By John Sakowicz I remember when my son, Ryan Morris, was seeking a Service Academy Nomination, Senator Feinstein made it easy. After a quick vetting, Ryan got the nomination within a month. I remember when Elliott Herskowitz-Hale, an intern at my show on KMUD community radio was seeking an internship at the senator’s San Francisco […]
A massive trove of documents produced in the investigation of Leonard Francis provides an unprecedented view of the man at the center of it all and his years of corruption
Thomas McInerney is not alone. He is one member of a clique of retired Generals, Admirals, and CIA officers who have created an echo chamber in which they cite each other as sources and stir up the political fringe of America.
The Air Force fired the general in charge of its nuclear missiles on Friday, just two days after a Navy admiral with top nuclear weapons responsibilities was sacked.
Fake news.
A U.S. nuclear bomb exploded off the South Carolina coast after U.S. military leaders refused an order by Pres. Barack Obama to destroy Charleston in a false-flag operation to create chaos in the United States, an apparently Russian-backed “newspaper” claimed on Oct. 12, 2013.
Years before fake news planted by Russian agents boosted the United Kingdom’s disastrous Brexit vote and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, the shadowy
European Union Times tried to convince gullible readers that Obama nearly nuked America.
According to the article, military intelligence known as the GRU notified Russian president Vladimir Putin and the Russian general staff that a U.S. B-61-11 nuclear bomb exploded 620 miles off the coast of Charleston on Oct. 8, 2013, causing a magnitude-4.5 earthquake that Russian intelligence was able to measure through seismic detectors.