conspiracy

you can never trust the government

Roswell

Sometime in the first week of July, 1947, an unidentified device crashed near Corona, N.M., during a violent thunderstorm. While out checking his sheep the next day, rancher Mac Brazel discovered a considerable amount of debris in one of his pastures. The device or craft gouged a shallow scar of several hundred feet long and debris was scattered over a large area.


Unnerved by the strange properties some debris consisted of, Mac Brazel showed his neighbors, the Proctors and then contacted the sheriff, George Wilcox. Sheriff Wilcox notified authorities at the Roswell Army Air Field and himself proceed to investigate the wreckage. Shortly after becoming involved, the Army closed off the area for several days and denied access to anyone, including the sheriff's department.


On the morning of July 8, 1947, Colonel Blanchard, Commander of the 509th Bomb Group, issued a press release stating that the wreckage of a Unidentified Flying Object had be recovered. The press release was released in time to make headlines in over half of the U.S.


Within hours, a second press release was issued from the office of General Roger Ramey, Commander of the Eighth Air Force at Fort Worth Army Airfield in Texas. It revoked the first press release and, in effect, claimed that Colonel Blanchard and his officers made a foolish mistake and somehow incorrectly identified a weather balloon and its radar reflector as the wreckage of a UFO.

the tuskagee study

In 1972, Jean Heller, a journalist, broke the story of a modern day Nuremburg occuring in America. In 1932 the Public Health Service (PHS) promises 400 men - all residents of Macon County, Alabama free treatment for "Bad Blood" also known as syphilis. They were all poor; 600 African-American males without much knowledge of their rights. They were told that the treatments would heal them, and that would be able to go on with their lives.


Little did they know. The Tuskagee Study lasted four decades, until 1972, and had little to do with treatment. It was, in fact, to study the long term effects of syphillis. The subjects were 600 Black males, 399 experimentals and 201 controls, the PHS directors and most of the doctors were white. Could the study possibly be racial genocide, planned and executed?

HAARP

The government wants us to believe their are no conspiracies. If you ever have any free time try to dig something up about HAARP. Go ahead try, more than likely you will run into mostly restricted areas. If there really are no conspiracies then what is it that needs to be hidden? Think about that.

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