Post by silverbeatle on Nov 7, 2015 14:53:10 GMT -5
Anyone read Miles Mathis' works? While I don't agree with everything he writes, in a recent paper of his he does share some intriguing information.
He gives forth evidence that SGT. Pepper was former head of British Security Co-ordination, the relatively unknown (wikipedia info on him is suspiciously non-existent) John Arthur Reid Pepper.
Furthermore, The SGT. Pepper album cover is a display of various secret service agents (Hitler too! but he was excluded at the last moment) who carried out secret service activities, in the US, England, and English
controlled India. It makes perfect sense!
British Security Co-ordination (BSC) was a covert organisation set up in New York City by the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) in May 1940 upon the authorisation of Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
Its purpose was to investigate enemy activities, prevent sabotage against British interests in the Americas, and mobilise pro-British opinion in the Americas. As a 'huge secret agency of nationwide news manipulation and black propaganda', the BSC influenced news coverage in the Herald Tribune, the New York Post, The Baltimore Sun, and Radio New York Worldwide. The fictional stories disseminated from Rockefeller Center would then be legitimately picked up by other radio stations and newspapers, before being relayed to the American public. Through this, anti-German stories were placed in major American media outlets to turn public opinion.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Security_Co-ordination
From Miles Mathis:
Although John Pepper was head of the entire British spy organization in the US from the late 1940's,
his presence has been pretty well scrubbed from the literature. While the first head of BSC, William
Stephenson, has a long page at Wikipedia, Pepper has nothing. They can now admit Stephenson was a
master spy, the inspiration for James Bond, but Pepper is still in the shadows. Why? Because his name
was used by the Beatles for an album. They foolishly used his real name and told you to look twenty
years before. The album actually lacks any subtlety, and as you have seen, they give you a list of
agents on the cover, providing you with their pictures in case you don't know their names. Sgt.
Pepper's blows the cover of almost 100 agents, so its success as propaganda relies on the assumption of
an incredible ignorance and laziness by the audience—which assumption turned out to be true.
From Miles Mathis:
You may start by asking why Robert Peel's picture is included? He is the key to unlocking the
entire cover. Peel was British Home Secretary from 1822 to 1830. The Home Secretary is of course in
charge of the Home Office. Although the Home Office was formed in 1782, it wasn't until the arrival
of Peel in the 1820's that the police services (and especially the secret police) were brought into it. This
was Peel's specialty. He is sort of the father of the British Secret Service. He didn't invent it, he just
coordinated it and expanded it. Just above Peel on the cover of Sgt. Pepper's, you find Aleister
Crowley, who was recruited by the Home Office from Cambridge in the 1890's. Just as the Beatles
promoted yogis and Cheiro, they also promoted Aleister Crowley. Why would they do that? The
common interpretation is that the Beatles found him fascinating as a tarot-reading mystic, in the same
vein as their yogis. Or that they dabbled in Satanism like many other 60's bands, mainly for the
purpose of looking cool or avant garde. But that isn't the right answer. The right answer is just below.
Also above Peel on the cover is Sri Yukteswar Giri, whose ideas were imported from India into the US
with others like Vivekananda and Krishnamurti in the 1890's and afterwards. I have shown in a recent
paper that this importation of mixed Eastern ideas at that time was a longterm operation by Western
Secret Services, initiated in the 1870's by the Theosophical Society. After reading that paper, you can
uncloak Sri Mahavatar Babaji, Sri Paramahansa Yogananda, Sri Lahiri Mahasaya, Terry Southern, and
William Burroughs; and from reading subsequent papers in that series, you can unveil Wallace Berman,
Larry Bell, Richard Lindner, H. C. Westermann, and Karlheinz Stockhausen. In this way, you will
finally understand the link between all the people pictured on that cover. You will also be able to pull
in Peter Blake and Robert Fraser, who designed and directed the cover of Sgt. Peppers, respectively.
He gives forth evidence that SGT. Pepper was former head of British Security Co-ordination, the relatively unknown (wikipedia info on him is suspiciously non-existent) John Arthur Reid Pepper.
Furthermore, The SGT. Pepper album cover is a display of various secret service agents (Hitler too! but he was excluded at the last moment) who carried out secret service activities, in the US, England, and English
controlled India. It makes perfect sense!
British Security Co-ordination (BSC) was a covert organisation set up in New York City by the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) in May 1940 upon the authorisation of Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
Its purpose was to investigate enemy activities, prevent sabotage against British interests in the Americas, and mobilise pro-British opinion in the Americas. As a 'huge secret agency of nationwide news manipulation and black propaganda', the BSC influenced news coverage in the Herald Tribune, the New York Post, The Baltimore Sun, and Radio New York Worldwide. The fictional stories disseminated from Rockefeller Center would then be legitimately picked up by other radio stations and newspapers, before being relayed to the American public. Through this, anti-German stories were placed in major American media outlets to turn public opinion.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Security_Co-ordination
From Miles Mathis:
Although John Pepper was head of the entire British spy organization in the US from the late 1940's,
his presence has been pretty well scrubbed from the literature. While the first head of BSC, William
Stephenson, has a long page at Wikipedia, Pepper has nothing. They can now admit Stephenson was a
master spy, the inspiration for James Bond, but Pepper is still in the shadows. Why? Because his name
was used by the Beatles for an album. They foolishly used his real name and told you to look twenty
years before. The album actually lacks any subtlety, and as you have seen, they give you a list of
agents on the cover, providing you with their pictures in case you don't know their names. Sgt.
Pepper's blows the cover of almost 100 agents, so its success as propaganda relies on the assumption of
an incredible ignorance and laziness by the audience—which assumption turned out to be true.
From Miles Mathis:
You may start by asking why Robert Peel's picture is included? He is the key to unlocking the
entire cover. Peel was British Home Secretary from 1822 to 1830. The Home Secretary is of course in
charge of the Home Office. Although the Home Office was formed in 1782, it wasn't until the arrival
of Peel in the 1820's that the police services (and especially the secret police) were brought into it. This
was Peel's specialty. He is sort of the father of the British Secret Service. He didn't invent it, he just
coordinated it and expanded it. Just above Peel on the cover of Sgt. Pepper's, you find Aleister
Crowley, who was recruited by the Home Office from Cambridge in the 1890's. Just as the Beatles
promoted yogis and Cheiro, they also promoted Aleister Crowley. Why would they do that? The
common interpretation is that the Beatles found him fascinating as a tarot-reading mystic, in the same
vein as their yogis. Or that they dabbled in Satanism like many other 60's bands, mainly for the
purpose of looking cool or avant garde. But that isn't the right answer. The right answer is just below.
Also above Peel on the cover is Sri Yukteswar Giri, whose ideas were imported from India into the US
with others like Vivekananda and Krishnamurti in the 1890's and afterwards. I have shown in a recent
paper that this importation of mixed Eastern ideas at that time was a longterm operation by Western
Secret Services, initiated in the 1870's by the Theosophical Society. After reading that paper, you can
uncloak Sri Mahavatar Babaji, Sri Paramahansa Yogananda, Sri Lahiri Mahasaya, Terry Southern, and
William Burroughs; and from reading subsequent papers in that series, you can unveil Wallace Berman,
Larry Bell, Richard Lindner, H. C. Westermann, and Karlheinz Stockhausen. In this way, you will
finally understand the link between all the people pictured on that cover. You will also be able to pull
in Peter Blake and Robert Fraser, who designed and directed the cover of Sgt. Peppers, respectively.