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Dulles, Harriman, and Bissell recruited George H.W. Bush and Jack Crichton to train Cuban terrorists to kill Castro and other leaders who threatened American interests. Kennedy, aware of the CIA's out-of-control behavior, canceled air support for the Bay of Pigs invasion, angering Sturgis. The stage was set for the Kennedy assassination, with the CIA, Mafia, military, and oil billionaires all wanting him dead. The plotters used snipers and coordinated fire to kill Kennedy, but made mistakes in the cover-up. They switched Kennedy's body with JD Tibbitt's, botched the autopsy, and silenced Oswald to prevent him from exposing the conspiracy. The plotters' incompetence and desperation led to their downfall.

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John Kennedy believed the CIA's purpose was to create new wars. Eisenhower warned against the military-industrial complex. Two months into his presidency, the military and intelligence asked Kennedy to invade Cuba, claiming it would trigger a revolution. Kennedy refused to use the US military. When the invasion failed, they asked him to send in the military, but he refused again, realizing he was being tricked. Kennedy wanted to shatter the CIA into a thousand pieces. He resisted military and intelligence pressure to enter Laos and Vietnam, limiting involvement in Vietnam to 16,000 military advisors. In October 1963, after learning 75 Americans had died in Vietnam, Kennedy ordered a total troop withdrawal. A month later, he was killed.

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Kennedy called for budget cuts of military installations and wanted to end the Cold War, cooperate with the Soviets, ban nuclear testing, refuse to invade Cuba, and withdraw from Vietnam. By 1961, some knew Kennedy wouldn't go to war in Southeast Asia. Kennedy questioned going into Vietnam when Cuba was closer, angering some military leaders who wanted to invade Cuba. Defense spending was increasing, with the defense budget going from $10 billion in 1949 to a projected $200 billion. The Kennedy brothers targeted voting districts for defense dollars. Some individuals discussed controlling intelligence from Saigon and keeping McNamara away from the situation to control Kennedy. The plan was to occur in the fall, probably in the South. Everything was singularized, with no direct orders or paper trails, ensuring plausible deniability. The goal was to succeed at any cost, ensuring the perpetrators would never be prosecuted. This was described as a coup d'etat.

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President Eisenhower warned us against the emerging military industrial complex that would turn us into an imperium. My uncle's thousand days in office were a constant fight to keep the country out of war. They tried to trick him into the Bay of Pigs invasion, but he refused to send in the military. He realized he'd been tricked and later fired those involved in the deception. They tried to get him to invade Laos, Cuba, and Berlin, but he wouldn't. In Vietnam, he only sent advisors, but when he found out about the casualties, he ordered everyone home. Thirty days after signing that order, he was murdered. Johnson then reversed the order and sent in troops. These traumas, including my uncle's death, pushed us down the road Eisenhower warned against. Today, we are the military industrial complex, and nobody believes their voices are heard in Washington. To go back to our original idealism, we must look at the original trauma and expose what happened to my uncle.

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Kennedy called for budget cuts to military installations and wanted to end the Cold War, cooperate with the Soviets on the moon race, ban nuclear testing, avoid invading Cuba, and withdraw from Vietnam. By 1961, some knew Kennedy wouldn't escalate war in Southeast Asia. Kennedy told McNamara he would pull advisers from Vietnam, angering some who felt betrayed after Laos. Kennedy questioned why they should enter Vietnam when Cuba was closer. Some believed defense contractors, oil, and bankers were involved in conversations leading to a plan, possibly in the South, where help was needed. The goal was to control intelligence from Saigon and manage McNamara's influence on Kennedy. The plan involved plausible deniability, with no direct orders or paper trails, similar to a military firing squad. The operation had to succeed at any cost, ensuring the perpetrators would never be prosecuted, characterizing it as a coup d'etat.

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Kennedy called for budget cuts affecting military installations and overseas bases. Nearly 3,000 helicopters had been lost in Vietnam, made by Bell Helicopter, which was saved from bankruptcy by the CIA. The defense budget had increased from $10 billion in 1949 to a projected $200 billion. Kennedy wanted to end the Cold War, cooperate with the Soviets, ban nuclear testing, avoid invading Cuba, and withdraw from Vietnam. By 1961, it was known Kennedy wouldn't escalate involvement in Southeast Asia. Kennedy's stance angered some, with one person saying he fucked them in Laos and was going to fuck them in Vietnam. Kennedy questioned why the US should go into Vietnam if they wouldn't go into Cuba. Defense dollars were being targeted to voting districts. Controlling intelligence from Saigon was seen as crucial, as was controlling McNamara to influence Kennedy. The plan was initiated through conversations among defense contractors, big oil bankers, and military officers. The goal was to remove Kennedy, with a plan formulated in the fall, likely in the South. The operation was structured for plausible deniability, resembling a military firing squad where no one is directly culpable. The coup d'etat had to succeed, regardless of the cost.

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Kennedy called for budget cuts to military installations and wanted to end the Cold War, cooperate with the Soviets on the moon race, ban nuclear testing, avoid invading Cuba, and withdraw from Vietnam. By 1961, some knew Kennedy wouldn't escalate war in Southeast Asia. Kennedy told McNamara he would pull advisors from Vietnam, angering some who felt betrayed after Laos. Kennedy questioned why they should enter Vietnam when Cuba was closer. Some believed defense contractors, oil, and bankers were involved in conversations that led to a plan to remove Kennedy, likely in the South. The plan involved plausible deniability, with no direct orders or paper trails, similar to a military firing squad. The goal was to succeed at any cost, ensuring the perpetrators would never be prosecuted. This was described as a coup d'etat.

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President Eisenhower warned about the military-industrial complex in his 1961 speech. He cautioned against the influence of the military and defense industry in shaping policies. An example of this influence was seen when President Kennedy ordered the withdrawal of military advisers from Vietnam in 1963, but after his assassination, President Johnson reversed the decision and escalated the war, benefiting the military financially. This led to the deployment of over 500,000 troops in Vietnam by 1968. The military profited greatly from the prolonged military presence in Vietnam, which was made possible by Kennedy's assassination.

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John F. Kennedy opposed Israel having nuclear weapons and planned to inspect their facilities. However, he was assassinated and Lyndon Johnson allowed Israel to proceed with their nuclear program in 1968. This decision was kept secret from the American public. Kennedy's stance against giving Israel nuclear weapons was seen as sensible, as he believed it should be limited to the first five countries that obtained it. Johnson's support for Israel despite their lack of assistance in the Middle East caused resentment. Kennedy's assassination was seen as a deliberate act to prevent the changes he would have brought, as he opposed colonialism and viewed Israel as an apartheid state.

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In his 1961 farewell address, President Eisenhower warned against the undue influence of the military-industrial complex. John F. Kennedy's narrow 1960 election victory ushered in a new era, but he inherited the CIA's secret war in Cuba, culminating in the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion. The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962 brought the world to the brink of nuclear war. Amidst these crises, Kennedy's administration also grappled with conflicts in Laos and Vietnam. He publicly advocated for peace, urging a re-evaluation of relations with the Soviet Union, emphasizing our shared humanity and the need for a peace not enforced by American might.

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Nixon, after a few drinks, revealed that Dallas was responsible for JFK's assassination. He admitted that both he and Lyndon Johnson wanted to be president, but Nixon wasn't willing to kill for it. This revelation inspired the speaker to write a book. They acknowledge that various theories exist, such as the CIA's involvement, as suggested by Robert Kennedy and Sam Gianconda's daughter. The speaker believes that within 84 hours of JFK's death, Johnson allowed the military-industrial complex to pursue their interests in Vietnam. Johnson also provided assurances to Alan Dulles, whom Kennedy had recently fired for betraying him.

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In 1962, the US military proposed Operation Northwoods, a plan to create fake attacks on American targets and blame them on Cuba to justify an invasion. The plan included blowing up a US ship, conducting a terror campaign on American soil, and even shooting down a civilian airliner. However, President JFK rejected the plan. The military's desperation to remove Castro from power and solve the "Cuba problem" is evident in their reckless proposal. This episode highlights the potential abuse of power and the need for checks and balances in government. The US was just one person away from a full-scale invasion, raising concerns about the government's actions and motives.

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The speakers discuss false flag operations, such as the Gulf of Tonkin, where they claim attacks were faked to initiate war. They mention Operation Northwoods, allegedly designed to provoke war with Cuba, but stopped by Kennedy. The Bay of Pigs is cited as a turning point where Kennedy realized he couldn't rely on the intelligence community and wanted to dismantle and rebuild it. Eisenhower had warned Kennedy to watch out for the CIA. Eisenhower's farewell address cautioned against the military-industrial complex, claiming that making war profitable leads to more war, a departure from America's traditionally defensive military. One speaker states that profit is where the devil does his best work.

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The Kennedy family had a long-standing feud with the CIA. Joseph Kennedy, the family patriarch, called for an end to the CIA's operations, and John and Robert Kennedy criticized the CIA's role in Vietnam. Before his assassination, John Kennedy planned to remove the clandestine services from the CIA. There were many enemies, not just from the CIA, who opposed the family. It wasn't until recently that doubts arose about who killed John Kennedy. Paul Schrade, a close friend of Robert Kennedy, believes Sirhan Sirhan did not act alone. The autopsy report and ballistic evidence suggest that Sirhan couldn't have shot John Kennedy from behind. The speaker doesn't draw any conclusions but emphasizes the importance of facts, autopsy reports, ballistic evidence, and eyewitness accounts. The involvement of the CIA or another government agency remains uncertain.

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The speaker lays out a narrative in which Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency, is intricately connected to the CIA and to a longtime insider, James Angleton. The claim is that Mossad and Angleton formed an alliance “forever,” with Angleton described as “the mole” who was aligned with Mossad. In 1960, Angleton was the head of the CIA’s Directorate of Foreign Intelligence, and he is depicted as the person who was always searching for a Russian mole. The speaker asserts that Angleton was effectively the Russian mole because of his close friendship with Mossad, to the extent that he would share information with Mossad and Mossad would not relay it to Russia. The narrative then moves to 1963, referencing David Ben-Gurion, the Israeli prime minister, arguing that Israel decided to kill John F. Kennedy. The speaker quotes Ben-Gurion as saying that Kennedy’s threats of inspections of “demonic” (interpreted as a mispronunciation or coded term for dangerous issues) were unacceptable, and that Ben-Gurion said, “It’s none of his frigging business. I don’t wanna hear anymore from Kennedy. You kill him.” According to the speaker, Ben-Gurion issued this order to Mossad and then resigned so he could not be held responsible for it. The implication is that Mossad then went to Angleton, implying that the Kennedy assassination was not a CIA job, but was “greased by the CIA” because Angleton had his connections at Mossad. From there, the speaker claims that Corsican sharpshooters were hired by Mossad for the Kennedy assassination as part of a larger operation at Dealey Plaza, including the escape. The speaker asserts that public suspicion has misattributed the blame to the mob, Lyndon Johnson, or Castro, but maintains that it was Israel that carried it out. The stated motive is tied to Israel’s desire to avoid further inspections related to their nuclear program. The speaker claims this is connected to Israel’s nuclear and biological capabilities and asserts that plutonium was stolen from the United States to support their program. In summary, the speaker contends that the Kennedy assassination was orchestrated not by the CIA alone, but through a coordinated effort involving Mossad, James Angleton, and David Ben-Gurion, with Israel acting to prevent scrutiny of its nuclear activities by eliminating Kennedy, aided by Corsican shooters and a CIA-Mossad alliance.

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Kennedy was seen as a privileged president planning to disarm nuclear warheads. The speaker, with inside knowledge from Jesuit headquarters, discusses details of the assassination team and Watergate. Deep Throat, revealed as Mark Felt, guided Woodward to follow the money to Nixon's involvement in Watergate. The CIA head, McCone, was kept in the dark.

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In 1962, the US military proposed Operation Northwoods, a plan to create fake attacks on American targets and blame them on Cuba to justify an invasion. The plan included blowing up a US ship, conducting a terror campaign on American soil, and even shooting down a civilian airliner. However, President JFK rejected the plan. The military's desperation to remove Castro from power and solve the "Cuba problem" is evident in their reckless proposal. This episode highlights the potential abuse of power and the need for checks and balances in the government. The US was just one person away from executing this operation, raising concerns about the government's ability to repeat such actions if the circumstances align.

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My uncle, President Kennedy, resisted pressure from the military and intelligence to start wars, including the invasion of Cuba. He refused to send combat troops to Vietnam, only allowing military advisers. After learning of American casualties, he ordered all troops out of Vietnam, but tragically, he was assassinated a month later. Kennedy's presidency was marked by his conflict with the military and intelligence apparatus, culminating in his efforts to end US involvement in Vietnam.

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Checklist for summary approach: - Identify and preserve central claim: Operation Northwoods as a 1962 plan by top U.S. military leaders to stage terrorist acts in the U.S. - List the specific proposed actions exactly as described: shoot down planes, drown refugees, bomb Miami, attack Washington, remote-controlled aircraft, fake passenger lists. - Note the stated purpose: to justify invading Cuba and to maximize emotional impact on the American public. - Highlight key decision point and outcome: Kennedy refused to sign; one signature stood between approval and mass murder by the U.S. government. - Mention declassification detail: documents remained buried for forty years before revealing how close the U.S. came to state-sponsored terrorism. - Maintain factual sequence and avoid evaluative or opinionated language. - Translate any non-English elements (not applicable here). Summary: In 1962, America's top generals approved Operation Northwoods, a classified CIA proposal that would stage fake terrorist attacks across the United States. The plan, described as something the Joint Chiefs of Staff signed off on “every horrific detail,” envisioned a series of provocations intended to be laid at the feet of Cuba. The scope included shooting down passenger planes filled with innocent Americans and then blaming Cuba for the massacres, with the aim of generating public outrage that could be used to justify a U.S. invasion. The proposed targets spanned major locations and events: Miami would be bombed; Washington, D.C. would face coordinated terrorist strikes; and Cuban refugees fleeing to America would be deliberately drowned at sea, their deaths used as propaganda to sway opinion. The plan also called for remote-controlled aircraft to crash into buildings, while fake passenger lists would be released to the press to lend credibility to the staged events. In addition to these acts, the military calculated exactly how many civilians would need to die to justify invading Cuba, with each attack designed for maximum emotional impact on the American public. The overarching intent was to manufacture a pretext for intervention through carefully orchestrated acts of terror on U.S. soil. President John F. Kennedy read the proposal and refused to sign it, with “one signature” standing between approval and the mass murder of American citizens by their own government. The documents stayed buried for forty years until declassification revealed how close the United States came to state-sponsored terrorism.

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Uncle John Kennedy understood the CIA's purpose was to create new wars. Eisenhower warned against the military-industrial complex. Two months after his inauguration, the military and intelligence approached Kennedy about invading Cuba, but he refused, stating the U.S. shouldn't dictate other countries' governments. Despite Kennedy's refusal to use the U.S. military, the Bay of Pigs invasion proceeded. When the operation failed and military intervention was requested, Kennedy again refused, realizing he had been deceived. He then wanted to shatter the CIA into a thousand pieces. During his presidency, Kennedy resisted military and intelligence pressures to enter Laos and Vietnam. He sent military advisors to Vietnam but refused to deploy 250,000 combat troops. After learning that 75 Americans had died, Kennedy ordered all U.S. troops out of Vietnam in October 1963. A month later, he was killed.

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Kennedy called for budget cuts to military installations and wanted to end the Cold War, cooperate with the Soviets on the moon race, ban nuclear testing, avoid invading Cuba, and withdraw from Vietnam. By 1961, some knew Kennedy wouldn't escalate war in Southeast Asia. Kennedy told McNamara he would pull advisors from Vietnam, angering some who felt betrayed after Laos. Kennedy questioned why the US should go into Vietnam if Cuba was too close, leading to conflict. Defense spending was escalating, with projections of nearly $200 billion spent since the war began. The Kennedy brothers allegedly targeted voting districts with defense contracts to influence the '64 election. Some wanted to control intelligence from Saigon and manage McNamara's influence on Kennedy. The plan may have started with conversations among defense contractors, big oil bankers, and military officers. The goal was to create a plan, likely in the South, with no direct orders or written evidence, ensuring plausible deniability. The operation had to succeed, regardless of the cost, with perpetrators protected from prosecution. This was described as a coup d'etat.

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Following the Bay of Pigs in 1961, JFK and the CIA were at war. JFK advisor Arthur Schlesinger wrote a memo detailing the CIA's covert actions and paramilitary warfare. Kennedy was preparing for a major shakeup of the CIA. JFK fired Alan Dulles, the head of the CIA. Kennedy also went after how the CIA financed their operations. The International Cooperation Administration (ICA) was the financial arm that funded foreign assistance and non-military security programs. It was accused of being a CIA cutout. The ICA was replaced by USAID. Questioning history is important, and one should always ask questions and question everything.

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Secrecy is repugnant in a free society. The assassination of President Kennedy occurred at 1 PM CST. We must overcome societal divisions – racial, economic, etc. – and work together. The assassinations of both Kennedy brothers are acknowledged. The dangers of excessive concealment outweigh the justifications for it. We must not let the need for security be used to expand censorship. The CIA’s purpose was creating constant wars for the military-industrial complex. Many Americans distrust the Warren Commission report. We must protect our freedoms; they are coming after us. No official should use my words as an excuse to censor, stifle dissent, or withhold facts. Some media push personal agendas, threatening our democracy. We seek a true peace, not one enforced by American weapons; we all share this planet and our children’s future.

American Alchemy

UFOs & JFK: He Knew Too Much! (Ft. Danny Sheehan)
Guests: Danny Sheehan
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The episode opens with the JFK files release, as the National Archives unseals thousands of declassified records—roughly 80,000 pages—stirring questions about who killed Kennedy and who bears responsibility. The host asks pointed questions, but the guest declines to name individuals, saying he will not finger someone in a case like this. He notes motorcade images, including a radio man and others with a Cuban presence near the umbrella man, and argues Oswald is connected to these figures. He contends this is a byproduct of deception, insisting it was set up by the highest levels and that the plan has endured for 62 years. The conversation then pivots to the JFK/Oswald nexus and alleged covert networks. The guest offers a sweeping account of Oswald’s ties to figures on the grass and at Delhi Plaza, Rip Robertson, and Ed Landsdale, arguing the assassination was orchestrated rather than performed by a lone gunman. He frames the release as exposing a long history of deception and maintains Oswald’s links imply a broader operation. He claims the JFK research community has cracked the case and casts Priscilla McMillan as a CIA asset, arguing sources were steered and monitored to shape the narrative. He outlines a chronology beginning in 1960 with covert operations tied to Cuba and China, moving toward plots against Castro and Che Guevara, and culminating in the frame for JFK’s death. He depicts an intricate web—the 5412 committee, S force, Cuban exile networks—funded by heroin profits and run through fronts and bases from Florida to Oaxaca, designed to preserve anti-communist leverage. He also names Howard Hughes, Johnny Roselli, and Santos Trafocanti, along with shadowy funding routes ferrying money through casinos, banks, and offshore accounts to support covert teams. The Bay of Pigs episode and the broader Cold War loom large. The guest recounts Kennedy’s refusal to provide air cover, the Bay of Pigs fiasco, and Khrushchev’s missile crisis that followed. He describes Kennedy’s public apology to Khrushchev and his private moves toward de‑escalation, including proposals for joint projects and a move to dismantle arsenals. He mentions secret Kennedy–Khrushchev letters brokered by Norman Cousins, with Pope John XXIII floated as a possible overseer. He notes tensions at JM Wave and CIA maneuvering, and the persistence of anti‑communist aims despite orders to stand down. He closes this section with Kennedy’s push for denuclearization and the influence of the China lobby. UFOs and the intelligence‑military complex feature next. The guest touches Kennedy’s interest in UFOs, briefings with top officials, and alleged ties between agencies and fringe groups, including remote viewing researchers and the Stargate program. He references live alien encounter rumors at S4 and Area 51, and notes the involvement of elements tied to the Church, the DIA, and MK‑ULTRA analogies, while acknowledging that much remains contested and secretive. Discussion hints at ongoing disclosure politics and the need for transparency within national security constraints.

Johnny Harris

The Operation Northwoods Conspiracy, Explained
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On 03/13/1962, the Joint Chiefs of Staff proposed Operation Northwoods, a plan to stage attacks on American targets and blame Cuba to justify military intervention. This included fake hijackings, bombings, and even a terror campaign on U.S. soil. JFK rejected the plan, highlighting a rift between him and military leaders, who remained intent on removing Castro.
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