This Is What I Think.

Friday, September 16, 2016

Proof Proof PROOF!!! Fact FACT FACT!!!




http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092690/quotes

IMDb


Born in East L.A. (1987)

Quotes


Immigration officer: Where were you born?

Rudy: What?

Immigration officer: Read my lips, El Paco. Where were you born?

Rudy: I was born in East L.A., man.










http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=O000167

Biographical Directory of the United States Congress


OBAMA, Barack, (1961 - )

Senate Years of Service: 2005-2008

Party: Democrat

OBAMA, Barack, a Senator from Illinois and 44th President of the United States; born in Honolulu, Hawaii, August 4, 1961; obtained early education in Jakarta, Indonesia, and Hawaii; continued education at Occidental College, Los Angeles, Calif.; received a B.A. in 1983 from Columbia University, New York City; worked as a community organizer in Chicago, Ill.; studied law at Harvard University, where he became the first African American president of the Harvard Law Review, and received J.D. in 1991; lecturer on constitutional law, University of Chicago; member, Illinois State senate 1997-2004; elected as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate in 2004, and served from January 3, 2005, to November 16, 2008, when he resigned from office, having been elected president; elected as the 44th President of the United States on November 4, 2008, and was inaugurated on January 20, 2009.










From 10/17/1939 To 8/4/1961 is 7962 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/21/1987 is 7962 days










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031679/releaseinfo

IMDb


Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)

Release Info

USA 17 October 1939 (Washington, D.C.) (premiere)



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0031679/fullcredits

IMDb


Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)

Full Cast & Crew

James Stewart ... Jefferson Smith










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092690/releaseinfo

IMDb


Born in East L.A. (1987)

Release Info

USA 21 August 1987



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0092690/fullcredits

IMDb


Born in East L.A. (1987)

Full Cast & Crew

Cheech Marin ... Rudy










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/beyond-blunderdome-1512/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 11 Episode 1

Beyond Blunderdome

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Sep 26, 1999 on FOX

Quotes


Mel Gibson: John Travolta flew me over in his jet. Now I have to help him move next weekend. He deliberately waited until we were in the air to ask me.












deed_29June1995.jpg

http://search.spartanburgdeeds.com/view_image.php?key=e28d7396280a7cee37ff58e515a7e022

http://search.spartanburgdeeds.com/


The Registry On-Line

Spartanburg County, SC










From 8/4/1961 ( Barack Obama ) To 6/28/1995 is 12381 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 9/26/1999 is 12381 days





http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/beyond-blunderdome-1512/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 11 Episode 1

Beyond Blunderdome

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Sep 26, 1999 on FOX

AIRED: 9/26/99












http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/ksc-95ec-0912.jpg

http://www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall/history/sts71_140623.html

NASA


STS-71










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/beyond-blunderdome-1512/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 11 Episode 1

Beyond Blunderdome

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Sep 26, 1999 on FOX

Quotes


John Travolta: But you promised to help me move! Aw Jeez!










http://www.cbsnews.com/news/former-kgb-spy-jack-barsky-steve-kroft-60-minutes-steve-kroft/

60 MINUTES


The Spy Among Us

Jack Barsky held a job at some of the top corporations in the U.S. and lived a seemingly normal life -- all while spying for the Soviet Union

2015 Dec 06

CORRESPONDENT Steve Kroft

The following is a script from "The Spy Among Us" which aired on May 10, 2015, and was rebroadcast on Dec. 6, 2015 . Steve Kroft is the correspondent. Draggan Mihailovich, producer.

Tonight, we're going to tell you a story you've probably never heard before because only a few people outside the FBI know anything about it. It's a spy story unlike any other and if you think your life is complicated, wait till you hear about Jack Barsky's, who led three of them simultaneously. One as a husband and father, two as a computer programmer and administrator at some top American corporations and three as a KGB agent spying on America during the last decade of the Cold War.

The FBI did finally apprehend him in Pennsylvania but it was long after the Soviet Union had crumbled. As we first reported in May, what makes Jack Barsky's story even more remarkable is he's never spent a night in jail, the Russians declared him dead a long time ago. He's living a quiet life in upstate New York and has worked in important and sensitive jobs. He's now free to tell his story as honestly as a former spy ever can.

Jack Barsky CBS NEWS

Steve Kroft: So who are you?

Jack Barsky: Who am I? That depends when the question is asked. Right now, I'm Jack Barsky. I work in the United States. I'm a U.S. citizen. But it wasn't always the case.

Steve Kroft: How many different identities do you have?

Jack Barsky: I have two main identities. A German one, and an American one.

Steve Kroft: What's your real name?

Jack Barsky: My real name is Jack Barsky.

Steve Kroft: And what name were you born with?

Jack Barsky: Albrecht Dittrich. Say that three times real fast.

Steve Kroft: Just say it once slowly...(laughs)

Jack Barsky: Albrecht Dittrich.

How Albrecht Dittrich became Jack Barsky is one of the untold stories of the Cold War, an era when the real battles were often fought between the CIA and the KGB. Barsky was a rarity, a Soviet spy who posed as an American and became enmeshed in American society. For the 10 years he was operational for the KGB, no one in this country knew his real story, not even his family.

Steve Kroft: Did you think you were going to get away with this?

Jack Barsky: Yeah, otherwise I wouldn't have done it (laughs).

What Barsky did can be traced back to East Germany, back to the days when he was Albrecht Dittrich. A national scholar at a renowned university in Jena, Dittrich was on the fast track to becoming a chemistry professor, his dream job.

Jack Barsky: Didn't work out that way, because I was recruited by the KGB to do something a little more adventurous.

Steve Kroft: Spy?

Jack Barsky: We called it something different. We used a euphemism. I was going to be a "scout for peace."

Steve Kroft: A KGB "scout for peace"?

Jack Barsky: That is correct. The communist spies were the good guys. And the capitalist spies were the evil ones. So we didn't use the word spy.

He says his spying career began with a knock on his dorm room door one Saturday afternoon in 1970. A man introduced himself, claiming to be from a prominent optics company.

Jack Barsky: He wanted to talk with me about my career, which was highly unusual. I immediately, there was a flash in my head that said, "That's Stasi."

Steve Kroft: East German secret police?

Jack Barsky: East German secret police, yeah.

How does a covert spy get around?

It was a Stasi agent. He invited Dittrich to this restaurant in Jena where a Russian KGB agent showed up and took over the conversation. The KGB liked Dittrich's potential because he was smart, his father was a member of the Communist party and he didn't have any relatives in the West. Dittrich liked the attention and the notion he might get to help the Soviets.

Steve Kroft: And what did you think of America?

Jack Barsky: It was the enemy. And, the reason that the Americans did so well was because they exploited all the third-world countries. That's what we were taught, and that's what we believed. We didn't know any better. I grew up in an area where you could not receive West German television. It was called the "Valley of the Clueless."

For the next couple of years, the KGB put Dittrich through elaborate tests and then in 1973 he was summoned to East Berlin, to this former Soviet military compound. The KGB, he says, wanted him to go undercover.

Jack Barsky: At that point, I had passed all the tests, so they wanted, they made me an offer.

Steve Kroft: But you had been thinking about it all along, hadn't you?

Jack Barsky: That's true. With one counterweight in that you didn't really know what was going to come. Is-- how do you test drive becoming another person?

It was a difficult decision, but he agreed to join the KGB and eventually found himself in Moscow, undergoing intensive training.

Jack Barsky: A very large part of the training was operational work. Determination as to whether you're being under surveillance. Morse code, short wave radio reception. I also learned how to do microdots. A microdot is, you know, you take a picture and make it so small with the use of microscope that you can put it under a postage stamp.

The Soviets were looking to send someone to the U.S. who could pose as an American. Dittrich showed a command of English and no trace of an East German accent that might give him away. He learned a hundred new English words every day.

Jack Barsky: It took me forever. I did probably a full year of phonetics training. The difference between "hot" and "hut." Right? That, that's very difficult and, and most Germans don't get that one.

Steve Kroft: Did you want to go to the United States?

Jack Barsky: Oh yeah. Sure. There was New York, there was San Francisco, you know, we heard about these places.

Steve Kroft: Your horizons were expanding...

Jack Barsky: Oh, absolutely. Now I'm really in the big league, right?

Dittrich needed an American identity. And one day a diplomat out of the Soviet embassy in Washington came across this tombstone just outside of D.C. with the name of a 10-year-old boy who had died in 1955. The name was Jack Philip Barsky.

Jack Barsky: And they said, "Guess what? We have a birth certificate. We're going to the U.S."

Steve Kroft: And that was the Jack Barsky birth certificate.

Jack Barsky: The Jack Barsky birth certificate that somebody had obtained and I was given. I didn't have to get this myself.

Steve Kroft: Did you feel strange walking around with this identity of a child?

Jack Barsky: No. No. When you do this kind of work, some things you don't think about. Because if you explore, you may find something you don't like.

The newly minted Jack Barsky landed in New York City in the fall of 1978, with a phony back story called a legend and a fake Canadian passport that he quickly discarded. The KGB's plan for him was fairly straightforward. They wanted the 29-year-old East German to get a real U.S. passport with his new name, then become a businessman, then insert himself into the upper echelons of American society and then to get close to National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski so that he could spy on him.

Jack Barsky: That was the plan. It failed.

Steve Kroft: Why?

Jack Barsky: Because I was not given very good instructions with regard to how to apply for a passport.

When he went to apply for a passport at Rockefeller Center, Barsky was thrown off by the list of questions.

Jack Barsky: Specific details about my past, for which I had no proof. So I walked out of it.

Steve Kroft: Did the KGB have a pretty good grasp on the United States and how things worked there?

Jack Barsky: No.

Steve Kroft: No?

Jack Barsky: Absolutely not. They made a number of mistakes in terms of giving me advice, what to do, what not to do. They just didn't know.

Left to fend for himself in a country the KGB didn't understand, he got himself a cheap apartment and tried to make do with a birth certificate and $6,000 dollars in cash the Soviets had given him. His spying career at that point more resembled the bumbling Boris Badenov than James Bond...

Steve Kroft: So you were working as a bike messenger?

Jack Barsky: Right.

Steve Kroft: That doesn't sound like a promising position for a spy.

Jack Barsky: No. But there were a lot of things that I didn't know...

Steve Kroft: So how close did you ever get to Brzezinski?

Jack Barsky: Not very.

To get a Social Security card, which he would need if he wanted a real job, Barsky knew he would have to do some acting.

Jack Barsky: It was unusual for a 30-plus-year-old person to, to say, "You know, I don't have a Social Security card. Give me one." So in order to make my story stick I made my face dirty. So I looked like somebody who just came off a farm. It worked! The lady asked me, she said, "So how come you don't, you don't have a card?" And when the answer was, "I didn't need one." "Why?" "Well, I worked on a farm." And that was the end of the interview.

The Social Security card enabled him to enroll at Baruch College in Manhattan, where he majored in computer systems. He was class valedictorian but you won't find a picture of him in the school yearbook. In 1984, he was hired as a programmer by Metropolitan Life Insurance where he had access to the personal information of millions of Americans.

Steve Kroft: You were writing computer code?

Jack Barsky: Right. Yes. Lots of it. And I was really good at it.

What he didn't write, he stole, on behalf of the KGB.

Steve Kroft: What was the most valuable piece of information you gave them?

Jack Barsky: I would say that was the computer code because it was a very prominent piece of industrial software still in use today.

Steve Kroft: This was IBM code?

Jack Barsky: No comment.

Steve Kroft: You don't want to say?

Jack Barsky: No. It was good stuff. Let's put it this way, yeah.

Steve Kroft: It was helpful to the Soviet Union...

Jack Barsky: It would've been helpful to the Soviet Union and their running organizations and, and factories and so forth.

Steve Kroft: How often did you communicate with the Russians?

Jack Barsky: I would get a radiogram once a week.

Steve Kroft: A radiogram, meaning?

Jack Barsky: A radiogram means a transmission that was on a certain frequency at a certain time.

Every Thursday night at 9:15 Barsky would tune into his shortwave radio at his apartment in Queens and listen for a transmission he believed came from Cuba.

Jack Barsky: All the messages were encrypted that they became digits. And the digits would be sent over as, in groups of five. And sometimes that took a good hour to just write it all down, and then another three hours to decipher.

During the 10 years he worked for the KGB, Barsky had a ready-made cover story.

Steve Kroft: When somebody'd ask you, you know, "Where you from Jack?," what'd you say?

Jack Barsky: I'm originally from New Jersey. I was born in Orange. That's it. American. Nobody ever questioned that. People would question my, "You have an accent." But my comeback was, "Yeah, my mother was German and we spoke a lot of German at home."

Steve Kroft: You had to tell a lot of lies.

Jack Barsky: Absolutely. I was living a lie.

Steve Kroft: Were you a good liar?

Jack Barsky: The best.










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/beyond-blunderdome-1512/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 11 Episode 1

Beyond Blunderdome

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Sep 26, 1999 on FOX

Quotes


Homer: Boring!

Marge: It's not boring. He's passionate about government.

Homer: At least the Jimmy Stewart version had the giant rabbit who ran the savings and loans.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 5:23 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Friday 16 September 2016