Wednesday, March 27, 2013

What Annoys Me? Liars, Perjurers, Frauds, Thieves, And Criminals



From: Kelley Lynch <kelley.lynch.2010@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Mar 27, 2013 at 7:58 PM
Subject: Leonard Cohen - Obscene and Perverted
To: "Francisco.A.Suarez" <Francisco.A.Suarez@verizon.net>, Dennis <Dennis@riordan-horgan.com>, "*irs. commissioner" <*IRS.Commissioner@irs.gov>, Washington Field <washington.field@ic.fbi.gov>, ASKDOJ <ASKDOJ@usdoj.gov>, "Kelly.Sopko" <Kelly.Sopko@tigta.treas.gov>, "Doug.Davis" <Doug.Davis@ftb.ca.gov>


Francisco,

Leonard Cohen's performance at my trial was and remains pathetic.  Do you believe an expletive offends this man?  His conduct was offensive to me.

I left you a message. I would like to talk to you about oral arguments, the City Attornney, and the fact that Gianelli has forwarded fraud to the IRS about me.  Also, the fact that various parties feel it is acceptable to monitor me online  and Streeter made that very clear at my trial.  Do you actually believe you can't call someone a perjurer?  Well, see Cohen's testimony in my trial.  The City Attorney has attempted to criminalize defamation for Cohen but I am telling the truth.  I also want to talk to you about the email re. Phil Spector the City Attorney continues to conceal and the email Mick Brown just wrote me re. Cohen, the Grand Jury, and "testimony."

All the best,
Kelley

"Cohen has sometimes invoked an obsessive and unsettling fascination
with totalitarian control. One of his books of poetry is entitled
Flowers for Hitler; in The Favorite Game, his first novel, Cohen's
youthful Jewish protagonists play Nazi torture games where they take
turns stripping naked and whipping one another with red string, and
they fantasize about delivering Fuhrer-like speeches and inciting
crowds to violence through mass hypnotism ..
. The Favourite Game opens
with the line, "Breavman knows a girl named Shell whose ears were
pierced so she could wear the long filigree earrings." Like Suzanne in
the Leonard Cohen song, Shell has touched a young man's body with her
mind, but she wants to stake a claim to more than his flesh. Breavman
is creating a Song of Songs to her glory superimposed on a lament over
his inability to renounce his Jewish soul to her gentile body. The
novel is steeped in biblical consciousness. Breavman is simultaneously
a priest in Babylonian exile mourning the loss of King Solomon's
glories and King David revelling carnally in the delights of a
multitude of women, including this beguiling foreigner.  Alternately
depressed about the past that perished with his father's death and
manic about all the young women he wants to bed, Breavman's story
brims with the delightful incongruities and twisted harmonies of
American Beauty. Like Lester in Mendes's movie, Breavman strives for
distance from himself but can't help constantly imploding. He is both
a self-mocking hero and a self-inflated villain in a story that has
many orgasms but no climax."
http://www.leonardcohenfiles.com/whiteis.html