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Douglas Caddy

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  1. On October 2, 2021, coasttocoastam from 6 to 10 pm PT replayed a program of 10/9/2002 from its archives. The moderator was Art Bell. Part of the program dealt with the U.S. government relationship with a live alien. It was disclosed that Edward Teller interviewed the alien at Los Alamos in the 1950’s. It is also likely that this alien is the same one that met with Canadian government officials in the 1950’s and told them that the alien presence was prepared to split the moon in half and reattach it to show the power that it has. This alien likely is the same one that President Nixon talked about with Robert Merritt in his office beneath the White House in July 1972 that I write about in my autobiography, Being There: Eyewitness to History.
  2. BBC expose of secret wealth of key world leaders https://www.bbc.com/news/world-58780465
  3. This movie of years ago about Afghanistan with Tom Cruise foretold the future.
  4. Do not miss this free interview with an intelligence officer. He presents crucial information never made public before. An Intelligence Officer You’ve Never Met Before with an Important Story to Tell https://www.unknowncountry.com/dreamland/an-intelligence-officer-with-a-stunning-story-to-tell/ Note: In the final 30 minutes of the interview program available only to subscribers to unknown country.com the intelligence officer disclosed that a new conscientiousness in a form of a yellow curtain of energy has established itself over the entire Planet Earth.
  5. Do not miss this free interview with an intelligence officer. His presents crucial information never made public before. An Intelligence Officer You’ve Never Met Before with an Important Story to Tell https://www.unknowncountry.com/dreamland/an-intelligence-officer-with-a-stunning-story-to-tell/ Note: In the final 30 minutes of the interview program available only to subscribers to unknown country.com the intelligence officer disclosed that a new conscientiousness in a form of a yellow curtain of energy has established itself over the entire Planet Earth.
  6. Bits and pieces that have washed up on my computer screen: I lived in a houseboat for a while and started seeing the girl next door...Eventually, we drifted apart. My boyfriend tried to make me have sex on the hood of his Honda Civic...I refused. If I'm going to have sex, it is going to be on my own Accord. A man tried to sell me a coffin today...I told him, that's the last thing I need. The neighborhood barber just got arrested for selling drugs...We had been his customers for 8 years. We had no idea he was a barber. 100 years ago everyone had a horse and only the rich had cars. Nowadays everyone has a car and only the rich have horses...Oh how the stables have turned. My boyfriend was dying. I was by his bedside when he said something with a weak voice, "There's something I must confess."..."Shhh," I said "There's nothing to confess. Everything is alright."..."No, I must die in peace," he said, "I had sex with your sister, your best friend, and your co-worker"..."I know" I whispered, "That's why I poisoned you... Now close your eyes." Did you hear about McDonald's trying to get into the high-end steakhouse market?...It was a Big McSteak.
  7. Pentagon's secret aircraft: https://dailycaller.com/2021/09/30/lockheed-martin-skunk-works-chief-skunk-jeff-babione-national-defence-air/
  8. Pentagon's secret aircraft https://dailycaller.com/2021/09/30/lockheed-martin-skunk-works-chief-skunk-jeff-babione-national-defence-air/
  9. https://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/agent-110-u-s-spy-helped-german-kill-hitler-article-1.2988755?fbclid=IwAR1Lwhjw4essh9L-iK8yB6M9RAlJ_6iideLMMKJuLcN_BZC-JFyh0EiDz4o
  10. CIA and Assassinations: The Guatemala 1954 Documents https://nsarchive2.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB4/index.html?fbclid=IwAR1lWMzOcWRRK11W7kSXr2EZWty8rR4S7XIIyULe5jIdBVFjBWDHUzWHuME
  11. VP Harris tops Biden poll ratings. She is at 49%. https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/574604-harriss-poll-numbers-rise-as-bidens-fall
  12. https://www.amazon.com/Spies-Traitors-Angleton-Friendship-Betrayal/dp/1643138073/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=spies+and+traitors+by+michael+holzman&qid=1633012765&s=books&sr=1-1
  13. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/biden-white-house-leans-toward-releasing-information-about-trump-and-jan-6-attack-setting-off-legal-and-political-showdown/ar-AAOKhEU?ocid=uxbndlbing
  14. From Joan Mellen’s book, page 14: ‘Mac Wallace is a case in point, his history with Lyndon Johnson a window into Johnson’s methods. Wallace’s story is so intriguing because, unlike other Johnson acolytes, it is difficult to prove what he did for Lyndon Johnson, and what Lyndon Johnson, in turn, did for him. More than any other of Johnson’s protégés and acolytes, Wallace’s connection to him remains cloaked in secrecy, “In the major events in Mac Wallace’s life, Lyndon Johnson remains invisible. Yet one truth is irrefutable. Everything that was positive and promising in Wallace’s life came to him before he made the acquaintance of Lyndon Baines Johnson and joined Johnson’s circle.”
  15. I agree. I only posted it here because of the reference to Oswald. I remember reading at the time one of these guys boasted about blowing off the head of a woman in Iraq who was holding a baby at the time because she was between him and his target. A movie was made about this guy but this scene was not in it.
  16. https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2019/11/21/jfk-spy-cuba-new-york-times-crozier/2425360001/
  17. [BE SURE TO READ THE SECOND TO THE LAST PARAGRAPH THAT RELATES TO OSWALD] HISTORY CORNER: SNIPERS: THE MOST FEARED WARRIORS “One man can change the world with a bullet in the right place.” — Malcolm McDowell During the Vietnam War, the North Vietnamese had a $30,000 bounty on the head of U.S. Marine Corps sniper Gunnery Sergeant Carlos N. Hathcock. Usually, they only offered from $8 to $2,000 for killing an American sniper. Hathcock was special. He was a legend in the jungle — for both sides, and the communists had to take him out. They couldn’t. Here’s how he worked: Hathcock volunteered for a dangerous mission before he even knew what it was.Camouflaged with local vegetation, he crawled inch-by-inch across a grass-covered meadow into the enemy camp to kill a North Vietnamese Army general. It took him four days and three nights to get there. The days were tropical hot and humid. There were always insects. And there was no time to sleep. While creeping through the tall grass, he was almost bitten by a bamboo viper — a nasty little green snake with an extremely painful bite. A wound would feel “as if it had been branded with a hot iron, and the pain does not subside until about 24 hours after being bitten (and) within minutes…the surrounding flesh dies and turns black.” While watching the serpent, Hathcock didn’t move a muscle — not wishing to give away his position. The snake slithered away and the Marine kept crawling. Just after sunset, as he lay motionless and camouflaged in the foliage, an enemy soldier almost stepped on him. He was about 700 yards away when the general emerged from his quarters onto the porch and took a stretch. “I thought to myself, ‘This'll be good…really good,’” he said. Carefully lining up his target in the crosshairs of his scope, Hathcock slowly squeezed the trigger. The shot hit the general square in the chest. Mission accomplished! Hathcock would boldly challenge the enemy snipers looking for him by wearing a white feather in his hat band. They called him “Trắng Lông,” meaning “White Feather Sniper.” Hathcock’s fellow Marines protected him by also wearing a white feather — and risking their own lives, while confusing the enemy counter-snipers searching for him. One report said that he killed every known Vietnamese marksman who tried to collect the bounty. On another mission, Hathcock and his spotter, John Roland Burke, were stalking an enemy sniper in the jungle southwest of Da Nang. A commie sniper they called “The Cobra," had already killed several Marines and was believed to be looking for Hathcock. Hathcock saw him first. Seeing a glint in the sunlight of the enemy’s scope, Hathcock took aim and fired. The bullet went right through the scope and hit him in the eye — killing him instantly. Hathcock brought the dead sniper’s gun back to camp as a trophy — but somebody stole it. By the time he was sent back to the U.S. in 1969 having suffered severe burns while rescuing seven Marines from a burning vehicle, he’d killed 93 enemy combatants — maybe hundreds more that couldn’t be confirmed under military protocols. While serving as a combat commander in Vietnam, retired Marine Corps Lieutenant Colonel and Annapolis graduate Kenny Moore of Hayden was part of a staff conference that included talking about the best firing techniques. Hathcock said, “Breathe in…breath out…relax… then squeeze.” “That’d be easy for him,” Moore said. “He had a heartbeat of only 41.” It takes incredible training and mental toughness to become a military sniper. Shooters and spotters are trained to work as a team, with the objective of hitting the enemy target with one shot. Before they take that shot however, there are a lot of variables that must be factored in — such as type of gun and ammunition used, distance to target, point of impact, bullet trajectory, wind conditions, humidity, elevation and even the Coriolis Force caused by the Earth’s rotation, and other factors. Some of this is calculated by electronic and optical equipment — the rest by the sniper and spotter. Handheld computers with ballistic-prediction software help contribute to the accuracy. All of this has to be calculated quickly: adjusting the rifle for the conditions and shooting before anything changes, or the target moves. Snipers and spotters go through rigorous physical and academic training to do all this. They are elite warriors of the Modern Age. U.S. Army Staff Sergeant Adelbert “Bert” Waldron of Virginia was another one of them. He served in Vietnam as a sniper with the 9th Infantry Division, and during his eight-month tour of duty had 109 confirmed kills — the most by any American sniper during the Vietnam War. His job in Nam was to ride shotgun on a U.S. Navy Tango “brown-water” boat in the highly dangerous Mekong Delta, infested with communist Viet Cong guerillas. “Allied troops would launch countless search and destroy operations throughout South Vietnam in an effort to break the insurgency,” said a report in Military History Bunker, “but the VC would simply melt away into the jungles and villages… “The VC utilized classic guerrilla tactics of ambushes, hit-and-run attacks, booby traps, bombings, and snipers to gradually inflict losses on Allied troops. “While the Americans and their allies roamed openly in the daylight, the VC and North Vietnamese Army owned the night.” But one night as his boat was moving along the river, Waldron shot and killed an enemy sniper in a tree 900 yards away. He was good at shooting at night. On another night, his recon patrol ran into about 40 armed Viet Cong, and a battle broke out. Ignoring the danger, he left the patrol to take a sniper position. With his night vision scope, he could see the VC moving in the dark. He killed and wounded so many of them that they disappeared into the jungle. That earned him a Bronze Star with a “V” for Valor. Three nights later, he was camouflaged in a sniper location when he spotted a large group of Viet Cong. Stealthily moving from one position to the next through the rice paddies, he killed 11 of them — making them think they were being attacked by multiple shooters. He held them off for three hours before he pulled out. His actions won him the Silver Star — the military’s third highest decoration. Bert Waldron died in obscurity in California in 1995 at age 62. The most amazing long-range sniper shot in history took place from a tower in Baghdad in 2017. Using a McMillan TAC-50 rifle, a Canadian sniper (unnamed for security reasons) from Joint Task Force 2 fired a shot that killed an Islamic State (IS) insurgent attacking Iraqi forces 3,871 yards away — almost 39 football fields. Video cameras and other information verified the kill. During the Civil War, an unidentified Confederate soldier in Fort Sumter saw a Union soldier moving around 1,390 yards away at Battery Greg and took a shot at him. Probably using a Whitworth rifle, he hit the target — killing him. Whether the shooter was a trained sniper, a good marksman, or just plain lucky is not recorded. But the deadliest American sniper in history was U.S. Navy Seal Chris Kyle from Odessa, Texas, with 160 confirmed kills in the Iraqi War. “I don’t have to psyche myself up, or do something special mentally,” he wrote in his autobiography. “I look through the scope, get my target in the cross hairs, and kill my enemy before he kills one of my people.” His autobiography “American Sniper” was a bestselling book, that became a hit movie starring Bradly Cooper and directed by Clint Eastwood, that received six Oscar nominations — including Best Picture. Sadly, Kyle’s life ended tragically in 2013 at age 38 at a firing range outside Fort Worth when he and his buddy Chad Littlefield were shot and killed by a deranged ex-Marine named Eddie Ray Routh. They’d taken Routh with them to the range to try and help him overcome personal issues and deal with his PTSD — at his mother’s request. He’d been drinking and smoking pot the previous night. Routh, was found guilty of murder and is serving a life sentence in a Texas prison, without possibility of parole. The nation owes a lot to our Special Forces snipers who are among the military’s most elite warriors — selflessly helping to keep America great. Bless them all. Why a sniper has a tough job… “Sniping is weaponized math. Although a .50 caliber sniper rifle bullet can fly as far as five miles, a host of factors…act upon the bullet as it travels. Even worse, these effects increase the farther the bullet travels. A successful sniper team operating at extreme distances must do its best to predict exactly how these factors will affect the bullet and calculate how to get the bullet back onto target.” Where the name 'Sniper' came from… The word appears to have originated in India in the mid-1700s, coined by the British Military when the troops were hunting the Snipe bird, which was fast and hard to shoot. Marksmen who were able to shoot the bird in flight were called “Snipers.” U.S. Marine Corps… "The Marine Corps has the best sniper program in the world," according to Gunnery Sergeant Richard Tisdale, staff noncommissioned officer in charge of the Scout Sniper School, with camps in California, North Carolina and Virginia. But the Army, Navy and Air Force also have snipers and might make the same claim. What gun did Bert Waldron use in Nam? For the gun techies: Waldron used the National Match quality M-21 with a Leatherwood 3-9X Adjustable Range Telescope (ART) graduated to 600 yards, with standard leather M1907 sling. Rock Island Arsenal converted some 1,435 of them for Vietnam in 1969, becoming the primary Army sniper rifle until 1988. The M21 was accurate to about 900 yards, firing M118 standard NATO 7.62mm rounds, using an early AN/PVS-2 Starlight night vision scope and suppressor. Hathcock and the JFK assassination… During the Warren Commission investigation following the assassination of President Kennedy, a mockup of the site was built at the Marine Corps sniper school at Quantico, Va., to recreate what happened. Even with the best sniper rifle, ace Marine sniper Carlos Hathcock could not duplicate assassin Lee Harvey Oswald’s fatal shot — made with a defective rifle. That finding was not included in the final Warren Report. The book, The Giant Killer honors and highlights unique war heroes and is available on Amazon as a Paperback, Audiobook, and eBook. Story By SYD ALBRIGHT
  18. U.S. Marshall Clint Peoples who was a former Texas Ranger who tracked Billie Sol Estes and Mac Wallace for decades told me that Mac Wallace was a stone cold killer. Those of us who live in Texas and know about what went down when LBJ ruled the Lone Star State with a iron fist are not surprised that others who were not or are not on the scene here would have a different view.
  19. Gallup Poll: Biden down to 43% https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/573367-biden-approval-rating-drops-to-record-low-43-percent-in-gallup
  20. As Biden prepares to declare US 20-year War over at U.N., Remembering the Bush Lies that Started it all JUAN COLE https://www.juancole.com/2021/09/prepares-declare-remembering.html
  21. Three million more Trump tax documents discovered in a basement. https://www.rawstory.com/trump-tax-fraud-2655064230/
  22. Experts have found the following analysis to be nearly 100% accurate. 1.The Wall Street Journal is read by the people who run the country. 2.The Washington Post is read by people who think they run the country. 3.The New York Times is read by people who think they should run the country, and who are very good at crossword puzzles. 4.USA Today is read by people who think they ought to run the country but don't really understand The New York Times. 5.The Los Angeles Times is read by people who wouldn't mind running the country, if they could find the time and if they didn't have to leave Southern California to do it. 6. The Boston Globe is read by people whose parents used to run the country. 7. The New York Daily News is read by people who aren't too sure who's running the country and don't really care as long as they can get a seat on the train. 8.The New York Post is read by people who don't care who is running the country as long as they do something really scandalous, preferably while intoxicated. 9.The Chicago Tribune is read by people that are in prison that used to run the state, & would like to do so again, as would their constituents that are currently free on bail. 10.The Miami Herald is read by people who are running another country, but need the baseball scores. 11.The San Francisco Chronicle is read by people who aren't sure if there is a country or that anyone is running it; but if so, they oppose all that they stand for. There are occasional exceptions if the leaders are gay, handicapped, minority, feminist, atheists, and those who also happen to be illegal aliens from any other country or galaxy, provided of course, that they are not Republicans. 12.The National Enquirer is read by people trapped in line at the grocery store. 13.The Seattle Times is read by people who have recently caught a fish and need something to wrap it in.
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