Hicks' Hoax
Rae West 27 June 2014
[big-lies.org
nuke-lies.org]
HICKSVILLE! An Introduction to the Genius of Bill Hicks
This Compilation (C) and (P) Rykodisk 1997 Manufactured in France RCD10427 (and also) LC2619
This CD seems under-represented online; possibly because it was printed in Britain (and made in France), and not American.
The card insert is black and red; this scan is just black and white.
Some of the info is:
Track 1 ('Modern Bummer') (P) 1990 Invasion Group Ltd, produced by Peter Casperson.
Tracks 2 and 3 (P) 1992; tracks 3-11 all (P) 1997, all produced by Kevin Booth.
Compilation by Pat Naylor
Cover photo stated to be by Graham Haber (1990) appears widely when searching images online. At the time of writing, the photo is therefore about 24 years old if the information is correct.
However, there are eight other smaller photos on the card, which of course could be dated up to 1997; certainly Hicks looks older in some of these than in the main photo.
Three of these photos don't show up on Internet anywhere, including the two Superman/Elvis (?) impressions, at least according to tineye.com the image searcher. Several show up exactly once. So I'm guessing these photos are not well known. Here are the six clearest:
They look just like a young Alex Jones; and searching online for Peter Casperson and Kevin Booth and other bits and pieces, gives information consistent with a smooth transition from Hicks to 'Jones', suggesting Jones was a stand-up entertainer or actor, accustomed to writing scripts and working from them. When Internet was invented, he was redefined, or redefined himself, as a controversial semi-serious commentator, with back-up website and audio people. And a few researchers to try to sift serious information, though it's more likely he'd be fed material, I'd guess from Jewish sources.
Note: I'm not particularly interested in this idea! In case anyone thinks I'm fanatical about it. 'Jones' is a victim of the accelerated pace of Internet: media phonies had a lifetime of bullshit, like music hall performers, reusing their material for decades. But now there is a faster detection-rate of psops, false flags, lies. At least among inquisitive people.
Miles Mathis thinks this is incorrect, but an unsurprising mistake: ... like the claimed match of Alex Jones and Bill Hicks. In other words, they aren't the same person, but there is something to the match nonetheless. They don't look similar for no reason. They are from the same families and are cousins, so of course they have similar looks.
There's been (I haven't tried to date it) interest in the teeth of both of these people, which are more or less identical. Here's a picture of both; sources not known to me:–
[big-lies.org
nukelies.org]
HTML scanning etc Rae West 2014-06-27 Photos used for legitimate research/information purposes. % formatting inserted 2015-06-22 Mathis note 2018-11-22. Teeth upload 4 Apr 2021