From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9884 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, October 12 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9884 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Thanks for your time! ["Vaccine Survey" Subject: Thanks for your time! Thanks for your time! http://covidvaccines.today/ESHfualOcHhpwlrd_8167LBKRvOM9vvOoBNq5fN8QbCjmKn6tA http://covidvaccines.today/cvXpgd29SbJbaE88AcAphD1uzNpISUbAARZaUUt9CDgOeshITQ e operation's investigations and surveillance would, in part, assess how the anti-Vietnam War movement could damage Nixon's campaign. Nixon's staff also anticipated that the Democratic campaign would employ the services of Intertel, a private investigation firm led by former Department of Justice officials who had served under Robert F. Kennedy, a Democrat and former Attorney General who had been the leading Democratic candidate in the 1968 primaries before his assassination. Caulfield noted that this firm had the potential to employ "formidable and sophisticated" intelligence-gathering techniques, and Sandwedge was his attempt to create a Republican counterpart. The plan would involve black bag operations, targeting political enemies of the campaign. Electronic surveillance was also an element of the proposal, with plans to scrutinize the private lives of the targets, including their tax records and sexual habits. The Sandwedge proposal also included a list of people willing to work with Caulfield on the project, among them several investigators and officials of the Internal Revenue Service and a former sheriff of Cook County, Illinois. Herb Kalmbach, Nixon's own attorney, transferred $50,000 (equivalent to $334,552 in 2021) to Caulfield at the request of John N. Mitchell. Mitchell had served as Attorney General during Nixon's first term, and directed the 1972 re-election campaign. Caulfield was also given responsibility for the salary of Tony Ulasewicz, an operative he planned to use for Sandwedge activities. Strachan, Dean and other staff members were frustrated at the pace of Caulfield's development of the project. Strachan directly questioned whether Caulfield was capable for the role in a memo dated from October ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2022 03:44:49 -0400 From: "Bed Bath and Beyond Shopper Feedback" Subject: Leave your feedback and you could WIN! Leave your feedback and you could WIN! http://surveytools.shop/UAMpF3x60XET4bpNGVs-Qh4EWmRGKPae-A-YkAflxNIXnJ8 http://surveytools.shop/ANrMpWsw3mrDCB9QpFSvpuUs-aN_ygtEP4R2WPMdCeUloYs eration Sandwedge was a proposed clandestine intelligence-gathering operation against the political enemies of U.S. President Richard Nixon's administration. The proposals were put together by Nixon's Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman, domestic affairs assistant John Ehrlichman, and staffer Jack Caulfield in 1971. Caulfield, a former police officer, created a plan to target the Democratic Party and the anti-Vietnam War movement, inspired by what he believed to be the Democratic Party's employment of a private investigation firm. The operation was planned to help Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign. Operation Sandwedge included proposed surveillance of Nixon's enemies to gather information on their financial status and sexual activities, to be carried out through illegal black bag operations. The operation would have targeted not only the anti-Vietnam war movement, but rivals within Nixon's own Republican Party. Control of Sandwedge was passed to G. Gordon Liddy, who abandoned it in favor of a strategy of his own devising, Operation Gemstone, which detailed a plan to break into Democratic Party offic ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2022 03:28:53 -0400 From: "Bed Bath and Beyond Opinion Requested" Subject: BONUS: $100 BED BATH AND BEYOND Gift Card Opportunity BONUS: $100 BED BATH AND BEYOND Gift Card Opportunity http://surveytools.shop/zJQQHu_8I3Z3V-WkJpSspJcWCE3ZUIuaG0_AIsfVQoYid6A http://surveytools.shop/N-251MMxWuN1oIZ3UqkURLR6L7xwSyGN15G8wcyL2NuS2hr69g eration Sandwedge was a proposed clandestine intelligence-gathering operation against the political enemies of U.S. President Richard Nixon's administration. The proposals were put together by Nixon's Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman, domestic affairs assistant John Ehrlichman, and staffer Jack Caulfield in 1971. Caulfield, a former police officer, created a plan to target the Democratic Party and the anti-Vietnam War movement, inspired by what he believed to be the Democratic Party's employment of a private investigation firm. The operation was planned to help Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign. Operation Sandwedge included proposed surveillance of Nixon's enemies to gather information on their financial status and sexual activities, to be carried out through illegal black bag operations. The operation would have targeted not only the anti-Vietnam war movement, but rivals within Nixon's own Republican Party. Control of Sandwedge was passed to G. Gordon Liddy, who abandoned it in favor of a strategy of his own devising, Operation Gemstone, which detailed a plan to break into Democratic Party offic ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2022 05:08:47 -0400 From: "Green Houses" Subject: One of Hundreds of Video Tutorials Youâll Get One of Hundreds of Video Tutorials Youbll Get http://surveydigi.shop/mC69EEqhX9cwxKC3PxFn3npIq9NKtxRlkI_BD17CrI8SzAU5 http://surveydigi.shop/omMjM6hupPlCIX08gRFW9M64LfGUC9mFe6NduYcKAXtQAFoleg late 1971, John Dean, the White House Counsel, pushed to expand the existing intelligence program ahead of the 1972 re-election campaign. Dean delegated the task to Jack Caulfield, a member of his staff who was a former New York police officer. According to Dean, Caulfield himself was interested in work outside of politics; he intended to create a private security company, and felt that if the Nixon cabinet were an early client, it would lead to lucrative future clients within the private sector. Caulfield reportedly requested $511,000 (equivalent to $3,419,123 in 2021) from the campaign to establish field offices in Washington, New York, and Chicago. Fred Emery, a journalist for The Times and BBC, refutes this, claiming in his book Watergate: The Corruption & Fall of Richard Nixon that the idea of a private sector security firm was simply a front for a committed campaign of surveillance working Nixon and the Republican Party, with political donations to the re-election campaign able to be diverted through the company as though they were unrelated transactions. John Ehrlichman, who was a long-time friend of Haldeman and had also served as White House Counsel, had been part of the operation's inception; by 1971 h ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2022 03:34:56 -0400 From: "Amazing Deals" Subject: Few People Know How to Save with Free Samples Few People Know How to Save with Free Samples http://jetblue.today/e7q2IvQqHC_V1sXBLxBrE7LmIzeuSYsY7Mi3UOH-v8nQQsw47g http://jetblue.today/M1UotdfH4NTU9sRBPi57qIHL6Kk_RZfjeNG5qWn9WZFSArAAaQ 1968, Richard Nixon, the Republican Party nominee, won the presidential election, defeating Democrat Hubert Humphrey, the incumbent Vice President. Nixon's margin of victory in the popular vote was seven-tenths of a percent. Nixon had previously contested the 1960 election, narrowly losing to Democrat John F. Kennedy by a margin of less than 118,000 votes, which amounted to less than two-tenths of a percent of the total. The close margins involved in these electionsbin particular, a swing of 28,000 votes in Texas or 4,500 in Illinois would have changed the outcomes in those statesbhave been cited by historian Theodore H. White as the impetus for future Nixon campaigns valuing every potential vote and not merely seeking a majority. White also makes the claim that electoral fraud was widespread within both main parties of the 1960 election. Nixon appointed H. R. Haldeman as his Chief of Staff; a position which granted Haldeman a relatively large degree of control over the activities of the presidential administration. Haldeman had first worked for Nixon in 1956, when Nixon was running as Dwight D. Eisenhower's vice-presidential candidate in the 1952 election. By 1971, Nixon's staff were receiving a cursory intelligence report from Haldeman's assistant, Gordon C. Strachan; Strachan's reports essentially collated information ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 10 Oct 2022 08:34:36 -0400 From: "Larger & Stronger" Subject: Impotence and ED... Impotence and ED... http://alphaextrememaleenhancement.shop/KfdgKHwa9dF_ES3msRRAmQ1mqEYhbWB1pEegVXd6gjLwI6AAeQ http://alphaextrememaleenhancement.shop/U1yoJalH9zBSkns3O9leEkGL5ZKy-mQrjoqT9Og17IB0eV5IMw he half dollar, sometimes referred to as the half for short or 50-cent piece, is a United States coin worth 50 cents, or one half of a dollar. It is the largest United States circulating coin currently produced in both size and weight, being 1.205 inches (30.61 millimeters) in diameter and 0.085 in (2.16 mm) in thickness, and is twice the weight of the quarter. The coin's design has undergone a number of changes throughout its history. Since 1964, the half dollar depicts the profile of President John F. Kennedy on the obverse and the Seal of the President of the United States on the reverse. Though not commonly used today, half-dollar coins have a long history of heavy use alongside other denominations of coinage, but have faded out of general circulation for many reasons. They were produced in fairly large quantities until the year 2002, when the U.S. Mint ceased production of the coin for general circulation. As a result of its decreasing usage, many pre-2002 half dollars remain in Federal Reserve vaults, prompting the change in production. Presently, collector half dollars can be ordered directly from the U.S. Mint, and pre-2002 circulation half dollars ma ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9884 **********************************************