Recommended Posts
Robert99 50
Quote
Jo, What do you mean when you call Duane a "CO"?
Conscientious Objectors - those who did NOT want to fight a war...you are aware of the CO camps?
Robert Blevins lives in WA and yet he denied the Bonneville Camp (this was not a CO camp). Why he could be oblivious to this I do not know...perhaps he did not read the thread prior to his making his entrance to promote his book.
This has been a LONG long long trip for me, but hopefully those of you who actually are able to sift through all of the garbage can understand why I believe Duane Weber was Dan Cooper. Even the CO's and the Black Jumpers has enlightened many of you...
It seemed like NO one was hearing me on this - I tried to explore it on the thread, but NO one wanted any part of it nor did the FBI agents understand what I was trying to say.
I still maintain the truth is so SIMPLE no one wants to believe it. Was Duane actually the one on the ground or was he the jumper? I believe from what I know and what he told me he had to be the jumper. When he made the comment about a certain location being where Cooper walked out of the woods, my reply was "How would you know that". He knew he had to back step and I think the comment he made about maybe his being the man on the ground was his way of doing that.
This was the ONLY time COOPER was mentioned on that entire trip!
Why? Cooper was not discuss even on the anniversaries and basically in the South - no new media coverage. If it was - he made sure I didn't see the paper as he did in 1980 when the money was found. He had purchased a new car after the trip to WA and I could not understand why. He said he got a good trade and had the money for the balance. This was an Oldsmobile cutlass - he bought this car in Ft. Collins or in Denver.
The 1980 announcement is made about the found money and the story is on the front page (a story I did not get to read). After he left CO he immediately bought a new car, but on credit...the Mercury. He went back to the South - and I am sure he checked to see how much the media was running articles on Cooper. He felt safe and came home for my daughters graduation and then left...very quickly. The moving truck I drove to AL with my daughter and a young man who was going to hike the Apalachicola...he relieved me of some of the driving and stayed with us for about a month until it was time to put him on a bus to meet the rest of his group.
Jo,
My dictionary defines a "conscientious objector" as "a person who for reasons of conscience objects to serving in the armed forces."
And you are saying that Duane Weber, the same person who stole the identities of others in order to serve in the military, was a conscientious objector?
Isn't the above a contradiction of terms?
And you are also saying that there was something known as "conscientious objector camps"?
If an individual could establish a "conscientious objector" status with the draft people, then the individual did alternate service of some kind.
Some COs served as combat medics in the military and I know of at least one instant where such a combat medic won the Medal of Honor during WW2.
Basically, these COs objected only to having to shoot at other people. They were shot at as much as your regular grunts and were killed about as frequently.
The only thing that I have heard of that could possibly be called a "Conscientious Objector Camp" is more commonly known as "prison".
Robert99
mrshutter45 21
http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2011-05-13/news/bs-md-co-objectors-camp-20110513_1_objector-civilian-public-service-conscience-war
might be possible.
might be possible.
"It is surprising how aggressive people get, once they latch onto their suspect and say, 'Hey, he's our guy.' No matter what you tell them, they refuse to believe you" Agent Carr FBI
Robert99 50
Quote
What was the purpose of this camp? What activities did the 26 COs engage in? Was it a work camp or a punishment camp?
Robert99 go back to school!
I did NOT say Duane stole identies to serve - I said nothing that resembled that. He was the extreme opposite of a CO he wanted to serve, but he was a "bad" boy and ended up in prison and the parents had "friends" and made arrangements for him - people who thought they could help him.
It was in a CO camp - but they also dealt with WAYWARD young men since it was a religion based organization How the family arranged all of this I do not know...but it did happen.
Check it out yourself!
Conscientious Objectors Camps
LOOK it UP! 1940's. They were all over the place.
Go to: Civilian Public Service - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and learn something. I don't know how to put the site address on here, but everyone else knows what I am talking about.
I did NOT say Duane stole identies to serve - I said nothing that resembled that. He was the extreme opposite of a CO he wanted to serve, but he was a "bad" boy and ended up in prison and the parents had "friends" and made arrangements for him - people who thought they could help him.
It was in a CO camp - but they also dealt with WAYWARD young men since it was a religion based organization How the family arranged all of this I do not know...but it did happen.
Check it out yourself!
Conscientious Objectors Camps
LOOK it UP! 1940's. They were all over the place.
Go to: Civilian Public Service - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and learn something. I don't know how to put the site address on here, but everyone else knows what I am talking about.
Copyright 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 2013, 2014, 2015 by Jo Weber
a woman who worked for the Civil Right Commission in Memphis.
This was taken from the informant file of the late civil rights era photographer Ernest Withers who died in 2007.
All released under the court order to the Commercial Appeal which sued the FBI to unravel Withers' secret life as a "racial" informant.
His code number was ME 338-R was one of 5 paid informants.
Who were the others.
Did Sheridan Peterson know Withers? They were both journalist.
Share this post
Link to post
Share on other sites