DON’T PANIC, IT’S JUST THERMONUCLEAR BOMBS…

By now you've probably all  heard about the firing of those base personnel at Minot Air Force Base in Minot, North Dakota.  If you've never been there, the city itself is fairly nice-sized, about 50,000, in the middle of the flat North Dakota prairie, and about 40 miles south of the Canadian border.  There all resemblance to a typical small-sized great plains city, or for that matter, a typical military base, end, for Minot is also home to an airbase (about 15 miles north  of town) and several B-52 intercontinental bombers, and a flight or two of Minuteman ICBM's in missile silos. Driving north out of town one can literally pass by some of these missile silos and their deadly cargos within a few hundred feet.  People who've read my Giza Death Star books, including the most recent, also know my fascination for the old Safeguard ABM radar system at Nekoma, North Dakota, which I saw in the distance as a boy while traveling in the state with my folks. (Nekoma, in case you're wondering, is northwest of Grand Forks).

So I tend to sit up and take notice when stories affecting these installations make the news. You might recall, a few years ago, that some h-bombs from the Minot base "went missing."  That alone should boggle the mind.

How do you lose a hydrogen bomb? What was the yield? Were they "suitcase" nukes or "city-busters"?

As if that wasn't bad enough, we were eventually told that someone at the base made a "mistake" and shipped the bombs to Barksdale Air base in Louisiana, you know, the base where Bush the Stupid flew to after being informed about the 9/11 attacks. You might recall that at Barksdale - the backup command center for the USA's strategic nuclear forces after Offut Air base in Omaha - was where he jettisoned the press corps, and gave a strange speech not mentioning terrorism at all but that America was under a test; and then off he flew to Offut Air base. Meanwhile, someone allegedly called the White House switchboard, revealed a bunch of passwords, and so on, and all of this fueled speculations - which I happen to believe - that Bush the Stupid had to fly to those bases to reassert personal presidential control over the nuclear arsenal, which the phone call revealed had been coopted.

So back to those missing hydrogen bombs. Eventually we were of course informed that the whole affair of the missing h-bombs was just a paper mistake, that the bombs were all found and accounted for, and that no one was ever in any danger, and that there were about six involved (I don't recall where, but I do recall reading a number somewhere, because someone apparently called the Missing Hydrogen Bomb Office at the Department of Defense. It's nice to know they have an office and established procedures for such things).  Then, of course, we had that strange episode during one of Orange Man Bad's covid press conferences where the podium was occupied by all sorts of military brass, and we were told about an operation in the Caribbean when Thoroughly Modern Milley took the stand. You might recall that after detailing the naval and Marine resources committed to this otherwise unspecified operation, Thoroughly Modern Milley repeated the phrase "You're not getting in, you're not getting in!"  This strange press conference and these bizarre statements by Thoroughly Modern Milley led me to speculate that perhaps someone was trying to smuggle a nuke into the USA, and perhaps even one of those "misfiled" h-bombs. And as for Thoroughly Modern Milley, you'll recall he also gave that strange speech in Colorado about military cadets having to fight little green men, which he later clarified was a reference to the camouflage uniforms of the Russian military.

Is it just me, or does anyone else out there find all this just a little bit more than mildly disconcerting?

Anyway, with all that as background, now we have to consider the recent round of personnel dismissals at Minot, and this article comes courtesy of V.T. who found it on RT, and as one might imagine, RT picked up on something from the original CNN report, and dutifully reported it:

Reason for firings at key US nuclear base revealed – CNN

Well, whaddya know? There's that number six again:

In a notorious incident in 2007, a US B-52 bomber took off from Minot base while mistakenly loaded with six nuclear-armed missiles. In 2014, Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana was hit by another scandal which saw half of its 183 missile-launch officers accused of cheating to obtain higher scores in their monthly proficiency tests.

Anyway, I hope you caught the thing that caught my eye, but in case you didn't, here is is, and it should be read in conjunction with the above quotation:

Eighth Air Force command announced on Tuesday that it had dismissed two senior commanders and four of their subordinates at Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota, which hosts 28 B-52H Stratofortress nuclear-capable bombers and 165 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Officials said that the service members were dismissed “due to a loss of confidence in their ability to complete their assigned duties.” (Boldfaced emphases added)

Now I have basically two high octane speculations about what may really be going on here. The first is that the dismissed officers took the jabs, and began to show signs of the mental and physical decline that have been reported all over the world as being associated with the jabs. If so, then the jabs have become a national security issue, one which the military, in its woke rush to  push the narradigm of quackcination, itself contributed to.  To put it country simple, there's a suspicious lack of specificity in the reasons for the dismissals, and that smacks of someone covering up something.

Disturbing as that possibility is, however, I suspect yet another culprit, one hinted at in the first quotation, the one from the very end of the RT article: cheating on monthly proficiency tests.  Or to put it bluntly once again: our declining academic standards are beginning to affect our deterrent capability. A certain standard of intelligence and competence has to be maintained in order to be able to operate modern technologically based weapons systems, and what that last  paragraph is telling us is that it has not been maintained, and that in order to meet military standards, those officers felt they had to cheat.

And if the officers responsible for operating and maintaining such weapons cannot be counted upon to be competent, what about their superiors, the ones rattling the thermonuclear saber and talking openly about the possibility of a nuclear war with Russia? In a country where many of these "leaders" don't even know the difference between a man and a woman, it's no wonder they have no idea, really, of what they're talking about when it comes to the insanity of a nuclear war.  To such idiots a hydrogen bomb is just another form of artillery.

Yes, these people really are insane, and this really is a banana republic with nukes.  Just how many nukes we don't really know, because having lied about everything else, they're probably lying about having recovered those missing h-bombs too. Would you trust this current "leadership team" with the nuclear football?

I wouldn't either. 'Nuff said.

See you on the flip side...

 

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Joseph P. Farrell

Joseph P. Farrell has a doctorate in patristics from the University of Oxford, and pursues research in physics, alternative history and science, and "strange stuff". His book The Giza DeathStar, for which the Giza Community is named, was published in the spring of 2002, and was his first venture into "alternative history and science".

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  1. Richard on March 8, 2023 at 2:30 pm

    In one’s view, it seems prudent to limit media sourced confabulations to a minimum when possible. Narrative drivers come in many forms as the last few years have demonstrated repeatedly. For some folks almost to the point of becoming jaded and uninterested when not overly zealous to drive a story. One does not fall into that camp, thankfully, but have concerns about mission readiness across the armed forces if adverse reactions of active-duty members are similar to one’s own after the Moderna duet. Perpetual recovery now.

    Another concern are those high percent numbers of young folk or new recruits, that have come to light, that are unfit for duty in their late teens and early 20’s. What is not mentioned are whether those emergency use authorization injections have been associated with those high unfit percentages. What also seems to be avoided is that cell-phone-lard-butt syndrome or maybe addiction awareness. Anyone that brings up a bristle in the briar patch to make better recover has had issues with censorship from abroad with obfuscation and plausible deniability alluded to.

    And those cheats to make the grade. That says a lot about mindset even programming of a sort coming from within sovereign borders where borders are to be found these days.

    What much of this looks like from an outside vantage point is a subtle but potent infiltration and set-up-to-fail of all sectors of modernity. That “Unrestricted Warfare,” sort of approach. The evidence is bold faced and mounting. It points to the undermining of the western road of constitutionalism, separation of powers, and judicial independence. That civilian military fusion of totalitarianism behind it. Essentially, veering towards answering “Who and what are compromised; and by how much and by whom?” That marathon is still ongoing, too, but has taken a few unexpected offroad treks much to the chagrin of those who see mostly red on flag & decor and are not likely to recover as they might hope, if that is anything they can do. Time will tell how much opportunity there really is in that chaos sown.

    It seems that those three monkeys (see-no-evil; speak-no-evil; hear-no-evil) are confused with what to react on for fear of the serpent sticking a poisonous fang into their minds by way of an apple. Irony of fate; such are these times it seems.

    Loose nukes & loose marbles-in-noggin & loose mind altering microbes in the brain, not sure if there’s a difference for how bad an outcome might be. And then there are the Others watching the monkeys, those upright simian types, wreaking havoc.

    One has known missileers proudly wearing their pocket rockets, pilots with their wings, navigators with theirs, and many levels of badges and stripes. They’re not all compromised or incompetent as the ignorant make them out to be. But there is an unrestricted war taking place larger than bombs & bullets with an accompanying fog of [Dezinformatsiya].



  2. anakephalaiosis on March 7, 2023 at 4:04 am

    Odin’s Yoga:

    1. Strength and speed.
    2. Will power and self-restraint.
    3. Awareness and foresight.
    4. Independence and superiority.

    In asymmetrical warfare, the Scythians developed a training system, that proved so successful, that it still echoes around the world today.

    Bringing a Scythian horse to water, and toasting a Scythian cranial cup, is the testament to a hidden fact, that the gospelers hinted at.

    Odin, as Adon, is the highest patriarchal authority, who rides on a donkey, with palm branches thrown at his feet, as he pulls sword from stone.

    The runes are original Christianity.



  3. EEEEEZY on March 7, 2023 at 1:43 am

    Good time to remind everyone we spend almost a trillion dollars a year on our military…..and most people are OK with that. Can’t imagine what we’d get for our money if we only spent a quarter of a trillion.



  4. marcos toledo on March 7, 2023 at 12:01 am

    Our problem is vicious bullies in suits who think(dream) their adults are at the helm of our world what is the third motto of Oceania Ignorance is Strength said it all. It is a well-established mindset, especially in the West



  5. FiatLux on March 6, 2023 at 5:34 pm

    “In its report, Ready, Willing and Unable to Serve [from 2009], Mission: Readiness — a group of retired military and civilian military leaders — found that one in four young people between 17 and 24 does not have a high school diploma. About 30 percent of those who do, states the report, still fail the Armed Forces Qualification Test, the entrance test required to join the US military.” [https://www.thoughtco.com/us-youth-ineligible-for-military-service-3322428] Other widespread disqualifying factors cited in the report were obesity, physical/mental health problems, and criminal history. And all of that was before the most recent quackcines.

    This is what you get when you eliminate human intelligence before you’ve got artificial intelligent in place — not that I believe the latter will run the world without even more catastrophic consequences than we’ve seen so far. Thank the eugenicist Malthusian elites, and the pharma-narco-propatainment complex they run, for the Great Moronization and Great Poisoning of the American people. The elites themselves have become morons, or simply gone completely insane, since they clearly don’t realize they, too, depend on much of the human intelligence and labor they’ve decided to destroy.



    • Robert Barricklow on March 6, 2023 at 7:14 pm

      Well said!



  6. Robert Barricklow on March 6, 2023 at 12:01 pm

    Not to worry.
    Just a few patriotic soldiers; not willing to follow unlawful orders.
    Ukrainian soldiers on the way as replacement$

    As far as test go; try this on for size.
    Oxymoron: Jumbo shrimp; military intelligence; military tests.
    When you take a test in the military; the NCO says he’s going to take a 20 minute break.
    He’s leaving the answers to the desk, right here[points].
    Now I know none of your knuckle heads are going to get this;
    read it to your fellow test soldiers. Your not smart enough to tell them;
    nobody gets 100% right. And, everybody needs different passable answers.
    “The real question here is can you follow instructions?
    Are you smart enough to pass… ?
    WITHOUT GETTING CAUGHT!!!.”

    So, they really can do the job.
    The test are there for stacked operational purposes.
    If they can’t do their jobs; they’re out.

    The real question; is, who or what the soldiers are working for?
    The country? The Const1tution? The Declaration of Independence? Liberty for all?
    Or, just following ANY orders?

    The above first paragraphs are to drive that point home.
    I’m sure the soldiers are professional.
    But, the shots and other policies bring much more into question; not because of patriotic duty.
    But because of leadership. Or, lack thereof.
    Or, a leadership that is less concerned about their country, and more concerned w/an idealism that is at cross purposes w/the policies of The United States. The United States are what the soldiers are serving. Not any person[s]; nor ideologies, other than what the Constitution, Declaration of Independence and liberty for all represents.



  7. Kevin Ryan on March 6, 2023 at 11:53 am

    Minot, ND. Eleven years ago I was there for two weeks in February, it was 40 below when i left, and with the brutal winters there one might think service personnel would have little to do that would distract from keeping up their proficiency ratings. But then there’s always social media, alcohol, sex, Casual Friday attitudes, and what have you. As for cheating, West Point had a major cheating scandal in ‘49-‘51 and the Air Force Academy ‘63-‘65. Just as businesses cut corners to increase profits, people more widely cheat to get better grades or get ahead on the playing field using steroids and other drugs, in addition to more hands-on cheating like holding, tripping, face-masking. Cheating is endemic in American society. And in regard to vaccine effects that might impair the mental proficiency of the guardians of our nuclear arsenal, just this morning I read a Long-Covid article on current symptoms that include Brain Fog. The article is particularly lacking as to the specific behaviors and circumstances that warranted the removal of these service members but it does suggest that someone is concerned about the performance of personnel responsible for our nuclear weapons. The speculation is justified that we might question the mental status of those higher up the chain of command linked to such weapons. The weapons themselves are insane. It is also interesting that the source of the article is RT, when within the past year it has been Russia’s leader Putin who has threatened the use of nuclear weapons. We should question the mental status and sanity of any leader capable of launching a nuclear strike or “accident.”



  8. Michael UK on March 6, 2023 at 5:33 am

    I suspect that the reported officers’ incompetence and cheating is a cover story for much stranger things going on at nuclear weapon bases and launch silos. There are credible military reports of interference with the nuclear weapons by UFOs.
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11776067/Air-Force-vets-testified-witnessing-UFOs-TURN-nuclear-warheads.html

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-57559179

    As I have been reporting on GDS pages over the past few weeks, there is an excellent documentary film titled ‘Moment of Contact’ released about a UFO crash and two alien beings that were subsequently caught in Varginha, Brazil in January 1996.



    • Joseph P. Farrell on March 6, 2023 at 3:57 pm

      I’m familiar with those reports and have talked about them in various interviews and in some of my books. But in this case, I just don’t think so. It doesn’t have that UFO feel to me.



      • Michael UK on March 7, 2023 at 4:12 am

        My personal view is we don’t need to panic. The evidence points to some entity or entities watching over nuclear weapons; and in the case of Vandenberg Air Force base nuclear missile launch – actual intervention and taking control of the launch.
        The jury is out on the oriign of the entity / entities – whether here on Earth / under the sea, the cosmos, interdimensional, or time travellers from the far future. The location of the first of these could be a base under the sea / in the deep lakes on the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific. That would neatly link in with the Varginha, Brazil UFO crash, which seemed to evidence amphibious beings (very strong smell of ammonia emitted by the two beings). Also the craft they crashed in was a cylinder / cigar shape and the size of a school bus.
        Draw your own conclusions about the recent Alaska shoot down of an unidentifed aerial object!



    • O. Kelzenberg on March 7, 2023 at 9:03 pm

      It could be a cover story, and a replacement of good officers that are not on board with the current administration’s plans for god knows what use of nukes with regard to depopulation or WW III?

      In 1980 there was an accidental explosion in a Titan II rocket silo in Arkansas, with a 9.5 megaton nuke attached that could have wasted the entire center of the USA. Here’s a link to the story: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TG8NCX-s-L8



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