Federal prosecutors, meanwhile, have indicated they want to use conspiracy-mongering videos and books found in possession of members of the Hutaree militia in the trial. Hutaree members were evidently fans of Sept. 11 conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, a short-wave radio host named Mark Koernke who warned about the so-called “New World Order,” and a book written by a man who thought aliens were involved in the U.S. government and who was killed after resisting arrest and shooting an officer in the head.
Other anti-government DVDs found in possession of various defendants included:
- “Loose Change,” a Sept. 11 conspiracy film,
- “Fall of the Republic,” which shows how an “offshore corporate cartel is bankrupting the US economy by design,”
- “Waco - Rules of Engagement,” perhaps a strange choice for the prosecutor’s list given that the film is pretty mainstream and was nominated for an Academy Award,
- “One Nation Under Siege,” which presents “the massive and ceaseless control projected onto an unsuspecting populace by a government that seems to have questionable motives and mendacious answers,”
- “Endgame,” an Alex Jones film
- “The Obama Deceptions,” another Alex Jones movie,
- “Wake Up or Waco,”
- “The Legacy of William Cooper,”
- “Bohemian Grove,” another Jones film,
- “9/11 Road to Tyranny,” Jones, once again
I am not surprised at all.
While Jones is not guilty of any crimes for making these detestabled disinformation laden films that allege the government is out to kill and destroy everyone and everything decent.
He practically spoon feeds the mentally ill and gullible with the worst kind of paranoid, fact-devoid, poison.




