BIO/JON RAPPOPORT
Jon Rappoport has worked as a free-lance investigative reporter for 20
years.
He has
written articles on politics, health, media, culture and art for LA Weekly,
Spin Magazine, Stern, Village Voice, Nexus, CBS Healthwatch, and other
newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe.
In 1982,
the LA Weekly submitted his name for a Pulitzer prize, for his interview
with the president of El Salvador University, where the military had taken
over the campus.
Jon has
hosted, produced, and written radio programs and segments in Los Angeles and
Las Vegas (KPFK, KLAV). He has appeared as a guest on over 200 radio and
television programs, including ABC's Nightline, Tony Brown's Journal (PBS),
and Hard Copy.
In 1994,
Jon ran for a seat in the US Congress from the 29th district in Los
Angeles. After six months of campaigning, on a very small budget, he
garnered 20 percent of the vote running against an incumbent who had
occupied his seat for 20 years.
In 1996,
Jon started The Great Boycott, against eight corporate chemical giants:
Monsanto, Dow, Du Pont, Bayer, Hoechst, Rhone-Poulenc, Imperial Chemical
Industries, and Ciba-Geigy. The Boycott continues to operate today.
Jon has
lectured extensively all over the US on the question: Who runs the world and
what can we do about it?
For the
last ten years, Jon has operated largely away from the mainstream because,
as he puts it, "My research was not friendly to the conventional media."
Over the
last 30 years, Jon's independent research has encompassed such areas as:
deep politics, conspiracies, alternative health, the potential of the human
imagination, mind control, the medical cartel, symbology, and solutions to
the takeover of the planet by hidden elites.
A painter,
Jon's work has been shown in galleries in Los Angeles and New York. His
poetry has been published by The Massachusetts Review.
63 years old, he is a graduate of Amherst College (BA, Philosophy), and
lives with his wife, Dr. Laura Thompson, in San Diego.
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