Australia Day, 2015: Terrorism Problem Solved.
Thanks, Dr Lawrence Dunegan!
by Mary W Maxwell, PhD, LLB
I got it! I figured it out! I know the score on these terrorist incidents, so-called. And it’s all down to Gumshoe News in Melbourne.
There are Dalia Lachlan’s articles on Hebdo and Martin Place, and her fussing about Australian Attorney General George Brandis’s new “anti-terrorism” laws that will punish a journalist who exposes government crime. (Three centuries of legal development down the drain!)
We’ve had my Gumshoe articles on the Bilderbergers, Treason, Dunblane, Sandy Hook, and “The Reality of World Government.” We’ve had Christopher Brooks contributing links as to the Ferry bomb and even the Mildura (Mildura!) terror.
Most crucially, Gumshoe has republished Dr Day’s 1969 speech, as it was reported in 1988 by Lawrence Dunegan, MD. Put ’em all together and what do you get? This: All the terrorist events are scripted. Trust me. It’s watertight. I’ll explain below.
Forget Man Haron Monis or whatever his name is. Forget the Marathon brothers and Charlie Hebdo’s brothers (who, Dalia claims, are an extra set of brothers).
Bilderbergers last year went completely out of their tree foretelling Transhumanism; I mention that to illustrate how arrogant they are. Recall that Charles Sannat allegedly said in 2014, in France, that a superhuman was planned, but not for us proles of course. (Has to do with stem cells, big hint there!)
Sannat’s Bilderbergian arrogance called to my mind the Protocols, published in Russia in 1905, in which it is threatened that the armies of US, China and Japan will all be used together on the BIG DAY (sort of like Judgment Day, minus the angels and the raisins). Well, not only arrogance but probably real power.
But the bewdy was re-reading Dr Day’s 1969 speech. If I had been in Day’s audience (age 22 at that moment), I would have been baffled by his prediction that:
“More men will be transferred to other cities and in their jobs, more men would travel. Therefore, it would be harder for families to stay together. This would tend to make the marriage relationship less stable. Travel would be easier, less expensive, for a while, so that people who did have to travel would feel they could get back to their families.”
Dunegan commented “Rather a diabolical approach to this whole thing!” As for me, I would not kapisch how anyone would attempt to weaken the family. It would have passed right by me – THEN.
I also would have been like “Duh” when Dr Day announced that “There would be new diseases to appear which had not ever been seen before. Would be very difficult to diagnose and be untreatable – at least for along time.” I mean it just wouldn’t have occurred to me to ask “Hey Doc, how do you and your laboratory know that will happen?”
And of course when Day said (as scribbled on Dunegan’s serviette), “We may have to use nukes on Americans who don’t cooperate,” well, heck, my ears would have just got blocked. Remember: 1969 was Cold War City. Nukes were for Them, not for Us.
Though I did once read, in Al Martin’s book, “The Conspirators,” that Ollie North worked on a plan, called Operation Sledgehammer, to nuke 70,000 Yanks in situ. (By ‘situ’ I mean Wisconsin.)
Speaking of mixing up the Yanks and the Russkies, when we read Orwell in high school (and believe me, the minor, absolutely minor, titillation going on between Winston and Julia in Mr Charrington’s upstairs room was pretty hot stuff at my Catholic all-girls school), I assumed the Big Brother stuff, and Down the Memory Hole, and all that, referred to the USSR not the US of A.
Admittedly I was a naive teenager, but even the most sophisticated people in our town (Boston) wouldn’t have figured that Orwell was talking to the Anglo-type races. I now see that he and Wells had no crystal ball. They had minutes of meetings!
Sorry, am I keeping you in suspense? Perhaps I shouldn’t bother you with the fact that HG Wells of England (a Fabian socialist, in case that be relevant) wrote “The War in the Air” in 1908 – shortly after Victor Marsden translated the Protocols.
The Wright brothers had only got off the ground at Kitty Hawk in 1903. They air-traveled 37 meters in 12 seconds, and did not get hijacked, at least as far as we know. (Dalia Lachlan might wonder if the brother-factor (Wilbur and Orville) has significance in the case.)
What we have here in 1908 is: Wells already imagining that planes could be used to drop bombs when humans had hardly begun to fly. Amazing. He also, by the way, mentioned that we shouldn’t go whole hog with bombing, as the stench of human bodies would make the place off limits for a year or more.
That’s an interesting matter. When the US was said to have used white phosphorus in Fallujah, I speculated that it was an experiment to create corpses in non-stench mode. I even worry about the smell in regard to mass killings in future, which Dr Day indicated are possible, for example if Old Ladies forget to take their Demise Pill. (Yes, we are supposed to go graciously and not have to be pushed.)
But now for the denouement. Although I have read Dunegan-on-Day a few times, and was fascinated by the promise that goods would be manufactured a bit sloppily so as to cause people minor irritation (and that little tea sets for girls would stop being manufactured – does Day control FAO Schwartz or what?), I had never caught, until today, in Day’s speech, the following paragraph:
Are you ready? Here it is, in plain English (emphasis added):
“There was a discussion of terrorism. TERRORISM WOULD BE USED WIDELY in Europe and in other parts of the world. At that time it was thought terrorism would not be NECESSARY in the United States. It could become necessary in the United States IF THE UNITED STATES DID NOT MOVE RAPIDLY ENOUGH INTO ACCEPTING THE SYSTEM. Along with this came a bit of a scolding that Americans had HAD IT TOO GOOD anyway and just a little bit of terrorism [A little bit of terrorism! Fathom it!] would help convince Americans that the world is indeed a dangerous place, or can be IF WE DON’T RELINQUISH CONTROL TO THE PROPER AUTHORITIES.”
That’s a verbatim quote. As Australians like to say, “You can’t make this stuff up.”
Why don’t I try to write what Dr Richard Day might have said if he had been addressing Sydney doctors that evening. How about:
“Terrorism will become important. It possibly won’t be needed in Sydney, you understand, since Aussies tend to do the cringe, but if we need to blow up a café or something, you wouldn’t mind, and anyway it might be worth the excitement. You’ll see in due course that the proper authorities will be in charge. ”
Man Haron Monis my foot. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev my foot. The Charlie Hebdo killer brothers (did anyone actually get killed? Or is it a killer bee situation?) my foot.
You heard it here first.
-- Mary W Maxwell wishes to thank Ned for linking her to the Dunegan piece, and Jeff Rense for carrying it, and the original publisher Randy Engels. It all comes together in the long run (1969 to 2015, a mere 46 years). Oh, and thanks to the Rockefellers for letting Richard Day float that trial balloon. And thanks to poor Eric Blair who died at age 44.