Anonymous ID: 1e6cac Nov. 15, 2018, 11:13 p.m. No.3923753   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3761 >>3797 >>3899 >>3988

Vannevar Bush: architect of the military/industrial/academic complex and founder of the New Manhattan Project

 

The aforementioned Vannevar Bush (1890-1974) was the man most responsible for the formation of today’s military/industrial/academic complex. Bob Dylan’s song “Masters of War” is about him. We all know about Eisenhower’s famous coining of the term ‘military/industrial complex.’ The former President is referring to the combined power of giant organizations enabled by the bureaucratic framework established by Vannevar Bush and his cronies. Bush was the head of the WWII-era National Defense Research Committee (NDRC) as well as the head of the concurrent Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD). While overseeing massive growth for all parties involved, Bush brought our military, corporations, and universities together to work on enormous projects such as the original Manhattan Project and the MIT Rad Lab. Without congressional approval, Bush and his cronies created the first American ‘black’ military budgets. Surprisingly, no, he was not related to the Bush political crime family. At the start of 1939, Bush became president of the powerful Carnegie Institution in Washington D.C.; another organization inextricably associated with the NMP. It was around this time that Bush began thinking that consolidating powers of the government, the military, and the private sector might match the efficiencies of the Nazi war machine then terrorizing Europe. With key support from such men as: Secretary of War Henry ‘Skull & Bones’ Stimson (1867-1950), the President of the National Academy of Sciences Frank Jewett (1879-1949), Manhattan Project chemist James B. Conant (1893-1978), Karl Compton, and Alfred Loomis, Bush went about doing just that.

 

https://www.activistpost.com/2017/03/chemtrails-exposed-truly-a-new-manhattan-project.html

 

Note: I bumped into this article on a dig…looking at Tesla's inventions and John Trump connections. It describes how Telsa's inventions were taken and used for the shadow government. What I found interesting here is the very nature of the way they went about using his inventions for the purpose of manipulation and world dominance. Reading this also had me considering if there was anything here relative to the fires in CA at the moment.

 

Here are some of the other names in this article: Edward Teller, John von Neumann, Bernard Vonnegut, Irving Langmuir, Alfred Lee Loomis. I don't know if there is anything to this, not in my area of complete understanding, but I would like to hear some thoughts if "there is a there" on this. I felt the post would be too long to do it any justice, which is why I linked it instead.

 

PS: I know it primarily mentions chem trails in the title, which is not what I was going for, of value I believe is the other information it contains. These guys are quite spooky!

Anonymous ID: 1e6cac Nov. 15, 2018, 11:41 p.m. No.3923914   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3968 >>3988

North Korea to deport U.S. citizen detained since October: state news agency

 

North Korea has decided to deport a U.S. citizen detained since October, state news agency KCNA said on Friday. The American, whom the agency identified as Bruce Byron Lowrance, “illegally” entered North Korea from China and told his captors he was “under the control of the CIA”, it said. A Michigan man of the same name was deported from South Korea in November 2017 after being found wandering near the heavily fortified border with North Korea, but there was no immediate confirmation of his identity.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-northkorea-usa-detainee/north-korea-to-deport-u-s-citizen-detained-since-october-state-news-agency-idUSKCN1NL0OC?il=0

 

Wonder if there is a message here?

Anonymous ID: 1e6cac Nov. 15, 2018, 11:51 p.m. No.3923968   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3988

>>3923914

Michigan man found wandering near DMZ is deported, South Korean officials confirm

 

South Korean authorities have deported an American man caught wandering last week near the highly fortified border with North Korea, officials here confirmed Wednesday. The deportation to the United States ends a bizarre journey for Bruce Byron Lowrance of Michigan, who authorities say came to the region because of the confrontation between North Korea and the international community over the communist nation’s illicit nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs. Authorities said he told them he wanted to help resolve the conflict.

 

After a tip from a villager in a rural border area, authorities on Nov. 13. caught Lowrance in a restricted area near the demilitarized zone — the dangerous, mine-laden border between the North and South. He was captured in Yeoncheon County, about 40 miles north of Seoul. Details about Lowrance’s travels, his detention and subsequent deportation proceedings have largely remained secret, with South Korean officials declining to comment, citing their strict privacy rules. Officials at the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, also citing privacy considerations for American citizens overseas, have said only that they were aware of the case and that they offered “appropriate consular services.” They declined to comment Wednesday. But South Korean government officials confirmed this week that Lowrance had been removed from the country, probably on Tuesday from Incheon International Airport, the country’s main airline hub on the outskirts of Seoul. Details about the precise departure time and final destination weren’t released.

 

Public records about Lowrance, age 58 or 59, are limited. His trip to South Korea came at a time of heightened tension between the United States and North Korea, which has test-launched dozens of ballistic missiles and conducted underground nuclear detonations in recent years in defiance of U.N. resolutions. It also came just days after President Trump visited Seoul as part of a 12-day, five-nation tour through Asia that also took him to Japan, China, Vietnam and the Philippines. Efforts to curb North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, in addition to international trade, topped Trump’s agenda on the trip.

 

In another example of the daily tension along the border, a North Korean soldier was shot by his countrymen on the same day as Lowrance’s capture as he fled across the border in an apparent effort to defect. South Korean soldiers rescued the man, who was riddled with bullets. The soldier, who during surgery was found to have parasitic worms, regained consciousness Tuesday, but his injuries are still considered life-threatening. The shooting has captured widespread media attention here, overshadowing Lowrance’s capture and deportation.

 

South Korean army Gen. Suh Wook told lawmakers in a hearing last week that Lowrance, whose surname was misspelled and transposed in some previous media reports, came to South Korea on Nov. 3. Suh said Lowrance is believed to have stayed in Seoul, the capital, and Munsan, a border community not far from the so-called joint security area, which has been the site of military skirmishes and diplomatic talks between the two Koreas, technically still at war. Suh, a top operational official in the South Korean military leadership, said Lowrance — who wasn’t named at the hearing — made confusing or contradictory statements during an investigation after he was found in the civilian control line, a miles-wide buffer zone along the fortified border. A villager spotted Lowrance on Nov. 13, and authorities took him to a provincial police office north of Seoul. His travels since then are unclear, though one South Korean official said this week that Lowrance had been held at an immigration facility in the city of Hwaseong, about 20 miles south of Seoul. Lowrance “made an incoherent testimony” during the investigation, Suh said in response to lawmakers’ questions about Lowrance’s mental state. “He testified that he could contribute in some way in North Korea.”

 

http://www.latimes.com/world/asia/la-fg-south-korea-bruce-lowrance-20171122-story.html