FINAL WARNING: The Council on Foreign Relations
Ten days before he was shot in Dallas, it has been reported that
President Kennedy said in a speech at Columbia University: “The high
office of President has been used to foment a plot to destroy the
American’s freedom, and before I leave office I must inform the citizen
of this plight.”
There has been a phenomenal amount of research done on the case of
President Kennedy’s murder, and it almost seems that when he died,
the tide changed in this country. The forces behind the assassination
of Kennedy were able to change the course of history at will, and with
the new-found confidence at their success, the power they gained,
literally allowed them to exert complete control over American
government.
One fact that linked the Illuminati to the Kennedy conspiracy was the
oil connection. Huge oil fields had been discovered off the coast of
Vietnam in 1950, and Rockefeller was able to use oil as a ploy to
ferment a fear that Vietnam would be lost to Communism, the way
Cuba was. However, Kennedy wanted to end American involvement in
the war, and in October, 1963, he recalled 1,000 so-called advisers. He
planned to bring home all American soldiers by 1965. After Kennedy
was eliminated, the U.S. government escalated the war in Vietnam.
Billions of dollars was being made from the war, because war is good
business. This money source would have ended.
Though the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), an offshoot of the
Coordinator of Information, was initiated in 1942 by President
Roosevelt, President Harry Truman was the one responsible for its
evolution into the Central Intelligence Agency in 1947. He also began
to see its growing power. In a column that appeared in the Washington
Post on December 21, 1963, he revealed his feelings about the agency:
“For some time I have been disturbed by the way the CIA has been
diverted from its original assignment. It has become an operational
and at times a policy-making arm of the government...” On January 16,
1961, in his ‘Farewell to the Nation,’ President Eisenhower said: “In the
councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of
unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-
industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced
power exists and will persist. We must never let the weight of this