August 9, 2017

The "Fat Man" bomb from Bock's Car detonated directly over Urakami Cathedral, the largest cathedral in the entire Orient. This was all that was left.







On this day in 1945, Nagasaki, home to 50,000 Christians, was bombed.



Of Nagasaki's 250,000 residents, 73,844 were killed, 74,909 injured, and more than 120,000 suffered radiation effects.



We shouldn't overlook that Nagasaki expelled the Freemasons in 1926.

By the 1930s Japan banned them entirely. Did this add "payback" to the Nagasaki bomb?























by James Perloff

(abridged by henrymakow.com)





The dropping of atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 was completely unnecessary; Japan had, in fact, already offered to surrender on virtually the same terms the U.S. approved at war's end.







Why did Truman's controllers order Japan's nuclear bombing? As I have grown increasingly aware of the ruthless Talmudic psychopathology of the Powers that Be, I cynically confided to friends, "I think they enjoyed it." But after discovering David Dionisi's Atomic Bomb Secrets , we can be much more specific. This well-written, 217-page gem, documented with 496 end-notes, blows the lid off the sordid episode.







After Christianity first reached Japan in the 16th century, it faced growing pains, including times of severe persecution, but gradually became established, centered in Nagasaki, which became nicknamed the "Japanese Vatican." In 1945, some 50,000 Nagasaki residents were Christians.





After the Enola Gay dropped the "Little Boy" bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, the plane named Bock's Car (also written bockscar) carried the "Fat Man" bomb to Nagasaki on August 9. Most of the 12-man crew believed their objective was Kokura, and a secondary target was only to be selected if weather interfered. Dionisi does much to debunk the "poor visibility" claim long used to justify the plane's rerouting to Nagasaki.





The "Fat Man" bomb from Bock's Car detonated directly over Urakami Cathedral, left, the largest cathedral in the entire Orient. At Nagasaki (250,000 residents), 73,844 were killed, 74,909 injured, and more than 120,000 suffered radiation effects.





Truman and other U.S. officials later claimed there was a military target: the Mitsubishi shipyard. But Bock's Car flew three miles past the shipyard before dropping its payload. The cathedral was obliterated; the shipyard left virtually unscathed. Its famous hammerhead crane, built in 1909, still stands today.









We shouldn't overlook that Nagasaki expelled the Freemasons in 1926; by the 1930s Japan banned them entirely. Did this add "payback" to the Nagasaki bomb?





Dionisi insightfully notes: when Satanists conduct a human sacrifice, they believe they draw power from the victim's death. At Nagasaki, over 70,000 lives, many of them Christians, were incinerated on a satanic altar.







(The Nagasaki bombing's ritualism cogently reminds us that events like 9/11 are not necessarily purely geopolitical false flags, but often have spiritual dimensions as well. Is Nagasaki perhaps a clue as to why geo-engineered disasters keep striking America's Bible Belt, but not the "Establishment" Northeast? Dionisi has written a book on 9/11, The Occult Religion of the 9/11 Attackers, which I haven't read but have ordered.)





When people contemplate Japan's nuclear bombing, most think: "Hiroshima." Dionisi considers this a psychological ploy by the PTB (whom he calls "the Brotherhood of Death"). The first bombing would stand out in the public's mind, while the principal target (Christian Nagasaki) would get largely overlooked.





In another macabre deception, a Catholic priest and Protestant minister were persuaded to bless Bock's Car before it departed on its mission. Later, both men greatly regretted it.





OTHER FINDINGS

A ground-breaking detail I learned from Dionisi is the A-bomb's role in Korea's division into North and South. I've discussed the artificial justification for this division elsewhere, but Dionisi elaborates that Japanese scientists were developing their own atomic bomb. After initial research in Japan, the project was transferred to the Konan region of northern Korea (then a Japanese protectorate). This area was selected for multiple reasons: availability of uranium, the power the Chosin dams could generate, and (perhaps most importantly) keeping away from American bombers.

Giving the Soviet Union postwar control of North Korea (allegedly its reward for a mere five-days' participation in the Pacific War) now makes far more sense. Not only was the cabal handing Stalin the plans and materials for the atomic bomb (as documented in 1952 by Lend Lease expediter George Racey Jordan in his book From Major Jordan's Diaries), they were giving him Japan's installations for making one.







Another compelling fact I learned from Dionisi: the horrifically bloody battle of Okinawa (over 150,000 casualties) was completely unnecessary to win the war; it was fought to convince Americans that A-bombs were needed. Dionisi's book is packed with other information I'd never heard before about, e.g., Stalin, and Freemasonry.







From his book you'll learn why Pyongyang became capital of communist North Korea, and why spying allegations were levelled against Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer (the Manhattan Project's scientific leader.) Oppenheimer and others, quoting Dionisi: "were misled to believe that the atomic bombs would be detonated over military targets, thereby limiting civilian casualties. . . . Speaking to President Truman after Nagasaki had been destroyed, Oppenheimer told him, 'Mr. President, I feel I have blood on my hands.' The Brotherhood of Death hated Oppenheimer for later opposing the hydrogen bomb and destroyed his career by arranging for him to be accused of spying for the Soviet Union."







You'll also learn about the American POWs who died at Nagasaki. And be sure to read his end-notes. Unlike most end-notes, which are dull recitations of publisher names and dates, Dionisi's are loaded with collateral information; they constitute a "book within a book."







Atomic Bomb Secrets rates a spot on any truth-seeker's bookshelf. Thank you, David J. Dionisi.

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Originally posted Sept 12, 2016







