Press Release Prepared for Nationwide Distribution about “Libel by New York Times”
     This Press Release will be used as the basis for a massive, nationwide kickoff on WorldNetDaily, which reaches millions of people.
      Attorney Ed Pawlick believes it may be possible to start a backfire across the whole country, which will reach back across Massachusetts, in an effort to alert the land to the nationwide campaign by the Chairman of the Times, Arthur O. Sulzberger, Jr., who also owns the Boston Globe.

     New York Times Is Responsible for “Gay Marriage” in Massachusetts; It Now Plans to Impose “Marriage” in Every State
     The “gay marriage” plan that’s been forced upon Massachusetts is coming from the newest member of the Sulzberger family to run the New York Times, Arthur O. Sulzberger, Jr. (Pinch) as a first step in imposing “gay marriage” in every state in the country.
     This is quickly shown in a new book by trial attorney Ed Pawlick and his wife, Sally, President of Mass. Citizens for Marriage, named “Libel by New York Times”, which finally connects all the dots (which are clearly visible when someone knows where to begin looking).
     Pinch started working at the Times in 1984 and immediately began singling out and befriending all the homosexual employees in the newsroom, but he had to wait until 1997 to get complete control of the huge conglomerate, because even his father, Arthur O. Sulzberger, Sr. (Punch) had serious doubts about his son.
     Some of those in the Times newsroom agree with Attorney Pawlick, as evidenced by a startling admission in July 2004 by the paper’s Ombudsman, that the “news” in the Times about homosexuality amounts to “cheerleading.”
     The Ombudsman didn’t report, however, that homosexuals comprise 75% of the editors who are deciding daily what stories to put on the front page, according to a lecture by its National Political Correspondent, Richard Berke.
     The Pawlicks have personal knowledge. After Sally’s organization obtained 130,000 signatures in 2001 for an Amendment to forbid its Courts from imposing “gay marriage” or “civil unions,” the Times used its enormous political power to tell the Legislature not to vote on the measure, even though a vote was required by the state Constitution  and thus the measure died.
     The Times is run like a shoe store by the dysfunctional Sulzberger family, with uncles and cousins discussing how to solve the problems of the world. Its news department is now personally managed by its latest Chairman, Pinch, who is using his power to further his own personal agenda of imposing “gay marriage” nationwide, saying that all previous Sulzbergers were “homophobes,” including his father (who now has Parkinson’s disease).
     Almost immediately after acquiring control, Pinch had Judge Margaret Marshall (wife of the famous Times radical columnist, Anthony Lewis, now 77-years-old), confirmed as Chief Justice of the state Supreme Court so she could impose “gay marriage.” She accomplished this last year, with the help of three of the other six judges. Thus, her ruling was 4-3, with the remaining three Justices (all Massachusetts liberals) passionately telling Marshall and her three cohorts that they have no power to do this, and they are breaking the state Constitution. (Atty. Pawlick was before the Court four times in 2002-2003 and it appears that he was successful in alerting the three dissenters.)
     Last year Pinch almost lost control of the paper because of the Jayson Blair scandal, where a young black reporter got in his way and was fired for fabricating stories.
     Sally had unknowingly intruded into Sulzberger’s plans in the spring of 2000 with her new organization.. He became very angry and had the Boston Globe, which is a part of his empire, and the Times lie sixteen times about the good citizens who sponsored the Referendum, including Sally.
     The Times was a national treasure from 1896 when Adolph Ochs bought it, until his declining health and ultimate death in 1935, with control passing to his only child and her husband, Arthur H. Sulzberger, who immediately changed the paper to their own liberal, radical vision, including:
     Hiding the death of 5 million peasants who sucumbed to starvation in the Ukraine, as plotted by Joseph Stalin in the early 1930s, and also hiding how the Communist philosophy was influencing intellectuals in the U.S.
     Endorsing Eisenhower (but being unable to control him) seven months before the election in 1952, without even knowing who would be the Democratic candidate, in order to defeat conservative Sen. Robert Taft. Ike later said of the Times that it was “the most untrustworthy newspaper in the United States.”
     Installing their son, Punch (who is dyslectic and unable to read the paper) as Chairman in 1963. He remained in total control for more than thirty years (except for the radical pressure from his mother) until 1997.
     Putting Punch’s older cousin in charge of Editorials in the 1960s, who enthusiastically supported our entry into Vietnam but then abruptly changed in 1966 (when Lyndon Johnson and the Democrats were still in charge). The paper then condemned the war by sending one reporter, Harrison Salisbury, to Hanoi, the enemy capital, by himself, to report on the “barbaric attacks” of U.S. planes on civilian targets. Although Salisbury’s “eyewitness” dispatches were conceded by everyone to be merely regurgitating false enemy propaganda, the Times, under the personal supervision of Punch, single-handedly changed American attitudes and led to our ignominious withdrawal from the country.
      There is much more about how the Times has severely damaged America since 1935 - and is continuing to do.
     Pinch is seeking to assuage the family “guilt” about homosexuality, but his twelve cousins believe he is weird and is Chairman only because of his father’s power in the family. (Pinch is obsessed with homosexuality and his friends often appear in-drag.) After being almost toppled last year over Jayson Blair, he realizes he is in trouble now that the Pawlicks have the time to mount a serious challenge against him.
     Ed Pawlick was a successful, practicing trial lawyer for 12 years before founding a newspaper for lawyers in Massachusetts in 1972. He was soon publishing legal newspapers in seven states, along with a national paper, and advising 150,000 lawyers about opinions from their state courts and other news. Upon selling the business in 1997, he employed 30 lawyer journalists, 10 lay journalists, 40 in advertising sales and 40 others. He spins a fascinating, very readable story that is highly praised by Alan Keyes and others.
     Sally Pawlick is a 1957 graduate of Wellesley College, mother of three, grandmother of four, and grandmother of Ed’s nine grandchildren.
      All proceeds from the sale of the book are being used to spread this message.

 

 



 




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