15-03-2014, 12:54 AM
Lauren Johnson Wrote:R.K. Locke Wrote:I found this on the forum ishtarsgate.com:
Have you pieced together the puzzle of
missing flight 370 to Beijing China ??
If not, here are your missing pieces.
Patents
Patents
Patents
Four days after the missing flight MH370 a patent is approved
by the Patent Office
4 of the 5 Patent holders are Chinese employees of Freescale Semiconductor of Austin TX.
Patent is divided up on 20% increments to 5 holders.
Peidong Wang, Suzhou, China, (20%)
Zhijun Chen, Suzhou, China, (20%)
Zhihong Cheng, Suzhou, China, (20%)
Li Ying, Suzhou, China, (20%)
Freescale Semiconductor (20%)
If a patent holder dies, then the remaining holders
equally share the dividends of the deceased if not
disputed in a will.
If 4 of the 5 dies, then the remaining 1 Patent holder
gets 100% of the wealth of the patent.
That remaining live Patent holder is Freescale Semiconductor.
Who owns Freescale Semiconductor ??
Jacob Rothschild through Blackstone who owns Freescale. (Bingo!!! )
Here is your motive for the missing Beijing plane.
As all 4 Chinese members of the Patent were
passengers on the missing plane.
Patent holders can alter the proceeds legally by
passing wealth to their heirs. However, they cannot
do so until the Patent is approved. So when the plane
went missing, the patent had not been approved.
Thus, Rothschild gets 100% of Patent once Patent
holders declared deceased.
I just am majorly skeptical of this. I the whole thing reads like somebody's imagination. It's all nice, neat, and tidy. Bring in Blackstone. Rothschild. And at Ishtargate? Oh, come on.
I really like the story though.
There is no verification/proof of the supposedly filed patent so I think it's entirely reasonable to be sceptical at this point.
That being said, I dothink that the presence of the Freescale employees on the flight is likely to be the key to understanding what has happened.
It is easy to verify that Freescale was bought out by Blackstone - along with the Carlyle Group and others - back in 2006:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freescale_Semiconductor
The significance of this is, of course, entirely a matter of speculation at this point.
“The most difficult subjects can be explained to the most slow-witted man if he has not formed any idea of them already; but the simplest thing cannot be made clear to the most intelligent man if he is firmly persuaded that he knows already, without a shadow of doubt, what is laid before him.â€
― Leo Tolstoy,
― Leo Tolstoy,

