By: RBT
Friends of Mark Fuhrman

Must reads if you want to get the whole story regarding the MOBIUS Project that you won’t get in the Spokesman-Review.

Please read if you want to prevent another RPS fiasco. Please feel free to share this with all your friends. Word of mouth circulation by the new/alternative/social media is what broke secrecy of the longstanding knowledge of pedophilia of priests within the Catholic Church that was tolerated and covered-up by the hierarchy of the Church.

This has nothing to do with the value of a science center to Spokane, but it has everything to do with the whole truth about the terms of the science center project. In other words, this concerns public transparency of a government that the citizens of Spokane have empowered to govern on their behalf. I’m not opposed to a science center and would tend to support such a project but all the cards must be clearly put on the table. All the risks must be clearly understood. There must be equity on how these risks are shared and borne. This was not done in the RPS Bond Fraud which will ultimately cost the citizens and taxpayers of Spokane $100M. The similarities between the RPS Bond Fraud and the MOBIUS Project are so striking as to suggest that the MOBIUS Project is a continuation of the criminal enterprise that foisted the RPS fraud on the unsuspecting citizens of Spokane and murdered Jo Savage. Which by the way could have been anyone of us or our loved ones. The Savage family wasn’t so lucky in the luck of the draw.

Jonathan Brunt wrote an article on the Park Board’s subcommittee meeting last week on the MOBIUS Project:

Science center plan falters

City officials balk as Mobius backers pursue changes in contract

Award winning investigative journalist Tim Connor now the Communications Director for the Center for Justice also attended this meeting and wrote this piece:

Reversal of Fortune

Published on November 19, 2009

Amid charges of back-door deals and Cowles family influence, the Mobius Science Center project hits a snag at the Spokane Park Board.

Neil K. Worrall, president of the MOBIUS Project, wrote this guest editorial in Sunday’s S-R:

No derailing science center

Neil K. Worrall Special to The Spokesman-Review

A meeting of a Park Board subcommittee this week created an inaccurate perception of the Mobius Science Center project. Members of the board suggested Mobius is asking for sweeping changes to the pending lease the two parties have been working on for months. This is not the case. More importantly, this meeting led to a perception that the project may be faltering. Also untrue. . .

Connor has written a response to this gratuitous editorial:

That Was Quick

Published on November 22, 2009

An epilogue to last week’s Mobius malfunction at the Park Board again shows how the Cowles family uses its newspaper to decide whose voice gets center stage in Spokane, and who has to yell from the cheap seats.

You can read my thoughts and I will continue to update them at:

MOBIUS PROJECT – Brunt’s vs. Connor’s version you decide