] He received a B.A. in 1966 and a J.D. in 1968, both from the University of Missouri.[1][6][2][5] In college, he was a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity.[5]
He started his career as a lawyer and real-estate investor in Houston, Texas.[3] After he filed for bankruptcy, he joined the Enron Corporation.[3] He has been friends with its founder, Kenneth Lay, in college.[3] From 1990 to December 1996, he served as its President and COO.[2] In 1996, he left Enron and started a new pipeline company with William V. Morgan, another friend from college.[3][4] They purchased Enron Liquids Pipeline for $40 million.[3] They also merged with KN Energy.[3] From 1994 to 2004, he was a Board member of Baker Hughes.[5]
He serves on the Boards of Directors of Transocean, Waste Management, Inc.[2] He is also Chairman of the Board of the Interstate Natural Gas Association of America and the Santa Fe Pacific Pipeline, and Vice Chairman and Director of the National Petroleum Council.[2]
He is a life trustee of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and a national Board member of the Smithsonian Institution.[1][2][3] He has also donated $15 million to Rice University, and $30 million to enhance parks around Houston, both through his Kinder Foundation.[3] A Republican, he campaigned for Bush-Quayle in 1992, for Bush-Cheney in 2004, for John McCain in 2008, and for Kay Bailey Hutchinson and Tom DeLay.[5]
He is worth US$6.4 billion.[6] As such, he is the 46th richest American citizen.[3][7][8] He is twice married, with one child from his first marriage.[6] His divorce was in 1996, the same year he left Enron.[5] He lives in Houston, Texas.[6]
Aerie Networks has eerie timing. Formed in 1999 to take advantage of a demand for bandwidth, Aerie Networks had planned to build a $3.5 billion nationwide long-haul fiber-optic network. But the bandwidth boom floundered before the company began construction as market conditions hit a nosedive. The company shifted its focus toward acquiring and consolidating networks in order to provide managed network services. Aerie acquired the Ricochet wireless data network from bankrupt Metricom in 2001 and operated it until late 2003. Investors in Aerie Networks have included VantagePoint Venture Partners and a group of pipeline firms that offered rights-of-way agreements for the planned network.
Denver-based Aerie Networks has struck a $1 billion deal with Nortel Networks.
The deal, which runs over four years, calls for Nortel to supply Internet services to Aerie’s 20,000-mile broadband network.
Aerie has collected the rights of way along 15,000 miles of pipelines owned by the energy and communications company that also are investors in the privately held company. Aerie already has begun construction of its network between Chicago and St. Louis, St. Louis and Kansas City, Kansas City and Dallas, and Dallas and Houston. The network should be completed in early 2004.
SAN FRANCISCO — Google has bid $900 million for the patent portfolio of Nortel Networks, the Canadian telecom equipment maker, as part of a strategy to defend itself against patent litigation.
In the late 1990s, stock market speculators, hoping that Nortel would reap increasingly lucrative profits from the sale of fibre optic network gear, began pushing up the price of the company’s shares to unheard-of levels despite the company’s repeated failure to turn a profit. Under the leadership of CEO John Roth, sales of optical equipment had been robust in the late 1990s, but the market was soon saturated. When the speculative telecom bubble of the late 1990s reached its pinnacle late in the year 2000, Nortel was to become one of the most spectacular casualties.
Aerie Network signed an agreement with Nortel owned by the Bin Laden
Group, and thus the family. This happened a month before Bush was
elected. Richard Kinder of Kinder & Moragn founded Aerie – and the
Bush Pioneers that helped put Bush in the White House. Kinder left
Enron to form KM and Aerie. Did he do so in a secret deal with the
Laden family, they wanting Bush to get elected because of his close
friendship with Salem Bin Laden? It appears the Laden family was
buying up America’s oil pipes, while Osama is bargaining with
Americans over the Caspian Sea oil pipe that the Bin Laden family
submitted a bid to build.
Is Bush a Stooge for the Bin Laden family, who stands to profit from
Defence Spending, which might explain why they have so many
Defenders of the West in their back pocket? Did Bush delay aid to
New Orleans in hope to make money for Carlyle, but, he and his
cronies were not watching the news (just the ticker-tape) and missed
the spectacle at the Superdome and Convention center that Shocked
and Awed the World.
The NPC’s membership roster reads like a who’s who of the oil industry and the Bush political fundraising machine, particularly during the late 1990s. It included current Commerce Secretary Don Evans, once the chief executive officer of oil company Tom Brown Inc., recently indicted former Enron chief executive officer Ken Lay, and various Bush “pioneers”—individuals who pledged to raise more than $100,000 in hard-money donations for the Bush-Cheney 2000 campaign, according to an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity.






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