Anonymous ID: d1d4cf Jan. 6, 2018, 7:18 p.m. No.11151   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1158 >>1259 >>1264 >>1591

This may be an insane theory, but let me explain. Something has bothered me ever since Q's first post on Thursday - why the three spaces before the "-6713A"?

 

>[J-Go_dX)-2-8

>Everything has meaning.

>Who is AMB Matlock?

>YES.

>/[RR-out][P_pers]

>EO_CLASSIFIED_WH[ -6713A]

>SIG_con_MAR39sv3665BECD

>Q

 

Initially, I was getting bogged down in the [RR-out] as meaning "Rod Rosenstein out" of the Justice Department, which still seems logical. Now comes the Q posts from today referencing RR as possibly Ronald Reagan and not Rosenstein.

 

I decided to search "reagan -6713A," and what came up but a link to newspapers.com of the A-2 page of the Herald & Review of Decatur, Ill. from Jan. 5, 1982 - almost exactly 36 years from the Jan. 4 Q post. In an advertisement for the grand reopening of Papa John's Pizzeria is the restaurant's phone number, 428-6713. In the article text on the page, the -6713 is immediately followed by an "A" (photo included to the left) and the "428" filling in the three blanks of Q's message perfectly.

 

newspapers.com/newspage/87601073/

 

What I found really interesting on the page were many of the stories of the day from Jan. 4, 1982.

 

1)

>"Clark replaces Allen as Reagan security adviser"

>WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, opting for a national security adviser with more authority than he gave deposed Richard V. Allen, is turning to a long-time confidante with little experience in foreign affairs. The president carried out the first major personnel shakeup of his administration Monday by naming Deputy Secretary of State William P. Clark Jr. to replace Allen, whose resignation was "mutually agreed upon." At the same time, Reagan said Clark, 50, would be given daily access to the Oval Office, something Alien lacked. Clark, a former California Supreme Court justice, was Reagan's chief of staff when Reagan was governor of California and is one of the most senior members of the president's inner circle. The president, in accepting Allen's resignation, said no evidence of wrongdoing had been found in Allen's conduct. "It's rather unusual that someone who had been the subject of a lot of rumors and allegations over a long period of time could go through a rigorous and meticulous examination and be substantiated in every detail and still find himself in a situation where his resignation would be submitted and accepted," Allen said. Later, in an appearance on ABC's "Nightline," Allen said he had asked Reagan to reinstate him. "It seemed that that was not possible precisely because of the accumulation of what I considered to be political circumstances, psychological circumstances." he said. "Having been cleared, the best thing was to take whatever burden might have been caused by my inadvertence or oversight away from the president." Allen was placed on administrative leave with pay Nov. 29 pending the outcome of the investigations into his acceptance of $1,000 from Japanese journalists and three watches from Japanese friends and errors in his government financial disclosure forms. Moments after Allen left the White House, Clark met with reporters. "As the president has directed. I report directly to the president on a daily basis or more often as the issues of the day might require," he said. Clark would thus resume a role exercised by Zbigniew Brzezinski in the Carter administration and Henry A. Kissinger, who was Richard M. Nixon's national security adviser. His nomination a year ago provoked a storm of protest in the Senate, and Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said: "He doesn't know anything about foreign relations." But one senior member of the White House staff said over the weekend that Clark's appointment as national security adviser would demonstrate that the president felt that his performance over the past year as deputy to Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. should have resolved any doubts about his ability. Clark's new job, near the top of the government salary scale, pays $60,662. He will direct the National Security Council staff and "will be responsible for national security policy, as approved by the president," said a White House spokesman. Allen accepted a job as interim consultant to the president's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, at $190 a day, Speakes said.

 

Tons of interesting names, including Creepy Uncle Joe.

Anonymous ID: d1d4cf Jan. 6, 2018, 7:19 p.m. No.11158   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1165

>>11151

CONT.

 

2)

>"Security adviser post regains former power"

>WASHINGTON (AP) - When Henry Kissinger was President Nixon's national security adviser he was so clearly in control of U.S. foreign policy that the secretary of state. William Rogers, often was left out in the cold. When Kissinger made a secret trip to Peking to discuss opening U.S. relations with communist China, Rogers wasn't told about the mission until Kissinger's plane was about to land. Kissinger acted as secretary of state in everything but name for four years and in 1973, Nixon finally gave him the job. The story is told that Kissinger moved into Rogers' comfortable seventh floor office at the State Department. Seeing that it overlooked the Washington Monument, he quipped to an aide: "I never knew this was such an exalted position." For two years. Kissinger comfortably ran both the State Department and the National Security Council, often from his high-flying jet. While his power grew. Nixon's diminished under the burden of the Watergate scandal. Retreating from domestic sues, Nixon tried to play his longsuit: foreign affairs. He busied himself in summitry, and Kissinger was his tireless advance man and adviser. After Nixon's resignation, Kissinger stayed on to tutor Gerald Ford. But Ford eventually stripped Kissinger of the National Security Council job, naming a loyal deputy, Brent Scowcroft, to succeed him. After the Ford administration ended and Kissinger left office, he confided that the national security adviser should not be allowed to compete with the secretary of state for influence with the president. Kissinger said he had concluded that the secretary of state ought to be in charge. It didn't always work out that way under President Carter, however. Sometimes Cyrus R, Vance, the dovish secretary of state, tugged Carter one way. Sometimes Zbigniew Brzezinski. the hawkish security director, tugged Carter the other way. And sometimes, Carter seemed to take both men's advice - simultaneously.

Ronald Reagan was going to change all that. Richard Allen, his national security adviser, was to have a subordinate role. The NSC staff was cut and for a long time, Allen made no speeches and gave no interviews. Although Allen got his views across, he was no challenge for Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr., who had declared himself the "vicar" of U.S. foreign policy. Standing between Allen and the president was a powerful man: Edwin Meese III, the president's closest aide. Reagan was in charge of Meese who was in charge of Allen.

 

Lots of important names in there. I especially liked the "seventh floor" reference to Kissinger's office at the State Department.

 

3)

>"Iran bans imports of 'luxury' items

>BEIRUT (AP) Iran's Moslem fundamentalist regime announced today it would stop importing everything but food, medicine and farming and industrial materials in an effort to save dwindling hard currency reserves.

Iran has cut its trade with the West by 18 percent since the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled the late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Under the shah. Iran was the world's second largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia with nearly six million barrels per day. Today. Iranian officials say their country is exporting 1 million barrels of crude a day. But ousted President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr told The Associated Press from his Paris exile last week that Iran's oil production has dropped to a half-million barrels per day. Hard currency reserves have dwindled accordingly.

Anonymous ID: d1d4cf Jan. 6, 2018, 7:19 p.m. No.11165   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11158

CONT.

 

4)

>"Tank, boosters joined for next launch"

>CAPE CANAVERAL (AP) Crews working on the space shuttle Columbia finished joining its silo-like external fuel tanks to twin solid-rocket boosters today as work progressed to ready the craft for its third test flight in March. Space center employees must also finish rebonding hundreds of the shuttle's tiles that were damaged by the heat of re-entry on the second mission in November. That second flight was shortened from five days to three when a problem developed with a fuel cell, which was later found by its manufacturer to be contaminated. A space center spokesman said the three fuel cells, which were removed for inspection, would be restored this week.

 

This one is interesting in regards to the speculation of Zach from Arizona's interview on Infowars on Friday hinted that he may be a part of Q or at least knows Q's identity. In the interview he spent a lot of time talking about the SpaceX launch at Cape Canaveral this weekend and the special payload aimed at the North Koreans.

 

5)

>"EPA reorganization challenged"

>WASHINGTON (AP) The Environmental Protection Agency soon will go through a top-to-bottom reorganization that environmentalists say will cripple government efforts to fight pollution. "This means the end of the agency," William Drayton, EPA's chief budget officer during the Carter administration, said Monday. "They have set out to tear EPA apart …" Save EPA, a coalition of environmental groups fighting proposed budget cuts, said they have obtained internal documents showing that 50 percent of EPA's headquarters staff either will be fired or demoted in the reorganization, to be announced in a few weeks. Drayton estimated that 80 percent of the people on the headquarters staff when Carter left office will have quit, been fired or demoted by next June. EPA officials said the figure was greatly inflated. They confirmed, however, that EPA Administrator Anne Gorsuch is reorganizing the agency. Sourees. who asked not to be identified, estimated that 700 to 800 people out of 4,385 in the Washington headquarters will lose their jobs.

 

Early '80s fake news of fearmongering comments from the Carter administration official.

 

There are other stories, but those are the prominent ones. I realize this is probably a stretch in terms of looking for hidden cryptic clues in Q's messages, but I definitely found it to be an interesting coincidence.

 

>"Everything has meaning." - Q