Sonia Sotomayor member of Bohemian Grove sister group

Sonia Sotomayor found friends in elite group

6.4.09 / Kenneth P. Vogel / Politico

Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor last year accepted an invitation to join the Belizean Grove, an elite but little-known women’s-only group.

Founded nearly 10 years ago as the female answer to the Bohemian Grove — a secretive all-male club whose members have included former U.S. presidents and top business leaders — the Belizean Grove has about 125 members, including Army generals, Wall Street executives and former ambassadors.

Sotomayor’s membership in the New York-based group became public Thursday afternoon in a questionnaire submitted to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Since then, the group has been deluged with press calls, said its founder, Susan Stautberg, who explained that “we like to be under the radar screen.”

The group — which on its website describes itself as “a constellation of influential women who are key decision makers in the profit, nonprofit and social sectors; who build long-term, mutually beneficial relationships in order to both take charge of their own destinies and help others to do the same” — hosts periodic meetings around New York, as well as an annual off-the-record three-day retreat in Central or South America at which its members attend cocktail parties with U.S. diplomats and host-country officials and participate in panel discussions on public policy and

business affairs.

At last year’s retreat in Lima, Peru, for instance, Sotomayor and the other members attended a reception at the American Embassy with U.S. Ambassador to Peru P. Michael McKinley and several female members of the Peruvian cabinet, Stautberg said.

Sotomayor, a federal appellate judge, gave a presentation on the challenges the judiciary faces in maintaining its independence from the legislative and executive branches.

“It was really about how you need to have that balance of power and that the judiciary needed to have the ability to really be itself and not be influenced politically,” said Grove member Cathy Allen, the chief executive officer of a financial services firm in Santa Fe, N.M. Allen said she didn’t take notes on the speech and added, “Everything we do is off the record.”

In a quote on the group’s website, Sotomayor called the Grove “an extraordinary grouping of talented, compassionate and passionate women. I am deeply honored to have been included. The joy of participating in your fun in Peru was wonderful.”

Mary Pearl, a dean and vice president at New York’s Stony Brook University, called the talk “inspiring” and said she came away from it impressed by Sotomayor’s “profound respect for the Constitution and our legal framework in this country.”

The two became friends through the group, which, Pearl said, is kind of the point of it.

“It’s hard if you’re someone who’s a type ‘A’ personality, who’s achieved a lot and who may be in the public eye — it’s hard to make friends, so it’s just a mutually supportive wonderful experience. We get together just for socializing and also just for intelligent conversation,” said Pearl, adding that the group charges a couple hundred dollar membership fee and also participates in charitable work.

But it’s not open to just anyone.

“The way you become a member is people recommend friends to join and we have an advisory board (that makes the final determination),” said Pearl, who is a member of that board. “You have to have achieved something, but you have to have a really good personality, too. You could be the richest person in the world with a resume that goes on for 50 pages, but if you don’t have a sense of humor, then people won’t want you to be a member.”

Pearl called it “elite in the sense that anything that has more people who want to be in it than are in it is elite. But it’s not elite in that people from all walks of life who are interesting can become a members.”

An out-dated member list on the group’s website lists members including former General Services Administration Director Lurita Doan, Army General Ann E. Dunwoody, former Goldman Sachs partner Ann Kaplan and IKEA executive Pernille Spiers-Lopez.

According to Stautberg, a former Washington bureau chief for Westinghouse Broadcasting, Sotomayor was recommended by Mari Carmen Aponte, a former Carter administration official who later served as Executive Director of the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration in Washington.

Sotomayor “came to some events and got to know some of the members” and then was approved by the advisory board, said Stautberg, who called Sotomayor “a very bright, very decent, very nice woman.”

Stautberg said she hoped Sotomayor could still be a member of the Grove if she’s confirmed to the court, though the White House did not respond to questions about her plans.

And Stautberg brushed off a question about whether the Grove’s women-only membership could generate controversy as the Bohemian Grove’s exclusively male membership did in 1979, when the state of California sued the club for not hiring female employees as its facility there.

Stautberg stressed that male “spouses, partners and adult children” are permitted to go on the optional post-retreat expeditions (last year’s was to Machu Picchu and the Sacred Valley) and said that even though “no man has ever applied to be a member. … If they did, we would certainly vote on it.”

The American Bar Association’s judicial codes states that it is inappropriate for judges to belong to groups that “invidiously” discriminate on the basis of race, sex, religion or national origin.

On the questionnaire, Sotomayor wrote that “I do not consider the Belizean Grove to invidiously discriminate on the basis of sex in violation of the Code of Judicial Conduct.”

While conspiracy theorists have cast the Bohemian Grove as a cog in a shadowy right-leaning globalist cabal, Pearl said the Belizean Grove is nonpartisan and stressed, “There’s nothing nefarious about it.”

Smells like Illuminati global ritual! Tubular bells ring across the world at “666″

Tubular Bells ring out across world at 666

6.2.09 / Amar Singh / London Evening Standard

A UNIQUE performance of one of the most successful albums will take place in London this weekend as part of a global event.

Mike Oldfield’s 1973 album Tubular Bells, still best known for providing horror film The Exorcist with its theme music, will be performed in cities all over the world on Saturday.

The performances are to mark the release of a digitally-enhanced version of the album. They are scheduled for 6pm on 6 June – a reference to the number of the devil – and are taking place in Milan, Berlin, Paris, Sydney, Japan and London, where the 29-piece Hand Bell Ringers of Great Britain and ambient house duo The Orb will showcase their own tributes.

The British Music Experience at the O2 arena will host the event, where visitors can try bell-ringing.

Oldfield, 56, the Reading-born multi-millionaire producer, told the Standard he doesn’t want the horror movie link to put families off bringing children, who will be admitted for free.

He said: “I hope the kids will come and families won’t be put off by the 666 thing.” Oldfield lives in the Bahamas with his wife Fanny and two sons. Tubular Bells has sold 17 million copies.

Slaughter and eating of goat on menu at Sony game God of War commemorative party

Slaughter: Horror at Sony’s depraved promotion stunt with decapitated goat

5.1.07 / Glen Owen & Rhodri Philips / Daily Mail

Electronics giant Sony has sparked a major row over animal cruelty and the ethics of the computer industry by using a freshly slaughtered goat to promote a violent video game.

The corpse of the decapitated animal was the centrepiece of a party to celebrate the launch of the God Of War II game for the company?s PlayStation 2 console.

GRUESOME: One of the party hosts stands over the goat’s carcass

Guests at the event were even invited to reach inside the goat?s still-warm carcass to eat offal from its stomach.

Sickening images of the party have appeared in the company?s official PlayStation magazine ? but after being contacted by The Mail on Sunday, Sony issued an apology for the gruesome stunt and promised to recall the entire print run.

Critics condemned the entertainment giant, which produces scores of Hollywood blockbusters each year, for its “blood lust” and said the grotesque “sacrifice” highlighted increasing concerns over the content of video games and the lengths to which the industry will go to exploit youngsters.

At the event, guests competed to see who could eat the most offal ? procured elsewhere and intended to resemble the goat?s intestines ? from its stomach.

They also threw knives at targets and pulled live snakes from a pit with their bare hands.

Topless girls added to the louche atmosphere by dipping grapes into guests? mouths, while a male model portraying Kratos, the game?s warrior hero, handed out garlands.

The International Fund for Animal Welfare said it was “outrageous” that the animal?s death had been used “to sell a few computer games”.

A spokesman said: “We are always opposed to any senseless killing of an animal and this sounds like a gruesome death. We condemn Sony?s actions. It is stupid and completely unjustified.”

The party features across two pages of the latest edition of the company?s PlayStation magazine, which was due to hit newsstands on Tuesday but has already been sent to subscribers.

We have reproduced the spread ? headlined Sony?s Greek Orgy ? here, but have pixellated the image to spare readers the sight of the goat?s decapitated head hanging by a thread of tissue from its corpse, with blood dripping to the floor.

But the magazine?s readers were shown the picture in its full horror.

The article, based on a Sony Press release, shows more vivid pictures from the event under headlines such as Topless Girls! and Flesh Eating?

It asks readers how far they would go to get hold of Sony?s next-generation console, the PlayStation 3.

“How about eating still warm intestines uncoiled from the carcass of a freshly slaughtered goat? At the party to celebrate God Of War II?s European release, members of the Press were invited to do just that . . .”

In God Of War II, which is so violent it has been given an 18 certificate, players follow Kratos into battle against a series of fearsome characters from Greek mythology.

Sony describes it as “an adult-rated, fast-paced bloodbath ? and enormous fun to boot”, adding that it is “bigger, better and as brutal as ever”.

One reviewer said the title featured “the most brutal, visceral combat of any action game”.

Former Minister Keith Vaz, Labour MP for Leicester East and a long-time campaigner against violent computer games, branded the stunt “distasteful and irresponsible”.

He said: “The slaughter of animals is not something that should be done to advertise a product.

“Sony as a global entertainment company has a social responsibility. At this event it failed in that responsibility.

“I think people should think very carefully before bringing games like this into their homes.

“I would understand if customers wanted to boycott other Sony products such as their televisions because of this controversy.”

Sony, based in Japan and run by Welshman Sir Howard Stringer, is one of the largest media organisations in the world, boasting global revenues of £40billion from electronics, video games, music, television programmes and feature films ? including Spider-Man 3 and Casino Royale.

It is regarded, along with Coca-Cola, Nike and Mercedes-Benz, as one of the world?s most valuable brands.

The company, which released the game in the UK on Friday, admitted that the stunt had been a mistake. In a statement it said: “Sony does not condone or sanction any inappropriate behaviour by its staff or sub-contracted staff.

“It has come to our attention that at the God Of War II launch showcase, an element of the event was of an unsuitable nature.

“We are conducting an internal inquiry into aspects of the event in order to learn from the occurrence and put into place measures to ensure that this does not happen again.”

The party was held last month in Athens in homage to the game?s Greek mythology themes. Revellers partied against the floodlit backdrop of the Parthenon.

The Sony spokesman said the animal had not been slaughtered for the event but had been bought from a local butcher by the Greek company hired to stage the event.

What purported to be warm intestines was actually warm offal.

He said Sony?s UK office had been shocked to see the report in the official PlayStation magazine, which the company licenses to publishing house Future. Sony is this weekend recalling the entire 80,000 print run of the magazine.

The offending article will be removed because of the “sensitivity of the general public over issues of animal welfare”.

The firm refused to say how the goat died. It is unusual for animals in modern Greece to be killed by having their throats cut, let alone by being decapitated.

It is not the first time Sony has been involved in controversy over its games. In 2004, the PlayStation 2 game Manhunt was banned by High Street stores in the UK after it was linked to the murder of a 14-year-old Leicester boy.

Last September the relatives of a family massacred by a New Mexico teenager addicted to Grand Theft Auto: Vice City launched a £317million lawsuit against the entertainment company.

And in November, Europe?s justice commissioner Franco Frattini was so shocked by the “obscene cruelty and brutality” of Sony?s Rule Of Rose PlayStation game that he wrote to all EU governments urging tighter controls on the “dreadful game”.

Scientologists building yet another underground vault in Wyoming

Scientology project raises questions, ire in Wyo.

2.11.09 / Mead Gruver / AP

The construction began last summer, stirring up dust that wafted down this desert valley and into a small community of off-the-grid homes.

As many as 20 heavy trucks a day hauling construction materials and equipment rumbled down the valley’s main gravel road, passing into a gate marked with a “No Trespassing” sign. Helicopters flew in sling loads of cargo. Powerful work lights lit up the valley at night.

Public planners in southwest Wyoming’s Sweetwater County – a sagebrush expanse roughly the size of Massachusetts – say the contractor hired for the project has told them it intends to build a 22,000-square-foot underground storage vault to store documents.

Whose documents exactly? Apparently, the writings of the late L. Ron Hubbard, the Church of Scientology’s founder, and other church records.

But plans remain vague. County land use planner John Barton said the county also has been told the vault might hold any number of things besides documents.

“We’ve had everything from underground housing of sheep or hay,” Barton said. “We’ve had cemetery discussed. We’ve had mining discussed.”

The contractor, International Ground Support Systems of Santa Fe, N.M., also has said it plans to build a 3,500-square-foot caretaker house and an airstrip, county officials say. But they allege that IGSS has failed to apply for two required permits for work done so far.

The mysterious project has riled some neighbors, who value the solitude of their remote community, located about 150 miles east of Salt Lake City.

“I don’t care if it’s Church of Scientology, the Roman Catholic Church or, you know, Kraft Foods,” Barton said. “We have development activity occurring – has occurred and, rumor has it, continues to occur – without required permits.”

A local attorney representing IGSS, Robert Reese, said the earthwork already done is similar to improvements that would be made at any ranch. He said that’s consistent with the site’s agricultural zoning and past use as a cattle ranch. Therefore, he said, the contractor hasn’t needed to get a permit.

“Our position is that everything that has been done so far falls well within the agricultural use and no permit is required,” Reese said.

IGSS has a majority ownership stake in the 3,500-acre property along with a handful of locals who otherwise don’t appear to be directly involved in the project, according to county officials.

Neither the Los Angeles-based Church of Scientology – a roughly 50-year-old religion noted for its unconventional beliefs and celebrity followers – nor IGSS officials returned several phone messages seeking more information about the project.

However, an entity called the Church of Spiritual Technology has been known to build underground vaults to store Scientology documents, including near Petrolia, Calif., and Trementina, N.M. According to records from Humbolt County, Calif., IGSS received a permit in 1990 to build the Petrolia vault for the Church of Spiritual Technology, which is based in Los Angeles.

The Church of Spiritual Technology doesn’t have a listed phone number.

The Church of Spiritual Technology and the Church of Scientology are linked, according to Larry Brennan, of Bow, N.H., a former Scientologist who now writes a blog about the religion.

The Church of Spiritual Technology holds Scientology’s copyrights and trademarks and stores church documents in underground vaults to preserve the religion in case of nuclear war, he said.

The developer’s lack of permits prompted the county to issue a stop-work order in September. When work didn’t stop, the planners referred the matter to County Attorney Brett Johnson, who said he’s contemplating legal action if work continues without a permit.

“There’s been a lot of earth moved. It’s quite clear that they’re preparing to do a lot more work and we just want them to come in and get the proper permits,” Johnson said.

John Ledford lives in a solar-powered home within sight of the construction zone. He said the project has stirred up considerable dust and he worries that the construction could cause his water well to run dry.

“They’ve ruined the road, and we live with the fact that the road has gotten ruined. But the air and the water? It’s just not right,” Ledford said.

IGSS attorney Reese said that far from doing harm, the company has improved the property.

“They’re doing nothing but agricultural work out there in the last couple of months,” Reese said. “They’ve got grazing permits, cattle are being raised, they were cleaning stream beds, fixing up the property, getting a lot of trash out there. It’s much nicer than it was.”

Infamous Denver Airport has on display blue demon horse statue

Effort To Remove DIA’s Blue Mustang Grows

Online Effort Under Way On Facebook

1.29.09 / ABC7 Denver

horsesculpture

demonhorse

mustangbluep1_200

Anyone who has been out to Denver International Airport has seen the “Blue Mustang” sculpture leading to the terminal.

Rachel Hultin wants to see the huge blue statue with its red glaring eyes removed from its current location. She has created a Facebook page called “DIA’s Heinous Blue Mustang Has Got To Go.”On her Facebook page, Hultin writes, “Is anyone else as mortified and offended by DIA’s 32 foot fiendish blue ‘Mustang’ statue as I am? Does anyone else find it to be the least welcoming public art exhibit imaginable? Are you perturbed by the chilling fact that Luis Jimenez, its creator, was killed by a piece of its torso?”

The group’s membership swelled to more than 1,800 members by 3 p.m. Thursday. Visitors are being asked to take part in the “Heinous Blue Mustang Haiku Challenge.”Hultin said the poems will be sent to the mayor’s office, in hopes of getting the sculpture moved.

She said she is a realist and doesn’t expect the city to move it, but believes it’s hideous. She said the mustang’s glowing red eyes are simply creepy, and thinks the Convention Center’s big blue bear was a better choice of art for the city.

“It’s just a very uninviting piece. I would just like to think that the people, when they come to our city, the first piece of art that they see should be a little more welcoming,” Hultin said.

Followers of @DenverChannel on Twitter posted several responses Thursday, that included:

romeyinfc “I think that mustang isn’t the best piece of art to put out by the airport, I’d like to see it moved.”

LaceyH “Seriously, that sculpture is scary and rather ominous … Particularly due to its past.”

Greeblemonkey “I hate to say it, but I am creeped out by the DIA mustang too. I know the family wanted it up — but seriously? It’s evil!”

The “Mustang” was commissioned in 1992 but was delayed by structural changes and because the creator, Luis Jimenez, had health problems.

Jimenez died in his Hondo, N.M., studio in June 2006 after he was pinned under a section of the sculpture that came loose from a hoist. The mustang was finally installed last year after Jimenez’s staff members and family members helped complete his work.

The statue costs $650,000 but it was municipal bonds, not tax dollars that financed the art work.

7News viewers have expressed a wide range of opinions Thursday.

“I agree that the blue mustang is hideous. However, with the economy the way it is, I think there are more important ways to use money than to pay to move the statue,” wrote one viewer in an e-mail.

“Instead of MOVING the big blue horse, why not just paint it to look like a real horse — ya know, brown, white feet, white streak down nose, black tail, etc.?” writes another viewer.