Holey Official Conspiracy Theories

Hitler ( I think) coined the term, ‘Big Lie,’ to describe how popular beliefs are easily conditioned by stating lies repeatedly and confidently in the media.
This is how the terrorism scam, the global warming scam, the 9/11 scam and ‘Obama’s Birth Certificate’ scam are promoted.

These are conspiracy theories that any rational observer determines are false.

Good conspiracy research journalists, on the other hand, like the authors of the books that are available as free downloads on EW, are historians who share documented material that could be used in lawful courts, if only they existed in this world, to expose and prosecute the scions and enforcers of the corporate world order.

I see that fewer and fewer Pajama People are laughing at these historians and at people who discuss this data. The official conspiracy theories (the Big Lies) are easily disproven.

For your enjoyment and as an example of the above, here’s the latest on Alleged President Obama’s (His Holeyness’s) alleged birth certificate. Thanks, John Pruner, for sending this to your list, which I’m on:

HOW NO ONE GETS A REASSIGNED SS NUMBER

An intensive investigation has revealed the identity of the man whose

Social Security number (SSN) is being used by President Obama:

Jean Paul Ludwig, who was born in France in 1890, immigrated to the

United States in 1924, and was assigned SSN 042-68-4425 (Obama’s

current SSN) on or about March 1977.

Ludwig lived most of his adult life in Connecticut . Because of that,

his SSN begins with the digits 042, which are among only a select few

reserved for Connecticut residents.

Obama never lived or worked in that state! Therefore, there is no

reason on earth for his SSN to start with the digits 042. None

whatsoever!

Now comes the best part! Ludwig spent the final months of his life in

Hawaii , where he died.

Conveniently, Obama’s grandmother, Madelyn Payne Dunham, worked

part-time in the Probate Office in the Honolulu Hawaii Courthouse, and

therefore had access to the SSNs of deceased individuals.

The Social Security Administration was never informed of Ludwig’s

death, and because he never received Social Security benefits there

were no benefits to stop and therefore, no questions were ever raised.

The suspicion, of course, is that Dunham, knowing her grandson was not

a U.S. Citizen, either because he was born in Kenya or became a

citizen of Indonesia upon his adoption by Lolo Soetoro simply

scoured the probate records until she found someone who died who was not
receiving Social Security benefits, and selected Mr. Ludwigs Connecticut SSN for Obama.

Just wait until Trump gets past the birth certificate and onto

the issue of Barry O’s use of a stolen SSN. You will see leftist heads

exploding, because they will have no way of defending Obama.

Although many Americans do not understand the meaning of the term

“natural born” there are few who do not understand that if you are using

someone else’s SSN it is a clear indication of fraud.

Let’s all get this information out to everybody on our mailing lists…

If the voters of this great nation can succeed in bringing this lying,

deceitful, cheating, corrupt, impostor to justice it will be the

biggest and best news in decades for our country and the world.


� Very Interesting Bit of Detective Work �

Back in 1961 people of color were called ‘Negroes.’ So how can the Obama ‘birth certificate’ state he is ‘African-American’ when the term wasn’t even used at that time?

The birth certificate that the White House released lists Obama’s birth as August 4, 1961. It also lists Barack Hussein Obama as his father. No big deal, right? At the time of Obama’s birth, it also shows that his father is aged 25 years old, and that Obama’s father was born in " Kenya , East Africa “.
This wouldn’t seem like anything of concern, except the fact that Kenya did not even exist until 1963, two whole years after Obama’s birth, and 27 years after his father’s birth.
How could Obama’s father have been born in a country that did not yet exist?
Up and until Kenya was formed in 1963, it was known as the " British East Africa Protectorate”.

On the birth certificate released by the White House, the listed place of birth is "Kapi’olani Maternity Gynecological Hospital ".
This cannot be, because the hospital(s) in question in 1961 were called “KauiKeolani Children’s Hospital” and “Kapi’olani
Maternity Home”, respectively. The name did not change to Kapi’olani Maternity & Gynecological Hospital
until 1978, when these two hospitals merged.
How can this particular name of the hospital be on a birth certificate dated 1961 if this name had not yet been applied to it until 1978?

Resources:
[http://www.kapiolani.org/women-and-chil]
Post-colonial history (from Wikipedia)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Kenya
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenya]
Why hasn’t this been discussed in the major media???

Hi Don,
Thank you very much for posting the true history of our country Kenya.
Like me I’m a Luo man who lives in Kisumu city, like the history
imitates we do like fishing and farming around the lake. Lake Victoria
covers only East Africa, when you go to Uganda we have Luos living
there called Achola and Pathola and when you go to Tanzania you will
find descendants of Luo men called Sendeyo who came from kenya and
they do fishing and farming there.
That’s why we Luos like Orgonite because we depond on fishing, so
Orgonite makes our lakes to be clear hence lots of fish are harvested.
Like now the orgonite we have at hand are applied in lake Victoria.
If you go to Tanzania and Uganda its easy to distribute orgonite
because our people (Luos) invaded those places. And that is why when
Luo people believe in something they must achieve the best of that
thing like the orgnite invention. Places like Turkana and lodwar, they
understand orgonite very well because there are more Luos and Turkanan
there. Dancan will distribute orgonite in Lodwar, Turkanan and lake
Turkana.I have thanked Laurent for the support he offered to me today.
Luos originated from Southern Sudan where Christian and other people
invaded are places of the Luo community.

The Luo (also called Joluo, singular Jaluo) are an ethnic group in western Kenya, eastern Uganda, and northern Tanzania. They are part of a larger group of ethnolinguistically related Luo peoples who inhabit an area ranging from southern Sudan, northern and eastern Uganda, western Kenya, and northern Tanzania.
The Luo are the third largest ethnic group (13%) in Kenya, after the Kikuyu (22%) and the Luhya (14%). The Luo and the Kikuyu inherited the bulk of political power in the first years following Kenya’s independence in 1963. The Luo population in Kenya was estimated to be 3,185,000 in 1994 and 4.6 million in 2010.[1] The Tanzanian Luo population was estimated at 280,000 in 2001 and 500,000 in 2010.[1]
The main Luo livelihood is fishing, farming and pastoral herding. Outside Luoland, the Luo comprise a significant fraction of East Africa’s intellectual and skilled labour force in various professions. Less educated members work in eastern Africa as tenant fishermen, small scale farmers, and urban workers. They speak the Dholuo language, which belongs to the Western Nilotic branch of the Nilo-Saharan language family spoken by other Luo-speaking peoples such as the Lango[disambiguation needed], Acholi, Adhola and Alur (all of Uganda and parts of Sudan and Eastern Congo).

Luoland (historically, “Kavirondo”) is the tribal homeland of the Kenya Luo (also called Jo-Luo or Kavirondo), a people of western Kenya, also extending into eastern Uganda and northern Tanzania. This area consists roughly of the basin surrounding Winam Gulf of Lake Victoria. Non-Luo tribal areas abutting upon Luoland include those of the Padhola (to the west, in Uganda), the Luhya and Nandi (to the north), the Kipsigis (to the east), and the Gusii and Kuria (to the south).
The first Luo migrants to present day Luoland arrived from present day Uganda sometime around 1500 AD. The first European to enter Luoland was Joseph Thomson who struggled into the Kavirondo village of Kabaras on 28 November 1883. (Thomson was shocked and made much ado over the habitual nakedness of the Luo which was in marked contrast with the tribes he had previously travelled among, but he ultimately decided that “morality has nothing to do with clothes” because the Luo were “the most moral of all the tribes in this region”.)
Kisumu is the largest town in Luoland, and also the third (or fourth) largest city in Kenya.[citation needed]

Lake Victoria (Nam Lolwe in Luo) is one of the African Great Lakes. The lake was named after Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, by John Hanning Speke, the first European to discover this lake.
With a surface area of 68,800 square kilometres (26,600 sq mi), Lake Victoria is Africa’s largest lake by area, and it is the largest tropical lake in the world. Lake Victoria is the world’s third largest freshwater lake by surface area (only Lake Michigan–Huron and Lake Superior in North America are larger). In terms of its volume, Lake Victoria is the world’s eighth largest continental lake, and it contains about 2,750 cubic kilometers (2.2 billion acre-feet) of water.
Lake Victoria receives most of its water from direct precipitation or from thousands of small streams. The largest stream flowing into this lake is the Kagera River, the mouth of which lies on the lake’s western shore. There are two rivers that leave the lake, the White Nile (known as the “Victoria Nile” as it leaves the lake), flows out at Jinja, Uganda on the lake’s north shore and the Katonga River flows out at Lukaya on the western shore connecting the lake to Lake George.[1]
Lake Victoria occupies a shallow depression in Africa and has a maximum depth of 84 metres (276 ft) and an average depth of 40 metres (130 ft).[2] Its catchment area covers 184,000 square kilometers (71,040 sq mi). The lake has a shoreline of 4,828 kilometres (3,000 mi), with islands constituting 3.7% of this length,[3] and is divided among three countries: Kenya (6% or 4,100 km2/1,600 sq mi), Uganda (45% or 31,000 km2/12,000 sq mi) and Tanzania (49% or 33,700 km2/13,000 sq mi).[4]
The lake supports Africa’s larges
Thank Mrs O

Hi
In, East Africa many people come from different places, so when you will be fluent in Kiswahili (Swahili language) you will communicate with so many people.

Though , Luo community and Turkana community comes from Nilotic speaking group, they do not speak the same language. Let me tell you a short story about Nilotes : First Nilotes are divided into three major groups one of them is River-lake Niotes second one is Plain Nilotes, third one is Highlan Nilotes.

Luo is a river-lake nilote while Turkana are Highland Nilotes. So Luo community are the same as Acholi community in Uganda.

Baba Carol already told me before about Doctor Batiibwe that you went to visit him in Uganda to distribute Orgonite.

Acholi and Luo nearly speak the same language though, during their migration Luo community settled in Kenya and Acholi in Uganda.

Mama Carol

Hi
The Luo ethnic group makes up around 25% of Kenya’s population, making it the 3rd largest ethnic group after the Kikuyu and the Luhya. There are approximately 12 sub-groups within the tribe. They are a very large group, with their territory spreading beyond Kenya, into Tanzania, Sudan and Uganda. The traditional occupation of the Luo is fishing, though many are also farmers or work jobs in the larger cities. Luo community, according to history emerged from the Southern part of Sudan. During the olden days, as history reads they were one community which included the Kalenjins who later came to be known as the highland Nilotes, and the Masai group who later came to be known as the plane Nilotes. Luo community came to be known as the River-Lake Nilotes. The naming of these communities came about according to their prevailing activities during the times of migration. The Luo community, however, were the most unique. During this migration, they followed the river Nile and settled along Lake Victoria hence the name.
It is written in history that the river lake Nilotes probably originated at Wau in southern Sudan, near the confluence of the Meride and Sue Rivers. The Kenya Luo migrated into western Kenya via today’s eastern Uganda, the first wave arriving sometime around 1500 AD. These arrivals came in at least five waves which is said to have been arriving at different times; The Joka-Jok who migrated from Acholiland, were the first and largest migration who comprise the Jo-Karachuonyo, Jo-Kabondo, Jo-Nyakach, Jo-Kanyada, Jo-Kadem among others settled in the south part of Nyanza which is today in the location of Homabay District, Karachuonyo District, Rongo, areas of South Nyanza sugar company and Migori District. Another group migrating from Alur joined the Joka-Jok. The Jo-K’Owiny who migrated from Padhola includes Jo-Sakwa, Jo-Uyoma, Jo-Seme, Jo-Asembo, Jo-Kajulu, Jo-Kisumo among others who settled in the Kisumu region and parts of the northern Nyanza. The Jok’Omolo are said to have come from Pawir and arrived later, they include the Jo-Alego, Jo-Ugenya, Jo-Gem, and Jo-Yimbo who settled in the northern side of Nyanza. The Abasuba an heterogeneous group in southern Nyanza, with Bantu peoples from Buganda and Busoga were assimilated into groups such as JoKaksingri, Jo-Kaswanga, Jo-Gwassi, Jo-Kamasengre among others, settled around Suba district and Mbita.
The main Luo livelihood is fishing, farming and pastoral herding. It is said that they moved along river Nile in search for fish since it was one of their main food source and their population was increasing and the river would not sustain the growing population, they were forced to move from different direction, some moved to the east of Uganda like the Acholi, some moved to the west side of Kenya, others moved to Tanzania and Ethiopia. As African communities they were encountered with diseases which forced them to move from their origin. ‘Jwok’ which means witchcraft also made some of the population to move since they believed witchcraft and ancestral believes and thus they could fear bad spirits and had to move because diseases indicated bad curse and bewitched from ‘Jwok’. They termed Some of the tropical disease as ‘Chira’ which is a curse could force them to move since these was a bad indication of bad land and even though they moved with some of these diseases while migrating the medicine men had to look for an alternative to cure ‘Chira’ as they moved from one place to another they discovered some plants which were suitable for medicinal purposes and consumption.

Internationally notable Luo people
Barack Obama, Sr., Economist, Harvard University Graduate, father of U.S. President (Kenyan)
Raila Amolo Odinga – Prime Minister of Kenya, Leader of the Orange Democratic Movement Party (Kenyan).
Odhiambo M’cAbwao a.k.a Agwatta: A Swahili Radio Presenter and a Radio Creative Executive,has worked with the State broadcaster in Kenya, The Kenya Broadcasting Corporation’s Radio Taifa. He is also a renowned Musician of the Mokeira Hit song fame ( a Kisii language remix to the song Ashawo by Mr Flavor). In music he is popularly referred to as Agwatta( The Remix King). Currently he is a Radio Creative Executive with the Royal Media services in Kenya.
Milton Obote, Former Ugandan Prime Minister and President of Uganda (Ugandan)
Tito Okello, Former President of Uganda and Army Commander-Deceased (Ugandan)
Bazilio Olara-Okello, Former president of Uganda-Deceased (Ugandan)
Janani Luwum, Former Archbishop of the Church of Uganda (Ugandan)
Tom Mboya – Politician, Pan-Africanist, assassinated in 1969 (Kenyan)
George Ramogi – Musician (Kenyan)
Joseph Kony, Leader of the Lord’s Resistance Army. Notorious rebel group in Uganda(Ugandan)
Okello Oculi, Novelist, Poet, and Chronicler (Ugandan)
Jaramogi Oginga Odinga – Independence Fighter, First Vice President of Independent Kenya (Kenyan)
Ramogi Achieng’ Oneko, Freedom fighter Veteran (Kenyan)
Olara Otunnu, Former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict (Ugandan)
Robert Ouko – Kenyan Foreign Minister, murdered in 1990 (Kenyan)
Okot p’Bitek, poet and author of the Song of Lawino (Ugandan)
Ayub Ogada, Singer, Composer and Performer on the nyatiti, the Nilotic lyre of Kenya (Kenyan)
Henry Luke Orombi, Archbishop of the church of Uganda (Uganda)
Johnny Oduya, a defenseman for the Atlanta Thrashers of the NHL
Thomas Risley Odhiambo, entomologist and environmental activist (Kenya)
Ramogi Achieng Oneko, Independence Freedom Fighter and Politician (Kenya)
Betty Bigombe, Former Ugandan Politician, a senior fellow at the U.S Institute of Peace (Uganda)
Matthew Lukwiya, Epidiomologist, Died while fighting to eradicate the ebola pandemic in northern Uganda (Uganda)
Adongo Agada Cham, He is the 23rd King of the Anuak Nyiudola Royal Dynasty of Sudan & Ethiopia (Sudan/Ethiopia)
Amos Otieno Odenyo – Chairman of Social Sciences, York College (City University of New York), World Education – Board of Trustees (Boston), and co-author of “Staring at the Nyanza Sun: A Kenyan-American Memoir.”
William Ouko, Kenyan High Court Judge. Swore in President Mwai Kibaki in 2003. (Kenya)
Francis Amos Raballa Oke Kagwa nyakwar Ogalo – Civil Engineering Expert – Development Bank of Southern Africa
Donald Owino Mwanga,German Engineer,Entrepreneur and Youth Leader
Major General (retired) Pasteur Omudho Awitta – Commander, Kenya Navy General Daniel Opande (retired), Kenya Army and Head of UN Peace Keeping Forces in Liberia

Mama Carol