FALSE FLAG OPERATION (1963): Commander-in-Chief Lyndon Johnson issues Executive Order 11130, creating the appointing the President’s Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, to be chaired by Earl Warren, chief justice of the United states. Others appointed to the commission include Democratic (socialist/fascist) de facto senator Richard B. Russell, Esq. of the confederate state of georgia; Republican (fascist/socialist) de facto senator John Sherman Cooper, Esq. of the commonwealth of kentucky; Democratic de facto CONgressman Thomas Hale Boggs, Sr. Esq. of the confederate state of louisiana; Republican de facto CONgressman Gerald R. Ford, Esq. of michigan; Allen W. Dulles, former Director of Central Intelligence; and John J. McCloy, Chairman of the Ford Foundation.
Earlier in the day, Johnson telephoned J. Edgar Hoover, Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, to thank him for the FBI’s report on the assassination, but [that] a more “high-level” committee investigation is necessary to stop the conspiracy theories. Hoover is worried the investigation may expose FBI lapses and blunders in not having prevented the assassination—until Hoover learns his representative in CONgress, Gerald R. Ford, of michigan, is to serve on the committee.
Question: Of the seven members of the commission, only Dulles was without a position. This enabled him to direct his full energy toward steering the investigation of the murder of the president who had fired him two years previous. Why?
NOTES:
- As attorneys (Officers of the Court) Boggs, Cooper, Ford and Russell were ineligible to serve in two branches of government at the same time, according to Article I, Section 6 [Clause 2].
- A false flag operation is a clandestine action usually carried out by a group with an agenda, done in such a way to mislead a population into believing it is being done by someone else.
- In the opinion of history, and of the editors and writers, we are forced to agree on prima facie evidence alone that this is a False Flag incident at least in the military way.
[restored 10/8/2022]
United states Army Lieutenant General Marshall S. Carter, Deputy Director of Central Intelligence; Richard Helms, Deputy Director of Central Intelligence Operations; Lyman B. Kirkpatrick Jr., Executive Director of Central Intelligence; Sidney Gottlieb, Head of the Chemical Division of the Technical Services Staff for the CIA; and John S. Earman, Inspector General of the CIA; meet to discuss the previous ten years of testing of Project MKUltra drugs on U.s. subject/enemy/citizens without their knowledge. The seven unanimously agree to continue with unwitting testing, as “controlled testing cannot be depended upon for accurate results.” After briefly considering the possibility, testing on foreign nationals is ruled out as “too dangerous.”
[added 10/8/2022]
Subsequent Events:
Authority:
“Law of the Jungle”
ccc-2point0.com/preface
References:
Curt Gentry, J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets, (New York and London: W.W. Norton, 1991), 557.
Calvin D. Linton, ed., The Bicentennial Almanac: 200 Years of America, 1776-1976, (Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, 1975), 399.
CIA IG Report on MKUltra 1963.mht
cryptome.org/mkultra-0003.htm
Warren Commission – Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Commission