Anonymous ID: b60a82 Dec. 13, 2021, 9:22 a.m. No.15186676   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6730 >>6739 >>6822 >>6867 >>6925 >>7018 >>7118

baker

 

34, 5:5, Ike, Heart Attacks can be Deadly

 

anon suspects that WH's were directly speaking to the board lb at >>15185555 (lb).5555That ID repeated341and was an exact four year delta to Q341. That ID's13posts lb may have been to draw extra attention to today's date / 4 yr delta.

 

other anon noticed tie in to34, which was later connected to Q634 and heart attacks.

 

latest 'coincidence':

 

President Eisenhower, Potus34, had a major heart attack in 1955and was released from hospital on Nov 11th of that year.11.11&5:5

 

    • *

 

“President Eisenhower puts on golf gloves as he leaves Officers Open Mess, August 25, 1955, with Maj. Gen. Martin E. Griffin.” (25 also 5x5/5:5 → quad 5's or5555)

 

It turned out to be on a golf course where some historians and medical experts now surmise his heart attack actually began. Feeling ill after a round of golf at the Cherry Hills Golf Club in southern Denver, he returned to the Doud home and turned in early on the evening of September23rd. [23PAIN?] Awaking to chest pains in the early morning of September 24th, his personal physician was summoned and worked to relieve Eisenhower’s discomfort. Hours later, a delay scrutinized since, a cardiac specialist was summoned from Fitzsimons Army Hospital to conduct an electrocardiogram which confirmed the suspicion; the president had suffered a massive heart attack. Eisenhower was whisked away to the hospital in a secret service car…

 

One gift that he did use was a set of maroon pajamas with “Much Better Thanks” embroidered on the left pocket. These were given to him on his October 14th birthday by the White House Press Corps and were his uniform of choice, along with a western necktie, when he made his first public appearance on October 25, 1955 (25 → 5x5/5:5) [between day and year we get5555like drop lb] …

 

On November 11th, Armistice Day, President Eisenhower was released from Fitzsimons Army Hospital. Boarding theColumbineIII, Columbine being his favored name for personal planes as a nod to the Colorado state flower, he gave a few brief words of thanks and closed with, “So I leave with my heart unusually filled with gratefulness, to Denver, to the people here, to the locality – in fact to everyone who has been so kind. And I hope that those people who have sent in messages – and Mrs. Eisenhower has not been able to reach them all; she did her best – that they will know, through this little talk, that we are eternally thankful to them. Goodbye and good luck.”

 

https://text-message.blogs.archives.gov/2016/09/22/heart-attack-strikes-ike-president-eisenhowers-1955-medical-emergency-in-colorado/

 

Are anons beingQueued to look at Ike's missing month in the fall of 1955? Maybe he wasn't in hospital, but this was the cover story for his covert OP [greet aliens? nazis? Anarctica?]

 

Was Dan's Runway 34 thing recently suggesting that Ike flew somewhere when he was supposedly in hospital in fall 1955? (Does anon have date of Dan's runway? Does it match with any of Ike's key dates in 1955??)

 

Is "Heart attacks can be deadly" an allusion to something that Ike set in motion in 1955 during his staged heart attack that is coming to fruition and will be deadly to the DS?

 

IDK. Thoughts welcome.

Anonymous ID: b60a82 Dec. 13, 2021, 10:04 a.m. No.15186867   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6920

>>15186807

 

Hussein library main art of Q341, too. Is there an Ike connection we're missing?

 

>>15185555 (lb)

>>15186676

 

The comparisons with Eisenhower, while largely favorable for Obama, also suggest some less attractive contrasts.

 

Both embraced a “team of rivals” approach to picking a national security team, priding themselves as comfortable enough in their own skins to have strong, high-profile players around them. However, while Eisenhower empowered the National Security Council system, Obama never seemed to get his process to work as well as it could have.

 

https://www.defenseone.com/ideas/2017/01/obama-and-eisenhower-two-legacies-arms/134543/

 

https://www.brookings.edu/articles/is-obama-like-eisenhower/