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What CIA front organizations operated in the United States during the 1960s?

07.06.2025 11:38

What CIA front organizations operated in the United States during the 1960s?

Boudin and Gilbert, however, were not so lucky, as they were captured during a failed Brink’s truck robbery that resulted in the deaths of two New Jersey troopers and a Brink’s guard. Gilbert got a life sentence and remains incarcerated. He has devoted most of his time in prison to debunking theories that vaccination programs contributed to the AIDs epidemic, starting with programs in New York City and San Francisco that gave free hepatitis shots to gay men, and later, a polio vaccine given free in Africa.

The Students for a Democratic Society experienced explosive growth in the mid-sixties and was threatening a socialist youth revolt. The organization was quickly penetrated by hundreds of undercover FBI plants, all of whom supported a takeover of the group by Bernadine Dohrn, a University of Chicago graduate and first student organizer of the Communist-infested National Lawyers Guild.

In 2012, Robert Redford released “The Company You Keep,” based on a novel by Neil Gordon, and although the story was greatly altered, the many pedantic obfuscations supporting violence abounded.

Sometime ago, the Iranian Minister said that a US Navy aircraft carrier would be an easy target for 300 speed boats armed with Katyusha rocket launchers. Is this true?

Boudin was inspiration for the female lead in Philip Roth’s novel “American Pastoral” (1997) as well as for David Mamet’s “The Anarchist” (2012).

Unknown to the FBI plants, however, was the fact Dohrn and her closest allies (Michael Kennedy, Bill Ayers, Leonard Boudin, Katherine Boudin) were not really the devoted Marxists they claimed to be, but deep state operatives with tentacles that reached into the CIA.

It all goes to show how manipulated our national media really is and how hard it is to penetrate the web of influencers constructed inside intel’s wilderness of mirrors.

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The violent and bizarre history of the Weatherman, which included giving their troops LSD and forcing them into orgies where straight men were commanded to have sex with each other, have been swept under the rug, and replaced with a fake history of them as well-intentioned antiwar activists, a fable promoted by numerous high-profile documentaries and feature films, beginning with Emile de Antonio’s “Underground” (1976), and continuing with Sidney Lumet’s “Running on Empty” (1988), which told the story of Dohrn and Ayers raising Boudin’s son inside the underground after his parent’s were captured. The son would go on to attend Yale and briefly become a prosecutor in San Francisco.

Leonard Boudin was the nephew of Louis B. Boudin who had created the American Communist Party alongside John Reed. In retrospect it seems more than likely both of them were secretly working for American intelligence and when the Kremlin was tipped off, they poisoned Reed and claimed he died of typhus before giving him a hero’s funeral inside the Kremlin.

Although the Weathermen were supposed to be the most wanted terrorists in America, and although they were heavily penetrated by FBI undercover agents who knew where they were much of the time, Dohrn and Ayers were never apprehended while conducting a decade’s long bombing campaign. After the FBI scrubbed them off their files (evidence that included the murder of a San Francisco policeman), the pair came out of the cold and soon ended up with tenure and pensions from prominent universities in Illinois. This is the only case in America where terrorist cop killers were granted such honors.

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In 2002, a feature documentary titled “The Weather Underground” by Sam Green was released to great acclaim and nominated for an Academy Award. The documentary also ignored the use of drugs for mind controlling Weatherman recruits, as well as the 1970 death of the San Francisco policemen Brian McDonnell from a Weatherman pipe bomb.

Boudin served 22 years and after release, became a professor at Columbia University in New York, where she remained until her death in 2022 from cancer.