Posted on 08/17/2006 3:07:06 PM PDT by Fedora
John Kerry and Ned Lamonts Common Ancestry
Corliss Lamont and the VVAW
By Fedora
When John Kerry threw his political machines fundraising support to Ned Lamont this week, he was in a sense returning a favor the Lamont family had once done for Kerrys old organization Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW). Prior to Kerrys affiliation with that group, Ned Lamonts great-uncle Corliss Lamont and his great-aunt Helen had actually helped finance the creation of the VVAW in 1967.
In August 1972, as US government prosecutors were preparing a case against VVAW members indicted in the Gainesville Eight case, FBI headquarters collected its field offices reports on the VVAW into an Information Digest Special Report. In the process of documenting the VVAWs links to the Communist Party (CP) and Socialist Workers Party (SWP), the report mentioned the role Corliss and Helen Lamont played in funding the creation of the VVAW.
The text of the report, taken from Section 32 of FBI File HQ 100-448092, is available online at Winter Soldier.com, along with a guide to key individuals and groups mentioned in the report (Scroll down the Whats New section to the link for August 20, 2005). The first passage in the report mentioning the Lamonts begins as follows [bracketed text in italics indicates the FBIs notes handwritten on the typed original document]:
On May 8, 1967, Corliss Lamont [C.P. Member], identified as a member of CPUSA in sworn testimony before a Senate Committee in August, 1951, wrote to a Bernard Koten stating that he would contribute $1,000 [the first of several large payments to be made during the next year] toward the cost of the New York Times advertisement calling for the Memorial Day action.The Lamont letter concluded, "We [Helen and Corliss] agree with you and Wolins that the Vets can be very important in stopping Johnson's war of aggression in Vietnam.
The Memorial Day action mentioned here refers to the event which spawned the VVAW. The event was a May 30, 1967 Memorial Day demonstration organized by Veterans for Peace (VFP), an antiwar group founded in Chicago in 1966 by Leroy Wolins, a Communist Party member and leader of the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam. (NOTE: There is also a present-day group called Veterans for Peace that was formally founded in 1985.) Wolins, New York antiwar groups linked to the CP and SWP, and Vietnam veteran Jan Barry Crumb planned to use the demonstration to attract Vietnam veterans to the antiwar movement. The demonstration was promoted through an ad placed in the New York Times, paid for by the Lamonts as mentioned above. During the demonstration Crumb recruited five veterans, who joined him to convene the first meeting of the VVAW on June 1, 1967. VFP continued to support the VVAW as it grew and expanded, and remained particularly close to the VVAW in certain regional branches such as the Chicago VVAW.
After mentioning Lamonts letter to Koten, the FBI report goes on to emphasize the considerable significance of Kotens background. It notes Kotens links to Soviet front groups and his 1956 appearance before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee. During Kotens appearance he was represented by Joseph Forer, a member of the CP-linked National Lawyers Guild and law partner of identified CP member David Rein. The FBI report observes, In 1966-67, David Rein was president pro tem of the VFP Washington, D.C. organization.
The report then discusses Wolins background before continuing:
On June 30, 1967, a check for $488.52 was sent to Corliss Lamont by the VFP organization with a covering letter which said:"The contributions on the ad came to something under 50% of its cost. Pursuant to our commitment, we're accordingly returning to you herewith our check for $488.52. Thanks again for your help in making the ad possible. Its effectiveness in turn helped ensure the success of the Memorial Day action in Washington."
An addendum to the FBI report notes that Lamont later sent Koten payments for another ad in the New York Times to promote the VVAW in fall 1967:
On 10/3/67 Corliss Lamont sent a second contribution of $500 to Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) via Bernard Koten toward the cost of an antiwar advertisement which appeared in the New York Times 11/19/67 headed "Vietnam Veterans Speak Out."
From the seed of the Lamont familys contributions, the VVAW eventually grew into the organization that helped propel John Kerry to a Senate seat and Presidential candidacy. In this way, John Kerry also can be said to represent the lineage of Corliss Lamont, and his support of Ned Lamont can be seen as returning an old family favor to a distant political cousin.
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Come read this reply and the article at the top. Oh heck..... just read the entire thread. :-)
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Thanks for the ping. :-)
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2006/08/02/john_kerry_takes_fight_against_cancer_personally/
John Kerry takes fight against cancer personally
By Bella English, Globe Staff | August 2, 2006
As he prepares to bicycle 111 miles Saturday to raise money for cancer, Senator John Kerry reflected this week on his own battle with the disease, saying prostate cancer changed his life profoundly -- from his relationships with friends, family, and constituents to his political battles for better health care for poor people.
``It doesn't scare me as much as cancer just pisses me off," said Kerry, who was diagnosed with prostate cancer during his presidential primary campaign in 2002. ``Too many incredible people weren't as lucky as I was, some because they had a cancer we can't yet cure, and others because they didn't get screening or care in time or couldn't afford great health care. Every American should have the same health care that senators and congressmen get."
Though his doctors consider him cured of the early-stage cancer -- his prostate was removed in February 2003 -- Kerry gets regular checkups. His last one, 12 days ago, was clean.
``It's a good feeling," said Kerry, 63, who spoke on his way to Belmont Wheelworks, the bike store he frequents. He needed a new wheel for his custom-built Serotta and had to get his bicycle cleats fixed before this weekend's Pan-Massachusetts Challenge. He'll join 4,300 other cyclists to benefit cancer research and treatment at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Kerry, an avid cyclist, has participated in the fund-raiser three times before, raising $12,475. He's also biked for cancer research in Iowa with Lance Armstrong, a two-time survivor, and wears on his left wrist the yellow rubber ``Livestrong" bracelet worn by millions of Armstrong fans.
This year, for the first time, he sent a charitable pledge plea to his database of 3 million supporters. The e-mailed request bears the heading ``Because I was lucky" and a link to ``help John Kerry support the Jimmy Fund." He writes that he'll be among the 200 or so riders who are cancer survivors. ``At the fund-raising training sessions for the event, they tell you to e-mail your friends for their help. But I don't suppose they realized I had 3 million friends in my e-mail address book," he wrote. The five people who come closest to guessing his riding time will win Pan-Mass Challenge jerseys autographed by Kerry.
Kerry is known as a skilled and fast cyclist who has done a number of ``centuries," or hundred-mile rides, for charity. He bikes -- and kiteboards, windsurfs, and skis -- for his physical and emotional health. ``The point is to get enough exercise to stay healthy, and so that I don't get ornery."
Though the Pan-Mass Challenge is a two-day event, Kerry is riding only the first day, from Sturbridge to Bourne; he says he must be at Logan Airport later that afternoon. ``I have six conflicts on Saturday, but this is sacrosanct. I'm doing this," he said.
Kerry says he has had an interest in cancer research from his early days in the Senate but that the political became personal when his father, his ex-wife, and he himself were diagnosed with the disease. His grandfather also died of colon cancer.
``On a personal level, my interest rose dramatically when my father got prostate cancer and died in 2000. Three years later, I was diagnosed, and one year later, my ex-wife was diagnosed." Julia Thorne died in April at age 61 of transitional-cell carcinoma. She and Kerry were married from 1970 to 1988 and have two daughters.
``Losing friends and family to this disease opens your eyes," he said. ``It reminds you to take a couple of minutes to call someone you haven't seen in years or reach out to someone going through cancer." Kerry says he gets many e-mails and phone calls from constituents, seeking advice regarding cancer. ``They want referrals, or they share their stories."
A decorated Vietnam veteran who was wounded in battle, Kerry says cancer, like war, taught him that ``every day above ground is extra" and has brought his family closer together. It was his wife, Teresa Heinz Kerry, who prodded him to get checked out. Once he was diagnosed, he said, ``it was as if she was battling cancer herself."
His wife sometimes bikes with him, he said, and monitors his eating habits. ``Teresa has assumed the task of making sure I eat healthy, which can be hard, because I have a weak spot for chocolate chip cookies and a habit of finding fast food when I'm on the road."
Kerry also spoke of friends, including a Vietnam buddy, who died of cancer, and those, like a couple of Yale classmates, who had beat it. Cancer strengthened many of his relationships, he said. He and one of his friends, Tom Farrington of the Prostate Health Education Network, were both successfully treated for prostate cancer. And it was this friendship that led Kerry to believe there is an ``awful apartheid in health care."
``We started learning things that just gnawed at both of us," Kerry said. ``Tom's African-American. Well, we learned that African-American men are 80 percent more likely to die of prostate cancer than white men. If that's not a doctrine of `separate but equal' in health care, I don't know what is. It's wrong. Beating cancer should never depend on the color of your skin. So, given the choice of being scared of cancer, or being pissed off at cancer . . . I've chosen to get mad and get energized."
That post deserves a BARF ALERT.
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You rock!
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1681380/posts
Jimmy Carter: The Untold Story
>>>>As the "human rights president," Carter noted....
http://www.cartercenter.org/doc2313.htm
Jimmy Carter: New U.N. Human Rights Council Raises Hope Worldwide
>>>...Human Rights Council...
My Note:
***This is a source of Foreign influence into U.S. politics STILL***
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