MK-Ultra Gate 172

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Aaron Sorkin and Brad Pitt Through ‘Moneyball’ Weigh in
on MK-Ultra Gate and Virtually Every Other Geo-Issue
© 2012 Brad Kempo B.A. LL.B.
Barrister & Solicitor
It wasn’t until the credits ran at the end of the September 2011 released film was it
discovered that the screenplay was co-written by the one who the Custodian’s described
in the following terms: “There’s smart; there’s really intelligent; there’s genius; there’s
uber-genius; and then there’s [Uber-Achievement Geo Award recipient] Aaron Sorkin”.
The last time this genius mould breaking author contributed to coalition interests and
objectives it was the Academy Award winning movie ‘The Social Network’. Then, for all
intents and purposes, he fell of the geo-map; resurfacing at a time that added to much of
what the Hollywood constituent of the partnership had done, like George Clooney’s
profound script to ‘The Ides of March’, to put Obama et al. on notice there was a zero
tolerance policy for the kinds of unlawfulness and impropriety observed across two
successive administrations.
What a combination of coalition superstar power that came together to fire salvoes of
condemnation at the White House and its co-colluding international counterparts and
the Chinada High Command. After geo-politicizing ‘The West Wing’, ‘Studio 60 on the
Sunset Strip’, ‘Charlie Wilson’s War’ and ‘The Social Network’, Aaron’s had more than
enough practice refining the lexiconic techniques that led to receipt of the UberAchievement award.
Plus he’s had many years with that massive brain power of his to reflect on how to
express in words, visuals and choreography his concerns and trepidations. That he had
the MK-Ultra Gate scandal as a new source of material gave him an opportunity to push
the envelope of creativity to a whole new level. That he had Brad Pitt (‘The Curious
Case of Benjamin Button’) and Philip Seymour Hoffman (‘Charlie Wilson’s War’) as
contributors made for a lethal accountability force of nature.
View trailer
Moneyball is a 2011 biographical sports drama film directed by Bennett Miller
and distributed by Columbia Pictures. The film is based on Michael Lewis's 2003
book of the same name, an account of the Oakland Athletics baseball team's
2002 season and their general manager Billy Beane's attempts to assemble a
competitive team. In the film, Beane (Brad Pitt) and assistant GM Peter Brand
(Jonah Hill), faced with the franchise's unfavorable financial situation, take a
sophisticated sabermetric approach towards scouting and analyzing players,
acquiring "submarine" pitcher Chad Bradford (Casey Bond) and former catcher
Scott Hatteberg (Chris Pratt), and winning 20 consecutive games, an American
League record.
Source: Wikipedia.com
One of the lexiconic techniques that was available to Aaron because of the kind of story
being told is described in One Way International Diplomacy is Being Played Out:
Embedding the Lexicon in the Sports Jersey. Additionally, the plot about the use of
statistics to construct a winning team provided another methodology of embedding the
confidential language’s numbers constituent in the script.
As Aaron began researching the Oakland A’s and observing what it did to become
elevated to the top of the league in 2002 he must have been excited by how much of
what occurred could be geo-ed.
For example, there was this success and set of
statistics after undertaking a roster makeover using an untested but now time proven
approach.
Absolutely amazing: A's win 20th consecutive game after blowing 11-0 lead
Sports Illustrated
September 5, 2002
Read article
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -- What looked like the easiest win for the Oakland
Athletics turned out to be the most improbable. The Athletics set an AL record by
winning their 20th consecutive game -- barely. They somehow blew an 11-run
lead before pinch-hitter Scott Hatteberg homered in the bottom of the ninth inning
to beat Kansas City 12-11 Wednesday night. […] After an off-day Thursday, the
Athletics will try to extend baseball's longest winning streak in 67 years when
they play at Minnesota on Friday night in a matchup of division leaders.
Demonstrative of what’s been at the top of the coalition’s priority list before and after the
epiphany, the film begins with the color of quantum.,,
... which is what was scripted for the opening moments of the first scene of ‘The Social
Network’.
During a scene that sets the tone of the plot - the protagonist placing his reform stamp
on the team’s management - Aaron adds the colors of Chinada and quantum.
One of the attendees executes the first Clooney M. of the film to “Damn Billy, was that a
suggestion?”. The question isn’t to anything he said, rather it’s geo- in nature since
Brad’s character had just raised his left hand and spread out his five fingers to articulate
the quantum issue; and the coalition answer to the question is ‘No it’s not a suggestion;
it’s a condition for keeping the MK-Ultra Gate scandal out of the public domain’.
Like a professor of philosophy or political science assessing problems with government,
Billy forces the attendees to examine what’s plaguing the team at its core.
Billy:
Okay good. What’s the problem?
Attendee 1:
Look Billy, we all understand what the problem is.
Billy:
Good, what’s the problem?
Attendee 1:
The problem is we have to replace three key players in our line
up.
Billy:
Nope, what’s the problem?
Attendee 3:
Same as it’s ever been: we have to replace these guys [Attendee
2: Powell-Cl.M.] with what we’ve got existing…
Billy:
Nope. What’s the problem Barry?
Barry:
We need 38 home runs, 120 RBIs and 47 doubles to replace.
The “three key players” referred to are the President of the United States, his VicePresident and his Secretary of State and one of the reasons for it is the atrocious White
House conduct that led to the assassination of an innocent American, Todd Bachman,
at the Beijing Summer Olympics.
Another topic that has MK-Ultra Gate relevance is developing a military asset which
procures surreptitious assassination without culpability.
The ‘elevator incident’ has
been high profiled a multitude of times since 2006 (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). And Aaron does so as
well during a scene between Billy and his whiz kid statistician.
Each time it’s observed
during an exchange Aaron adds a geo-gesture to make several points.
The first one involves a verbal and gesturing form of the O-S M. and a Federer M.:
“Okay, people who run ball clubs, they think in terms of buying players; your goal
shouldn’t be to buy players, [O-S M.] your goal should be to buy wins”.
For the coalition to succeed in the second clash between democracy and imperialistic
totalitarianism in modern era it’s not enough to simply provide the Custodian with his
quantum, for that covers what is personally owed and he’s not obligated to use that
capital for any other purpose. To be victorious there must be substantial financing of
reform and accountability operations. Therefore, the public sector constituent of the
coalition has strategized its approach in a very parochial manner. First, political leaders
left him without a penny since early 2006 to acquire resources and assets necessary to
push the agenda forward in a meaningful way and then come up short again by only
offering enough capital to cover his damages; when the need to do this right involves
enormous amounts of money to challenge those who have embezzled trillions and will
mobilize as much of that plundered prosperity to sabotage institutional change.
Billy’s first geo-gesture is very embellished and involves three separate Maneuvers Federer, Shafer and Prince Harry. It’s timed to Pete confessing his theories on baseball
have led him to be marginalized within the league’s management community; stating “If
I say it to anybody I’m ostracised; I’m a leper; so that’s why I’m cagey about this with
you”.
This is interpreted as describing what happened when the Custodian tried to inform
those he contacted north and south of the 49th Parallel - the former to get justice for
himself and fix the dysfunctional system that caused his nightmare and the latter when
his thirteen White House accountability initiatives were launched. The use of these
three gestures confirms that the private sector component of the coalition has been with
him all the way.
“Cagey” is thus a synonym for ‘confidentiality’ since going public
prematurely and without properly strategizing the edification of the world would likely
lead to the same result.
MK-Ultra R&D, deployment and global proliferation,
surreptitious assassination not in some third world country, but Canada, hypno-rape and
other sexual perversions employing stealth cognition technologies, etc. - they’re all
subjects that if introduced into the public domain without credibility generators the
desired goals would not be achieved.
Aaron adds a compensation ratifier with this geo-gesture...
... which is timed to “I think it’s a good thing...” when discussing how Billy dealt with a
player. This is Aaron’s way of agreeing with the ratification of quantum.
As Billy reaches over to push the elevator button, Pete executes an Erin M...
... and the statistician is asked three questions: “Where are you from?”, “Where’d you
go to school?” and “What’d you study?”; the purpose of which is to draw attention to the
type of education and degrees the Custodian got - B.A. political philosophy and law because his academic successes should have been sufficient when pursuing justice,
reform and accountability wherever he took these objectives.
Then right after Billy
enters the elevator ...
... Aaron cuts to a stats chart which is filled with the numbers constituent of the lexicon;
like putting the number 20 between compensation ratifiers.
During a scene in which baseball scouts are making the case to a potential recruit and
his parents a Taylor Identifier [*] is added and juxtaposed to the color of Canada to
describe the publicly non-transparent nature of America’s northern neighbour as
pubescent.
[Eventually we’re told] we no longer can play the children’s game; we don’t know
when that’s gonna be [Canada]; some of us are told at 18*; some of us are told at
40*; but we’re all told.
Next of geo-relevance is drawing a parallel between the Custodian academic
achievements and his predecessors in ancient Greece. Aaron inserts a large portrait of
either Socrates or Plato hanging on the wall of the statistician’s hotel room when he’s
called and learns of being traded to the A’s.
The colors of Chinada are embedded in a scene when the two are talking business. It’s
here Aaron reminds everyone of what signalled a serious morphing of the Chinada
threat - the assassination of Todd Bachman. Billy asks his new employee how many
player assessments he’d done for him. The answer: “47”.
When Pete shows Billy his methodology for calculating the value of prospective players
to recruit, Aaron embeds the numbers constituent of the lexicon again. To “Using stats
as we read them we’ll find value in players nobody else can see” there’s a close up of
Taylor, Custodian and coalition identifiers followed by a second close up of a Taylor
Identifier alone...
... which draws attention to the caliber of individual recruited to join the coalition. The
supra-celebrity is identified with specificity because having emerged onto the country
and crossover music scene to become a massive superstar, nobody outside the
partnership would ever think her capable of rising to the challenge of helping in a
meaningful way to contain the new totalitarian on the international block and reforming
America’s northern neighbor; which is usually the exclusive domain of veteran
politicians, military and intelligence leaders and personnel and Ph.D.s working at
academic institutes and think tanks. To Aaron, she’s earned every single one of her
awards, honors and accolades; for what she’s produced and the quality, tenacious and
prolific nature of those contributions and her high moral character have far exceeded
many in those categories of partner, including presidents, vice-presidents, cabinet
secretaries, CIA directors, joint chiefs chairmen and others.
After linking three photos of players together the scripted line “People are overlooked
for a variety of biased reasons and perceived flaws” is timed to a Custodian identifier, a
compensation ratifier and the first initial of his first name three times.
This is a compliment to the Canadian lawyer for political, corporate and law-related
organizations in his country and their U.S. counterparts didn’t see him for his worth
because they had inappropriate agendas and dysfunctionalities that prevented his value
being recognized.
Then comes Pete’s remark “Billy, of the 20 thousand young players to consider I believe
there’s a championship team of 25 people that we can afford” and the introduction of
baseball player “Chad Bradford”. He’s described as “...one of the most undervalued
players in baseball”. His jersey number is 53. Added is “And they can sign him for
“$237,000 a year” - the digits adding up to a coalition identifier.
Another management meeting is geo-ed. The room is filled with the colors of Chinada
and quantum and it begins with Pete executing a geo-gesture to red flag the scene as
relevant to coalition interests and objectives.
Billy:
None of ‘em.
Attendee 1:
Billy, we got 38 home runs, 120 RBIs guys.
Billy:
We’re still trying to replace Giambi. I told you we can’t do it. We
can’t do it. [Attendee: Close M. scratch] Now what we might be
able to do is re-create him. We create him in the aggregate.
Attendee: 1:
Do what?
Billy:
Pete:
Giambi’s on base percentage was 477. [X] on base - 324. And
[X2] was 291. Add that up and you get [snaps fingers at Pete].
You want me to speak?
Billy:
When I point at you, yea.
Pete:
1092.
Billy:
Divided by three [snaps fingers].
Pete:
364.*
Billy:
[McCain M.] That’s what we’re looking for. Three ball players -three ball players whose average OBG is [snaps fingers]?
Pete:
364.*
* Taylor Identifier
Attendee 3:
That doesn’t look right. That doesn’t come out right.
Billy:
It’s right. [Attendee 4: Colbert M.] You gotta carry the one.
Attendee 1:
Billy -- Billy.
Billy:
Yea.
Attendee 1:
Who’s that?
Billy:
That’s Pete.
Attendee 1:
Does Pete really need to be here?
Billy:
Yes he does. Okay, here’s what we want. Number One
[Attendee 5: Sarkozy M.] Jason’s little brother Jeremy. [tosses
magnetic name Id on board].
Attendee 6:
Trouble.
Billy:
This is the new direction of the Oakland A’s. Card counters at the
blackjack table. We’re gonna turn the odds on the casino.
Attendee 1:
Ah, I don’t see it.
Attendee 7:
Seriously guys, we have to remember [Att 1: praying gesture] this
is the man - he answers to no one except [Att: 8: Pacino M.
ownership and God. And he doesn’t have to [Att 9: R-S M.]
answer to us. We make suggestions; he makes decisions.
Aaron first recommends that the Custodian's persona be given a full makeover when
going public. To "create him in the aggregate" is to suggest he be presented in a
manner that reflects all the dimensions of his life, of which there are many.
Next is him saying the coalition's "gotta carry the one" - not a mathematical calculation;
rather help the Canadian lawyer achieve what he's been mandated to accomplish in
Canada and the U.S..
The praying gesture to "Seriously guys, we have to remember" is a caution to the entire
coalition that what lies at Canada's political and corporate core - the fascination with the
occult - must not be ignored because like capitalism-antithetical government and
economic policies the Chinada belief system threatens American interests on the
continent and throughout the world wherever it seeks to spread its nefarious policies
and practices.
Aaron is so convinced of the Custodian's competence he recommends to partners that
he not be second guessed on strategies and solutions he seeks to implement. That
said, however, he’s is not immune from accountability; for if he makes gross errors of
judgment he must be responsible. Since there is no manual in a book store or at the
library he can access that provides a blueprint for success in achieving very unique and
the most difficult to attain objectives, there is the very real chance he’s going to make
mistakes, i.e., strategize initiatives that don’t work or fall short of expectations. So he
ought to be allowed free reign going forward.
The next scene addresses the isolation-deprivation issue. It’s set in the home of a
player that’s about to be visited by Billy who’s going to make him an offer. When the
phone rings the audience sees he’s watching TV and the channel is set to Seattle’s
KING Five - which is a way to articulate the threat of MK-Ultra Gate publicity.
Near the end of the scene his baby girl wanders into the living-room and Aaron
choreographs the recruit to execute an Eva M. to the question “You got kids?”, which is
geo-rhetorical because the Custodian was deprived of all things romance, marriage and
family to ensure the success of the R&D program. Billy replies when executing a Brown
M. “Yea, a daughter”.
The isolation-deprivation issue is embedded again when Billy takes his daughter to a
music store to purchase a guitar. The colors of Chinada figure prominently when she
sings to him…
… the purpose of which is to high profile the multitude of experiences and joys of raising
children that were engineered out of the Canadian lawyer’s life to be enslaved,
experimented upon and tortured.
Billy, attired in quantum, effects a Federer M. to
underscore this loss. It’s timed to the lyric “enjoy the show” - a reference to the kind of
lifestyle he’s going to have to make up for lost and stolen time.
A specific reference to stealth cognition technologies is added to a flashback of Billy
being in the major league for a short spell. He had the appearance of being a great
recruit, but the realities of professional ball proved he just didn’t have it. First he’s seen
wearing a jersey with the number 20 on it and then retiring to the dugout where he
smashes his bat in frustration at being struck out. A Prince Harry M. is used to red flag
the scripted voiceover “Few scouts can go into the [PHM] mind of a young man and
determine whether he’s really competent about what he can do”.
The spring training scene begins with a voiceover involving two baseball commentators.
One says “He looked like clown out there”. The other asks “Who?”. The answer: “Ah,
Chad Bradford”. Aaron also choreographs the #53 jerseyed player to execute a
McGraw-Jackson M. to identify the Custodian…
… and articulate the position of the Chinada High Command. Its principals think of the
reform and accountability driven lawyer as foolish for trying to fix the rogue and failed
state.
Billy’s voiceover adds “Tell me about Chad Bradford”, which is the kind of
information exchange that went on during each and every coalition partner recruitment
introduction.
The description offered is “He’s a specialist; he’s not a guy you just say
‘Hey, the eighth inning is yours - lefties vs. righties”. Another voiceover adds “He only
throws the ball 82-83 miles per hour” - a combination China and Taylor identifier. Here
Aaron’s employing his uber-genius in combining the lexicon with geo-political facts:
“lefties vs. righties” is totalitarians vs. democracy advocates and saying the Custodian’s
not the kind of guy to give up.
Next in the line-up is David Justice - added after Bradford to underscore what the
Custodian seeks for himself, other MK-Ultra targets and millions of Canadians who were
victims of authoritarian and Chinese joint governance. His jersey number is 23 - digits
add up to a compensation ratifier. A sub-scene begins with a red flagging Clooney M..
Billy and Pete are talking on the sidelines in front of the prison certainty (chain link
fence) pattern. The former, sounding serious, says to him “This better work”.
He adds when the joke works “I’m just kiddin’ ya”. Not only does he tap the quantum
colored statistician on the chest three times, a triple Sorkin M. is added. The scene
ends with Billy executing five claps. The goal here is to be playful and at the same time
seriously convey his confidence in achieving stated objectives, including imprisonment
for those who broke the law, with publicity if needed.
^… One player crosses in front; two players cross in front …^
Next is a caption that reads “April 1, 2002”. It was on that day on the calendar in 1990
that Canada’s version of the CIA installed the electronic equipment in his home in
Edmonton, Alberta to advance the MK-Ultra R&D program.
The Game Day opener begins with Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing” and fans walking
towards the stadium. The one in the middle of the screen is wearing a jersey with a
coalition identifier on it and two are wearing quantum colored wigs.
A David Justice banner is next seen draped over the side of the building; added to
remind everyone what the Custodian’s been pursuing first on his own and then with the
assistance of an international conglomerate and what turned out to be disingenuous
help by two administrations that deceived and manipulated him into thinking they were
collaborating.
When Billy’s roster shake-up doesn’t produce results during the first part of the season
the critics are all over him. To a commentator’s voiceover “I want Billy Bean gone”
there’s a close up of the win-loss chart. First there are three “Lost” markings…
… followed by two more to total five.
In this context the coalition identifier is a reference to Obama et al. and their forced
resignation from office.
The Custodian identifier is using the Canadian lawyer as
symbolic of who was the catalyst for that historic development. A Clooney M. is added
to ensure this message is heard loud and clear.
Moments later the audience hears “... you try to fix it - everything” timed to a coach
walking down a line of winning players executing five fist bumps.
This is definitely an
Obama reference because this gesture was highlighted by the media during the election
campaign when he and his wife did it during a rally.
The run of losses gets Billy scrambling to address shortcomings in the theory he and
Pete have been pursuing in building a championship winning team. In his office and
ready to make calls to other general managers in a bid to pick up some new players his
secretary says “David Dombrowski’s on line three”, to which he is scripted to say “Look,
we’re going to shake things up” - his way of telling the White House that the failure to
follow-through before the epiphany because of serious and protracted abuses of power
and after it necessitates a ‘house’ cleaning of historic proportions. The reason for the
player trade is “’Cause he’s makin’ the rest of the team look bad”. This is a profound
critique of President Obama. Pete’s choreographed to execute a Federer M. to the
word “all star”, which is what the President appeared to be when he was elected.
However, that perception evaporated with the epiphany.
That message is reinforced when after the call, which ends with “You got five minutes;
I’m not waiting”, Billy executes a Hank M. ...
... to Pete’s underscoring that the player they’re talking about is an all star. In other
words, Aaron and others with Hollywood’s quasi-Fourth Estate status aren’t going to let
more time pass without doing something substantial; that the White House has to get its
act together if its occupants want to escape what publicity will deliver.
Philip Seymour Hoffman as the team coach is scripted to interact with Pete, who insists
on an affirmation from him about the team shake-up, inquiring of him “You agree with
this?”.
Pete answers “100%” and the red flag is Pete’s Colbert M. before the question and
Aaron placing Bradford in his #53 uniform in the hallway during the answer to state on
the record once again he’s in favour of the Custodian’s entitlements.
His agreement that quantum of that historic amount dates back to the final season of
‘The West Wing’ in early 2006 as documented in How Many Times Did ‘The West Wing’
Ratify the Canadian Lawyer’s US$5 Billion Compensation? [March 26, ‘06]. The answer
to the title question: a China identifying 19 times in that episode.
Anger is Billy is mounting over the run of losses. The scene in which he explodes
begins with the General Manager’s Clooney M. as Billy walks toward the dressing room
to red flag it as geo-relevant.
How he expresses his frustration is indicative how
coalition partners are feeling about what the White House did and didn’t do that led to
the possibility of losing to the Chinada High Command.
Billy:
Is it fun? Is losing fun?
Player:
No.
[tosses bat; pauses]
Billy:
That’s what losing sounds like. [Player: Federer M.; Billy tosses
Gatorade container and walks out.]
Billy and Pete go on a coaching offensive - meeting with players individually and in
groups. The first encounter contains two Taylor Identifiers with Pete arguing “When
you’re getting your pitch you’re hitting 625 (1) - which is massive, you’re crushing -crushing the ball; but [...] when you’re swingin’ low and away you’re 158 (2).
After delivering the prediction the coalition’s adversaries will be ‘crushed’ there’s
another short scene involving Billy and Pete. The former’s attired in prison certainty coalition identifier; the latter in prison certainty (chain link fence) and he’s offering a
gambling metaphor which seeks to remind the Chinada malfeasant they’re betting
against the House - the U.S. of A. - and history.
A coalition identifier is added by way
of “So every first pitched strike your batting average goes down about 75 points” (first =
7 + 5 = 12).
In the next exchange Billy’s “I wanna knock that starter out - deep into their bull pen; I
want you to take the bats off the 10th and 11th pitcher by the end of the series” is red
flagged with a Federer M. by one of the players to articulate the only kind of victory that
is acceptable in the circumstances.
Aaron articulates what’s been stated over and over about what the coalition is the
beneficiary of that makes reform and accountability almost easy.
He scripts most
gleefully “Let them make the mistakes. [Pete: Hank M.] “When the enemy is making
mistakes, don’t interrupt ‘em”.
Next clip there’s the line: “This is a process; it’s a
process, it’s a process; okay [Paula M.]?”.
This argument is stated in More Evidence of Chinada Complicity and Loyalty by
Western Canadian Multi-Billionaire Fiefdom King Jimmy Pattison and the Triangle of
Power and Wealth...
One of the goals of the Fiefdom treatise and its diplomacy archive was to collect
evidence of malfeasance and document the communiqués emanating out of the
Ottawa-Toronto-Montreal-(Beijing) triangle of power and wealth. The Chinada
High Command, having not evolved past intellectual or moral pubescence,
simply adopted the coalition’s methodology of diplomacy and in doing so
enthusiastically confessed and admitted to their violations of domestic and
international law – a prosecutor’s dream file.
... and in Chinada Principals React to Coalition Diplomacy With Television Commercials
of Their Own: Part II:
Now a lawyer for twenty years, the Custodian Chief Executive has viewed since
he began the diplomacy archive how the Chinada High Command conducted its
diplomacy as a prosecutor’s ‘dream come true’. What better than parties
charged with high crimes willfully volunteering information by way of confessions
and admissions, not to mention guilty conscience evidence, in the belief they
were above the law?
A commentator says by way of voiceover [Billy: Greenspan M.] “Remember when they
traded Jeremy Giambi to Philly and everyone thought they’d just given up? [Plus Hank
M. & coalition identifier] Actually, not so much.” In other words there’s not going to be
any tossing in the towel on this conflict.
Next is the caption “The Streak” as the audience hears “Strike three called; 12 straight
wins for the Athletics”. There is only one “streak” in the coalition discourse, and that’s
the TI Streak*, which by the movie’s release date had surpassed its one year mark by a
couple moths.
Next is describing the genesis of what would become a major league record of historic
proportions - the A’s winning 21 games in a row. Aaron begins with three lexiconic
numbers: 12 wins, then 14, then 16 to draw a comparison with the kind of victory
against Chinada that’s been in the making since 2004. Then there’s a pitch by Bradford
#53 ...
... timed to a commentator voiceover remarking “You try to analyze it from the numbers
standpoint and I’m telling you there is no explanation for what’s occurring right now - its
bigger than...”. Then to “The all time record of 20 does not seem impossible anymore”
Bradford’s 5 on his jersey is observed which juxtaposes the Custodian’s quantum with
what amounts to a Guinness Book world record for being a two decade MK-Ultra victim.
Then there’s a clip of Billy executing an Erin M. looking at a screen...
... as the commentator’s voiceover says “Page 1 of the New York Times today: they are
the story in sports in this entire country” [end Erin M.]”. Translated - the coalition’s fight
against its enemy and then battling becomes front page news if the White House
doesn’t follow through. On the heels of that is a scene from the 20th game involving...
... an out of the field hit; and as the player is approaching home plate the commentator
states “Crazy, just plain crazy”. Aaron inserts a clip of two jerseys - one with #38 (who’s
executing a George W. M.) and the other #10 - the digits added up totals a coalition
identifier. Here he’s describing the Bush and Obama White Houses for their ‘insane’
abuses of power.
That’s followed by a huge banner with the number 20 draped over the side by fans, at
which time we hear “In 103 years of American league baseball the Athletics have
accomplished what no one has before; they have won 20 consecutive games”.
Billy’s observed with his chin resting on his spread out fingers = Erin M. and Custodian
identifier. He’s staring at three pictures of himself as a young child dressed in quantum
colored baseball gear. This is another isolation-deprivation (family, kids) embed.
As a result of setting a new all time winning streak record Billy gets an offer from the
Boston Red Sox and meets with one of the club’s owners to discuss this opportunity.
Here Aaron shows his ‘uber- to the thirteenth power’ genius in what he inserts about the
conflict between the coalition and Chinada and MK-Ultra Gate.
Billy:
[I’m interested] because I hear you hired Bill James.
Owner:
Yep. You know, why it took so long for someone to hire that guy
is beyond me.
Billy:
Well, baseball hates him.
Owner:
Well, baseball -- baseball [Staul M.] can hate him, you know. One
of the great things about money is it buys a lot of things; one of
which is the luxury to disregard what baseball likes, doesn’t like;
what baseball thinks.
Billy:
[chuckles] Sounds nice. Well, I was grateful for the call.
Owner:
You were grateful?
Billy:
Yea.
Owner:
[Staul M.] For $41 million you built a playoff team. You lost
Damon, Giambi, Esringhousen, Paynea. And you won more
games without them than you did with them. You won the exact
same number of games that the Yankees won, but they spent
$1.4 million per win and you paid $260,000. I know you’re takin’ it
in the teeth out there, but the first guy to the wall, he always gets
bloodied. Always. This is threatening not just a way of doing
business but in their minds it’s threatening the game. But what’s
really threatening is their livelihoods; threatening their jobs;
threatening the way they do things. And every time that happens
whether it’s a government or the way of doing business, of
whatever it is, the people who are holding the reigns, they have
the hands on the switch, they go bat sh--t crazy. [Staul M.; Brown
M.] I mean anybody not tearing their team down right now and
rebuilding it using your model, they’re dinosaurs. To be sitting on
their ass, on the sofa, in October watching the Boston Red Socks
win the World Series [end B.M.].
Billy:
What’s this?
Owner:
I want you to be my General Manager. That’s my offer.
The owner's Staul M. red flags Aaron's observation about how the Custodian's been
received by the Ottawa-Toronto-Montreal-(Beijing) triangle of power and wealth.
Understandably, they "hate him" for what he's sought to achieve; and they have
conveyed that sentiment in many different ways, including threats of assassination
stretching back to January 2004 which triggered the political asylum application and
unrelenting hypno-torture. His point is that being in possession of his quantum and
whatever else partners provide him in terms of resources and assets will buy objective
attainment. By its very nature money can disregard what these militarized totalitarians,
these psycho-pubescent perverts, think. For example, when he has funds to pursue the
coalition’s agenda in Canada he can walk into every office and enter every conference
room - with the power of massive wealth and the moral high ground on the country’s ‘old
guard’ - and build a political base from which to initiate reform and hold those to account
who never believed they could be. Next a compensation ratifier is chosen to red flag
the remark "You built a playoff team", which underscores again the need for adequate
resources to push agenda forward.
Aaron highlights what happens whenever and wherever there's a challenge to the status
quo - to the way things have always been done. The parallel with Canada is made most
convincingly insofar as those who are "holding the reigns" of power and wealth got their
knickers in a twist, or in this case, their diapers, when faced with the demand to change
policies and practices that are decades, in some instances, generations old.
The argument is also made that once that change is successfully undertaken, as Billy
did in reconstructing his team to smash a long-held record, everyone scrambles to
repeat that success. The parallel here is when the Custodian achieves the goal of
deconstructing and reconstituting the Canadian state in all its forms, then others will
take his lead and seek to replicate his achievements. And that cannot but have a
beneficial effect of major significance for the 21st century. Those who don't will be
perceived as "dinosaurs"; being in command of dysfunctional countries and watching
improved societies reap the rewards.
As Billy’s driving home from the meeting in the knowledge he disproved his critics,
overcame what would have been debilitating self-doubt in others and gained a
reputation that will be remembered throughout coming generations, Aaron juxtaposes
the piece of paper the historic offer is written on with the prison certainty pattern to ...
... contrast what the Custodian will get out of his efforts and what his enslavers,
experimenters, torturers and deprivers will receive for theirs. Like Billy, the Canadian
lawyer will have shown those who thought he was ‘nuts’ to challenge the Chinada High
Command and the White House they misjudged him and he was right all along,
acquired an international persona that won’t be forgotten amongst the world’s
community of movers and shakers and the public if it goes that route and will have
triumphed in a circumstance that he never once had any self-doubt about.
The scene ends but it’s not until the film nears its conclusion is it revealed the amount of
the offer: $12.5 million.
Of that proposed salary Pete observes “That makes you the
highest paid GM in the history of sports” - which mirrors the Custodian’s quantum as
described by T. Boone Pickens.
The set is designed to include five vertical stripes
behind Billy and the prison certainty pattern is also behind Pete.
The statistician seeks to convince Billy he ought to accept the offer by drawing his
attention to a play that has parallels with his historic success. The baseball player is
wearing a number five jersey.
Pete:
He never does [run past first]; he gonna go for it. He goes around
first and he’s gonna go for it. Okay? [rolls tape; trips after passing
first base and crawls back to first] This is all Jeremy’s nightmares
coming to life.
Billy:
[CBS M.; Federer M.] Ah-h-h, they’re laughin’ at him.
Pete:
And Jeremy’s about to find out why. Jeremy’s about to realize
that the ball went 60 feet over the fence. He hit a home run ... and
didn’t even realize it.
Aaron underscores the previous point about those who dismissed the Custodian as a
joke. And he drives home in a most complimentary way what might be missing in his
perceptions about what he really did achieve over the years and especially with his
epiphany.
Brad was interviewed on ‘CBS This Morning’ on February 6th - the day after this
documentation was commenced and he wanted to underscore what the geo-portion of
the Sorkin film was all about. He first embellishes the Springsteen ‘times up’ M. to
“we’re gonna get it right and get it right right now; and let the chips fall where they may”
- which is a statement of intent that includes a short time horizon that the White House
would ignore at its peril. George Clooney’s ‘Ides of March’ had the same message.
He then employs a B-Clinton M. when a clip of his wife from a ’60 Minutes’ interviewed
is aired. It’s timed to her answering a question with “I’m still a bad girl” which seeks to
label Obama et al. as having become the opposite of what they should be as revealed
by the epiphany.
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