ADVISORY: There will be no startling revelations or even a thesis in this post, just a long, strange chain of evidence that wraps around on itself in a surprising way. What it conjures, though, is the notion that far beneath the headlines and history books, it really is a Small Club, and you ain’t in it.
Understand first that very, very few people are actually trying to put together for themselves How the World Really Works. I would say the number of such people on conspiracies.win is less than 10. If you’re one of them, consider yourself an Elite (of the right kind, for once).
What we’re doing is putting together a giant jigsaw puzzle. Most of what counts as “conspiracy theory” these days is that someone pulls out a puzzle piece, waves it in your face, and you have a primarily emotional reaction. Even if that puzzle piece is legit, just trying to place that single piece correctly into the whole puzzle is nearly impossible. TPTB know these dynamics and that’s why disinfo is so effective.
What I’ve done here is put together a block of puzzle pieces, all with this strange center of “Lookout Mountain”. Exactly what it all means I certainly do not know, but the idea is this: if you can’t remember the details, just remember “Lookout Mountain”. If you later encounter that name in research, rather than skating over it your mind will catch and you’ll think, “Hang on—there may be some significance to that.” You can then refer back here.
Alternatively, you can just enjoy the sights along the way and be reminded once again, “Oh, yes, there is a Dark World that the Small Club lives in but which few outside of it ever notice.” In either case, let’s begin our sightseeing…
Once again, I bumbled into all this when--for a reason I have utterly forgotten--I was looking at the wiki of Mark David Chapman, the fake assassin in the fake murder of John Lennon. (If you were not aware it was fake, I told you already we’d wrap back around so please remain seated until the post comes to a complete stop.) I happened to notice that he had attended college in Lookout Mountain, Georgia. I was immediately hooked by an association which we will get to shortly, but first things first. That city in northwest Georgia near the Alabama line is at the foot of a striking ridgeline, very ominous and surely occult, known as…
Lookout Mountain, Georgia. It’s the first place everyone thinks of when they hear that name, but, well… it isn’t at all significant, at least not in any way I could detect. No red flags at all, but everyone is free to look for themselves. So we’ll go back to the association I had, the one I know leads somewhere…
Lookout Mountain Air Force Station. Ten demerits if you were not already familiar with this place. The site figures prominently in Miles Mathis’ landmark paper: The Tate Murders were a False Flag (95-page PDF). While it is quite a stunning work, keep in mind that Mathis is a disinfo agent. We might have an example of that disinfo at work in an insignificant line from the paper: “behind Sharon in both pictures is a large hill called Lookout Mountain”.
The thing is, I cannot confirm that’s what the hill--among countless others in the canyons north of LA--is or ever was named. We all know how the military is obsessed with naming things after people, so why not something like “William H. Blanchard Air Force Station”? The naming is particularly strange seeing that there is another Lookout Mountain about 40 miles east across the LA Basin, near Mt. Baldy. Were they running out of names? This all leads me to believe the AFS was so named not because of the ground on which it stood, but because “They” find this name significant in some way.
And keep this in your back pocket for now, but near Wonderland Ave where the old AFS was, there’s a Stanley Hills Drive off Lookout Mountain Ave just before you get to Laurel Canyon Blvd. (Any Dave McGowan fans here?) But for now, back to Chapman, where we learn more about that school in Lookout Mountain, GA, named…
Covenant College. Let’s see, a Christian School located at the Georgia-Alabama line, so of course you can guess it was founded in… Pasadena, California. While I expect everyone to know that Jack Parsons died in Pasadena in 1952 (or did he?), just before Covenant was founded there in 1955, what you might not have seen coming is that Pasadena is on a direct line between those two Lookout Mountains we were just talking about. Curious, no? More provocative is the founding president of Covenant College, Robert G. Rayburn. Okay fine, it’s not actually him that’s provocative, but more his brother…
Jim Rayburn. Jim was born in Iowa, but he ended his days in Colorado Springs, Colorado. They may as well call the place “DotMIL West”, and it’s an hour south of Denver. Also, Jim married a lady named Helen Maxine Stanley. Huh. But speaking of Denver, did you know that on the western edge of town you’ll find another (you guessed it)…
Lookout Mountain (Colorado). You know about Columbine and Aurora, but no one ever mentioned this place before, did they? So, what crazy Elite stuff goes on there? Hell if I know, but that’s how secrets work--they’re secret. But we can talk more about the suburb immediately to the south…
Morrison, Colorado. “Morrison”? As in Jim Morrison, lead singer of The Doors? (As in Rush Limbaugh?) As in Vice Admiral George Stephen Morrison, who gifted us with the Gulf of Tonkin Incident and the Vietnam War? I can’t tell you the answer--because I’m terrible at genealogy--but I can tell you the town was founded by another George Morrison. Common name to be sure, but still, right? You’ll also see that three of the most famous types of dinosaurs were discovered in the nearby Morrison Formation, so that may be of interest to proponents of “dinos never existed”. But the more prominent and interesting fellow from Morrison seems to be…
John Brisben Walker. “Walker” as in “George Herbert Walker Bush”? Maybe, but as I said I’m terrible at genealogy so I leave it as an exercise for the student. First quick note on this guy: in 1887, Walker donated 40 acres in Denver to the Jesuits, where they built what is now Regis University. Take that for what it’s worth.
Second not as quick note on this guy: he was an early owner of Cosmopolitan magazine. Weirdly, it started as a family magazine. Double-weirdly, the word “cosmopolitan” used to mean "belonging to all parts of the world, limited to no place or society [ie, no borders or national sovereignty]” or "composed of people of all nations, multi-ethnic". Haha, ring any bells? Today, the magazine is primarily about teen butt sex or something. But John’s story does not itself end with teen butt sex.
You see, I noticed something on Walker’s page in the “See also” section not mentioned elsewhere in the rest of the text. It turns out that for his Locomobile Company of America, he purchased a prototype from the brothers that founded the...
Stanley Motor Carriage Company. Yes, the "Stanley Steamer". Again with these people? And speaking of American industrialists named "Stanley", what might have popped into your head is...
Stanley Hand Tools. Good instinct, but there’s a bit of a longer story. The founding of that company traces back to Frederick Trent Stanley, but look on that page and you’ll see it traces back further to a broken link to his cousin, “Henry Stanley (industrialist)”. Who is he? IDK and--once more--this is how secrets are kept. You can decide whether and how he might be related to this man of the same name...
Henry Morton Stanley. Yes, this is the guy from, "Doctor Livingstone, I presume?". You know how the Elites all love to change and corrupt their own names? There’s a switchup with this guy, where they tell some fake-ass story about how he was born “John Rowland” and then changed it to “Henry Morton Stanley”. In this case, he switched to his real name, or rather never switched away. But do we have any reason to believe this guy might be one of “Them”, controlling world events from behind the scenes? Well, we do have this:
Henry Stanley, The Man Who Stole The Congo (HeadStuff 8/25/2018)
You can’t make this stuff up, can you? If you’re thinking that was the big reveal about the Stanleys, you’re wrong but we’ll finally close the loop when I tell you about the…
Murder of John Lennon. Phony, as you might have guessed at the rate things are going, but you can read up on all of Miles Mathis’ Proof that John Lennon Faked his Death (54-page PDF). Another landmark paper and well worth studying, including a lot of info on these Stanleys we've seen over and over. For example, if this whole time you’ve been thinking, “The only Stanley I know about is the Cup”, yep, same Stanleys.
Maybe you think this material is all old and dusty, but I tell you it’s still close at hand. Obama’s mother’s name is Stanley Ann Dunham. Really? No, of course not. As I just said, they like to corrupt their own names to fool us all (which They usually do). Her name was clearly Ann Stanley Dunham, her middle name reflecting her bloodline. That makes former President Osama yet another Stanley. Meanwhile, everyone points and shrieks about Gates and Schwab and Trump. See how real power is hidden?
As promised, I brought us all right back to Mark David Chapman, who may have shot any number of people, but not John Lennon. Oh, almost forgot to mention John’s mother’s name was Julia Stanley. Quite a trip, eh?
Wow, I'm going to have to study your Einstein post.
Actually, my first "love" was science, but a few years ago I realized that I was lucky never to have ended up with a career in mainstream science. I see how polluted and suppressed and inverted it has all become, and I'm sure I would have gotten deranged right along with it.
As to the muzzling of Einstein, you're not going to believe it (but maybe at this point it's somehow not surprising) but it connects to the Parkers one more time. I'm dead serious.
The Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation paid for an assistant (i.e. handler) for Einstein. That Macy family was connected to Nantucket and tied up with the Parker family all the way back in the late 1700's. Details and links are in a post I wrote just two days ago (freaky, right?):
Macy’s flagship store in San Francisco is closing, which is a bigger deal than you think (because the Macy family is part of the Small Club you ain’t in)
I already linked that post, but the occurrence of Einstein was (I thought) pretty trivial and purely incidental. If you noticed it there and that's.what put you in mind of Einstein, then it's not so freaky. Really, I kind of hope that's the case... lol. Hard to keep track of who said what to who and when.