Benjamin Cole Posted September 22 Share Posted September 22 Veteran JFKA scholar Jeff Morley raises vexing issues in his column on MK-ULTRA, the JFKA and the Trump Assassination Attempts (TATs). Morley does not mention it, but one explanation of the RFK1A is that Sirhan was operating under hypnosis. Of course, if one posits that Sirhan was hypnotized, and can remember no details whatever of his hypnotizers, nor key moments of what he did when under hypnosis (even after decades of reflection, and even when other hypnotists put him under)...then one has to be open to "Manchurian candidates" explanations every time a putative "lone nut" takes a shot at a President or prominent candidate. The TATs too. The national security state, aka Deep State, or shadow government, did not evaporate in recent decades, but rather has larger budgets, resources and capabilities than ever before, by far. Do MK-ULTRA programs exist today? Perhaps yes, simply moved offshore and run through contractors. (Side-note: Self-driving cars are loaded with cameras. Those wi-fi linked cameras can become spy cameras. Your smartphone reveals your location constantly. This is just scratching the surface. Your bank records, e-mails, everything online can be looked into in seconds.) The JFKA is often informative, even to the present day. ---30--- The Latest From JFK Facts Trump Conspiracy Theories Come to Capitol Hill The pernicious legacy of MK-ULTRA infects thinking related to assassination attempts on the former president SEP 21 READ IN APP From The Bulwark, we get this report on fact-free conspiracy theories about the two assassination attempts on former President Donald Trump. One of the quotes in Joe Perticone’s report reveals the pernicious legacy of MK-ULTRA. The crime spree of the CIA’s mind control program (which ran from 1952 to 1970) now serves as an all-purpose template for those who want to raise doubts about the government’s credibility. Perticone writes: Capitol Hill is full of conspiracy theorists. Whether we’re talking about the belief that the Great Depression was an inside job, the idea that California wildfires were the product of space lasers operated by a shadowy cabal of Jewish bankers, or a prophetic dream about “Federal squads” raiding homes, there is hardly a theory out there that someone in the 118th Congress has not considered and adopted. The latest — and perhaps one of the most dangerous — theories to reach the halls of American power is that the recent attempted assassinations of Donald Trump were not the actions of troubled, isolated individuals, but the fruits of a larger plot. It’s obviously important for lawmakers and federal investigators to probe every possible angle on these events, and federal agencies and congressional task forces are doing just that. But this is not that. Leaving aside expert testimony, rigorous forensics, and other features of real fact-finding work, some Republican lawmakers are instead trusting hunches and things they read on the internet to guide them to the true true. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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