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"The Tragedy of Whitewater House" A work of fiction Shortly before Clint Willton was given a Rhoades Scholarship to Oxford, he met a man who said he represented a new world order and claimed that he could help Willton with a political career. The man told young Clint that people had been watching him for years and had great expectations of him. Shortly thereafter, Clint Willton become increasingly involved with the anti-Vietnam movement, led anti-American protests in Great Britain and traveled to the Soviet Union in an act of defiance worthy only of Lee Harvey Oswald. Pit-tooey on the U.S. But his political star rose immediately upon return to the United States. Soon he was elected attorney general of a small, southern state and later became the nation's youngest governor. Some years later, this long-shot, know-nobody, womanizing pip-squeak was somehow elected president. How could this be? He wasn't establishment, or was he? The CIA has long used front companies to hide their true activities. Small, southern states are easily manipulated to serve larger interests that must by nature remain hidden. State troops could even be dispatched, under guise of training, to support cl andestine operations. Banks, S&Ls, law firms, regulators, all easily controlled. Companies could be set up to move money and later, when exposed, used as opportunities to black mail high officials. Maybe even motive for murder. If someone discovered th e true nature of one of these, say, real estate development companies, then they might be in danger. In the end, it turns out that it doesn't matter who gets elected president. Larger interests control both parties, the national media and the huge trusts and foundations. The whole one world movement is exposed by a conservative radio talk show who late r goes on to become Mayor of New York City, but is tragically assassinated by an out-of-work covert Russian operative while touring a Cuban cigar factory.