Milton William Cooper

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Milton William Cooper
Milton William Cooper (2).png
Born (1943-05-06)May 6, 1943
Long Beach, California, U.S.
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Eagar, Arizona, U.S.
Cause of death Gunshot
Resting place Springerville Cemetery
Springerville, Arizona
Nationality American
Other names Bill Cooper
Occupation Conspiracy theorist, radio broadcaster, author
This InfoGalactic article has forked from just mirroring the original on Wikipedia.
This article was/is censored on Wikipedia.

Milton William "Bill" Cooper (May 6, 1943 – November 6, 2001) was an American militia supporter, radio broadcaster, and writer. Cooper was best known for his 1991 book Behold a Pale Horse, in which he warned of multiple global theoretical conspiracies, some involving extraterrestrial aliens.[1][2][3] Cooper also described HIV/AIDS as a man-made disease used to target blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals, and that a cure was made before it was implemented.[4] He has been described as a "militia theoretician".[5]

Early life

Little is known about Cooper's background and education, beyond the information supplied in his own accounts. Public records indicate a period of service in the United States Navy, including a tour of duty in Vietnam with two service medals.[6] He claimed to have also served in the United States Air Force, as well as Naval Intelligence, until his discharge in 1975.[7] He then attended a junior college in California, and worked for several technical and vocational schools before making his conspiracy theories known, beginning in 1988. Cooper expanded the speculations of earlier conspiracists by incorporating government involvement with extraterrestrials as a central theme.[8]

Behold a Pale Horse

Cooper produced and published Behold a Pale Horse in 1991.[5] The book has been influential among "UFO and militia circles".[9] Just prior to the trial of Terry Nichols in 1997, The Guardian described it as "the manifesto of the militia movement".[10]

According to sociologist Paul Gilroy, Cooper claimed "an elaborate conspiracy theory that encompasses the Kennedy assassination, the doings of the secret world government, the coming ice age, and a variety of other covert activities associated with the Illuminati's declaration of war upon the people of America".[5] Political scientist Michael Barkun characterized it as "among the most complex superconspiracy theories", and also among the most influential due to its popularity in militia circles as well as mainstream bookstores.[7] Historian Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke described the book as a "chaotic farrago of conspiracy myths interspersed with reprints of executive laws, official papers, reports and other extraneous materials designed to show the looming prospect of a world government imposed on the American people against their wishes and in flagrant contempt of the Constitution."[11]

HIV/AIDS

In Behold a Pale Horse Cooper proposed that AIDS was the result of a conspiracy to decrease the populations of blacks, Hispanics, and homosexuals.[8] In 2000 South Africa's Minister of Health Manto Tshabalala-Msimang received criticism for distributing the chapter discussing this theory to senior South African government officials.[12] Nicoli Nattrass, a longtime critic of AIDS denialists, criticized Tshabalala-Msimang for lending legitimacy to Cooper's theories and disseminating them in Africa.[9]

UFOs, aliens and the Illuminati

Cooper caused a sensation in UFOlogy circles in 1988 when he claimed to have seen secret documents while in the Navy describing governmental dealings with extraterrestrial aliens, a topic on which he expanded in Behold a Pale Horse.[7] (By one account he served as a "low level clerk" in the Navy, and as such would not have had the security clearance needed to access classified documents.[13]) UFOlogists later asserted that some of the material that Cooper claimed to have seen in Naval Intelligence documents was actually plagiarized verbatim from their research, including several items that the UFOlogists had fabricated as pranks.[14] Don Ecker of UFO Magazine ran a series of exposés on Cooper in 1990.[15]

Cooper linked the Illuminati with his beliefs that extraterrestrials were secretly involved with the United States government, but later retracted these claims. He accused Dwight D. Eisenhower of negotiating a treaty with extraterrestrials in 1954, then establishing an inner circle of Illuminati to manage relations with them and keep their presence a secret from the general public. Cooper believed that aliens "manipulated and/or ruled the human race through various secret societies, religions, magic, witchcraft, and the occult", and that even the Illuminati were unknowingly being manipulated by them.[7]

Cooper described the Illuminati as a secret international organization, controlled by the Bilderberg Group, that conspired with the Knights of Columbus, Masons, Skull and Bones, and other organizations. Its ultimate goal, he said, was the establishment of a New World Order. According to Cooper the Illuminati conspirators not only invented alien threats for their own gain, but actively conspired with extraterrestrials to take over the world.[7] Cooper believed that James Forrestal's fatal fall from a window on the sixteenth floor of Bethesda Hospital was connected to the alleged secret committee Majestic 12, and that JASON advisory group scientists reported to an elite group of Trilateral Commission and Council on Foreign Relations executive committee members who were high-ranking members of the Illuminati.[2][3]

Cooper also claimed that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion was actually an Illuminati work, and instructed readers to substitute "Sion" for "Zion", "Illuminati" for "Jews", and "cattle" for "Goyim".[3][16][17]

Kennedy assassination

In Behold a Pale Horse, Cooper asserted that President John F. Kennedy was assassinated because he was about to reveal that extraterrestrials were in the process of taking over the Earth. According to a "top secret" video of the assassination that Cooper claimed to have discovered, the driver of the presidential limousine, William Greer, used “a gas pressure device developed by aliens from the Trilateral Commission” to shoot the president from the driver's seat.[13] The Zapruder film shows Greer twice turning to look into the back seat of the car; Cooper theorized that Greer first turned to assess Kennedy's status after the external attack, and then to fire the fatal shot. Conspiracy theories implicating Greer reportedly "snowballed" after publication of Behold a Pale Horse.[18] Cooper's video purporting to prove his theory was analyzed by several television stations, according to one source, and was found to be "... a poor-quality fake using chunks of the ... Zapruder film."[13]

Death (according to the "official" Wikipedia version)

As Cooper moved away from the UFOlogy community and toward the militia and anti-government subculture in the late 1990s, he became convinced that he was being personally targeted by President Bill Clinton and the Internal Revenue Service. In July 1998 he was charged with tax evasion; an arrest warrant was issued, but Cooper eluded repeated attempts to serve it. In 2000, he was named a "major fugitive" by the United States Marshals Service.[7]

On November 5, 2001, Apache County sheriff's deputies attempted to arrest Cooper at his Eagar, Arizona home on charges of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and endangerment stemming from disputes with local residents. After an exchange of gunfire during which Cooper shot one of the deputies in the head, Cooper was fatally shot. Federal authorities reported that Cooper had spent years evading execution of the 1998 arrest warrant, and according to a spokesman for the Marshals Service, he [is alleged to have] vowed that "he would not be taken alive".[1]

The Actual Circumstances Of Cooper's Death

According to neighbor of Bill Cooper, Walter J. Bubien, Jr. of Saint Johns, Arizona, this is his first hand account that Wikipedia will not allow.[19]

The FBI teamed up with the Apache County Sheriff's Office with a plan to get Cooper. The plan was to send young male and female sheriff deputies in plain clothes in an unmarked car to park at the bottom of Cooper's driveway, appear to be drinking beer, play their radio loud, and toss their bottles out on the ground. This was done to bait Cooper into approaching the two, to tell them to get off his property. Two other Sheriff vehicles were hidden behind a hill so that after Cooper drove down his driveway, they would then quickly drive out and block the driveway so that Cooper could not return to his house as they would attempt to arrest him. The initial plan worked and Cooper drove down to the end of his driveway to tell these people to leave. When he approached their bait car, the two deputy cars drove out from their hiding place and blocked Coopers drive behind him. However, Cooper drove off-road and detoured off the driveway around the two deputy cars and made it back to his house, got out of his car, and was walking towards his front door when the deputies also jumped out of their cars in pursuit. One pulled his revolver out of his holster, put the gun up next to his own head, and in doing so accidentally discharged a round wounding his own ear. Another deputy, 25-years old at the time, after hearing a round discharged fired five times at Cooper's back, hitting Cooper all 5 times in the back as he was walking towards his front door, fatally wounding Cooper. Cooper was unarmed. Two years later, the deputy who shot Cooper five times in the back, while riding a motorcycle too fast around a curve, hit sand, flew off an embankment, and was instantly killed. This is a first hand account of what happened and I note much was done by the FBI and local Apache Sheriff's office to put out false propaganda to the press attempting to cover up what happened the day Bill Cooper was killed.

Works

Books

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Radio broadcast

Mark Potok, spokesman for the Southern Poverty Law Center, notes that Cooper was well-known within the militia movement for his anti-government shortwave radio program. Reportedly, Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh was a fan.[1] The program, broadcast from 1993 to 2001, was titled "The Hour of the Time."[20]

References

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  6. Milton William Cooper. aad.archives.gov. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
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  14. Doherty, Brian (December 7, 2001). Death Wish: How rebels punch their own ticket. Reason.com archive. Retrieved February 5, 2013
  15. Ecker, Don. Bill Cooper. Skeptic Tank archive. Retrieved February 5, 2013
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  19. On 2016-08-19, I, User:JasonCarswell, simply added "allegedly" to the police statement on the Wikipedia article. It was promptly reverted. On 2016-11-05 I received an email from "Walter Bubien". It wasn't until 2017-02-15 that I replied to that address about how I had posted this testimony here. He has not responded nor contacted me again further. His email opened with, "Jason: I tried to post on 11/04/16 and 11/05/16 to the "talk" page of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milton_William_Cooper where you also commented. My post was along the lines of your post. Tried twice and it was taken down twice in a few hours. Maybe you can get it posted to that page, and get it to stay there. Copy of my post is as follows:" I knew it wasn't going be accepted on Wikipedia as I had my own problems and was banned for one year from December 2016 to December 2017 for being "another polite truther". I took the liberty of editing and improving his paragraph and posted it here. More details are available upon request.
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Further reading

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External links