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I say without modesty this is a historic broadcast. Here I am joined by Dimitri from Subliminal Jihad for the first public glimpse into the Betty Ford Aquino papers. In addition to the that, you also get a crash course in the secret history of the gifted program; an ongoing eugenics project that's been active in the Bay area since nearly the First World War; the dark history of the Pacifica Foundation/KPFA; the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutes; the Bay area Pacifists movement; and so much more.

But most of all, you learn the extent of the Aquino family's influence. Their ties: to the San Francisco and Mormon gentry; what Betty Ford-Aquino really thought about Nazism; and how she was present for the transformation of San Francisco into an international hub. And most sinister of all, what were the family connections to the same region of Utah were the current SRA allegations are unfolding. And why do individuals there have ties to Michael Aquino. And how far back do Aquino's links to the area go? And, as an added bonus, you get the Betty Ford Aquino papers in all their glory along with the script for this show in the attachments. Cheers. 

Music by Keith Allen Dennis:

https://keithallendennis.bandcamp.com/

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Jason Matthews

I hate to add to this post's congestion, but it seems worthwhile to note that Leslie Kean, godmother of the disclosure movement, started her journalistic career at KPFA.

Floyd Hill

When I joined elementary school, it was just before they started throwing Ritalin/Biphentin at kids with "ADHD". My parents educated me with writing and I had a cookie monster calculator, big yellow "toy" that I wouldn't let go of that thought you how to do arithmetic. Apparently just that was enough for me to be way ahead of everyone else, and I had Developmental Coordination Disorder, for real, but they didn't see that, of course, I sucked at plastic arts and music (I'd later do just fine with guitar, bass, I just can't play wind instruments very well at all, damn Yamaha recorders). So after finishing my tasks in everything else 30 minutes before everyone else and feeling extremely uncomfortable to just sit still and do nothing, I would run around in class and get in trouble. They realized I was gifted, I guess, because soon I was given extra work to do after I was already done with the easy 1st grade crap, I guess I was doing 2nd grade stuff, the pedagogic helper would bring me binders fulla extra work and I would sit still and do it...but not so happily as the DCD made me feel very uncomfortable sitting on their crappy metal and wood school chairs for extended time, I remember how my joints almost everywhere hurt so bad...but I did their extra work. I was judged good enough to skip 2nd grade the next year and start in the 3rd grade, my "ADHD" mostly disappeared but the untreated DCD continued, they barely realize what it is now. I'm glad it didn't go any further, I did do things beyond other people's abilities on the Tandy Coco3 and the 286 IBM my dad bought which I ended up programming on at 6-7 years old, but the untreated DCD really didn't go away until I started playing baseball...like all manual tasks, takes me a while to get a grip of it, but when I do....ended up playing as highly ranked as my parents were willing to pay until I was 20, but a lot of Canadians just aren't seen playing baseball, for the most part. All this to say, I'm glad I figured out the DCD part of it, my parents when it was time to decide on whether to send me to International School or just normal Secondary education by the 7th grade, fortunately the price was too much even if it was in the same school as Regular and those who struggled, they charged 1k per semester and my dad is an asshole anyway he wouldn't have paid for it even if he wanted. So I kinda dodged a bullet I guess? International School in my corner of Canada is pretty much the equivalent of what you're describing here that's in the US. But no wonder I end up not playing Candy Crush on my desktop as I turned 40 but continue to be attracted to the kind of content that was there before it suddenly was cool for the general populace to be online all the time everywhere -- they considered it nerd shit until MySpace/FB or so...I wish it was still the case sometimes.