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the junta's love to Burmese people (r)



Subject: Re: the junta's love to Burmese people

Isnt it neat that the IHT does a story like this, hey, I mean, its the
IHT, and we all know, its the paper that flogs liberal capitalist
exploitation like no other paper in the world, with its financial pages,
60 percent of the paper, the finance editing department, I know a lot
about the paper, from the inside, the editors, the editing desks, the
copy boys and girls, the 530 pm editorial meetings to decide on the
headlines, front pages, stories, what goes in, what doesnt go in, and
now, the editors, tagging along from the new york times and washington
post, because they own 2/3rds of the paper, are now saying good about
democracy in burma. how very nice of them. because they do so little
except to push alcatel, elf, total, and the current stock boom in
paris...

send your letters and email to the iht, 
address the letters to
Walter Wells, Managing Editor - He's the boss 
and to the Publisher
Michael Gelter (Executive Editor) He's the boss of boss 

I am sure they will be most interested, and let me tell you, they DO
read their mail. They really do. And in their tiny little offices on the
Third Floor, when they are not going around Paris as vips, they may read
YOUR mail too. They know me, I know them, thats all I can say. Dont
mention me. It wont mean anything at all. 

International Herald Tribune
181 Ave Charles de Gaulle
92521 Neuilly sur Seine France

Now understand they have strings, they get copy from Michel Richardson
through the South Pacific, Australia and Asia, they dont use many people
out there, none at all, besides him. Really incredible. But they pick up
the NYT, Los Angeles Times and WP news. Thats what they do, string it
out into the IHT, but Mike does a good job for over twenty years or
nearly that now. DO WRITE WALTER AND GETLER. They will read your mail.
> 
> The following is the excerpt from International Herald Tribune's coverage on
> World Bank's report on Burma.
> 
> "There has been a sharp decline in spending on primary education, with funds
> for children between the ages of 5 and 9 falling more than 90 percent over
> the past decade."
> 
> Burma's future is destroyed by those so-called patriotic dictators.