Tuesday, June 28, 2011

WCC film marked by typical corporate approved "history"

The first film that was made about radio station WCC in Chatham, Massachusetts, utilized Walter Cronkite to narrate it to make it true, and to cause any one to care enough to watch it. The no-doubt financial aid funded film maker appears to have no history credentials from Trinity College. He does what his now corporate sponsors and their retired corporate puppets at CMMC dictate for free air conditioning and as applicable, a ham station away from their wives... uh... home.


The tides of war shifted against the U-boats in 1942, thanks to the U.S. Navy's listening post in Chatham which intercepted encrypted messages between the German high command and its Atlantic fleet.

"If Germans had been able to cut off the supplies to Great Britain in the early stages of the war " the Battle of Britain would have gone the other way," said Fouhy, who knows a great story after his 35-year career in news and journalism, mostly for CBS News.

If he knows a great story why do they perpetually ignore the link to Valkyrie and forward to what is now Bilderberg ?

Why is WCC being sold as some centerpiece when in fact it was Scituate, Rhode Island that was the key ? In doing so they happen to ignore the most important role WCC played as if it was a fiction.

And why did a Globalist, CFR, Bilderberg, Bohemian Grove CBS icon narrate a story that then evolves into a CBS-retiree run sequel that obliterates the narrative of the German sub that was sunk off Chatham, and precipitated the Dutch family fleeing to Canada after they waited in vain for it at the Chatham Bars Inn ?

By omitting a "secret" sub story covered up by the Navy and Justice Department in 1993 and 1998 machinations, they make it look like it never happened because they don't mention it in a now to-be-viewed-widely film; they repeat what they want you to know and ignore what they want forgotten.

Indeed, we can expect that they completely omitted the real "secret" history, that the day after Operation Valkyrie failed to kill Hitler, a sub sailed for the USA. That sub was indeed destroyed by an airship sent by WCC's intercepts of the sub.

A Bilderberg style meeting of Nazis and Americans was clumsily first attempted in Chatham, Massachusetts at the Chatham Bars Inn during the war right after the Operation Valkyrie attempt to kill Hitler on 20 July 1944. A submarine headed for the area, but was stopped by the crew of a blimp that was under the mistaken impression that the USA was at an unorchestrated war where everything was as it seemed and not staged. When the industrialist sub was located, the Navy and Department of Justice made the story go away after 1998.

If this government allowed access to what's in the vault of that submarine, the world would have had its history rewritten. Why else would the Navy and DOJ care about 60 year old memorabilia about dead men ? Their coup isn't dead and their children inherited it. They negotiated an end to the war and the details of who would do what as in Operation Paperclip, the continued ownership of BMW and the ongoing use of Merck as a de facto bank for SS assets.




Bilderberg features the Germanic families of Europe that overthrew the lawful Roman Empire, assassinated lawful Roman rulers and now demand that you not do it to them.

The sequel obliterates the truth that Scituate Rhode Island was the important station, a fact carried in the January 1986 issue of Yankee by Thomas Cave, of the FCC Radio Intelligence Division.

Even more amazing than the proposal to build UN headquarters in North Scituate was the reason it almost happened: Chopmist Hill was thought to be the only place in North America where radio signals from around the world, of virtually any strength and frequency, could be picked up clearly.

The astonishing and little-known story of the Chopmist Hill Monitoring Station began in 1940 when Thomas Cave, a tall, intense Bostonian who was a top agent of the Federal Communications Commission's Radio Intelligence Division (RID), leased the l83-acre Suddard farm. Chopmist Hill was to become the most important of 150 RID monitoring stations listening in on enemy communications during World War II.

The entire property was dotted with telephone poles on which 85,000 feet of antenna wire was strung. Cave and his men were able to listen in on conversations between German General Erwin Rommel and his tank commanders in North Africa during the critical battle of El Alamein in 1942. All through the battle, Cave kept calling the Narragansett Electric Company to send crews to Chopmist Hill to move the antenna poles in order to improve reception. On another occasion, Chopmist Hill saved the ocean liner Queen Mary, loaded with 10,000 Allied troops, by intercepting orders broadcast to a wolf pack of German U-boats in mid-Atlantic. One of the reasons there was almost no sabotage inside the U.S. was that Chopmist Hill was able to pick up and pinpoint the location of every radio transmitter that German agents set up...

However, a week after the visit, the search committee announced that UN headquarters would be built in New York. How seriously they considered the Rhode Island site may never be known. The irony is, as Cave admitted shortly before his death in 1983, that it was not any super-receptivity of the site, but the advanced and top-secret radio equipment used there that made Chopmist Hill's place in history.

WCC retirees and their friends are engaging in the self aggrandizing malarkey marketing typical of Cape Cod. They take corporate handouts even as they de facto ban Walmarts, Targets, Kohl's... or Stop and Shop from building gas pumps in Orleans. They spar with the hand that feeds their museums, Verizon, from building cell towers as needed.

This year's new exhibits were financed by a $100,000 donation from the Qualcomm wireless company in honor of Verizon executive Richard Lynch. Now the museum is working with mobile phone manufacturer Sony Ericsson on a new exhibit, also designed to expose and interest younger generations in careers in science and technology, museum spokesman Frank Messina said.

Thus the corporate-approved history narrative is safe for casual consumption once more.

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