Yamato
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I applaud Benjamin Fulford's courage, idealism and defiance. However, he is new to this subject and may have been mislead. He shouldn't use Illuminati teminology like "New Age" . The Illuminati control the central banks of Russia, China, India and Venezuela. They control the EU. Germany may not appear on the Illuminati chart because it is at the top. Barak Obama is a Zionist stooge. The Illuminati Li Ka-Shing (and family) has had a major role in China. Heck, the Communists are Illuminati. I thought the Illuminati controlled organized crime. I can't imagine a genuinely benevolent secret society. It would be encouraging if this were one.
It's possible Fulford is sincere but is being used to confuse and/or create divisions. Possibly they want to ramp up domestic terrorism as an excuse for martial law. Now, Orientals as well as Muslims could be on the watch list. This secret society is challenging the traitorous Western Establishment. We're talking about the State Apparatus! So please be critical. It may or may not be what he says. Time will tell.
In any case, it's time we refused to bow down to tyranny and called a spade a spade.
Imagine, in Japan he writes the truth in the mainstream media! Maybe some day, we'll do that in America. Benjamin Fulford is an inspiration and deserves our thanks.
Hmm, maybe he was pretending to think that. Of course if the mafia, rather than the CIA, had killed JFK many other things would be unexplainable. Many things, among which the huge cover-up by the government.The CIA’s John McCone remembered conversations with the attorney general shortly after Jack’s death: “He wanted to know what we knew about it and whether it had been a Cuban or perhaps Russian hit. He even asked me if the CIA could have done it. I mentioned the mob, but RFK didn’t want to know about it. I suspect he thought it was the mob.
There you go. He simply didn't want to die by trying to go after who did it.Jim Garrison, the flamboyant New Orleans district attorney who challenged the Warren Commission’s conclusions, recalled a telephone conversation he had with RFK in 1964: “I told him some of my theories. He listened carefully, then said, `Maybe so, maybe you’re right. But what good will it do to know the truth? Will it bring back my brother?’ I said, `I find it hard to believe that as the top law man in the country you don’t want to pursue the truth more ardently.’ With this he hung up on me.”
RFK expressed dismay over the Commission’s report, saying it was “impossible that Oswald and Ruby hadn’t known one another.” He also said “Those Cuban c**** are all working for the mob. They blame us for the Bay of Pigs, and they’re trying to make this look like a Castro Communist hit. I don’t buy it. And I don’t trust those guys at the CIA. They’re worse than the Mafia.” Bobby simply didn’t want to know who did it. But at the same time, he couldn’t put it behind him. He wanted to bring his brother’s murderers to justice, but he didn’t have the strength to do it. He must have felt tremendous guilt over his failure to act.