Tom Brady Officially Retires Six Days Before He Won Super Bowl 55 Last Year
(media.greatawakening.win)
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I'm in the middle of reading the decodingsymbols article on Chernobyl. I just found out some things about Admiral Rickover that I never knew:
"The USS Nautilus was constructed under the direction of US Navy Captain Hyman G. Rickover, a brilliant Russian-born engineer who joined the US atomic program in 1946.
I didn't know he was "Russian-born," so I did a little dig. He was actually born in Poland. His real name is...Chaim Godalia Rickover.
"Rickover was born Chaim Godalia Rickover to Abraham and Rachel (Unger) Rickover, a Polish Jewish family from Maków Mazowiecki in Congress Poland. His parents changed his name to "Hyman" which is derived from Chayyim, meaning "life". He did not use his middle name Godalia (a form of Gedaliah), but he substituted "George" when at the Naval Academy."
His childhood was quite average and nondescript until...
" He then held a full-time job as a telegraph boy delivering Western Union telegrams, through which he became acquainted with Congressman Adolph J. Sabath, a Czech Jewish immigrant. Sabath nominated Rickover for appointment to the United States Naval Academy. Rickover was only a third alternate for appointment, but he passed the entrance exam and was accepted."
Hmmm...only a third alternate, but was nominated by a Czech Jewish immigrant congressman. Why? Rickover's background does not suggest any great brilliance.
Once in the military, he turned into a jack-of-all-trades. He has a really strange string of duties and commands, flitting from this to that. If you read between the lines, there was always someone there to conveniently shove him farther up the chain of command.
"While his team and industry were completing construction of the Nautilus, Rickover was promoted to the rank of rear admiral in 1953, however this was anything but routine, and occurred only after an extraordinary chain of events:
"[Rickover's] peers in the Navy’s engineer branch thought to get rid of him through failure of promotion above captain. This would entail automatic retirement at the thirty-year mark. But someone made the case to the U.S. Senate, charged by the Constitution with formal confirmation of military promotions. In that year, 1953, two years before Nautilus first went to sea, the Senate failed to give its usual perfunctory approval of the Navy admiral promotion list, and the press was outraged because Rickover’s name was not on it. ... Ultimately an enlightened Secretary of the Navy, Robert B. Anderson, ordered a special selection board to sit. With some shuffling of feet it did what it had been ordered to do.... "
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyman_G._Rickover
He sounds like a spy that the DS wanted. Good dig!
When they want you to be seen as a "hero" that much then it probably means he was a hero to the DS.
It's the same with McCain.
Small detail, but I find his eyes disturbing. Something is off in them.
He testified on the 3 mile isle incident:
He so very much a spy.
He had no real talent because he just meant to be a plant. They gave him "accolades" to make him be seen as brilliant in the absence of actual accomplishment.
Remember what Q said about steel inspectors making weakened steel for our warships. It makes me think of that.
So Rickover was a traitor.
He was able to force Rickover out because Reagan was president.
What a brat. He thought he couldn't be fired and then he was fired under Reagan. He offered the chance to save face, but threw a fit instead.
It says a lot right there.
Their favorite comm trick. They do this one a lot. If you look up the birdwatcher that James Bond is named after you will find he died in 1989 at 89. It's how they signify a "spy".
Thanks for the dig.
Your welcome.
Rickover had a reputation for striking fear into the hearts of anyone interviewing with him for naval positions. He'd ask tough questions and expected you to have the answers. You either knew your stuff and got the position or you left his office with your tail between your shaking legs.
My guess is, this is how Rickover kept his position for so long. People were too afraid of him to question anything he did. Rickover had no qualms about handing your head to you on a platter.
It's the old adage about being a ruler: it's better to be feared, than loved.
I think he was a bully. He was mediocre so he hated "mediocrity" in others so he couldn't be accused of it. They always try to be seen as what they aren't.