Tuesday, September 2, 2014

A Missed Anniversary. "The victor will not be asked whether he told the truth."

Sick as a dog this weekend for the most part, I missed the 75th anniversary of an incident that opened the ball on World War Two and that I wrote about five years ago: False Flag: "The victor will not be asked whether he told the truth." -- the 70th Anniversary of the "Gleiwitz Incident"

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I first read of this incident while in high school in the early 1960's. I was amazed then, and still am, at how blatant propaganda can, and is, used by those in political power to effect the public's perception of reality.

In America, in the past 20 yrs, IMHO we have witnessed numerous false flag events, some designed to disarm the citizens, others to bring public hostility against those holding political power.

Our main stream media has been an extremely willing accomplice to this move and should receive the complete disdain of all patriotic Americans.

I agree, we have not seen anything yet. Each time the powers that be get away with "manufacturing a situation" we can rest assured that the next one will be even more blatant, and that tens of millions of us will believe every word the media prints about it!

Anonymous said...

Yeh well...We seem to forget that A. Hitler didn't come up with the Idea. King Carl Gustav III of Sweden did EXACTLY the same thing in the 18th century in order to drum up a phony war with Russia.(C.G.III was a vain silly popinjay with a whore of a wife . who fell in love with "war as theater" because of his love of opera. His own people shot and killed him for taxing moonshine to pay for his latest war.) "False flag" wars are the historic norm--NOT the exception

Slobyskya Rotchikokov said...

apropos of nothing and totally OT but wanted to share for any of you who use a 'smart phone' -
http://www.komando.com/happening-now/265195/make-free-calls-the-government-cant-track

Anonymous said...

OT, I admit. the discussions of the fighting withdrawal of a Filipino unit
on the Golan Heights at PJMedia's
The Belmont Club are fascinating.
They refused to lay down their arms.
one post is "The Gulang Heights"
["gulang" is Tagalog]

Paul X said...

It's starting to look as if false flag operations are the rule, not the exception.