Anonymous ID: 26edc3 March 21, 2019, 3:34 a.m. No.5807553   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7578

Russians, Ukrainians, Chinese, Secret Cults, Witches, Deep State Actors, Bloodlines, Brainwashing, Pedophilia, Rome, London, Wonderland and Terrorism.

 

This thing is so deep.

I can barely piece it all together and I've been here for over a year. Q/we have a big job to do in terms of getting John Q. Public on page.

Anonymous ID: 26edc3 March 21, 2019, 4:22 a.m. No.5807786   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>5807443

> She's one of many descendants of the Chandler family, which owned the Los Angeles Times for decades.

 

Her family didn't just Own the LA times, they owned Los Angeles basically. It stems from her ancestor Gen. Harrison Gray Otis.

Otis, a Civil War veteran, drifted to Los Angeles in 1880, believing it a good place to raise goats.

Los Angeles at this time was a sand lot. Somehow six years after moving to LA, Otis gained full control of a fledgling newspaper, the Los Angeles Daily Times. He changed the name to the LA times.

He used the LA times to shape Los Angeles into his vision.

He was part of a syndicate that bought vast tracts of barren land in the San Fernando Valley with the inside knowledge the Los Angeles Aqueduct would bring water there, and used his newspaper to scare the public about the threat of drought, drumming up support for a 230-mile aqueduct to divert water from the Owens Valley to Los Angeles. Without this aquaduct, LA would still be a desert. Him and his syndicate buying up the land knowing the aqeuduct would be built inspired Roman Polanski's Chinatown.

 

The port of Los Angeles, the busiest port in the United States, was his brain child, and he used the LA times to pressure the federal government to build the port of LA in San Pedro instead of Santa Monica.

 

Otis had a son-in-law and right hand man was Harry Chandler, who took over the operations when Harrison Gray Otis died in 1917. Chandler had his hands in every LA honeypot, owning stakes in oil wells, promoting and investing in the burgeoning SoCal aviation industry, investing in steamships, Goodyear Oil and Tire, and subdivisions—including the fabled Hollywoodland in Beachwood Canyon—in the city and the Valley and At every turn, the LA Times was there to promote the boss’s latest business venture.

After Chandler’s retirement, his handsome, laid-back son, Norman, became publisher. Under him, the Times continued to exert a powerful influence on Los Angeles and Southern California, helping a young politician named Richard Nixon get elected.

 

In short, the LA times was the driving force behind the transformation of LA from a backwater to a metroplolis. It no only was the PR machine of it, it was the financial beneficiary of LA's growth and industry.

 

Ray comes from deep pockets with a vault of secrets I imagine on every major player to exist in the 20th century.

 

https://www.kcet.org/shows/inventing-la-the-chandlers-and-their-times/as-chandler

http://edition.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/Movies/10/04/los.angeles.documentary/-dynasty-evolved-so-did-power-in-la

https://la.curbed.com/2018/7/13/17558644/los-angeles-times-history-chandler