06-06-2013, 09:10 AM
Perpetual war was the status quo in Eric Blair-George Orwell's 1984. He died shortly after it was published in 1949.
John F. Kennedy saw the duplicity of Dulles & Co. and vowed to smash their venture into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds. No doubt when Dulles was forced to resign in November 1961 and called E. Howard Hunt in to assist in the creation of The Craft of Intelligence to be complete and in print in 1963, they clinked some bourbon over turning that line.
Are they not the sword and shield of the cabal, the intelligence (read: covert operations then, and a wider array of thought control now) who along with the military and its corporate partners, as well as resource extractors and global business bullies concurred in a Proutyesque fashion that the current occupant had to go.
April 23 Johnson announced Kennedy would attend a luncheon in Dallas in the Fall. The Thomas dinner in Houston November 21 set the itinerary from Love Field to the Trade Mart through Dealey Plaza--well in advance of the fake confusion of routes--these are not confused people.
Oswald was a doppleganger from 1952 according to Armstrong, and manipulated by Angleton per Newman and Pease, shuttled from DeMohrenschildt to the Paines to the Depository, having been under the wing of Clay-Bannister in New Orleans and Phillips in Dallas (per Veciana to Fonzi).
The shooters were likely pros using WerBell silencers working in teams, four or five teams. *
The firecracker was the South Knoll bullet through the windshield into the throat at Z225.
Here we see Secret Service agent Elmer Moore (who would call Kennedy "a traitor") badgering Malcolm Perry to change his public description of the "entry wound" in the throat, followed by both Arlen Specter and Allen Dulles piling on Perry. Specter didn't have to have it spelled out--he knew his job. He was ambitious. It was an historic opportunity to curry favor with the power.
CGI cartoons to the contrary notwithstanding, there is no trajectory making the SBT possible: Sherry Fiester's Chapter Eight spends seventy pages doing a Maria Benitez Flamenco dance on Arlen Specter's magnum opus.
There was a head shot through right temple and out the right occipital-parietal witnessed by 81 by Groden's last count, a trajectory dictating a frontal shot: South Knoll if JFK were looking there; Grassy Knoll if JFK were looking there. The general characteristic is of a professional sniper blowing his brains out without hitting Jackie.
The Commie cop-killer was demonized and allowed to be cut down by the mafia gunrunner under threat of his associates; later he would be taken by injection of rapid onset cancer.
Kennedy was a peacemaker in a time when war was good business. He opposed the Fed at its fiftieth anniversary. He wanted a test ban, detente with the Soviet Union and demarche with Castro.
And he was martyred as depicted so masterfully in James Douglass, JFK and the Unspeakable.
Hoover's model was expensive--but it's silly isn't it? Isn't it like the bat man who over slept and instead of brushing his officer's uniform, only polished the coins.
McKnight's Breach does show that to paraphrase Frank Zappa, if Americans knew how lame its government was they would slay them in their beds.
Hey, it's how they handled Dorothy Kilgallen.
Her hairdresser knew for sure.
*Gaeton Fonzi, The Last Investigation, page 69:
Thanks to the complicated technology of his silent-kill weapons, Mitch WerBell was central to the development of the talent with the capability to employ those weapons. Out of that talent came the "special teams" concept. Special teams are assassination teams.
It was the special team concept that the CIA used within its own bureaucratic structureselect individuals were stitched together into a tight, top-secret network outside their normal chain of commandto plan the Castro assassination attempts. But the first utilization of that concept had come in 1954 when, according to St. George, a deep-cover CIA team went off to Hanoi under Lt. Colonel Lucien Conein, one of WerBell's "closest lifelong friends." The Conein mission, code-named "Blackhawk," was to harass and decimate the new Communist rulers of North Vietnam. Its orders included the "elimination of Vietminh cadres." Subsequently, similar missions multiplied as CIA Clandestine Services sent out special teams with the authority to kill whenever "circumstances warranted." There were, among others, the "White Star Training Mission" in Laos (James Files), "Operation Lodestone" in Northern Thailand, and "Study Project Minimax" in certain disaffected ethnic regions of Indonesia. Then, in the early Sixties, with the CIA's employment of the hard-bitten hill tribesmen of North Burma, Laos and Southwestern China as "deep penetration" and "long-range reconnaissance" teams into Red China, came large-scale, top-secret U.S. intelligence operations involving unlimited license to kill. Mitch WerBell's business did very well in those days, and Thai King Phumiphon personally hand carved a tiny rosewood Buddha for him.
John F. Kennedy saw the duplicity of Dulles & Co. and vowed to smash their venture into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds. No doubt when Dulles was forced to resign in November 1961 and called E. Howard Hunt in to assist in the creation of The Craft of Intelligence to be complete and in print in 1963, they clinked some bourbon over turning that line.
Are they not the sword and shield of the cabal, the intelligence (read: covert operations then, and a wider array of thought control now) who along with the military and its corporate partners, as well as resource extractors and global business bullies concurred in a Proutyesque fashion that the current occupant had to go.
April 23 Johnson announced Kennedy would attend a luncheon in Dallas in the Fall. The Thomas dinner in Houston November 21 set the itinerary from Love Field to the Trade Mart through Dealey Plaza--well in advance of the fake confusion of routes--these are not confused people.
Oswald was a doppleganger from 1952 according to Armstrong, and manipulated by Angleton per Newman and Pease, shuttled from DeMohrenschildt to the Paines to the Depository, having been under the wing of Clay-Bannister in New Orleans and Phillips in Dallas (per Veciana to Fonzi).
The shooters were likely pros using WerBell silencers working in teams, four or five teams. *
The firecracker was the South Knoll bullet through the windshield into the throat at Z225.
Here we see Secret Service agent Elmer Moore (who would call Kennedy "a traitor") badgering Malcolm Perry to change his public description of the "entry wound" in the throat, followed by both Arlen Specter and Allen Dulles piling on Perry. Specter didn't have to have it spelled out--he knew his job. He was ambitious. It was an historic opportunity to curry favor with the power.
CGI cartoons to the contrary notwithstanding, there is no trajectory making the SBT possible: Sherry Fiester's Chapter Eight spends seventy pages doing a Maria Benitez Flamenco dance on Arlen Specter's magnum opus.
There was a head shot through right temple and out the right occipital-parietal witnessed by 81 by Groden's last count, a trajectory dictating a frontal shot: South Knoll if JFK were looking there; Grassy Knoll if JFK were looking there. The general characteristic is of a professional sniper blowing his brains out without hitting Jackie.
The Commie cop-killer was demonized and allowed to be cut down by the mafia gunrunner under threat of his associates; later he would be taken by injection of rapid onset cancer.
Kennedy was a peacemaker in a time when war was good business. He opposed the Fed at its fiftieth anniversary. He wanted a test ban, detente with the Soviet Union and demarche with Castro.
And he was martyred as depicted so masterfully in James Douglass, JFK and the Unspeakable.
Hoover's model was expensive--but it's silly isn't it? Isn't it like the bat man who over slept and instead of brushing his officer's uniform, only polished the coins.
McKnight's Breach does show that to paraphrase Frank Zappa, if Americans knew how lame its government was they would slay them in their beds.
Hey, it's how they handled Dorothy Kilgallen.
Her hairdresser knew for sure.
*Gaeton Fonzi, The Last Investigation, page 69:
Thanks to the complicated technology of his silent-kill weapons, Mitch WerBell was central to the development of the talent with the capability to employ those weapons. Out of that talent came the "special teams" concept. Special teams are assassination teams.
It was the special team concept that the CIA used within its own bureaucratic structureselect individuals were stitched together into a tight, top-secret network outside their normal chain of commandto plan the Castro assassination attempts. But the first utilization of that concept had come in 1954 when, according to St. George, a deep-cover CIA team went off to Hanoi under Lt. Colonel Lucien Conein, one of WerBell's "closest lifelong friends." The Conein mission, code-named "Blackhawk," was to harass and decimate the new Communist rulers of North Vietnam. Its orders included the "elimination of Vietminh cadres." Subsequently, similar missions multiplied as CIA Clandestine Services sent out special teams with the authority to kill whenever "circumstances warranted." There were, among others, the "White Star Training Mission" in Laos (James Files), "Operation Lodestone" in Northern Thailand, and "Study Project Minimax" in certain disaffected ethnic regions of Indonesia. Then, in the early Sixties, with the CIA's employment of the hard-bitten hill tribesmen of North Burma, Laos and Southwestern China as "deep penetration" and "long-range reconnaissance" teams into Red China, came large-scale, top-secret U.S. intelligence operations involving unlimited license to kill. Mitch WerBell's business did very well in those days, and Thai King Phumiphon personally hand carved a tiny rosewood Buddha for him.