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tv   The Whistleblowers  RT  September 21, 2024 11:30am-12:01pm EDT

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that's what everyone keeps talking about in the us. so see is grove that a downturn is on the way. it's also the top issue for voters. so naturally when people like to see over tracy, morgan makes a statement about the house of the us economy. people, as soon as you see the bill economic scenario, one of the things that are happening in the, in the world of the consumer knew that the most important from a financial markets perspective from a doable finance perspective. the most important thing, the door to all of the things that's really important. far more important today has been probably since 1945 is this for a new crane is threat of nuclear blackmail. i ran north korea and russia and can, you can, with jimmy call, evil access. americans are encouraged to ignore other issues, may domestic problems and focus their attention and potential anger elsewhere. how very pin means dear americans,
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who are in the cross hairs of the cost of living crisis. and the probability of a reception now stands at 35 percent. but please don't think about that. think about north korea and russia instead. well, it's on clear what these countries have to do with the us economy and why they're seen as the top threats when the us has been battling its own economic issues for quite some time. now with historic inflation and a weak labor market. all that culminating in the shock moved by the federal reserve slash interest rates by a wolf and 50 basis points. you know, the us economy using a good place and, and our decision today is designed to keep it there. ultimately, we think we believe with an appropriate recalibration of our policies that we can continue to see the economy growing. this doesn't make sense because they've only done this when the economy was in danger. like during the adult calm level and the global financial prices,
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and even if they were satisfied with the countries inflation, which is still not at the desired level, they could have decreased interest rates by just a quarter percent. if things are so good, why such an aggressive decrease? although pounds message was a mass argument for 50 basis points would be the deterioration in the labor market this likely to end up in a mall recession. however, by costing 50 basis points. when do you think the economy is strong, you may be wasting valuable ammunition if your assessment of the economy is right, or if there's a sudden deterioration in the economy old the markets do with then get a 75 basis points caught starting with 50 basis points without compelling data or full cost means that you're blunting your interest rate to meanwhile, with a $50.00 basis points caught the side is pointing for my and possibly next president from this could have serious repercussions. next. yeah, there are precautions. good. send the place and arrive back up as people start ball
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rolling and spending more. the same thing happens in the seventy's and it was a disaster with inflation sort and the said was forced to take more drastic steps. so again, one wonders, why are they taking such a risk if the economy is as good as they say, good time and have something to do with it? how, how to create incentive to deliver a 50 basis points account before election day? because trump has already made clear that he would not re appoint team as fred check. in fact, he may decide to remove him prematurely. so powells only terms of another time is by pleasing, kamala harris and her fellow democrats and the senate fed shared jay towel just gave cobble a hair as a 50 basis point give by slashing their target race by one half of one percentage point. this may well put the central branch smack in the middle of presidential politics. something they pledge not to do. i think it's ridiculous that we have a centralized government agency. the design decide how much or dollar is worth
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based on a total mission of reducing unemployment and keeping inflation down. of course the ssl is good for the democrats right now, but what inflation patches up, the average american is going to have to swallow the bill. so what's the point? it really is a political move. most people thought it was going to be half of that number, which probably would have been the right thing to do. the current risk is that the fed is injecting inflation fighting medicine into an economy that no longer needs it. and that could turn a cooling job market into one that's frozen, leading to job losses seems like a risky adventure. so what we have here is that later on, one of the largest u. s. banking houses say to call because god forbid american, see the house of cards about to fall behind the smoke and mirrors as well. we dock with one using these and just on this 30 minutes. the
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many americans, perhaps even most americans believe that lee harvey oswald did not act alone when he killed president john f. kennedy on november 22nd 1963. oswald even called himself a patsy. just before he in turn was assassinated by a nightclub owner jack ruby. it was a series of events that not only shook america, it also permanently change the course of american history. look at it this way. kennedy wanted to break up the c. i a and withdrawal from south vietnam. had that happened, there would have never been a president, lyndon johnson, and then no anti vietnam war movement. that means that there probably wouldn't have been a president richard nixon. and without mixing, it would have been no watergate scandal without water d. jimmy carter would have never been president. and without carter, there would have never been the so called reagan revolution of 1980. those are the only ways in which history would have been different. and john kennedy's wasn't the
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only murder that had an impact on history. i'm john kerry onto welcome to the whistle blowers the the. 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 we're going to tell you today about one of the most fascinating and so. busy murders in modern american history, and it's one that most americans know nothing about. i want to try to lay out the characters in the story. one is john f kennedy himself, you know all about him. another is cord meyer. he was a school friend of kennedy's, and many of their mutual friends said that they were best friends, indeed, best friends until the end of kennedy's life. kornmeier also became one of the c. i is senior most officers. another character in the story is mary pincher, my records wife. she too was a great school friend of kennedy's, mary cord and j. f. k. all went to school together and in fact,
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kennedy and mary dated each other before marian cord became a couple and got married. that didn't stop j, f, k. and mary from having an affair, though that's something we'll talk about a little bit later. cord meyer join the c i a in 1951. at the invitation of c, i, a director allen dulles kennedy was already in washington, having been elected to the house of representatives and contemplating a sent it run. 3 years later, ford had a string of senior positions at the c, i always with kennedy support and the 3 along with jackie kennedy and newsweek magazine editor, ben bradley, and his wife antoinette, who was married sister, were it every society party and every social event in washington, together, the meyers divorced in 1958, 2 years after their young son, michael was hit by a car and killed near their home. he was 9 years old. fast forward then to 1963. kennedy is murdered in dallas in november. the myers are devastated,
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and washington and the country are never the same. but life eventually goes on. mary, who had always been artistic, became one of the leading artists in the washington colors school. that was an important american art movement of the mid 20th century. her paintings are now worth hundreds of thousands of dollars and are in museum collections around the world. on october 12th 1964, 11 months after kennedy was killed, mary decided to go for a walk along the cno canal. tow path in the georgetown section of washington dc. that was something that she did almost every single day. she was suppose to then meet her sister for lunch. and then she intended to paint for the rest of the afternoon in her studio, which was behind her sister's property in georgetown. but mary never made it. she was brutally murdered while walking along the tow path. police almost immediately arrested a black man near the scene of the crime and arrest which racism played
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a major role. that man was tried for the crime and then an all white jury found him not guilty. no other arrests have ever been made. and the case is officially listed as open and unsolved. our guest today who was the best friend of the myers son, who was killed in that car accident, took up the case as an adult. he published an absolutely riveting book about it called mary's mosaic. the c i a conspiracy to murder, john f. kennedy, mary pinto meyer and their vision for world peace. he used primary source, c i a and us army documents to get to the bottom of it. and spoiler alert, he solves the crime. any points the finger directly at the c, i a and we are very happy today to welcome peter jenny to the show. peter is a p h, the psychologist. he's a renowned author and a university lecture. peter,
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thank you so much for being with us. this is a real treat. i pleasure, john. i am just really thrilled. busy that the excitement around this story and this book as job to maybe you and hopefully help continue the job today. your audience a meant to that peter. let's start with the players in this complicated story. i hope that i did them justice in the introduction, but tell us about chord and mary meyer, their relationship to john and jackie kennedy and to ben and antoinette bradley. these people were all at the very top of washington society and the 19 fifties and the 1960s. and these were the circles in which your own parents were traveling. yes . uh, all of the people basically just mentioned, not not only socialized together, but their kids. uh, you know,
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became friends and where they went to the same channels uh, in washington, the private show continually one called george foundation, which is quite well known right now. and uh, you know, they, they, they had a very old time in washington. and of course, that included quite a lot of drinking. uh, and it took it show to what tell us a little of your own personal history. you lived near the myers when you were a child. their middle son, michael, was your best friend. and then he was killed when he was hit by a car while trying to cross the street. you remains close to the myers into your young adulthood. and then when you were 17 years old, you came home from school during a break. and your parents told you that mary had been murdered. that affected you deeply. tell us about that event and about how it spurred you to write this
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outstanding book. yes, it did. did you know the event itself shocked to me? you know, i remember sitting at our dinner table the night before thanksgiving in the fall of 1964. and my mother just sort of casually made an announcement as to the event of this murder. i had, you know, here i was home for boring soul. i was in the 11th grade, i was planning to go out and how to get a all night. and i ended up retreating to my bedroom and going to bed literally right after dinner and crying. busy most of the night off and on. i knew there was something very profound that i'd taken place. and
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i was also for many years trying to buy the scene at our dinner table because my mother did all the talking and my father just vacantly shared off with this page, which i thought was kind of unusual given you know, how. busy critical this event, lunch show each day with me for many years and there was only room the course of intensive psychotherapy. and since we were in the late got into. busy late 19 sixty's, the original view, the news of cycle del x and a very responsible way that i started making the connections that i needed to make that allows me to advance is. busy ready to
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where the ultimate end result was the book and that took many years. what tell us about the relationship between mary meyer and john kennedy, the national choir tabloid broke the story in 1976. well after both of them were dead. but now it's generally accepted, as fact. did you find proof of that relationship in your own research? oh, on the way that i think the thing you know to begin is that the 1st time j f k laid eyes on mary. was she at a pressure winter, especially the sands? j. s. k has gone from the trunk small or very tosh of lead bradshaw. we're in wallingford, connecticut, and you're already graduated. but he came back the following year. just to go to
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this big shot weekend. there were. busy there was formal damage that kind of thing . and this was where the 1st way eyes on there and, and there was a and then child or she could not forget. mary's date was a man by the name of william atwood, who actually became a member of kennedy's administration. what was the amount of kennedy's and bachelors? but there are a number of references to the 3 of them sitting around that uh no subject quietly coming together. and we're in addition about when they work together at this dance. and so bill atwood kept running upstairs, to garner to wish for me. he had a very bad cold and during that time is when j. s. k started to make his boots on
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mary in terms of cutting in a tower and all that well and things like that. but you know, mary kind of took it with a grain of salt. she recognized j. s. k. at that time for me was, you know, a very wealthy play. moore's was just awesome. married. and you know, they didn't really address mirror. he didn't, i address scenario really, but definitely he was very just taken with her. i never forgot the times now. fast forward in june, the late fifty's, early sixty's age, and they ended up being neighbors, j, f, k, and his wife jackie more 1st to occupy. vickery hill, subsequently, where bobby and apple and their family may have dr. j, f k, and just wanted to georgetown. so there was a lot of, you know,
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interaction at a certain time. um, i think the thing to remember here is that the trauma of the miners and particularly mary losing their middle son to a car accident where mike always get kind of as josh is coming home for dinner. and that was all 1956 in december. and so barry was devastated and i think that was really one of the primary things that chap a divorce or simulated native worst to take place. because mary was also increasingly very turned off. of course. busy at the central intelligence agency, but she, i and she just didn't like it. she hated the island dollars and she
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was just a po uh about hearing a number of things that they were involved in. peter, i want you to hold that thoughts. we are going to take a short break and when we come back we're going to talk to peter jenny about his investigation into mary myers murder and the exciting combination of all of those efforts say to the. 2 the, the. 2 2 welcome back to the whistle blowers and john kerry onto were speaking with dr. peter jenny. he's a psychologist, renowned officer and a university lecturer. here, thanks again for being with us. by your peter. let's get into the details of mary
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myers murder. mary went for a walk along the cno canal in georgetown like she did almost every day. she was going to have lunch with her sister and then paints, but she never made it to the lunch. take it from there. well, berries walks as you know, told were a regular photo for g. g, typically winter studio around 8 in the morning. she would work for 3 or 4 hours. and there you go. take a walk down in georgetown from wherever the studio was, which was about 6 blocks and then go under t bridge and walked out the tow path to a place. busy fletcher's boat house, so to go out to fletchers and that was about 2 miles, maybe 2 or a half mile long. and it was, as i said, a very established routine mary. yeah she, i that as
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a woman and her early forties, she was very physically chad. she played a lot of tennis. she took exercise very seriously. so this was, you know, routine that she really enjoyed and we get to keep it up even on the coldest stays. in the winter, and there's a little story in my book about one day she walked into jackie kennedy. this is both the fascination and the 2 of them just embraced and cried together. and uh it's, it's a very, it's a very poignant moment, i think. and the story in terms of, even though barry and and j s k, were having an affair, which i really think jackie knew about as well as any number of sexual
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encounters. jack pag during his career and you know, the 2 of them had a bond that was above and beyond conflict just in terms of their respect and connection. and, you know, deep of buying states and j. f. k was at the time and the tragedy that had take your place in dallas. one of the absolute craziest parts of this story is that of mary's diary. she kept a diary and she told her sister and brother in law about it and asked them to destroy it in the event that something happened to her. then immediately after her death, the bradleys were in their home and they heard somebody in mary's studio behind the house, and ben bradley went to investigate. so tell our viewers what happened next. well,
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actually, there used to be a correction here. the way the bradley's knew about the diary was mary's best friend and slowly man. um and andrew was it in japan? the day of the murder? and on the evening of the murder, she actually called the bradleys and she was looking for jim angleton for as many people know where's the chief of counterintelligence at the guy? and she wanted to inform everyone that there was this diary they needed to find it because there were a lot of uh, very fascinating details that were in the diary and the band did not want to see this information get into the wrong hands. so what happened is that point is bradley and angleton went to marry, she died already,
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and bradley had the key to the entrance. so they went down to larry's gallery and found as irie as worse. bradley gave it to angleton to quote, unquote, take care of it. and so. busy busy it was angleton blashley news about the diary already because he was having there each phone. i knew how who barry was and what she was capable of. and we're talking about a moment that is just, you know, in september of 1916 floor, the warren commission had been written and released. mary had her own copy, which she read and just curious to know and, and it was at that point she was planning to go public and basically tell the world of her relationship with j,
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f. k. and what had happened and she was going to blow the whistle on this. busy particular raver, ex husband and of course jim angleton showed that the chain really the. busy meeting tractor as to why the c i a so they just tried to get rid of her. she was going to just destroy all the publicity that was going into the warren commission report and trying to put the public at rash the. busy english lee harvey oswald when in fact she was already convinced that it was that you used the primary source documents from the c i a and from the us army that allows you to focus on one person, a man that you believe to be married, myers killed her now this is the thing to me, this is what sold me on the book. who was that man and what led you to him?
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the name of the man was lieutenant william l mitchell and mitchell was. busy an under cover of contract agent for the she, i a uh, she started to develop a habit richard was instructed to do. i'll be out of the. busy time around that time, mary took her walk and so on the day of the murder, she was actually the last person to see her. now, originally i thought, mitchell was the assassin. was given the nature of visuals, personnel records which by researchers helped me get the least along with the jump. turning. we got his personnel file and examined a and mitchell did not have
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a profile of the c. i a, a shots that had been a c. i a ss and there would've been certain entries in the as personnel file of having training here. i the training there, they weren't there. but mitchell is a very credible critical person in this story. because reading going deeper into this web, it occurred to me that there was a she, i, a samsung, and these people. busy as you can probably mine, imagine the wife goes, i mean they come in, they do the work and then they just completely disappear and vanish. and there is not a trace of them. i don't think mitchell, it was the size of. and one of the reasons that leads me to this is i, i filed the lawsuit against mitchell. i had to get to him in some way.
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and in order to get rid of the last 2 vigils, attorney agreed to a deposition that i would have a 3 hour. busy deposition with mitchell in california, whereby i could ask him questions that he has never been asked before and of course it would be recorded, manor gated is written out that kind of thing. so we went to the deposition that mitchell was unaware of my level of preparation as most people are. so i basically caught mitchell with this pass down the number of details. and it was very clear through the deposition that he was like all at one point only took a break by attorney was very anxious. so that's your date of. busy what's going on here he shut. busy up, peter, this is a guy who will come back with a loaded gun and shoot as all right,
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that's what i'm worried about. a force that does not happen, but. busy i think that deposition really just the case, several start steps further deeper to really show that there was an immense amount of organization around this operation and had to look a certain way or else the suspicion was just going to totally d rail. what do you tell of trans results wanting to achieve in the shop, or asian? and a go ahead peter, i, i apologize that we're out of time and i want to thank you for being with us on the show. and i, i want to encourage everybody to take a look at this absolutely magnificent book. mary's mosaic thanks for being with us . a lot of pleasure, john arthur, robert per se, said it,
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his famed book then, and the art of motorcycle maintenance. the truth knocks on the door and you say, go away. i'm looking for the truth and it goes away. puzzling but that's what so many americans have done as others have searched for the truth and some of the most dramatic and historically important events of the 20th century. that's why we are so fortunate to have people like dr. peter jenny, out, they're researching, writing, and not being afraid of the truth. i'd like to thank peter jenny for being with us today. please. again, check out his book. mary's mosaic the c. i. a conspiracy to murder john of kennedy, mary pinto myers and their vision for world peace. i'd also like to thank our viewers for joining us for another episode of the list of lowers. and john kerry all can please follow me on some steps at john kerry. i will see you next time the. 2 2 2 2 the
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thanks talk to delete the account will be on the international news network. amid the us government crackdown on quick source, the desk told form is rarely attacked on a high rise. these dozens of the 40s have found in the old speculation, swelling about a potential idea invasion. is this well, a message for stolen it signed? we strongly condemn these unprecedented attacks on friendly lebanon, the envious citizens which constitutes a gross violation of it sober and the end is a serious challenge to international law and un, uh, united nation secures and cancel. russia takes a stat.

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