90s Psyop #9: The Olympic Park Bombing

The 1996 Centennial Olympic Park bombing was supposed to be the work of a lone extremist Eric Robert Rudolph, a radical anti-government survivalist who, we are told, managed to pull off a terrorist attack in the middle of the Olympic Games using little more than a pipe bomb and backpack. But, as with so many stories of national tragedy, this one follows a very familiar script: an explosion, a rapid scapegoat, a media feeding frenzy, and government response that – coincidentally, of course – expands state control.

Insert different names and locations, and you could be talking about Oklahoma City, 9/11, the Boston Marathon Bombing, or any number of suspiciously convenient crises that just so happen to lead to increased surveillance, stricter security measures, and a general tightening of the noose around personal freedoms.

Continue reading “90s Psyop #9: The Olympic Park Bombing”

Stri-King Numerical Markers

In his recent post about Martin Luther King Jr. (MLK), Mark astutely highlights key dates as potential “spook markers,” suggesting a deeper significance behind these patterns. Upon examining the deaths of MLK’s relatives, a peculiar trend of noteworthy dates and circumstances undeniably emerges. While I don’t intend to delve as deeply into this topic as Mark has in his excellent analysis, I’d like to share some passing observations for consideration.

Continue reading “Stri-King Numerical Markers”