Tuesday, June 16, 2026

The Mystery of William Colby: A Life Lived in the Shadows

How a master of secrecy became an unlikely reformer


He left behind a death as enigmatic as his career

The life of William Colby was mystery, a life lived in the shadows, an ending lost in them too. 


William E. Colby remains one of the most paradoxical figures in American intelligence history — a man who spent decades mastering secrecy, only to become, in his final years, a surprising apostle of transparency. His life reads like a Cold War novel: clandestine operations, moral ambiguities, bureaucratic battles, and a death that still invites speculation. To understand the mystery of Colby’s end, one must first understand the mystery of his life.

Born in 1920, Colby came of age in an era defined by global conflict and ideological struggle. After serving as a paratrooper in World War II, he joined the Office of Strategic Services, the precursor to the CIA. The OSS was a natural fit for him — a place where idealism and covert action intertwined. Colby believed deeply in the mission of defending democracy, but he also believed in doing so through the quiet, surgical work of espionage. This duality would define him for the rest of his life.

During the Cold War, Colby became one of the CIA’s most capable and controversial operators. He ran covert missions in Italy aimed at preventing Communist influence in postwar elections. Later, in Vietnam, he oversaw the Phoenix Program — an intelligence‑driven effort to dismantle Viet Cong infrastructure. Phoenix remains one of the most debated operations in CIA history. Supporters argue it was a necessary counterinsurgency tool; critics call it an assassination program. Colby defended it to his last day, insisting it was misunderstood and misrepresented. But the controversy followed him, a shadow he never fully escaped.

In 1973, Colby became Director of Central Intelligence at a moment when the CIA was entering its most turbulent period. The Watergate scandal had shattered public trust in government, and the press had begun exposing decades of covert operations, domestic surveillance, and abuses of power. Colby made a decision that stunned many inside the agency: he cooperated with congressional investigations. He handed over the so‑called “Family Jewels,” a compendium of the CIA’s most questionable activities. To some, he was a reformer who recognized that the agency could not survive without accountability. To others, he was a traitor to the craft — a man who broke the code of silence.

This internal backlash ultimately cost him his job. In 1975, President Gerald Ford replaced him with George H. W. Bush, a move widely seen as a way to calm the agency’s anger. Colby left quietly, but he did not fade away. Instead, he became an advocate for a more open intelligence community, arguing that secrecy without oversight was a danger to democracy. It was a remarkable transformation: the spymaster who had spent his life in the shadows now believed sunlight was essential.

And then, in 1996, William Colby disappeared.

On April 27, he left his Maryland home for a solo canoe trip on the Wicomico River. He never returned. Days later, his body was found downstream. The official explanation was simple: he suffered either a stroke or heart attack, fell from the canoe, and drowned. But for many, the story didn’t add up. Colby was 76, but he was healthy, experienced on the water, and meticulous by nature. Friends said he would never have gone canoeing alone at night. His canoe was found upright. His dinner was left unfinished. His computer was still on.

Theories proliferated. Some believed he had been murdered — by foreign agents, by former colleagues, or by someone threatened by his increasingly outspoken views on intelligence reform. Others believed he had taken his own life, though those who knew him rejected the idea. Still others accepted the official explanation but acknowledged that the circumstances were strange enough to invite doubt.

The truth is that Colby’s death mirrors his life: ambiguous, contested, and layered with contradiction. He was a man who believed in secrecy but also in accountability, a man who defended covert action but also warned against its excesses. He was both insider and outsider, loyalist and critic, warrior and reformer. His death, like his career, resists simple interpretation.

What remains is the sense of a life lived on the fault line between democracy and secrecy — a life that embodied the tensions of the Cold War and the uneasy legacy of American intelligence. William Colby spent decades shaping the hidden history of the United States. In the end, he became part of that hidden history himself, leaving behind a mystery that, like so many of the secrets he once guarded, may never be fully resolved.

Article composed entirely by Copilot, at the suggestion of McColl Magazine

Thursday, June 4, 2026

Now For Something Completely Insane

Spree-killed his three children, spent 3 years incarcerated by Canadian justice system

Shoenborn's children, and victims
Originally Published April 6, 2011  Updated

Things are a little strange in Canada when it comes to killers, and it gets stranger when you turn to psychopathic killers who are practically bestial in their carnage only to walk away with barely a wink of an eye in the way of retribution. Pickton confessed on the sly to killing 50 but gets convicted of six, gets lots of encouragement to appeal, and why not? He's got nothing but time (you might wish).

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

THE NEW RISING HEAT

 CANADA’S RISE IN HATE CRIME 

WHAT IT SIGNALS ABOUT A SOCIETY UNDER STRAIN 

You can tell a society is in trouble when the old, familiar forms of disorder stop being the problem. Petty theft, nuisance behaviour, the usual civic entropy — these are the background hum of any civilization. What should keep public safety officials awake at night is not the noise, but the tone of the noise. And in Canada, the tone has changed. It has sharpened. It has grown teeth.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Beast at the Urban Wall (You all know. . .)

 A civic meditation on second-hand smoke and first-hand smokers


“Tobacco isn’t recognized as the cause of social disorder — but it is the gravitational center around which a remarkable amount of mayhem orbits.”

Thursday, May 7, 2026

The Governor General Who Brought a Fire Extinguisher to a Candlelight Job

Canada hands the Crown’s quietest office to a veteran of the world’s loudest crises

— and suddenly the curtains are rustling 


Canada likes to pretend the Governor General is a harmless ornament — a constitutional throw pillow with a motorcade. Schoolchildren are taught the GG “represents the Crown.” 

Yet, every few decades, the office emits heat, a little smoke, and a political classman remembers the GG is more than a mascot. A dormant volcano with impeccable diction begins to rumble. 

Enter Louise Ardour, incoming Governor General

Monday, May 4, 2026

Alberta: A Comedy of Manners on the Prairies

The Long Road from Dissociation to Détente 

Alberta’s latest plot twist reads like a national comedy of manners: a province long cast as the brooding outsider suddenly finds the spotlight turning warm, the thermostat fixed, and the country behaving as though it remembers who keeps the lights on. All in the past few days.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Whispers About the Nuclear World Order

For the noise in 2026 — the shouting, the slogans, the moral theatrics — the real question humming beneath the floorboards of every major capital is disarmingly simple. . .


Is the internal environment stable enough to guarantee command‑and‑control integrity?


That’s it.  You better believe that’s the whole show.  Everything else is commentary, press releases, fake media, and the usual diplomatic yoga by a lot of phoney, chicken-leg politicians.

The nuclear age was built on the assumption that states were stable, institutions were coherent, and the chain of command was something more than a polite suggestion. That assumption held for a while. It holds less strong now.

So we arrive at the four pressure points shaping the quiet realpolitik of the moment — the ones no one campaigns on, but everyone in the back rooms understands.

Number One:  Nuclear Stewardship Assumes Domestic Coherence

Friday, April 17, 2026

Friday, April 10, 2026

Taxoholics Anonymous: For People Addicted to OPM (Other Peoples Money)

Tax collection, it's an addiction like any other

 A Revolutionary New 12‑Step Recovery Program 

Murder of Iryna Zarutska: Assailant won't stand trial

  Atrocity on a  train in North Carolina

Iryna Zarutska

A major development has emerged in the case of Iryna Zarutska, the Ukrainian refugee whose killing on a Charlotte light‑rail train in August 2025 shocked communities across North America. Court filings now state that the accused, DeCarlos Brown Jr., has been found “incapable to proceed” to trial under North Carolina law following a psychiatric evaluation. 

Sunday, April 5, 2026

One Number That Runs the World 5,000 Years and Counting

A 5,000‑year‑old Sumerian system quietly underwrites every minute

The order, timing, and coordination of modern public safety depends on it

marine chronometer, astrolabe, sextant, compass rose, surveyor’s theodolite, antique mechanical clock face, sundial, cuneiform tablet with numerical marks, astronomical clock dial, and an early ledger or tally stick,

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

A Field Briefing from a Subtropical Professional

Historian by education. Tactician by trade. Descended from a long line of witnesses.

A Shit Sandwich From A Fly on the Wall


Doesn’t need to be liked — only to be heard, and possibly to be understood


“Alright, listen up…”

A formal introduction to a very informal expert.

First Nations Salmon Farmers Preserving a Legacy

BUSINESS PULSE | NATIVE ARTICLES