Taking Back Our Stolen History
HISTORY HEIST
Military Industrial Complex

Military Industrial Complex

Given that the elite knew their might be problems down the road as they move us into post-industrial feudalism and depopulation the planet, it was important to encourage the growth of the Military Industrial complex and create wars (real or imaginary such as the Cold War) to ensure continued public support for the massive investment in military weaponry. And of course if you don’t have an enemy any more the government and military create one as they did on 9/11 and the war on terror. This is nothing new as governments are responsible for the vast majority of terrorism – a tool they have used over and over down through history to get the people to comply with an agenda. The consequence of this massive investment is that the elite now have an entire arsenal of advanced weaponry they can now turn on the public to ensure their control. These include bioweapons; weather modification weapons (HAARP); psychotronic weapons; microwave weapons; tectonic weapons; space based weapons; and robotic weapons. Concurrent to the scientific developments, the elite knew they would need to create a generation brought up to fight that would fill the ranks of the military and police forces and introduced violent video games and movies for this purpose.

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is Founded... as a Covert Zionist Military Intelligence Spy Front?

National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is Founded… as a Covert Zionist Military Intelligence Spy Front?

With the race riots of Springfield, IL (President Lincoln's hometown) as a catalyst, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People was founded six months later. The public generally believes that the NAACP was founded by people like W.E.B. DuBois (who would later become a leader of the Communist Party), but the truth is that the organization had a heavy Jewish influence from its inception, founded by ...
Coup of 1901: US President William McKinley Assassinated to Transition the American Republic to the American Empire

Coup of 1901: US President William McKinley Assassinated to Transition the American Republic to the American Empire

United States President William McKinley was shot on the grounds of the Pan-American Exposition at the Temple of Music in Buffalo, New York, on September 6, 1901 as the result of a conspiracy. On September 11, 1901 (9/11/01) he was poisoned while convalescing at the home of Exposition President John G. Milburn. McKinley died on September 14, 1901. Shortly thereafter, Theodore Roosevelt became the 26th President of ...
The Posse Comitatus Act of the U.S. is Signed into Law by Rutherford B. Hayes

The Posse Comitatus Act of the U.S. is Signed into Law by Rutherford B. Hayes

The Posse Comitatus Act is a United States federal law signed on June 18, 1878 by President Rutherford B. Hayes. The purpose of the act – in concert with the Insurrection Act of 1807 – is to limit the powers of the federal government in using federal military personnel to enforce domestic policies within the United States. It was passed as an amendment to an army appropriation ...
President Lincoln received the first Telegram from a Balloon

President Lincoln received the first Telegram from a Balloon

June 18th 1861, Thaddeus Lowe ascended with a tethered balloon five hundred feet above the National Mall. He intended to demonstrate, amid the Civil War, practicality of observing enemy troop movements from the air. His audience was the Commander-in-Chief. A telegraph wire connected the basket with the White House. The scientist sent a message to the President Lincoln: This point of observation commands an area nearly ...
Little v. Barreme: SCOTUS Finds that the POTUS does not have "Inherent Authority" or "Inherent Powers" that Allow him to Ignore a Law Passed by the US Congress

Little v. Barreme: SCOTUS Finds that the POTUS does not have “Inherent Authority” or “Inherent Powers” that Allow him to Ignore a Law Passed by the US Congress

Many people know the first  Supreme Court decision to declare an act of Congress unconstitutional (It's Marbury, of course), but few people could identify the Court's first decision declaring Executive Branch action to be unconstitutional.  Little v Barreme (1804), called the Flying Fish case, involved an order by President John Adams, issued in 1799 during our brief war with France,  authorizing the Navy to seize ships ...
The United States Civil Flag of Peacetime

The United States Civil Flag of Peacetime

We the People of the United States, actually have two national flags, a civil flag for peacetime and a military flag for times of war. They have several important distinctions and meanings. The Stars and Stripes: Today almost all Americans think of the Stars and Stripes "Old Glory" as their only flag. This has become the custom since the Civil War between the States. Before the ...
The Newburgh Conspiracy and George Washington's Powerful Speech to Calm It

The Newburgh Conspiracy and George Washington’s Powerful Speech to Calm It

One of the early threats to the republic came in March 1783, when a group of officers in the Continental Army decided to challenge the authority of the Congress. The incident was caused by the inability of Congress to pay the members of the military. Under the Articles of Confederation, the Congress could not tax the states to raise revenue. Instead, it relied on voluntary payments from ...
The American Seizure of British Occupied Nassau

The American Seizure of British Occupied Nassau

On March 3 the Marines captured Nassau without a fight and seized a sizable store of cannon, mortars and munitions. The battle marked the first time American Sailors and Marines responded to the command "Land the landing force." Capt. Esek Hopkins of Rhode Island rallied a task force of four ships near the Bahamas on March 1, 1776. The next day Hopkins sent a raiding party ...
The Marines are first formed as an act of the Continental Congress

The Marines are first formed as an act of the Continental Congress

On this date in history, the US Marine Corps was founded in 1775. At the very start of the American Revolution, there was an act of the Continental Congress that ordered that two units of Marines be raised. They were raised to serve in the Continental Navy to serve on ships and to engage in amphibious operations. The resolution was drafted by a future U.S. President ...
The Continental Congress officially established the Continental Army

The Continental Congress officially established the Continental Army

Interestingly, the United States (U.S.) Army traces its lineage to the American Army of the 1780s, not the Continental Army that fought the American Revolution.[3] The U.S. Army, however, celebrates its birth on the 14th of June each year. This anniversary documents the birth of the Continental Army on June 14, 1775 when the Continental Congress authorized three different states to raise ten rifle companies, six ...