Home › Forums › Modern Europe › The Secret History of Armand Hammer /Beck/Finder interview
- This topic has 1 voice and 1 reply.
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 30, 2009 at 1:18 am #1708cadremumParticipant
http://www.schwarzreport.org/SchwarzReport/2000/august00.htmlI'm sure you are all familiar with the Armand Hammer communist connection:
Edward Jay Epstein?s book, Dossier: The Secret History of Armand Hammer, a damning investigative classic based on previously unavailable FBI and KGB files, is the keystone of most reporting and commentary on the real Hammer, consulted by all who delve into Gore-Hammer connections. Other biographies and expos?s have provided pieces of the puzzle, but Epstein put many of the pieces in place. More has emerged since Epstein?s book was published. Most recently, Insight discovered the little-noted autobiography of a close Hammer associate, Fair & Square by industrialist John Burton Tigrett. Evidencing a level of respect shared by many who dealt with Hammer up close and at length, Tigrett describes him as ?not just mean, he was evil.? Tigrett, who negotiated many of the oil and coal concessions that propelled Hammer to billionaire status, termed Hammer ?absolutely ruthless in both business and life.?
Joseph Finder was a young guy in his twenties when he went to Russia to research Hammer. He was told to get out by the KGB and did so, quickly.
Finder was among the first to attempt a biography of Hammer without authorization. When Hammer was unsuccessful at derailing Finder?s efforts, he bought every copy of the published book, Red Carpet, that he could acquire. While this tactic may have limited the impact of the book, it sat well with the publisher, who scored a ?sell-through.? With the exception of Epstein?s work, most biographies of Hammer are out of print, available only through secondhand dealers.
Finder was interviewed by Glen Beck on his radio show and he said he has very reliable sources who tell him that Putin ordered the assasination of ex Soviet spy Alexander Litvinenko "....died a slow agonizing death after he was poisoned with polonium-210, a deadly radioactive substance that police suggest is very difficult to obtain. The 43-year-old was a former member of Russia?s intelligence services who fled into exile in London from where he became a fierce critic of the Kremlin."http://www.networkeurope.org/feature/british-police-in-moscow-to-investigate-russian-spy-deathhttp://www.glennbeck.com/content/articles/article/196/29398/ Here is the Beck interveiw with Finder, he talks about spys for hire. People who were with the CIA, now working abroad.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.