TL;DR: We expose General Blanchard in three ways: his participation in the early fake atom bomb program, his links back to the fake Salem Witch Trials, and his crucial role in kicking off the decades-long (and going strong) UFO psyop.
Disclaimer: None of this is to say that there isn’t something going on in the skies. The point is to demonstrate that there is an elaborate, long-running psychological operation regarding flying saucers/UFOs/UAPs. I think it would be easy to guess my opinion regarding the value of the views of anyone who claims to know what’s going on, yet is ignorant of this psyop. You have to strip it all away before you can even begin to estimate the situation.
This post closes out an unintended trilogy—a Matrix if you will—composed of three people across five topics: the Trinity test, the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, the Salem Witch Trials, and the UFO phenomenon. Fifteen elements in total, which is more extensive than I would have ever guessed before starting the research. We’ll have to add a bit in this post to fill out our grid, but the first two installments of what turned out to be this trilogy were:
Who needs fake witches when you have fake atom bombs? The hidden connections between General Leslie Groves and Salem Witch Trials (conspiracies.win 11/20/2024)
Captain Deak Parsons, the triggerman for the (fake) atomic bombing of Hiroshima and involved in all the other atomic fakery, was related to Jack Parsons and all the other historical fakery (conspiracies.win 10/7/2024)
In the Parsons post, you found out that Deak was related to Jack, and that their ancestry traced back to a guy called “Cornet Joseph” Parsons, as described in this post about Jack. You also found out that Cornet Joseph was running a fake witch psyop in Northampton in 1674, almost two decades before Salem.
Before even that, though, there was another phony witch hunt in Springfield in 1642 involving persons known as “Hugh and Mary Parsons”. You’d think the genealogy would be easy, but I can’t find any appropriate Hugh Parsons, related to Cornet Joseph or not. However, Cornet Joseph died in Springfield in 1683, so you can calculate the odds on how many unrelated Parsons were running around that town at the time. FWIW, the narrative is told here:
First Witch Trial in New England – Springfield, Massachusetts 1642 (Hampden County History 10/4/2018)
Now we may move on to our main subject, General William Hugh Blanchard (1916-1966). Let’s hit his roles in the “Strategy of Tension: Nuclear Armageddon” first:
In the climaxing phase of World War II, then-colonel Blanchard was directed to prepare and supervise the detailed operations order for the delivery of the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima. He was the backup pilot for the Hiroshima A-bomb drop….
After the war, on January 20, 1946, Blanchard became Commanding Officer of the 509th, succeeding Tibbetts…. But Blanchard and the 509th were immediately ordered to commence operations for the "Operation Crossroads" atomic tests at Bikini atoll.
We skipped Trinity, but it turns out his links to Trinity, witches, and UFOs are all tied up in one. First, was there a Blanchard at Salem in 1692? Not that I know of yet, but there was one at another phony witch hunt in 1658:
More Witches Were Accused in Andover than in Salem (Andover Center for History and Culture 10/21/2015)
There is a tag for “Elizabeth Blanchard” in the sidebar, but she’s not mentioned by full name in the text. The “witch” to which they refer is Elizabeth “Goody” Garlick (Blanchard) (1620-1683). Not enough of a connection to fake witchery? Then there were three Blanchards at yet another phony witch hunt decades later!
Aftermath of the Salem Trials (Encyclopedia.com)
An episode that occurred in 1720 in Littleton, Massachusetts, was eerily similar to the event that started the Salem witch trials. It began when eleven-year-old Elizabeth Blanchard had visions, went into trances, and acted as if she were "possessed.'… Soon Elizabeth's two sisters were exhibiting the same bizarre behavior, and all three girls accused a local woman of putting a spell on them.
Haha, Littleton! I guess phony school shootings had not yet been invented so witch hexes was apparently what they were going with. And another Elizabeth, no less. But was Butch Blanchard actually descended from any of these Blanchards? You can start with the genealogy for William Hugh Blanchard and run right into a brick wall at his father. We are told, however, that Butch was born in Boston, Massachusetts, of all places. Coinkydink?
But enough about witches flying around Mass on broomsticks, what about Blanchard’s ties to the other Unidentified Aerial Phenomena now filling our skies, i.e. UFOs? As mentioned, Butch ends up in charge of the 509th and was base commander at Roswell Army Air Field at the time of the “Roswell Incident”. Will coinkydinks never end?
Now, it’s not just that Blanchard was there at Roswell at the time of the Incident, there would have been no Incident at Roswell were it not for him. Well, none that we would have ever heard of anyway. He was the one that ordered base press officer and his personal friend, Lt. Walter Haut, to write that historic press release about the “saucer crash”.
Had he not done that—and I cannot stress this point enough—we all would have had zero way of finding out. I mean, can you name something amazing or interesting or not at all interesting that happened at the military base nearest you today? Of course not. They see no benefit in keeping the civvies apprised of any of their doings, lest you become intrigued or ask further questions or object. So, huge mistake on Blanchard’s part, just set off an A-bomb on his own career, right?
Of course not, silly goose! That’s not how the military works. Proven to be someone who likes to blab to the public, a year later Blanchard got promoted to America’s most sensitive military unit as Director of Operations for the now nuclear-armed Strategic Air Command. Later…
On February 19, 1965, Blanchard became Vice Chief of Staff of the U.S. Air Force, with promotion to four-star rank.
Number two guy running the whole USAF. Not bad! I really don’t get why everyone in the military doesn’t talk about all the things that happen that the public may find interesting. Clearly the recipe for success! Seriously, though, I think we can all see this was the reward for loyal service. (Loyal to whom is a separate question.)
As an aside, you can use this knowledge of Blanchard’s role and context—which I found quite startling when I first uncovered it—as a litmus test for all the disinfo agents pimping their narratives about Roswell. Just listen very closely when the topic of Blanchard comes up. They jerk the wheel like you’re going to go in the ditch (which, in reality, is where they are steering you). Most simply never talk about him. They have way more to tell you about all those real live dead ayylmaos.
Aside to the aside: There are so many jokers out there telling you about how flying saucers are hovering over strategic military bases disabling the nukes with their special rays because the, uh, Greys are trying to, uh, save humanity so that, uh… you know. Take time to reflect on how very far afield we are from that kind of talk. Okay, back to wrapping up our business….
We still did not determine whether Blanchard had a link to Trinity, did we? Well, if you start at the Trinity Site Historical Marker and go due north, in less than 10 miles you’ll come to the old Blanchard Mine, Bingham, Hansonburg District, Socorro Co., New Mexico, USA.
That mine is all that’s left of what was once a vast series of rich lead mines known as the “Blanchard Claims”. If you thought White Sands Missile Range was big, just know that the Blanchard Claims included all that and a similarly-sized piece north of Highway 380. Not bad, huh? Do I think Butch was a member of this family, and that it included those fake witches centuries ago? Even with no further evidence, I certainly do. Thus, I think the fact that the fake first A-bomb blew up there, and the fact that a flying saucer decided to crash there, and the fact that Butch was in charge and made sure we heard about it, and the fact that Deak Parsons’ family moved there, etc, are, in fact, not coinkydinks at all.
Bonus: You want to know how I first heard about this last part, having to do with Butch and the Blanchard Claims? A number of years ago I was stumbling around Google Maps, trying to find out precisely where this purported saucer purportedly came down, when I saw a marker for the Blanchard Rock Shop.
It’s a little roadside shop, a tiny remnant of those claims. Okay, I understand that 380 doesn’t get a lot of traffic, but how many people have passed by over the decades that could have noticed what I noticed? A jillion or so? Yet in those several years, I have never once heard anyone mention this connection. Trust me, I’ve been listening closely. Just more talk of ayylmaos.
Anyway, it’s… well, it’s something to reflect on how little others really see of the world around them. It literally just goes flying by on the highway.
Preview: This post launches us off into the “UFO Phenomenon”. The fakeness and Salem Witchiness of UFOs just makes you SMH more as we enter the (false ) Dawn of the Flying Saucer Age!
Hope you enjoyed, and thank you for reading this long one.
If I had to say there was one fundamental methodology--if you could call it that--it's that you have to have your own questions in mind then seek answers wherever and whenever you can. I would say this simple rule works strongly in two ways.
Secondarily, it shields you from a lot of disinformation. If disinfo can do nothing else, it will confuse you, distract you, and waste your time. Their basic technique is to be your good friend and take you on a wonderful and exciting ride through their narrative. And "being taken for a ride" really describes it.
If, instead, you already have questions in mind, you will either get their version of the answer or no answer. You can make a lot out of even getting no answer. If they're some expert and you think they should know and don't, likely they're not an expert but a fool or a disinfo agent.
Primarily, though, even when your questions can't be answered right away, your "radar" will be on, virtually unavoidably. You'll pick up the importance of things as they fly by, including things you were aware of before but just never recognized the significance of.
For example, I was getting ready to write up a post about Roswell. Nothing to do with witches, just problems with the chronology. Yesterday when I was looking at Stanton Friedman, I noticed his first wife's name was Porter (from the witch trials) and I identified her as his handler. A connection, but not to the event itself.
Today, researching for that Roswell post (in old paperback books, oddly enough, which I just happened to have on hand), I casually noticed the guy that loaded the "wreckage" on the bomber for transport to Carswell was Sgt. Porter. "Oh no, could it be?" Yeah, like opening the floodgates.
See, I know I've heard before Brazell lived next door to the Proctors. That's the most prominent name from the witch trials! But my consciousness had never put two and two together, in the right frame of mind, the right context.
It's not so much a methodology as something of an illustration of the old adage that "luck is when opportunity meets preparation". In this sense, I luck into everything. So yes, the next post is going to be all about Roswell and witches... lol
It's always really fresh, new thinking not seen around before, I should pick a subject and give something like that a try. The content is appreciated, I'm always interested in anything related to the UFO business. Thanks for your time!
Thanks for your support!
I forgot to mention one thing: don't be afraid to freely alter the questions in your mind on the fly. If you can come up with a "better" question, in whatever sense of the word that may be, then you have most definitely made progress. Indeed, if a disinformation operation can just get you asking the wrong questions, that's all they need.
Best of luck in your endeavors!