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Bill Cosby truly is “America’s (elitism) dad”

The seemingly endless accusations leveled against Bill Cosby by women claiming that he drugged and raped them has tugged at the scab under which hides those known variously as the elite.
There are elites in the form of royalty, politics, celebrity and other areas. These personages have the powder, money, prestige and adoration of the hoi polloi sufficient to virtually get away with anything.

Consider the case of Jimmy Savile (see attached video); someone who remembered him as a beloved entertainer noted that Savile likely spent the night in morgues so as to better appreciate life. This was excuse making for what for a common person would be rather odd in the least. Jimmy Savile spent nights in morgues, he is a beloved public figure thus, it must be okay, normal, natural, healthy, etc. Well, as it turns out; he would spend nights in morgues (something that the common person would never be allowed to do) because he was into necrophilia (as well as satanism and pedophilia; to name a few of his joys in life).

When the public, at large, was made aware of Jimmy Savile’s Satanism, pedophilia and necrophilia it was also revealed that there were those who, of course, had known about it for decades but where on the “inside” and did not say anything or hinted at it along the way (such as Johnny Lydon aka “Johnny Rotten”).

Ashley Collman has published a report titled, “How Bill Cosby’s team of high-profile lawyers and media experts silenced rape rumors for decades by threatening accusers and playing hardball with the press,” Daily Mail, December 29, 2014 AD in which the following question is asked and answered:

Most of the allegations against Cosby date back to the 1970s, which led to speculation over why the women stayed silent for so long. Like many rape victims, some of the women said they never reported the assault because they were scared of Cosby’s power and feared damaging their reputation.

The report notes:

When women first started coming forward to accuse Bill Cosby of rape last month, the public was surprised due to his flawless reputation as ‘America’s dad’. It has now been revealed that a team of lawyers and publicists worked tirelessly to keep his image pristine for decades, by silencing alleged victims and keeping the media from reporting their claims…

Such elite personages simply cannot function in terms of drugged rapes or in the Savile case, satanism, pedophilia and necrophilia without many people around them knowing about it. It is just that they have the powder, money, prestige to keep it, largely if not altogether, hushed up. The lawyers, publicists and media experts should be charge with accessory to Cosby’s crimes—yet, they too, of course, have certain protections in place and have people around them, assisting them, who also knew all about it.

The report elucidates that some specifically named handlers are “lawyer Martin Singer…former William Morris agent Norman Brokaw, his publicist son David, and New York lawyer John P Schmitt.” The team of handlers has consistently “depict them as greedy women seeking to destroy the once-beloved comedian’s reputation for a cut of his fortune”:

This pattern of intimidation goes all the way back to 2000 when an actress on his TV series ‘Cosby’ allegedly told police that he tried to put her hand down his sweatpants during a visit to his New York townhouse. Cosby’s lawyers threatened to sue the National Enquirer with a $250million defamation lawsuit if they published comments from the alleged victim’s relatives…

Just five years after threatening to sue the Enquirer, the paper was once again investigating claims against Cosby after Temple University employee Andrea Constand publicly accused the comedian of drugging and assaulting her at his Pennsylvania home. The Enquirer was looking to report on claims by another woman, Beth Ferrier, but Cosby’s team effectively silenced that woman’s story by offering an exclusive story from Cosby telling his side of the story. They employed the same tactic against Constand, whose mother allegedly asked Cosby to ‘make things right with money’ before her daughter went to the police to report the crime and one of Cosby’s lawyers called the move ‘a classic shakedown’, according to TV show Celebrity Justice which reported on the suit at the time.
In court, Cosby’s legal team acknowledged that the lawyer in question was Singer. Constand’s suit was later settled out of court for an unknown sum.

Also in 2005, a woman named Tamara Green said she was sexually assaulted by Cosby in Los Angeles in the 1970s and told her story on the Today Show and to the Philadelphia Inquirer. Cosby’s lawyers called Green’s claims ‘absolutely false’ and even offered ‘damaging information about her’ to the newspaper. As more and more women came forward in recent weeks to accuse Cosby, Green went public again with her story and Cosby’s lawyers reacted the same way – saying her claims were ‘a 10-year discredit accusation that proved to be nothing at the time, and is still nothing’…

One of the most shocking claims in the scandal comes from a woman named Judith Huth who says she was just 15 years old when Cosby got her drunk and forced her to perform a sex act on him at the Playboy Mansion. Huth filed a lawsuit against Cosby this month, but his lawyer Singer has tried to discredit the claims by revealing that Huth unsuccessfully attempted to sell her story to a tabloid a decade ago.

Cosby’s legal team is just as threatening with the media, and have in recent weeks sent letters to outlets like CNN and the New York Daily News urging them to stop their coverage of the scandal. ‘The media has consistently refused to look into or publish information about various women whose stories are contradicted by their own conduct or statement,’ Singer wrote in a letter to The Daily News, obtained by the Times.

Granted, this does not mean that a mere accusation against Bill Cosby amounts to his guilt and there are inconsistencies here and there:

Cosby’s lawyers also tried to stop Buzzfeed from publishing an account from former supermodel Janice Dickinson, who has also accused the comedian of sexual assault. ‘You proceed at your own peril,’ Singer wrote to the website, pointing out inconsistencies between Dickinson’s story and what she wrote in her memoir. Just yesterday in a story published in the New York Post, Singer blamed the media for reporting on claims from women he doesn’t believe have been properly vetted.
‘You [the media] don’t need private investigators to find out information about the accusers. A simple Google search will obtain the information,’ Singer said in a statement. Singer was commenting on a story in which it was revealed that Cosby is allegedly paying six-figure fees to a team of private investigators digging dirt on his accusers.

Other questionable cases are those of Beverly Johnson and Katherine McKee:

Johnson claimed that Cosby raped her after slipping a drug into her cappuccino during a visit to his home in the 1980s. Another source who says they have worked with Cosby for at least a decade confirmed the tactic and said it has already been successful in finding information to discredit both Johnson and another alleged victim, Katherine McKee. The team discovered that Johnson’s live-in boyfriend at the time only heard her say nice things about Cosby and that McKee, an ex-girlfriend of Sammy Davis Jr, wrote posts praising the comedian online after the alleged rape, according to the Post. In a published interview, McKee also once said she is ‘used to lying’. McKee, now 65, is the latest woman to publicly come forward to accuse Cosby, saying the comedian raped her in a Michigan hotel room in the early 1970s after inviting her to a party on a boat in Detroit.

A statement from McKee is either indicative of her warped sense of reality, the Hollywood mindset’s warped sense of reality or a combination of both:

‘It was a rape, but it seemed so strange to call it that. We think of rape as a stranger who attacks you in a parking lot,’ McKee, now a casting agent, told the New York Daily News. ‘I chalked it up to another powerful person in Hollywood who just felt he could take what he wanted from women.’

To think of rape as just “another,” mind you, “powerful person in Hollywood who just felt he could take what he wanted from women” and who, of course, allegedly did take what he wanted and did so within a circle of silence seems to be the modus operandi of the elite—both the alleged perpetrator and the victim, in this case, thought of it as such; it is just the sort of thing that is done.


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