Although Truman liked to take full credit for the decision to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, in fact, he was advised by a prestigious group, The National Defense Research Committee, consisting of George L. Harrison, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; Dr. James B. Conant, president of Harvard, who had spent the First World War developing more effective poison gases, and who in 1942 had been commissioned by Winston Churchill to develop an Anthrax bomb to be used on Germany, which would have killed every living thing in Germany. Conant was unable to perfect the bomb before Germany surrendered, otherwise he would have had another line to add to his resume. His service on Truman's Committee which advised him to drop the atomic bomb on Japan, added to his previous record as a chemical warfare professional, allowed me to describe him in papers filed before the United States Court of Claims in 1957, as "the most notorious war criminal of the Second World War". As Gauleiter of Germany after the war, he had ordered the burning of my book, The Federal Reserve Conspiracy, ten thousand copies having been published in Oberammergau, the site of the world-famed Passion Play.
Thanks for this, promises to be a juicy read and I will come back after reading to share my thoughts.
An excerpt:
Now it makes sense why the 'Visitor's Guide To Twin Peaks', published way back in 1992, referenced the Oberammergau Passion Play.
Bloody Hell they've slow-walked this and then some.
I know the Jesuits were involved...
Looks very interesting, thanks for posting.
read the whole thing, very eye opening.gonna dive deeper into this one