G-Force
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2009 8:18 am
What you don't know can't hurt them.
https://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/
https://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/viewtopic.php?t=23154

Reverse engineering psyops and discovering what they are intended to hide is a fairly straight forward process although somewhat less than a science and more than a few parts art. But how to work the methodology the other way around? DuFrane and Forrest are names that easily stand out. But what about lead counsel, Gordon Erspamer?Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:I talked on the phone to the veteran who is part of this 1/09 lawsuit against the Pentagon and also is the model for 'Forrest Gump,' the 1985 novel by a military spook and then later a CIA-Hollywood movie when Congress opened up the files on this ugly chapter of US human testing on military 'guinea pigs.'
His name is Wray C. Forrest.
He was used as a guinea pig for chemical testing then when this destroyed his health he was ejected from the military as 'unfit for service' with no medical support.
A-hoo-ah! Fucking military.
When I looked up the law firm handling the 'human guinea pig soldier's' lawsuit, I noted that the same firm is representing Boeing in another case.brainpanhandler wrote: .....
But what about lead counsel, Gordon Erspamer?
http://www.abajournal.com/news/meet_gor ... fits_case/
A name like "Erspamer" doesn't require much countering, I think.When we throw in the concept of homonyms and the like it gets pretty difficult to find the psyops intended to obscure the work of Erspamer. It stands to reason though that if camoflaging the USG's history of illegally experimenting on "volunteer" soldiers is a priority as well as the efforts to seek legal remedies for medical conditions like PTSD related to military service in combat then the name Erspamer ought to be a target of psyops tactics. How to find those psyops?
I kinda like bumping threads.JackRiddler wrote:
On clicking I thought you meant this, one of my favorite cartoons as a child:
Battle of the Planets - G-Force
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWMY4U1g4pg
Not far off the subject: Anime-styled 80s US cartoon about warrior youths (in a standard set of five characters: cool leader, unruly No. 2, nerd, chick, strong fat guy, plus a cute robot dispatcher). They defend Earth's galaxy from attack as part of a larger military force. I still remembered the song from back then! Anyways, watching the credits again, I notice that in addition to being super-militarist, the courageous warrior youths are orphans trained from childhood for their roles as elite soldiers.
Gah.