Patricia N. Saffran, The Naming Game

Patricia N. Saffran While university officials seem committed to social justice, they stop short when it strikes the prestige and identity of the school.  “Mary Berkeley Minor Blackford was an abolitionist in Fredericksburg VA, who owned five slaves. She opposed succession. Her son fought for the Confederacy. That shows the complexity of the issues surrounding slavery,” said Scott Walker, the tourmaster of Hallowed Ground Tours in Fredericksburg on the phone, March 23, 2023. Fast forward to today and no one can begin to understand Biblical slavery or what went on…

SANDY HOOK: Launching a Public Health Crisis Distracts from Years of Mafia Control, Meth-Dealing, Pedophelia and Murder

By Stephanie Sledge Author’s note: WARNING: This publication contains information free to the American public “We the People” under the First Amendment. Any information you find offensive or inflicts any emotional response will be doing so at your own risk.  It was the State Police that identified the alleged dead children’s bodies and said they wanted to give the families closure instead of the families being the identifiers. This could be why Coroner, H. Wayne Carver said, “I hope, uhh, I hope they and I hope uhh the people of Newtown, uhh don’t…

The Order of the Skull and Bones: Everything you always wanted to know, but were afraid to ask

15 of the Historically Most Powerful Members of Skull & Bones By Kris Millegan 1. The Secret Origins of Skull & Bones The story begins at Yale, where three threads of American social history — espionage, drug smuggling and secret societies — intertwine into one. Elihu Yale was born near Boston, educated in London, and served with the British East India Company, eventually becoming governor of Fort Saint George, Madras, in 1687. He amassed a great fortune from trade and returned to England in 1699. Yale became known as quite…