|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
Just before beginning his first term on January 20, 1993,
President-Elect Clinton made a very strange request to close family
friend and lawyer Webster Hubbell: "If I put you over there in
justice I want you to find the answer to two questions for me: One,
who killed JFK. And two, are there UFOs." According to Hubbell,
"Clinton was dead serious." The key to unlocking the mystery of
President Kennedy's assassination and a possible UFO connection lie
in events that occurred 18 years earlier in post-war Germany. In
1945 John F. Kennedy was a guest of Navy Secretary James Forrestal,
where he personally witnessed technological secrets that have still
not been disclosed to the world. These secrets stemmed from
extraterrestrial technologies that Nazi Germany had acquired and
were attempting to use in their weapons programs. In searching for
answers to who killed President Kennedy we need to start with the
death of his mentor, James Forrestal in 1949. Forrestal became the
first Secretary of Defense in 1947, a position he held until March,
1949. Forrestal was a visionary who thought Americans had a right
to know about the existence of extraterrestrial life and
technologies. Forrestal was sacked by President Truman because he
was revealing the truth to various officials, including Kennedy who
was a Congressman at the time. Forrestal's ideals and vision
inspired Kennedy, and laid the seed for what would happen 12 years
later. After winning the 1960 Presidential election, Kennedy
learned a shocking truth from President Eisenhower. The control
group set up to run highly classified extraterrestrial
technologies, the Majestic-12 Group, had become a rogue government
agency. Eisenhower warned Kennedy that MJ-12 had to be reined in.
It posed a direct threat to American liberties and democratic
processes. Kennedy followed Eisenhower's advice, and set out to
realize James Forrestal's vision. The same forces that orchestrated
Forrestal's death, opposed Kennedy's efforts at every turn. When
Kennedy was on the verge of succeeding, by forcing the CIA to share
classified UFO information with other government agencies on
November 12, 1963, he was assassinated ten days later. Kennedy's
Last Stand is the story of how an American President tried to
realize his friend and mentor's vision of a world where humanity
openly knows about extraterrestrial life; and of the government
officials responsible for denying that vision.
El material de este libro llegara como un profundo shock para
muchos. Esto sera especialmente asi para los profesionales de la
politica publica quienes han creido erroneamente que la veterania,
la responsabilidad y el merito determinan el acceso a los secretos
mas profundos de la seguridad nacional. Este libro prepara al gran
publico la verdad acerca de la vida extraterrestre, y como un
selecto grupo de agencias en los USA y otras partes han sido
implementadas politicas publicas durante seis decadas. La esperanza
es que revelando tal informacion inspirara al gran publico para
intentar participar de manera informal en el futuro debate publico
sobre las politicas apropiadas sobre la vida extraterrestre.
The hero's journey is a process of (re)discovery of the
principles that make up the national identity of a country. These
principles must then be applied in the formulation and
implementation of foreign policy. For the seventh time in its
history, America has discovered a grand synthesis of power and
morality in projecting its resources and principles into the global
arena. This makes possible a more assertive, moral foreign policy
course in responding to a range of foreign policy challenges. Of
these challenges, Salla asserts, the most profound in terms of the
scale of human suffering around the planet is that concerning
violations of the rights of ethnic minorities.
Ethnic conflicts and the humanitarian crises and massive human
rights violations they generate form a foreign policy challenge
that will preoccupy the minds of policy makers for much of the 21st
century. NATO's intervention in the Kosovo crisis is the high water
mark for America's seventh hero's journey. The intervention sends a
decisive signal to all governments that the U.S. and its allies
will no longer remain inactive in the face of states attempting to
militarily repress the aspirations of their ethnic minorities. This
moral interventionism can safely be extended well into the 21st
century if policy makers wisely combine the moral principles and
foreign policy challenges that make up both the Second American
Century and America's (Seventh) Hero's journey. This provocative
analysis will be of interest to all scholars, students, and
researchers involved with the development of American foreign
policy.
Did the West win the Cold War? Was it a genuine or a contrived
conflict? When did it begin? How was its cause related to its end?
These are among the questions considered by the contributors of
this volume. Asked to assess the combination of socio-political
forces and events they attribute to ending the Cold War, they have
come up with diverse theories that challenge the self-serving
orthodoxy that claims Western military prowess, economic strength,
and ideological superiority produced the triumph. The contributors
consider a range of views from the contention that the West's
military resolve and economic capacity forced the Soviet Union into
submission to arguments focusing on U.S. and West European peace
movements and East European dissent movements. Between these
diametric positions, they weigh the significance of such factors as
the new thinking in the Soviet Union and the intelligentsia of
Eastern Europe. Through a range of many views, they provide a broad
interpretive framework for understanding the Cold War's end, and
suggest how that understanding is related to the solving of future
conflicts.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R330
Discovery Miles 3 300
|