July 8, 2008 (LPAC)--Interviewed on July 6 by Columbus, Ohio radio host Khari Enaharo, Lyndon LaRouche said the following about Al Gore, in his ridiculous efforts to waddle his way into the Presidency: “You have Al Gore: Al Gore is a British agent, even though he was formally a Vice President of the United States, and I would prefer a possum to him, in the Presidency—…This guy is not to be trusted. His tail is a long one.”
But why a possum?
Leading into the Civil War and beyond, Tennessee was a battleground of British intelligence attacks on the American system. Counting Al Gore’s great-grandfather among its uniformed ranks, Lord Palmerston’s Confederacy attempted to fracture the nation, leaving it susceptible to military takeover, by manipulating national, ethnic, and religious divisions. Even after Lincoln defeated this faction, Britain remained intent on destroying the U.S. through internal corruption. Despite Lincoln and his followers’ post-war commitment to develop the South through modern industry and technology, the 1876 compromise of U.S. President Rutherford Hayes, pulled troops out of the South and opened the door for the latent Confederate leadership to reemerge, particularly in the form of the Ku Klux Klan.
Key to the revival of the Confederacy was the Wall Street and Morgan sponsorship of Vanderbilt University. In the 1920’s and 1930’s Vanderbilt was the base of operations for the Nashville Agrarians, a fascist, existentialist movement to subvert the United States by spreading Confederate culture and economic backwardness. This grouping was an active branch of the British Fabian Society, with Rhodes Scholars comprising the hard core of the group.
From 1929-1931 the Agrarians released a series of books which was promoted as “the Revolt of the Young South Against Machine Civilization.” Essentially, the Agrarians conceived of man as a beast , and as “artists,” saw their job as inspiring man to return to his bestial nature and appetites. Assaulting the Platonic-Christian conception of man made in the image of G-d, John Crowe Ransom, a leading Agrarian, asserted that man had to be ruled over by a vengeful, Olympian “Thunder God,” otherwise known as an eternal British Empire. This operation, foreshadowing the ideology and intention of the modern environmentalist movement, fought to replace American system optimism with the backwards (or backwoods) notion that man’s ever-growing desire for progress was wrong, and that he were best to live simply, as an animal.
It was from his family’s plot of dirt outside of Possum Hollow, Tennessee, that Albert Gore Sr. rose to serve in the House and the Senate. Proving his propensity to act opportunistically for the British Oligarchy, Gore Sr. and his family were further integrated to corrupt and fracture the United States from within. Losing his Senate seat in 1970, Gore Sr. was contacted by a top CIA consultant, and not-so-distant relative of John Crowe Ransom, Harry Howe Ransom, and was offered a position lecturing at Vanderbilt. That same year, young Al Gore, in a “snickering escape from the threat of overseas military service” was given an honorable discharge from the army upon being accepted to Vanderbilt Divinity School. From there the former army journalist was picked up by FBI agent Hank Hillen. Gore was used by this apparatus to aid in targeted operations against the black elected leadership in Tennessee, acting on behalf of the same apparatus that covered up and shut down the investigation into the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
Al Gore Jr. is encouraged to make a characteristic retreat from politics and return to nature at his daddy’s ole’ dirt farm in Possum Hollow. There, he could use his prehensile tail to climb back up his family tree, spending the rest of his days understanding his true identity, eating insects and his neighbors’ garbage, never obliged to come out in the light of day.
(The North American possum, the continent’s only marsupial, is a solitary and nocturnal animal, about the size of a house cat. The possum will live wherever there is water, food, and shelter and enjoys trees which it climbs using its prehensile tail to stabilize itself while climbing. When frightened and unable to flee a predator, the remarkably slow-moving creature may fall into an involuntary shock-like state--a.k.a. “playing possum”. Very passive creatures, they hiss or growl and show their teeth when they are startled, but in reality they are harmless and prefer to avoid confrontations. The possum eats bugs, snakes, leaves, and notoriously sifts through garbage cans for rotten food. For its size, the possum is one of the shortest lived animals, typically surviving only 2-4 years, and has many predators: dogs, cats, owls, humans, and cars. )