 What's this one? Truman's Painty Raid. We read something about this in a previous card. What does that say? Almindon the Maze, and there's a swastika right there. Who's that? The little mannequin. Exhibit C. Who is that? Is that Bush? Exhibit D. Is that cocaine? Exhibit B. We don't know what B is. Maybe it's the panties. What is this one? Card number 29. General Manuel Noriega. Oh, this is the trial of Matt Noriega, I believe, because the U.S. government kidnapped and brought him into the United States, right? Look at the shelf. There's like jars of frogs in there or something. What the swastika is about? It's gotta be World War II war criminals there, right? I think the mannequin is because Noriega, they brought in voodoo stuff and mannequins, but let's read this. Let's see. Card number 29. General Manuel Noriega. While searching for fugitive general Manuel Noriega, U.S. Southern Command Chief General Max Thorman reported that Noriega's beach house contained 50 kilos of cocaine and evidence that he and his burrohas were practicing Brazilian witchcraft on enemies like Ronald Reagan and Henry Kissinger. Noriega rumored to be wearing red underwear to ward off the evil eye eventually took refuge in the Vatican embassy and later turned himself in to U.S. authorities to face prosecution on a 1988 U.S. drug trafficking indictment. The U.S. Army later admitted that the beach house cocaine was really tamale flower. As Noriega awaits trial, his case is being hampered by the government's refusal to unfreeze 20 million informed banks which had 20 million dollars in foreign banks which he needs to pay his defense attorneys. In addition, authorities have violated his civil rights by taping phone calls between him and his lawyers. Should Noriega's case ever come to trial, the true extent of his role as a middleman between the U.S. back contras and the middle cocaine cartel undertaken as a favor for his longtime CIA benefactors could prove embarrassing to George Bush whose role in the Contra supply operation has so far been cloaked in secrecy. The invasion left the Panamanian economy in shambles. Damage is estimated at 1.5 to 3 billion and though the U.S. promised 420 million dollars and eight, only one-fourth of that has been delivered by the end of 1990. Nor has removing Noriega made Nor has removing Noriega made a dent in Panama's drug trade. Illegal drop shipments through Panama are more abundant than ever and President Andara is so far unwilling to weaken his country's bank secrecy laws. This is very much, very much the same game plan that has been going on since then as well, right? Same thing they did in Afghanistan, right? Opium shipments keep going through the roof after the NATO invasion of Afghanistan, right?