| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1968-01-01 | N/A | Nixon election / Vietnam War impact | US/Vietnam | View |
This document contains two slides from a presentation titled 'USA Inc. | High Level Thoughts' produced by KPCB (Kleiner Perkins). The slides bear the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020864. The content is a financial analysis criticizing the historical underestimation of Medicare costs and highlighting concerns from Federal Reserve leaders (Bernanke and Volcker) regarding the sustainability of US entitlement program spending.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir (possibly by Alan Dershowitz) produced to the House Oversight Committee. It details Dershowitz's time at Harvard Law School during the Vietnam War, specifically focusing on his initiative to create a legal course regarding the war. The text includes a lengthy excerpt from a New York Times article describing the course, the faculty involved (including Derek Bok), and Dershowitz's stance on legal education's role in contemporary social issues.
A page from a manuscript (likely by Alan Dershowitz, based on context) recounting his time as a Supreme Court clerk for Justice Arthur Goldberg during the JFK assassination in 1963. The text details the moment the court learned of the shooting, the narrator driving Goldberg to the White House to advise LBJ, a tense encounter with a guard over a toy gun, and Goldberg's private explanation of the political motivations behind the formation of the Warren Commission. The document suggests LBJ believed in a conspiracy but used the commission to push the 'lone gunman' theory for national security reasons.
A page from an interview transcript featuring Paul Krassner (PK) interviewed by 'EP'. They discuss Krassner's counter-culture magazine 'The Realist', the famous 'Disneyland Memorial Orgy' poster, and Krassner's role in running an underground abortion referral service in the 1960s. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp, suggesting it was collected as part of a larger investigation.
The document appears to be a page from a narrative, likely satirical fiction or a controversial manuscript, stamped with a House Oversight Committee bates number. It depicts a first-person account (implied to be Richard Nixon) receiving oral sex from his Chief of Staff (Haldeman) before discussing political strategy regarding Watergate, specifically a plan to leak information about Democrats to the media. The text references historical figures including J. Edgar Hoover, LBJ, Spiro Agnew, and Ramsey Clark in the context of illegal wiretapping.
This document appears to be a page from a book or report stamped by the House Oversight Committee (Bates: HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015088). It features a lengthy quote from UPI correspondent Merriman Smith defending President Lyndon B. Johnson against a 'filthy' attack published in a specific May edition of an unnamed magazine sold in Washington. The text discusses the distribution of obscenity and the double standards regarding federal action against magazines of different standings.
This document is page 4 of a report by Laffer Associates, dated July 6, 2016, titled 'Game On'. It provides a critical analysis of the US economy under the Obama administration, arguing that employment-to-population ratios show no recovery compared to historical precedents like the Reagan or Clinton eras. The author predicts that economic indicators favor a party change in the 2016 election and suggests that 'racial sensitivity' was a key factor in Obama's 2012 reelection.
This document is a page of endnotes from a chapter titled "The NSA's Back Door," identified by the footer "HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020419". It cites various articles and reports from 2004-2015 concerning U.S. national security, cyber warfare, government contractors like Booz Allen Hamilton and USIS, and intelligence figures such as Edward Snowden. Despite the user's query, this document contains no mention of Jeffrey Epstein or any related individuals or events.
This document, labeled 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_012391,' lists historical precedents of U.S. Presidents from 1876 to 1990 using signing statements to challenge the constitutionality of 'legislative veto' provisions in various acts. Presidents including Kennedy, Nixon, Reagan, and Grant are cited as having declared they would not be bound by such provisions, treating them as non-binding requests or nullities. The document appears to be legal or historical research compiled for a government body, but its content does not contain any information related to Jeffrey Epstein.
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