Anonymous ID: c4723f May 19, 2018, 11:47 a.m. No.1470577   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Speaking of owls… Risking condemnation by an over-worked baker, LYNH (love you no homo), I'm going to re-post something I feel deserves recognition, as it has to do with the owner of a particular owl which keeps making an appearance in the affairs of man. This has to do with a series of events beginning in the mid 1960's. I posted this yesterday during a time of great shilling, so it was likely ignored. If a baker feels it necessary to kill this repeat, I understand, but I do think there's something worth noting for those who hadn't seen it, which is why the repeat.

 

This begins with a follow-up on the May 4, 1970 Kent State University anti-war protest which turned deadly when four students were shot dead by the Ohio State National Guard, who were sent to KSU by the Governor of Ohio in response to destructive violence on the campus when protesters burned down an ROTC (military recruitment) building. For an explanation as to why the National Guard opened fire, Guardsmen believed they were being fired upon. To this day confusion still reigns as to exactly what happened. What is clear is that the radical left used the incident to further inflame the anti-war/anti-American sentiments among students across the country.

 

Because I grew up near the KSU campus and lived with that event and it's aftermath for years, it remains a point of reference for my understanding that turbulent time in history. While doing research within the newspaper archives of my former home town near KSU, I found an article dated shortly after the shooting, in which a KSU student and Vietnam war veteran spoke about the effort by the radical left to misinform students, and suggested that KSU was targeted for protests because of on campus locations of a major crime lab, the ROTC, and the liquid crystal research lab funded by the DOD.

 

Theorists have suggested the shooting was a planned event, i.e. false flag. The presence of both military connected facilities on that campus at the time does lend support to that theory. If you are going to plan a false flag, or stage an event for optics regardless the intention, having a base of operation already on site is a good place to begin. How and why exactly the DOD would have been working with the radical left is the mystery. A mystery, that is, until you add an element of possible infiltration by black hats somewhere in the DOD and CIA, and possibly into the Ohio government offices. Something tells me digging will turn up a few usual suspects.

 

Digging further into the liquid crystal research center on Kent State University at the time, I found a few things worth considering. One of which is very surprising. Then again, maybe not so surprising since Q sent us scrambling down these rabbit holes, all of which is our choice to know what we find, of course.

 

The DOD program which funded the liquid crystal research at KSU, beginning in 1967, was called Project Themis, an effort begun by the Johnson administration to have smaller colleges involved with research beneficial to the DOD. Further digging reveals that Project Themis had another name during it's infancy, called… Project Minerva. That's right, Minerva, the Roman goddess of strategic warfare. Oh, and Minerva had a pet. Wanna guess what kind? If you guessed an owl, you're right! Other "symbols" for Minerva include the snake, spiders, and a flowering plant known as hellebore. Snakes and spiders we know about. We know what they do, and what they represent historically. Hellebore I hadn't heard about. Well, it turns out hellebore is highly toxic, and has been used in both witchcraft, and an ancient form of chemical warfare to poison humans.

 

One last thing, Minerva still figures prominently in current military symbology. Hello, Westpoint Military Academy!

 

Kent State University liquid crystal research history:

https://www.lcinet.kent.edu/members/individual/index_std.php?id=30&ref=1385909433&id=30&ref=1385909433

 

Project Thesis/Minerva:

https://heinonline.org/HOL/LandingPage?handle=hein.journals/airfor10&div=25&id=&page=