As journalist Gary Allen explained in his now famous book ‘None Dare Call it a Conspiracy’, “It must be remembered that the first job of …
Assassinations & Mysterious Deaths
As journalist Gary Allen explained in his now famous book ‘None Dare Call it a Conspiracy’,
“It must be remembered that the first job of any conspiracy, whether it be in politics, crime or within a business office, is to convince everyone else that no conspiracy exists. The conspirators’ success will be determined largely by their ability to do this.”
Sometimes that can be accomplished by intimidation, threats, smear campaigns by the deep state controlled mainstream media as well as other tactics, but when it is determined that none of those will be successful, or that a potential whistleblower or brave journalist knows too much or is digging too deep, then more drastic measures are used. Some of the typical methods to of elimination are to assure that the enemy to the conspiracy is suicided, meaning murdered but made to look as if the person committed suicide, ‘accidented’, or just outright murdered and the scene wiped clean as to leave no trail back to the conspirators. After all, Dead Men Tell No Tells as they say.
Chronological History of Assassinations and Mysterious Deaths:
US plans to eliminate Patrice Lumumba went as high as the President himself. On August 25, 1960, a subcommittee of the National Security Council known as the Special Group met. Thomas Parrott, the secretary of the Group, began the meeting by outlining the CIA operations that had been taken by ‘mounting an anti- Lumumba campaign in the Congo,’ and the meeting ended with the group “not ...
Paul Bang-JensenAfter blowing the whistle on the UN, Paul (Povl) Bang-Jensen (shown), a United Nations official from Denmark, warned his wife and friends never to believe it if they were told that he had “committed suicide.” Then, supposedly, he “committed suicide.” That tragedy took place more than 50 years ago. More recently, UN persecution of whistleblowers has made headlines around the world. Most infamous, perhaps, was ...
Dr. Frank Olson commits suicide (according to the official story) after having been given a secret dose of LSD by the CIA, under the direction of the mysterious Dr. Sidney Gottlieb. Experts told his son, Eric, that in order to achieve the momentum needed to vault over a central heating radiator under the window, burst through the closed blinds and smash through the hotel’s heavy glass ...
The two highest-ranking government officials in the history of the American republic to have “committed suicide” are Deputy White House Counsel, Vincent W. Foster, Jr., on July 20, 1993, and Secretary of Defense, James V. Forrestal, on May 22, 1949. Actually, Forrestal was not a government official at the time of his death. He had been rather abruptly removed from office on March 28, and after ...
The UN- appointed mediator's, Count Folke Bernadotte, report on whether or not to divide Palestine for the displaced 'Holocaust victims' (U.N. Document A. 648) was filed. He said it offended "Basic principles to prevent these innocent victims of the conflict [Palestinians were not to blame for the Holocaust] from returning to their homes, while Jewish immigrants flood into Palestine and, what’s more, threatening to permanently replace ...
In Bogota, Colombia, 22-year-old Havana University law-school student and new CIA recruit, Fidel Castro, actively helped carry out an assassination and a successful large-scale psychological warfare operation (PSYOP) by organizing riots, looting, murder, burning, and the takeover by communists of radio stations and government buildings following the Colombian leading Presidential candidate Jorge Eliécer Gaitán, leaving the capital city destroyed. In the Psyop, they tested new covert ...
The radio, cell phone, and alternating current electricity have all revolutionized the way humans live and they all have one very important person in common: Nikola Tesla. Tesla, often called the Man Who Invented the 20th Century, was the most famous and perhaps most dangerous mind of his time. In 1943, he was found dead in a hotel room, his safe cracked open, and his research ...
Robert Johnson was born May 8th, 1911. Johnson, who grew up poverty-stricken would become known as the King of the Delta Blues Singers and his music influenced the cream of the crop of musicians from the Rolling Stones to the Allman Brothers and Bob Dylan to name a few. Johnson released 29 songs between 1936 and 1937 for the American Record Corporation. Eleven 78 rpm records ...
On July 2nd 1937 America’s “First Lady of Flight,” Amelia Earhart, along with her navigator, Fred Noonan, disappeared—at least from public view—in their two-engine Lockheed Electra, NR 16020, somewhere in the South Pacific. They were on an ambitious round-the-world flight from an east to west direction, and they had already completed a good part of it. The voyage had begun in Burbank, California, on May 21, ...
Few recall, however, how controversial the Fed was when it was first proposed and then maneuvered through a recessing Congress just before Christmas 1913. Rep. Charles Lindbergh, Sr., R-MN and father of the future aviator, called the Federal Reserve Act “the worst legislative crime of the ages.” But the strongest opposition came later, during the Great Depression. The source was Rep. Louis T. McFadden, a Republican ...