What you get from Dispatches

By WND Staff

The editors of WorldNetDaily have created a unique magazine and the
perfect complement to the world’s most popular and innovative,
independent Internet newspaper.

It’s called Dispatches.

And that’s one of the benefits you get when you subscribe to this
monthly newsprint vehicle for some of the best investigative reporting
this side of the Internet — dispatches from one of the most daring
English-language, roving foreign correspondents in the world.

His name is Anthony LoBaido. LoBaido has worked as a journalist in
Mexico, South Africa, Korea, Thailand, Hong Kong, Australia, Laos and
Cambodia. Having lived and trained with the elite Special Forces of
the South African Defense Force, he authored “The Third
Boer War,” an apocalyptic account of a future war in South Africa
between the global right wing and the UN/ANC. LoBaido is also a veteran
filmmaker, having been hired by former U.S. President George Bush to
produce a documentary film on his life, which was featured on CNN in
1993. Today, LoBaido travels the world over for WorldNetDaily and its
special offline sister monthly, Dispatches.

You won’t want to miss LoBaido’s in-depth, colorful reporting from the
four corners of the world.

But that’s not all you get in Dispatches. Just as WorldNetDaily scours
the planet via the Internet for the news scoops you can’t find anywhere
else, Dispatches scours short-wave broadcasts and foreign-language
offline sources for trends and news unreported by the establishment
press. This is an invaluable resource, a service no one else provides —
on or off the Net.

And there’s more. Each month, WorldNetDaily investigative reporter David
Bresnahan files an exclusive report for Dispatches — the important
tidbits he has picked up out in the field that just didn’t make it into
the traditional news story format.

And that’s still not all. Do you like J.R. Nyquist’s analysis in
WorldNetDaily? Each month he files special reports for Dispatches under
the heading, “The Final Phase.” That was the name of Nyquist’s monthly
insider intelligence newsletter until we purchased it and folded it into
Dispatches as a regular feature.

Oh yeah, WorldNetDaily Editor Joseph Farah writes a monthly “letter from
the editor” column. There’s reader feedback and other news items,
special deals and features.

It’s been called the most unpredictable monthly magazine in America. But
you can count on those features month in and month out. And you get it
all — the whole kit and caboodle — for the bargain price of $36 a year
and a money-back guarantee.

If you’re not subscribing to Dispatches magazine, you’re missing out on
a world of ideas and information. Because, just like WorldNetDaily,
Dispatches “tells it like it is.”

Sign me up for a year now!