another bob
14th November 2011, 18:14
Greetings, Friends!
Found this interesting bit over at George Ure's UrbanSurvival Blog today:
"We have been chatting a bit about the work of Anatoly Fomenko recently. He's the Russian scientist who has been piecing together how much of what we think of as "conventional history" is likely not as old as we'd like to think. I've only gotten through the first of the four volumes of his work, but already a clear pattern has emerged that a lot of "historical dudes" - such as Plato - may have been constructs put together in the Middle Ages in order to "create history" which would be acceptable to the folks who were then the PowersThatBe.
Fast forward to CoastToCoast AM and John B. Wells' interview last night with Douglas Dietrich, who was a Department of Defense research librarian for almost 10-years. An amazing series of revelations about nuclear weapons in WWII!
What? you thought only America had nuclear weapons? Sorry, you missed reality. According to Dietrich's work (based on documents within DoD but not widely known in military historical circles, Germany had nuclear weapons and actually used one up in the area around Northeast of Germany in the Latvia/ Estonia area to halt a Russian advance from the north.
OK, you're thinking, why didn't Germany win WWII? Well, turns out that according to his research, if I followed the whole flow of it, Dietrich says Erwin Rommel (the "Desert Fox") had planned to use tactical nuclear weapons on Allied forces at Normandy. BUT Hitler said no to the plan because the Germans understood the biological risks and Hitler wasn't going to put the "purity" of the Aryan race in jeopardy.
So what followed was the famed (and foiled) plot against Hitler which has been memorialized in movies and books. But the backstory seems to be that the Plot was hatched because Rommel and his coconspirators we so angry that Hitler wouldn't use the one tool which could have laid waste to the Allies.
Oh, noted Dietrich, talking to Wells: That's why Geiger counters were carried by Allied invasion forces at Normandy.
The rest of the interview was just as compelling (based on historical documents from DoD after all), including the assertion that the US actually deliberately triggered the war with Japan by sending B-24'as driven by American Flying Tigers to bomb Japanese soil a full five months before Pearl Harbor.
The research is compelling... and to a student of military history, the US and Japan did not sign a surrender document on VJ-Day as most of the American public was led to believe - a myth perpetrated by the "approved" historical documents and texts.
Seems history is coming down around our ears - thanks in large part to the internet and serious academics like Fomenko and the Russians involved in the new Critical Thought Movement as well as now, with Dietrich's work, a vastly different version of World War II.
Wells' closing quote to ponder was Truman's Maraschino cherry:
The only thing new in the world is the history you don't know.
~As quoted in Plain Speaking : An Oral Biography of Harry S Truman (1974) by Merle Miller, p. 26
And that, boys and girls, is why we don't speak German and why the war with Japan dragged out to 1951 and why the first Japanese import cars were made from American aircraft carriers.
It's also why Dietrich's books and presentations are a must read for anyone serious about breaking through the mass-media induced mind trip and hidden history of the world."
Blessings!
Found this interesting bit over at George Ure's UrbanSurvival Blog today:
"We have been chatting a bit about the work of Anatoly Fomenko recently. He's the Russian scientist who has been piecing together how much of what we think of as "conventional history" is likely not as old as we'd like to think. I've only gotten through the first of the four volumes of his work, but already a clear pattern has emerged that a lot of "historical dudes" - such as Plato - may have been constructs put together in the Middle Ages in order to "create history" which would be acceptable to the folks who were then the PowersThatBe.
Fast forward to CoastToCoast AM and John B. Wells' interview last night with Douglas Dietrich, who was a Department of Defense research librarian for almost 10-years. An amazing series of revelations about nuclear weapons in WWII!
What? you thought only America had nuclear weapons? Sorry, you missed reality. According to Dietrich's work (based on documents within DoD but not widely known in military historical circles, Germany had nuclear weapons and actually used one up in the area around Northeast of Germany in the Latvia/ Estonia area to halt a Russian advance from the north.
OK, you're thinking, why didn't Germany win WWII? Well, turns out that according to his research, if I followed the whole flow of it, Dietrich says Erwin Rommel (the "Desert Fox") had planned to use tactical nuclear weapons on Allied forces at Normandy. BUT Hitler said no to the plan because the Germans understood the biological risks and Hitler wasn't going to put the "purity" of the Aryan race in jeopardy.
So what followed was the famed (and foiled) plot against Hitler which has been memorialized in movies and books. But the backstory seems to be that the Plot was hatched because Rommel and his coconspirators we so angry that Hitler wouldn't use the one tool which could have laid waste to the Allies.
Oh, noted Dietrich, talking to Wells: That's why Geiger counters were carried by Allied invasion forces at Normandy.
The rest of the interview was just as compelling (based on historical documents from DoD after all), including the assertion that the US actually deliberately triggered the war with Japan by sending B-24'as driven by American Flying Tigers to bomb Japanese soil a full five months before Pearl Harbor.
The research is compelling... and to a student of military history, the US and Japan did not sign a surrender document on VJ-Day as most of the American public was led to believe - a myth perpetrated by the "approved" historical documents and texts.
Seems history is coming down around our ears - thanks in large part to the internet and serious academics like Fomenko and the Russians involved in the new Critical Thought Movement as well as now, with Dietrich's work, a vastly different version of World War II.
Wells' closing quote to ponder was Truman's Maraschino cherry:
The only thing new in the world is the history you don't know.
~As quoted in Plain Speaking : An Oral Biography of Harry S Truman (1974) by Merle Miller, p. 26
And that, boys and girls, is why we don't speak German and why the war with Japan dragged out to 1951 and why the first Japanese import cars were made from American aircraft carriers.
It's also why Dietrich's books and presentations are a must read for anyone serious about breaking through the mass-media induced mind trip and hidden history of the world."
Blessings!