Just to be on the level with those Squares in the Oval Office, |
Timothy Spearman Shakingmyspear.com
timothywatsonjan2022@gmail.com
Just to be on the level with those Squares in the Oval Office, |
This radio play has been updated by Andy Peacher to appeal more to the modern audience. Nothing we have learned from tradition is true. The White Star Line was owned by the Jesuit Order of the Catholic Church, which knew that the best place to murder people was at sea, where there were fewer witnesses, and where the Official Secrets Act could be invoked so that sailors could be compelled to keep silence.
There were 3 prominent U.S. bankers on board, Isidor Strauss, John Astor and Benjamin Guggenheim. They were staunch opponents of the Aldrich Bill introduced in Congress to inaugurate the Federal Reserve Bank. Vatican banker J. P. Morgan switched the sister ships the Olympic and the Titanic. And Captain Smith, a Jesuit of the short robe took charge of the Olympic masquerading as Titanic. All three bankers died.
Amazingly, another enemy of the Jesuits, who opposed a Federal Bank and wished to issue greenback interest free treasury notes, was Abraham Lincoln, who was shot April 14 and died April 15, 1865. The Titanic would suffer its fatal blow on April 14 when it was rammed in the middle of the night by a Navy ship and sank April 15 at 0230 Hours.
This radio play puts James Cameron’s film to shame by revealing the truth so grossly at odds with the traditional fairy tale. Grab a coffee, cookies and milk or Earl Grey tea or whatever you fancy and kick back and enjoy.
Tim Spearman, John Hamer & Andy Peacher bring you Titanic: Ship of Fools
A HUGE THANK YOU TO
Hugh Reilly and thatchannel
https://thatchannel.com/about-us/
Lee Pritchard for mastering the recording
The Voice actors
Videographer Andy Peacher
Horizon Talk Radio
The Radio play was written by Timothy Spearman
inspired by a story line suggested by John Hamer.
Above is an image of Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth. He was supposed to have been cornered in a manhunt that led to a tobacco shed, which was set on fire to flush him out. He purportedly died in the fire, presumably succumbing to smoke inhalation. His body was allegedly rescued from the fire and identified by those asked to view the body. Not so, says Finnis Bates, a lawyer who met the real John Wilkes Booth, who spent his life on the run, operating under two aliases, John St. Helen, and late in life, David E. George. Originally, meeting the assassin over a small legal matter, Bates later became so absorbed with tracking the assassin that he turned the enterprise into his life’s work, recording the epic journey in a book titled, The Escape and Suicide of John Wilkes Booth.
You are tasked with the job of locating it. Where is the mummy today? Call it a treasure hunt of sorts. See if you can determine its whereabouts.