Black Hand* – Captains or journeymen of livery companies with "Licenses to Kill, Extort and Bribe" namely City of London Honourable Artillery Company 1527, Master Mariners and Air Pilots 1929 and Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company of Massachusetts 1638 whose alumni include U.S. Presidents James Monroe, James Garfield, Calvin Coolidge and John F. Kennedy and whose incumbent may well prove to be Barack Hussein Obama.
McConnell claims that the late homosexual pedophile Lt. Col. Edward Heath, the former Black Hand commander of the Honourable Artillery Company, outsourced the operation of the U.K.'s four-minute warning system to Serco/Telstar in 1962 and gave his Black Hand cronies the opportunity to extort governments by switching bogus threats of a nuclear attack to imputed orders to stand down defenses against conventional crimes including assassinations and mass murders.
McConnell claims that Lt. Col. Heath authorized Black Hand captains and journeymen to use the Serco-Telstar four-minute warning system to coordinate the JFK sniper team and alleges that Heath continued to extort concessions from the American government until his death in 2005 by outsourcing Skynet – the Telstar successor – to Serco operatives for the East Africa bombings.
John F Kennedy Speech Warning of Secret Societies
And Global Conspiracy
"This is a portion of the speech that President John F. Kennedy gave at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel on April 27, 1961. "The President and the Press" before the American Newspaper Publishers Association. .. 'For we are opposed around the world by a monolithic and ruthless conspiracy that relies on covert means for expanding its sphere of influence--on infiltration instead of invasion, on subversion instead of elections, on intimidation instead of free choice, on guerrillas by night instead of armies by day. It is a system which has conscripted vast human and material resources into the building of a tightly knit, highly efficient machine that combines military, diplomatic, intelligence, economic, scientific and political operations. Its preparations are concealed, not published. Its mistakes are buried not headlined. Its dissenters are silenced, not praised. No expenditure is questioned, no rumor is printed, no secret is revealed.'"
McConnell invites rebuttal of his allegation that Serco (RCA GB) operatives re-configured the U.K.'s four-minute warning system for the Black Hand captains or journeymen who used Telstar to coordinate the JFK murder in Dallas in 1963 and Skynet to synchronise the 1998 East Africa Embassy bombings.
Prequel 1: #2238: Marine Links JFK 4-Minute Warning To Serco Black Hand Journeymen, Sniper Team Edward Heath
EXPOSED! Former [Blackmailed] Prime Minister
Implicated In Murder, Rape And Pedophilia
In Saviles Pedo-Ring
August 7, 1998 When Osama Attacked East Africa
Telstar - The Satellite and the Music
JFK'S ASSASSINATION (NBC-TV COVERAGE)
(PART 1)
JFK Assassination: As it Happened - NBC News Break
November 22, 1963: WBAP-TV
LEE HARVEY OSWALD IS SHOT
(NBC-TV FOOTAGE)
Serco... Would you like to know more?
"Ted Heath: The Cottaging Paedophile and Child Killer
Friday, January 25,
2013 12:33
He led the Tories to a
surprise General Election victory over Labour, took Britain into Europe and
lost power after failing to beat the unions over the three-day week.
But Sir Edward Heath might never have had a stint in 10 Downing Street had he not heeded advice to stop ‘cottaging’ for gay sex.
For he was warned in
the 1950s that cruising for homosexual encounters could destroy his political
career. Sir Edward, a lifelong bachelor who died in 2005, always refused to
comment on his sexuality.
But Brian Coleman, a
senior Tory member of the London Assembly, has claimed the ex-Prime Minister
had actively sought gay sex in public places.He said it was ‘common knowledge’
among Conservatives that Sir Edward had been given a stern warning by police
when he underwent background checks for the for the post of Privy Councillor
[from which position he allegedly outsourced the four-minute warning system to
Serco – then RCA GB 1928].
In an internet article for the New Stateman magazine, Mr Coleman claimed that gay men had run the Conservative Party in the capital for years, whether as officials, councillors or volunteers. Evening Standard
One of the things we are all starting to learn recently is that ‘gay’
is Tory code for paedophile. The
last sentence has been highlighted because those who have seen the Mary Moss
documents will have already realised that there were an awfully large number of
Conservative paedophiles who were not only members of parliament but also of
the old GLC and local councils.
It would be great if genuine homosexuals would publicly distance themselves from these paedophiles. At the moment they [Obama?] are being used to shield these men.”
"SERCO has come a long way since the 1960s when it ran the 'four-minute
warning' system to alert the nation to a ballistic missile attack.
Today its £10.3bn
order book is bigger than many countries' defence budgets. It is bidding for a
further £8bn worth of contracts and sees £16bn of 'opportunities'.
Profit growth is less ballistic. The first-half pre-tax surplus rose 4% to £28.1m, net profits just 1% to £18m. Stripping out goodwill, the rise was 17%, with dividends up 12.5% to 0.81p.
Serco runs the [Skynet Military-Satellite Communications Network with Airbus,] Docklands Light Railway, five UK prisons, airport radar and forest bulldozers in Florida.
Chairman Kevin Beeston said: 'We have virtually no debt and more than 600 contracts.'
The shares, 672p four
years ago, rose 8 1/4p to 207 1/4p, valuing Serco at £880m or nearly 17 times
earnings.
Michael Morris, at broker Arbuthnot, says they are 'a play on UK government spend' which is rising fast.”
"1962: from the A-bomb to Z-cars
1962 was a year of breaks with the past, of seismic cultural changes
and the threat of mutually assured destruction
It had been an
unbelievable train of events that was all too real. The British ambassador, our
man in Havana, sent a dispatch reporting events on the ground to the foreign
secretary, Lord Home: "My Lord… I doubt whether a month ago any reputable
publisher would have given a moment's consideration to a story in which Soviet
Russia was to be credited with shipping some four dozen assorted giant
missiles, each one longer than a cricket pitch, across the Atlantic…"
Fantasy and reality inform each other, and intertwine. Ian Fleming wrote as he did because of his wartime experiences in secret operations. Kennedy’s misguided support of the ludicrous and hopeless attempt by exiles to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs early in 1961 had brought a spike in Fleming’s book sales – the threat of real trouble stimulating the appetite for fantasy. One US advertisement for a Bond book, under the caption “an increase in tension", showed the White House with a single upstairs light on, and the words, “You can bet he’s reading one of those Ian Fleming thrillers." When the film of Dr No was released in America in 1963, Kennedy demanded an early screening at the White House. On the night before he was assassinated, Kennedy is said to have been reading a Bond novel, and so was his killer, Lee Harvey Oswald.
The Cuban missile crisis confronted us with the threat of total destruction and, after that, things never seemed quite so frightening again. Just as well. The advice the government gave out from time to time about what to do in the event of nuclear attack made it even more evident that there was nothing to be done. Captain Mainwaring v Hitler would have been an even battle by comparison. They recommended putting brown paper over the windows and getting under the table. We were told there would be a four-minute warning in the event of attack.
Four minutes didn't seem very long. In 1960, Peter Cook, impersonating the prime minister, Harold Macmillan, said to critics of civil defence: “I would remind them there are some people in this great country of ours who can run a mile in four minutes."
The arrival of Bond
and the Beatles seems now to have coincided with many other things that
signalled the start of a different Britain. In 1962 That Was The Week That Was
came on television, satirising our leaders for the amusement of the citizenry –
not the sort of thing previously certified by the BBC. By then John Stephen had
four boutiques on Carnaby Street, signalling the start of young men's escape
from the hegemony of Burton the tailor. The Rolling Stones, the Beatles'
naughtier cousins, played their first gig at the Marquee club in Soho.
More significantly, the Lord Privy Seal, Edward Heath, spent the year trying to negotiate Britain's tortuous way into the Common Market ("We celebrate the greatest event of modern times," said General de Gaulle, "the friendship between the French and German peoples". That’ll be a non then). And far more life-changing than any of these, the previous December, the minister of health, Enoch Powell, announced that the oral contraceptive pill could be prescribed on the NHS at the subsidised price of two shillings a month."
"The 1998 United States embassy bombings were a series of attacks that occurred on August 7, 1998, in which hundreds of people were killed in simultaneous truck bomb explosions at the embassies of the United States in the Southeast African cities of Dar es Salaam and Nairobi. The date of the bombings marked the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American forces in Saudi Arabia.[1]
The attacks, which
were linked to local members of the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, broughtOsama
bin Laden and Ayman
al-Zawahiri—and their terrorist organisation al-Qaeda—to the
attention of the American public for the first time, and resulted in the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
placing bin Laden on its ten most-wanted fugitives list.
The FBI also connected the attack to Azerbaijan,
as 60 calls regarding the strike were placed via satellite phone by bin Laden
to associates in the country's capital Baku.[2] Fazul Abdullah Mohammed and Abdullah Ahmed Abdullah were credited
for being the masterminds behind the bombings.[3][4][5]
The bombings are widely believed to have been revenge for American involvement in the extradition, and alleged torture, of four members of Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) who had been arrested in Albania in the two months prior to the attacks.[6] Between June and July, Ahmad Isma'il 'Uthman Saleh, Ahmad Ibrahim al-Sayyid al-Naggar, Shawqi Salama Mustafa Atiya and Mohamed Hassan Tita were all renditioned from Albania to Egypt, with the co-operation of the United States; the four men were accused of participating in the assassination of Rifaat el-Mahgoub, as well as a later plot against the Khan el-Khalili market in Cairo.[7] The following month, a communique was issued warning the United States that a "response" was being prepared to repay them for their interference.[8][9]
A Nissan Atlas truck, similar to that used in Dar es-Salaam
According to journalist Lawrence
Wright, the Nairobi operation was named after the Holy Kaabain Mecca; the Dar es
Salaam bombing was called Operation al-Aqsa in
Jerusalem, but "neither had an obvious connection to the American
embassies in Africa. Bin Laden initially said that the sites had been targeted
because of the 'invasion' of Somalia; then he described an American plan to
partition Sudan, which he said was hatched in the embassy in Nairobi. He also
told his followers that the genocide
in Rwanda had been planned inside the two American embassies."[citation needed] Wright concludes
that bin Laden's actual goal was "to lure the United States into Afghanistan,
which had long been called 'The Graveyard of Empires.'"[10]
In May 1998, a villa in Nairobi was purchased by one of the bombers to enable a bomb to be built in the garage. Sheikh Ahmed Salim Swedan purchased a beige Toyota Dyna truck in Nairobi and a 1987 Nissan Atlas refrigeration truck in Dar es Salaam. Six metal bars were used to form a "cage" on the back of the Atlas to accommodate the bomb.[11]
In June 1998, KK Mohamed rented House 213 in the Illala district of Dar es Salaam, about four miles (6 km) from the US Embassy. A white Suzuki Samurai was used to haul bomb components hidden in rice sacks, from House 213.[citation needed]
In both Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, Mohammed Odeh supervised construction of two very large, 900 kg destructive devices. The Nairobi bomb was made of 400 to 500 cylinders of TNT (about the size of soda cans), ammonium nitrate, aluminum powder and detonating cord. The explosives were packed into some twenty specially designed wooden crates that were sealed and then placed in the bed of the trucks. Muhsin Musa Matwalli Atwah ran a wire from the bomb to a set of batteries in the back of the truck cab and then to a detonator switch beneath the dashboard.[11] The Dar es Salaam bomb was of slightly different construction: the TNT was attached to fifteen oxygentanks and gas canisters, and was surrounded with four bags of ammonium nitrate fertiliser and some sand bags to tamp and direct the blast.[12]
The bombings were
scheduled for August 7, the eighth anniversary of the arrival of American
troops in Saudi Arabia, likely a choice byOsama
bin Laden.[13]”
"The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) is an American commercial broadcast television and radio network. It is headquartered in the GE Building in New York City's Rockefeller Center, with additional major offices near Los Angeles and in Chicago. NBC is sometimes referred to as the "Peacock Network", due to its stylized peacock logo, which was originally created for its color broadcasts.
Formed in 1926 by
the Radio
Corporation of America (RCA),
NBC is the oldest major broadcast network in the United States. In 1986,
control of NBC passed to General Electric (GE), with GE's $6.4 billion purchase of
RCA, which would eventually be sold to Thomson SA, who currently licenses it to various consumer electronics
manufacturers, such as Audiovox, as a brand name for their products. GE had previously owned RCA and NBC until
1930, when it had been forced to sell the company as a result of antitrust charges."
"Telstar 1 relayed its first, and non-public, television pictures—a flag outside Andover Earth Station—to Pleumeur-Bodou on July 11, 1962.[6] Almost two weeks later, on July 23, at 3:00 p.m. EDT, it relayed the first publicly available live transatlantic television signal.[7] The broadcast was made possible in Europe by Eurovision and in North America by NBC, CBS, ABC, and the CBC.[7] The first public broadcast featured CBS's Walter Cronkite and NBC's Chet Huntley in New York, and the BBC's Richard Dimbleby in Brussels.[7] The first pictures were the Statue of Liberty in New York and the Eiffel Tower in Paris.[7] The first broadcast was to have been remarks by President John F. Kennedy, but the signal was acquired before the president was ready, so the lead-in time was filled with a short segment of a televised game between the Philadelphia Philliesand the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field.[7][8][9] The batter, Tony Taylor, was seen hitting a ball pitched by Cal Koonce to the right fielder George Altman. From there, the video switched first to Washington, DC; then to Cape Canaveral, Florida; to the Seattle World's Fair; then to Quebec and finally to Stratford, Ontario.[7] The Washington segment included remarks by President Kennedy,[8] talking about the price of the American dollar, which was causing concern in Europe.[7][10]
During that evening, Telstar 1 also relayed the first telephone call to be transmitted through space, and it successfully transmitted faxes, data, and both live and taped television, including the first live transmission of television across an ocean from Andover, Maine, US to Goonhilly Downs, England and Pleumeur-Bodou, France. [11][clarification needed] (An experimental passive
Telstar 1, which had ushered in a new age of the commercial use of technology, became a victim of technology during the Cold War. The day before Telstar 1 was launched, the United States had tested a high-altitude nuclear bomb (called Starfish Prime) which energized the Earth's Van Allen Belt where Telstar 1 went into orbit. This vast increase in radiation, combined with subsequent high-altitude blasts, including a Soviet test in October, overwhelmed Telstar's fragile transistors; [13][14][15] it went out of service in November 1962, after handling over 400 telephone, telegraph, facsimile and television transmissions.[8] It was restarted by a workaround in early January 1963.[16] The additional radiation associated with its return to full sunlight[clarification needed] once again caused a transistor failure, this time irreparably [a lie], and Telstar 1 went out of service on February 21, 1963.
Experiments continued, and by 1964, two Telstars, two Relay units (from RCA [in U.K. became Serco which now operates NPL cesium clock for spot-fixed contract hits]), and two Syncom units (from the Hughes Aircraft Company) had operated successfully in space. Syncom 2 was the first geosynchronous satellite and its successor, Syncom 3, broadcast pictures from the 1964 Summer Olympics. The first commercial geosynchronous satellite was Intelsat I ("Early Bird") launched in 1965."
"July, 1964 PRACTICAL TELEVISION
A MONTHLY COMMENTARY
Underneath the Dipole
BY1CONOS
WHEN one considers the enormous television communication distances covered by Telstar and the other satellites circling around the earth, the differences in distance between London, Paris, U.S.A. and Japan seem relatively small. None the less, the first of the relays from Japan to England, via the French receiving station and, of course, Telstar, was an exciting event.
Variable in quality, particularly when views from a helicopter were used, the interview with the President of Japan and others came over quite well and followed the usual opening pattern of references to "hands across the sea ", etc. This reminds one of similar speeches made in U.S.A. when the first TV pictures came here via Telstar. One of the interesting consequences of the special facilities required by the Post Office to get the signals from the English receiving station at Goonhilly Down, Cornwall, to London has been the reverse combination of microwave links between Goonhilly and Bristol which have been contributed partly by the five repeater links and aerial towers used in the south-westerly direction to Westward Television, whose studio is at Plymouth. By injecting a signal from Plymouth to the repeater station just north of that city West Country newsreel items can be sent up to Independent Television News at short notice, and it is possible in the same way to supply to the network special local items or programmes of general interest.
Independent Television News has installed three RCA television tape recording equipments which can be used for pre- recording news items from any part of the ITA network, to which can be added greetings from U.S.A., Japan and almost every television-minded country in the world — if the Post Office provide the appropriate links via coaxial lines, microwave transmitters and repeater stations and, of course, satellites circling around the earth, including Telstars and Syncoms. Whether viewers will be comfortably in bed or at work in the morning is a moot point when considering the precise time when special events are taking place at the Olympic Games in Tokyo. The resultant picture could be taped for later transmissions, of course, but there may be occasions when filmed recordings can be sent all or part of the way to suit the transmission times in Britain."
Yours sincerely,
Field McConnell, United States Naval Academy, 1971; Forensic Economist; 30 year airline and 22 year military pilot; 23,000 hours of safety; Tel: 715 307 8222
David Hawkins Tel: 604 542-0891 Forensic Economist; former leader of oil-well blow-out teams; now sponsors Grand Juries in CSI Crime and Safety Investigation
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