Thinking AlltheTime public
[search 0]
More
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Artwork

1
All the Time

Thinking AlltheTime

Unsubscribe
Unsubscribe
Monthly
 
Irrefutable conspiracies, obscured military programs and evidence of ancient civilizations that we are learning more about all the time. Puzzle pieces that fit into a more complete understanding of the world we live in. Secrets, secrets everywhere.
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
Oswald joined the Civil Air Patrol, a program planned to send recruits to Russia as spies(but totally didn't know anybody there or that the founder of the CAP owned the Texas School Book depository), spoke fluent Russian, according to schoolmates, Marines who served with him and personal friends and acquaintances before and after his trip to the So…
  continue reading
 
Hoover knew there was more than one Lee Harvey Oswald. Eyewitnesses said there were many Lee and Harvey Oswalds, friends with Ruby and declaring their communist sympathies. While Lee was elsewhere, Lee was sighted, talked to, and his signature recorded in hotel rooms and on receipts in the wrong place at the right time. The Warren Commission wasn't…
  continue reading
 
Marina Oswald, wife of Lee Harvey Oswald, is the only witness linking Lee Harvey Oswald to the rifle found in the TSBD, the discarded blue jacket that matched fibers on the rifle, the name Hidell(the name of the purchaser of the rifle), and quite a few other pieces of direct evidence. The problem is that Marina constantly made contradicting stateme…
  continue reading
 
Medical examiners shouldn’t be destroying and concealing evidence, the Kennedy Archives shouldn’t be accepting and using JFK autopsy photos not taken by the official autopsy photographer. Warren Commissioners shouldn’t be altering medical reportsand leaking information. Witnesses with relevant information shouldn’t be ignored. Some of these actions…
  continue reading
 
During the JFK murder investigation, a rifle was probably misidentified several times. Big whoop. During the JFK murder investigation, that rifle fires impossibly fast. Never resolved, kind of a bigger whoop. The bullet that couldn't have been fired, now sitting in the National Archives as proof that Oswald fired all the shots that day, has no chai…
  continue reading
 
Two days before JFK was killed, Rose Cheramie/Cherami, pseudonym of Melba Marcades, told law enforcement and everyone else around her that she was part of a plot to kill JFK. Every detail of her branching story was confirmed to be true by US officials, who were asked to look into those details by the lone cop Rose initially confessed to, after it t…
  continue reading
 
Patiently and objectively putting together the plain facts of a story is as important as a critical eye. Any whole is made up of discrete parts. Plus, the actual police reports, the primary case documents from intelligence agencies, the interviews of the emergency room doctors, the scientific and ballistics studies, and the unaltered, firsthand wit…
  continue reading
 
Thank goodness we live in a world where slavery ended! Oh wait, it totally didn’t. Slavery exists in more countries than not. In about 85 percent of countries, in fact, or about 165 countries in 2022. Chocolate! More than 70% of all the chocolate in the world comes from cacao beans grown, harvested, then processed into cocoa in West African countri…
  continue reading
 
Dr. Albert Kligman experimented on inmates at Holmesburg Prison with various chemicals, surgical procedures, injury schedules and radioactive isotopes. The prisoners were financially compensated, but were not afforded informed consent and rarely knew what was being administered or how it would affect their long-term health. Part 4 focuses on How Kl…
  continue reading
 
Dr. Albert Kligman experimented on inmates at Holmesburg Prison with various chemicals, surgical procedures, injury schedules and radioactive isotopes. The prisoners were financially compensated, but were not afforded informed consent and rarely knew what was being administered or how it would affect their long-term health. Part 3 focuses on the At…
  continue reading
 
Dr. Albert Kligman experimented on inmates at Holmesburg Prison with various chemicals, surgical procedures, injury schedules and radioactive isotopes. The prisoners were financially compensated, but were not afforded informed consent and rarely knew what was being administered or how it would affect their long-term health. Part 2 focuses on the ma…
  continue reading
 
Dr. Albert Kligman experimented on inmates at Holmesburg Prison with various chemicals, surgical procedures, injury schedules and radioactive isotopes. The prisoners were financially compensated, but were not afforded informed consent and rarely knew what was being administered or how it would affect their long-term health.…
  continue reading
 
Leo Stanley, a doctor at the San Quentin State Penitentiary, was infatuated with roly-polys. He experimented on ten thousand men and women with testicle grafts and purees on primarily but not exclusively the male San Quentin prison population to achieve some fairly unclear aims, decidedly unclear results, using scientifically fallible methods. None…
  continue reading
 
The United States government and military had been building up a fairytale case to go back to Iraq since they left in the late 80s. Their case was completely false and contradictory to their own, almost simultaneous statements that Iraq was not a threat. Most people listening to these politicians were unconvinced, with good reason.…
  continue reading
 
According to the American CIA-written report delivered by Colin Powell at the 2003 UN Security Council, the Iraqi government was using a “web of lies” to hide a dangerous weapons program. This portrayal was factually incorrect and was in fact a mirror of the web of lies other countries, primarily the United States and the United Kingdom, were using…
  continue reading
 
In many combat operations, direct and indirect fighting causes more civilian casualties and deaths than military. People who do not want to fight, who have chosen not to fight, are killed for whatever arbitrary reason a needy, greedy, or angry government proclaims. The lowest recorded civilian casualty rate in a war is 13%. The absolute minimum num…
  continue reading
 
Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi was an indirect informant for the US who, without meeting a single US politician, general, or official, managed to provide the right information to the United States government, that Rafid knew was inaccurate, that constructed an altar made of three little letters upon which the United States, Iraq and their allies would…
  continue reading
 
What came after? 829 radioactive soft drinks given to 829 pregnant women as a non-therapeutic come-what-may style experiment, disabled and abandoned children being fed "special oatmeal," and US soldiers deliberately put into pockets of radioactivity after nuclear explosions. As well as a look at the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.…
  continue reading
 
Before the US dropped the bomb, they dripped the bane. Military and civilian doctors put together special intake programs at free clinics around the US and injected American civilians with sometimes dangerous and sometimes lethal levels of plutonium and other radioactive isotopes just to see what happened. None of the test subjects were asked for c…
  continue reading
 
There are two hundred underground towns in Cappadocia, Turkey, a province smaller than Connecticut, extending down into the earth as far as 250 feet with multiple levels that supported a population of thousands, with ventilation, irrigation, storage areas, and even areas for cattle. They'v been around for at least 2400 years and you can even go wal…
  continue reading
 
Who penned the works of Shakespeare? Was it a Stratford commoner who might have attended grammar school and has no literary work leading up to any of the Shakespearean plays, or was it Edward de Vere, with an uncle who wrote Shakespearean sonnets before Shakespeare did, a life mirroring a myriad of Shakespearean plays, explicitly named by intellect…
  continue reading
 
In 1932, the United States Public Health Service, or USPHS, established a study entitled “Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male.” 600 black men were involved in the study, and their medical exams, meals and burial insurance was paid for. 399 patients suffered from syphilis going into the experiment, 201 did not have the disease. No…
  continue reading
 
The STOCK Act signed in 2012 explicitly states that if federal employees use nonpublic information for private profit, they are breaking a federal law. In 19 months, from 2020 to 2021, 52 members of congress and 182 staffers have broken this federal law and face little to no consequences. Before 2012, the prohibition against insider trading among l…
  continue reading
 
Who was Shakespeare, really, and why is the cover of his sonnet quarto covered in right triangles and significant mathematical figures? And what is up with the altar stone at Shakespeare's church? Music from various Pixabay artists Resources for this episode: Top 18 reasons - https://shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org/top-reasons-why-edward-de-vere-17…
  continue reading
 
This is part 2 of a 2 part series about Unit 731, a human experimentation camp of horrors that the United States quietly swept under the international rug in order to gain access to the data gathered from war crimes such as torture and vivisection. Resources: Unit 731: Testimony by Hal Gold Spotlight: Documentary on atrocities of Japanase Unit 731 …
  continue reading
 
Manshu Detachment 731, usually referred to as Unit 731, a secret human experimentation camp and atrocity epicenter that operated for at least 13 years, is difficult to reconcile with any measure of science, or politics, or human development, and is definitively lacking in any respect or consideration for universal human rights. Resources: Unit 731:…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Quick Reference Guide