TL;DR: Whatever your opinion concerning the real or fake gunning down of CEOs, just be aware that in the case of Luigi Mangione, a stunning number of people named Parker are involved.
For the record, I thought the whole thing was both phony and unimportant from the very beginning. Frankly, I was determined not to waste any time looking into it. Just today, though, I was listening to the latest episode of the podcast, “Tin Foil Hat with Sam Tripoli”:
#844: 39 Days To Melee and The Sky Wars With Top Lobsta, Raven and Mark Steeves (12/17/2024)
I personally recommend that after you read this post, you should actually force yourself to listen to that whole podcast. The reason is that as you do, you’ll be able to study and analyze the typical kind of disinformation being peddled by persons like “Raven” and “Top Lobsta” of the “Nephilim Deathsquad”. “Mystic Mark” Steeves, who is actually the booker for the show, is along for the ride, having discovered the great value of their insights on this incident. Seriously, see how long you can put up with it.
You see, I think conspiracy theorists have the idea that disinformation is carefully crafted after long experimentation in the MKULTRA basement labs. Sometimes, maybe, but it’s generally hardly necessary. It’s all stark raving bullshit being handed out by this crew. The key, though, is the format. Sam and the gang are bro-ing down with their good bros, who are blowing their minds with this banger of bangers.
These guys are complete clowns, of course, but Sam is lapping it up. If it never crosses your mind that your “bros” might be handing you a line of bullshit, there’s basically zero chance you will ever recognize it. My God, they even discuss the “work” of Clif High, clown prince of all clowns, as if there was something real about it.
What a rant, huh? So why would I say this? Let’s dive in and we’ll try to see what we are not supposed to notice right in front of us, while Nephilim Deathsquad and every other lame sideshow act are polluting all podcasts with their deep research. Perhaps we should start slow and set the tone. Check out this latest story:
Luigi Mangione began plotting to ‘wack’ Brian Thompson as early as August, investigators say (New York Post 12/19/2024)
Well, not the story, but the pictures. Compare the two stills of Luigi walking in front of the big crowd of cops. It’s a real mess, and beyond the typical problems with shadows, contrast, and sharpness. Subjects are appearing and disappearing, and even changing heights. Just imagine that these are heads and bodies sloppily pasted one over the other. You’ll see it. More subtly, notice that in that big crowd, not one person is visibly in contact with any other person.
So that alone shows (literally) the fraud, and there’s always the meta-point: notice how little people notice of the world around them. No one else sees this? Really? That being said, who are the fraudsters? Well, did you notice in the article who’s running the show? Judge Katharine Parker.
I hope at this point I don’t have to reintroduce the family of generational Satanists that have been running psyops on us for centuries. I suppose this is the most blatant episode I’ve yet seen. Personally I can’t even figure out what the point of it was, but here it is presented to us.
We’ll come back to Judge Parker. Maybe she’s just a judge named Parker, right? She isn’t the one I first noticed, anyway. Again, as much as I tried to avoid this story, mention of this other key person came up in the TFH podcast:
Who is Nancy Parker? McDonald's employee who allegedly turned in Luigi Mangione reportedly misses out on reward money (Sportskeeda 12/12/2024)
Indeed, who is Nancy Parker? I suppose we’re discussing just what you need to know about Ms. Parker right now, aren’t we? Now, here are a few others I just happened on by-the-by, and you can decide for yourself how many Parkers is too many Parkers telling us what to think about this story.
Jessica Parker of the British Brainwashing Corporation vividly paints the scene according to “Larry” (maybe Larry Parker, eh?):
McDonald's customer recounts moment CEO shooting suspect spotted (BBC 12/10/2024)
Star Parker validates those of us who desire to hold the view that Luigi did nothing wrong. You can also read her bio to decide who, if anyone, is in the woodpile:
Star Parker: Did Luigi Mangione murder because of 'emotional disturbance'? (Daily News-Record [Harrisonburg VA] 12/19/2024)
We also get to hear from Nicole Parker, a voice from the most trustworthy of American institutions telling us that, in her expert opinion, there’s nothing to see here:
Former FBI special agent Nicole Parker: 'Not shocked' Luigi Mangione was not a client of UnitedHealthcare (Noticias Fox 12/13/2024) (<-- bizarrely this was only on the Spanish-language version of the site)
Now as we return to the judge, the waters get deep. They gave me the tiniest crumb but it was enough:
Biography of Hon. Katharine H. Parker, United States District Court, Southern District of New York, United States Magistrate Judge (Practising Law Institute)
Judge Parker clerked for the Honorable Warren W. Eginton in the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut prior to joining Proskauer.
He’s actually prominent enough to have his own wiki page: Warren William Eginton. I note Warren is another of the Spook Families and is closely linked to the Parkers. For example, check out this quick historical quote:
Chelmsford and the Battles of Lexington and Concord
2 Captain Joseph Warren fired the Alarm Gun to notify the Minutemen and Militia to muster.
3 The Chelmsford Militia Companies were led by Captain Oliver Barren and Captain Moses Parker.
Right on scene but just outside the spotlight of history, you see? I suspect that, in the typical style of the Elites, “Warren” is his middle name and reflects his mother’s bloodline.
In any case, they admit he died a few years back in Redding, Connecticut. Who cares? I do. Right on that page, they tell us that the name of the town was originally “Reading”, and it was named after the town of Reading in Berkshire, England.
That, in my opinion, goes some way to explaining how this circus ended up in Pennsylvania. I had been unable to avoid hearing that factoid and it struck me as odd. Luigi had made it out of the big city full of cops, to the boonies of Altoona, and that’s where he gets dimed? Really?
Well, it turns out that there’s a Reading, Pennsylvania. Right on that page they admit that town also is named after Reading in Berkshire. Something about Reading, huh? But wait, there’s more!
The one that I was familiar with, which popped into my mind when I saw where Eginton had died, was Reading, Massachusetts. Right on the page they admit that—third time’s a charm—that town too was named after Reading in Berkshire.
Finally, the punchline: Guess who founded and named that initial American version? Thomas Parker (1609-1683).
See, I told you They had been at this a long time.
Thanks for doing the math. After seeing the result, instead of "very unusual", I should have went with "extraordinarily unlikely". Sheesh!
Actually, had this been the first time I'd ever encountered the Parkers, it really would have been a head-scratcher. Like, "Jesus, are those Simulation Theory jabronis right after all?"
Thanks for the support!