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originally posted by: cherokeetroy
a reply to: CanadianMason
my camera wasn't charged and they didn't stay long enough for me to film them but I'll be ready if they come back. They could have been birds...maybe. They were so small..it was hard to tell. Either that or they were too far away to see but like I said, they weren't circling like birds do. They were hovering together in two groups. They were stationary...like the way helicopters can remain stationary in the air. Can birds do that?
.... It all began with Alister Mackenzie who Built the Russian River gem in 1928. He supposedly refused quarters at the nearby Bohemian Grove and chose instead to stay in a railroad car. The black ânâ white photo shows Alister standing near his prefer red âlodgingâ at Northwood, which was the end of the line for the Northwestern Pacific Railroad. Just out of the reach of the local gendarmes, the temporary residence soon became the hangout for local card sharks, distillation entrepreneurs, and ladies of the night. And all this time you thought he was a proper gentleman. Oh my!
Northwood Golf Course was the product of the imagination of three men. The first to conceive the idea a golf course could be built on seventy wooded acres of land, across the Russian River from the world famous Bohemian Club Grove, was a Bohemian Club member, Jack Neville
The back-story here is likely worse than the obvious. In a tweet today Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announces his resolution warning President Trump not to remove troops from Syria or Afghanistan.[Not coincidentally the two countries visited by Speaker Pelosi and Adam Schiff last weekend.]
originally posted by: cherokeetroy
a reply to: Creep Thumper
POST REMOVED BY STAFF
In association with the Defense Intelligence Agency, and under the leadership of commanding general Albert Stubblebine, INSCOM attempted to use parapsychologic methods such as remote viewing in operation Center Lane. This was done as late as 1981. Other U.S. intelligence services attempted similar projects during the same period, most notably the Stargate Project by the Central Intelligence Agency.
Over the course of his retirement, it became widely known that Stubblebine maintained a keen interest in psychic warfare throughout his service. He sought to develop an army of soldiers with special powers, such as the ability to walk through walls.
In addition to alleged security violations from uncleared civilian psychics working in Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities (SCIFs), Stubblebine offended then-U.S. Army Chief of Staff General John Adams Wickham, Jr. by offering to perform a spoon-bending feat at a formal gala; Wickham associated such phenomena with Satanism.
A character ("General Hopgood") in the 2009 film The Men Who Stare at Goats â a fictionalized adaptation of Ronson's book â is loosely based on Stubblebine as commander of the "psychic spy unit" (portrayed in the film) who believed he could train himself to walk through walls.
In closed-door testimony, a Democratic lawmaker said, William B. Taylor Jr., the top American diplomat in Ukraine, drew a âdirect lineâ between President Trumpâs withholding of security aid and his demand for investigations.