>>8965194 (pb)
one thing for sure.
The /qresearch/ archives will be mined for years and years by screenwriters who will make many a movie about the saga we are experiencing today.
>>8965194 (pb)
one thing for sure.
The /qresearch/ archives will be mined for years and years by screenwriters who will make many a movie about the saga we are experiencing today.
hard to believe it's already been 19 years since Greer's first big public event at the National Press Club.
not a fan boi of Greer's, but it's undeniable that getting together the group he did for that event (FAA, FBI, mil, intel people) began to open many sets of eyes.
anons who feel they need to get up to speed with the UFO/ARV/SecretSpaceProgram material might find it useful to take in the lengthy testimony given at the Citizen Hearing on Disclosure around 2012.
That events was a sort of follow-up to the 2001 Disclosure Project conference.
There may have been a few looney-toons and weirdos at the Citizen Hearing, but there was a ton of useful information there, and in total the testimony ran to something like 15-20 hours if I recall correctly.
There ought to be a torrent or something out there of the whole event. it played a big part in getting congressmen & women to feel they could have their staff research this issue without too much fear of ridicule. a turning point in many ways.
yeah, whether by coincidence or design, 9/11 truly set the disclosure movement back many years. There was a lot of momentum building around disclosure prior to Sept. 2001.
Pol Pot has a blue one Comey could borrow.
>@maggieNYT
>"There is no smoking on this train. If you're found smoking, we'll assume you're on fire and take the appropriate action,"
Does this have anything to do with POTUS's references to "burning embers" today?