A Russian mathematician named Anatoly Fomenko spent decades proving that roughly a thousand years were deliberately added to the historical timeline — to erase an entire civilization and justify land claims.
Wikipedia, heavily under CIA influence, derides Fomenko as a conspiracy theorist who espoused pseudoscientific theories about ancient Egypt, Rome and Greece. But more individuals are now re-exploring the writings of Fomenko to see if we’ve been duped and misled about history.
Screenwriter Roger Avary, best known for co-writing Pulp Fiction, read all six volumes and brought it to Joe Rogan. Seth Holehouse breaks down what it means on this episode of Man In America.
Here is Avary’s appearance on the Rogan show. The first hour he’s chitchatting with Rogan about Hollywood figures like Orson Welles, William Shatner and Quentin Tarantino.
But around the hour and 15-minute mark, the discussion, shall we say, dives into Alex Jones territory. It gets pretty dark, but also quite riveting and eye-opening.
Is Avary a nutcase or on to something big? That’s for you to decide for yourself.
The United States celebrates itself as the land of the free and home of the brave. But the CIA, the intelligence agency run by the U.S. government, has instead pushed censorship and violent color revolutions around the world. Much of this was done through monies supplied via U.S. Agency for International Development or USAIDs– the State Department-affiliated program that has run into a buzzsaw under the Trump administration.
Here, Mike Benz, executive director of the Foundation for Freedom Online, tells the story of one of USAID’s most hideous endeavors — Internews. Founded in California in 1982, Internews claimed to be non-partisan. But the non-profit had a particularly cozy relationship with the Democratic Party. Not only did it collaborate with the Clinton Global Initiative and have Obama advisor Susan Rice on board, but it also drew money from the likes of Bill Gates and the Carnegie Corporation.
Its chief — Jeanne Bourgault — carved out an annual salary of $451,000 for herself, so this was, indeed, a choice racket. Information saves lives was the Internews slogan, but again, the Democratic Party wanted full control and to dictate what constituted legitimate information that should be spread. Censorship, as well as color revolutions, became part of the Internews legacy, as well as quite possibly money laundering out of the Cayman Islands. Benz gives us the bigger picture.
Former CIA officer Larry Johnson says Russia held back from striking key Kiev command centers for four years specifically to avoid killing the Western intelligence and military officers embedded inside them. But Johnson says, “Now, Putin’s gloves are off and he’s not bluffing.”
Will the heart of Ukraine be struck soon? Here’s more on Redacted News.
Barbara Boyd argues Tulsi Gabbard’s resignation as DNI was driven by a family medical crisis—her husband Abraham Williams’ diagnosis with a rare bone cancer—and not by Iran-policy disputes, while claiming Reuters and online narratives framed it as an Intelligence Community “victory.” Boyd says Gabbard’s work centered on declassifications tied to Russiagate, the 2019 impeachment effort, 2020 election issues, Havana Syndrome, and directed energy allegations, amid reported pressure on her office.
The episode also covers a Senate confrontation with Acting AG Todd Blanche over Trump’s proposed $1.776B Anti-Weaponization Fund to compensate victims of “lawfare,” and portrays Trump as politically disciplining RINO opponents ahead of the midterms.
Finally, Boyd highlights Kevin Warsh’s swearing-in as Fed chair, his call for “regime change” at the Fed via balance-sheet reduction and rate policy, and cites Treasury- and agency-linked equity stakes and loans aimed at rebuilding U.S. industry outside traditional Fed/Congress channels. Here’s more from Promethean Updates.
If U.S. Sen. Rand Paul is serious about undercovering the American role in the creation of the Covid-19 pandemic, his Homeland Security Committee needs to secure testimony from Avril Haines,
Haines served as the Director of National Intelligence during the Joe Biden administration. She previously had been deputy director of the CIA during the Barack Obama presidency . It was in that role that she had her greatest proximity to the players involved in the pandemic, among them, Ralph Baric, an epidemiologist from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
He worked directly with scientists from the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Communist China, including the so-called Bat Lady of Wuhan, Dr. Shi Zhengli, in creating and mapping out Covid-19.
Will Paul calls Haines to testify? Hard to say, but he did call attention to the CIA meddling and trying to block his committee’s oversight. He tweeted on Catherine Herridge’s reporting of this same issue, saying, “Based on @C__Herridge‘s reporting & our CIA whistleblower’s testimony, the CIA appears to be ILLEGALLY SPYING on @DNIGabbard‘s team, INTERFERING w/ investigations on the COVID coverup, the JFK, MLK, & RFK assassinations, UAPs, etc.”
Here, in a video, posted on X.com, Mike Benz spells out the array of players and institutions involved, and even underscores timelines showing interactions among these players. Some are from China, others from American academic institutions as well as the CIA and arms of the U.S. military. Benz is director of the Foundation for Freedom online.
Avril Haines seems to be the one person who touched every element of Covid's gain-of-function journey, from CIA in 2015 while CIA & ODNI worked with Ralph Baric & the Wuhan Bat Lady, to Event 201 in Oct 2019 with China's CDC head, to ODNI chief while the pandemic then played out pic.twitter.com/UhxNyZtwhk
Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt returns with a new look at the missing scientists involved in UFO spinoff research. But this broadcast also touches on a bigger bombshell — the wholesale desecration of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. Most of us know already that Tulsi Gabbard resigned on Friday as director of the DNI to tend to her husband, who is suffering a crippling bone disease.
Her resignation follows the departure of her deputy Joe Kent, who opposed the Iranian War, and more recently, the resignation of Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, Gabbard’s assistant in charge of Policy and Capabilities. For those who don’t know, Amaryllis Fox Kennedy is the daughter-in-law of Robert Kennedy Jr. A former CIA officer, she had just assembled 40 boxes of documents pertaining to the CIA’s involvement in the assassination of the late President John F. Kennedy. Her resignation came in protest because the CIA marched into her offices at the DNI and seized all 40 of those boxes to prevent their release.
President Donald Trump had promised his administration would tell us the truth about the Kennedy assassination. Apparently, we’re not going to get the truth — just more subterfuge that hides the ugly reality of the CIA’s history and the inordinate role that agency has played in political assassinations and violence within the United States.
We can’t say we’re shocked. There have many signs lately that the Trump administration isn’t nearly as transparent nor as clean as they try to portray themselves. Are we giving up on Trump? Not yet. There’s time to mend bridges and actually fulfill campaign promises.
But that’s not at all the focus right now. In fact, it’s impossible to say what is the focus right now, as it seems to shift daily, sometimes by the hour. Will the administration ever get back on track, or will the disappointments continue? That’s the rub — and it’s a difficult, and dangerous, one.
President Donald Trump has named Aaron Lucas as the successor to Tulsi Gabbard in her role as Director of National Intelligence. Gabbard announced her pending resignation on Friday, saying she will step down on June 30 to care for her husband Abraham Williams, who is struggling to ward off a crippling bone disease.
Lucas has served as Gabbard’s deputy director at the DNI. He is a former CIA agent, who served with the agency for nearly 20 years in a multitude of posts around the world.
Here, Fox News contributor Byron York discusses the transition and whether Lucas will encounter any resistance to his appointment when he appears before the U.S. Senate. One of the Republican members of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence — John Cornyn of Texas — could be smarting as he did not receive a re-election endorsement from Trump. The president encouraged voters to elect Cornyn’s primary opponent Ken Paxton.
Something very disturbing has happened in America: assassination attempts used to be uncommon and isolated.
But the attacks President Trump has faced are part of a terrifying pattern. There have been so many attempts, it’s impossible to pass them all off as the handiwork of crazed nutballs.
So the question becomes: Which foreign nations or federal agencies might want to control the narrative so intently that they would encourage and even instigate assassination attempts? Should we be blaming the outburst in violence on Iran, the CIA or some other nefarious parties?
How do we stop them dead in their tracks? Here’s more from Glenn Beck.
Bill Gates has been exposed for his role in dropping boxes of ticks near farms and wooden areas.
We already know Gates’ rationale for this abhorrent behavior: He’s got a master stake in producing artificial foods — lab-grown meats and vegetable products for companies including UPSIDE Foods and Memphis Meats. We understand why he would want to give his artificial products a better edge.
But when you’re messing with the health of human beings, as well as farm animals, you’re not just playing with fire, you’re engaged in criminal activity. Here’s more from Gary Franchi on the Next News Network.