History Repeats Again

The main reason Ronald Reagan beat out Jimmy Carter in the 1980 presidential election was the Iran Hostage Crisis. 66 American hostages were taken from the US Embassy on 4 November 1979 while the almighty Phil was working in Saudi Arabia. Carter was unable to secure their release and lost the presidential election in the following year. Ayatollah Khomeini declared he would never release the hostages to Jimmy Carter. Iran released them on 20 January 1981, Reagan’s inauguration day. Reagan had Carter meet the hostages when they got off the plane.

Then came the Iran Contra Affair where the Reagan administration bypassed congress to finance the Contras. They smuggled guns from Iran and probably cocaine from Central America to the US to pay for the weapons. They did this with an airlines (SAT) owned by Les Wexner while power of attorney had been granted to Jeffrey Epstein.

Since that time Khomeini, Reagan and Carter have passed. Khomeini named his successor Ali Khamenei and our current president is Donald Trump. We have to ask ourselves; is the same cult of man gods (pictured above) with former fixers Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell controlling our leaders today?

George Ernest Boulanger
(death)

This is the death chart of Georges Ernest Boulanger (29 April 1837 – 30 September 1891), nicknamed Général Revanche (“General Revenge”). He was a French General and politician of the 19th century. He used inflammatory rhetoric and nationalism to vault to popularity during the Third Republic. He called for revenge against Germany for the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71. In January of 1889 it was feared he had enough popularity to become a dictator and is considered by some historians to be the first fascist or “proto-fascist.”

He was considered a Republican because he did not go to church. Turned out he had been a conservative Monarchist the whole time.

His downfall from politics occurred in January of 1889 when he won a race for a seat as a deputy for Paris. His supporters were elated and wanted to conduct a coup d’etat; immediately take over the national government. He was a threat to the Republic and was accused by his detractors of treason (later convicted in absentia). He fled to Brussels and then to London.

He committed suicide in 1891 with a pistol over the grave of his mistress Marguerite de Bonnemains who had died two months earlier.

Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini

This is the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (24 September 1902 – 3 June 1989). He was a religious leader of Twelver Shi’a Islam. He became the Ayatollah (religious title) around 1962. He went into exile in 1963, living in Iraq, Turkey and France. In Turkey he stayed in Bursa in the home of Colonel Ali Cetiner, head of Turkish Military Intelligence.

According to the BBC, recently released documents show the Ayatollah had contact with the CIA on different occasions. He returned to Iran during the Iranian Revolution with the help of the US and France. The leaders of these countries believed he would help calm the situation, being a religious man. He promptly took over the revolutionary government and formed a Theocracy. He eliminated all competition, including the original groups behind the revolution against Shah Pahlavi. Iran was then involved in a 10 year war with Iraq (Iran-Iraq War); more souls.

Currently Iran is run by the Ayatollah Khamenei. It is said Khomeini selected Khamenei as a replacement on his deathbed, after receiving a revelation from whichever giant was handling him.

Georges Boulanger (birth)