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| #Post#: 33210-------------------------------------------------- | |
| The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:11 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION --ACCESS LIST D | |
| ENCODED GLYPHSCRIPT ONLY | |
| THIS REPORT CANNOT BE PUT INTO ANY OTHER MEDIA FORM WITHOUT | |
| CENTRAL ACCESS PERMISSION. | |
| SCI/SCIF-POTOMAC | |
| SCI/SCIF-PARKHAM | |
| SCI/SCIF-CHEYENNE | |
| SUMMARY REPORT 20220722 | |
| ARCHON DIRECTORATE | |
| 20220722-1425 1015GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| [1-1]GENERAL PROGRAM SECURITY STATUS IS UNCHANGED. PROGRAM | |
| SECURITY HAS BEEN DETERMINED BY INTERNAL AFFAIRS TO BE SOUND. | |
| EXTERNAL AFFAIRS REPORTS CONGRESSIONAL, WHITE HOUSE AND | |
| JUDICIARY SECURITY ARE AT CONDITION GREEN. | |
| [1-2]GIVEN THAT FORMER PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP IS STILL A | |
| SECURITY THREAT TO THE COUNTRY AND TO ESTABLISHED CONSTITUTIONAL | |
| GOVERNMENT, THE DECISION REMAINS IN PLACE THAT THE MIND LOCK | |
| SHALL NOT BE REMOVED FROM HIM AND FROM THOSE OTHER FORMER | |
| ADMINISTRATION OFFICIALS STILL IDENTIFIED ON THE WATCH LIST AS A | |
| THREAT TO PROGRAM SECURITY (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE ONE). | |
| [2-1]GROUP MIND POTOMAC CONFIRMS THAT THE MIND LOCK EMPLACED ON | |
| FORMER PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP BY PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE REMAINS | |
| SOUND. GROUP MIND POTOMAC (GMP) CONFIRMS THAT ITS SEALS ARE | |
| INTACT AND THAT ITS FUNCTIONING DIAGNOSTICS ARE WITHIN | |
| PARAMETERS. | |
| THE LUCIDITY TEMPLATE ENABLING THE FORMER PRESIDENT TO MORE | |
| RATIONALLY INTERACT WITH PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE IS NOW NO LONGER | |
| USEFUL FOR PROGRAM SECURITY SINCE INTERACTIONS BETWEEN THE | |
| FORMER PRESIDENT TRUMP AND PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE WILL CEASE AS OF | |
| NOVEMBER 2022. | |
| [2-2]THE ARCHON DIRECTORATE HAS DETERMINED THAT THIS LUCIDITY | |
| TEMPLATE MUST BE REMOVED FROM THE MIND LOCK ALLOWING THE | |
| PRESIDENT�S EXISTENT DETERIORATION TO NATURALLY PROCEED AT ITS | |
| NORMAL PACE (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE TWO). | |
| [2-3]THEREFORE, THE ARCHON DIRECTORATE, IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE | |
| IKORRCENI PREFECTURE, MANDATES AND DIRECTS THAT PSION ADRIAN | |
| STEMPLE REMOVE THE LUCIDITY TEMPLATE FROM THE FORMER PRESIDENT�S | |
| MIND AT THE FIRST CONVENIENT OPPORTUNITY. THIS OPERATION IS TO | |
| BE DIRECTED BY SECRET SERVICE SUPERVISOR, INVESTIGATIVE | |
| PROTECTION OFFICER, MICHAEL COLLINS, AS SOON AS THE FINAL PLAN | |
| IS APPROVED. | |
| [2-4]THE DIRECTORATE HAS DETERMINED THAT PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE | |
| BE PERMITTED TO CARRY WITHIN HIS PSIONIC PARA-DIMENSIONAL KARG | |
| TEMPLATE, A PREFECT ANALOG THAT CAN SUPPRESS THE ANTI-PSIONIC | |
| FIELD AROUND THE PRESIDENT. THE DIRECTORATE HAS ALSO DETERMINED | |
| THAT MR. STEMPLE MAY ONLY UTILIZE THE ANALOG TO CAVITATE THE | |
| PROTECTIVE ANTI-PSIONIC FIELD WITHIN THE PROXIMITY OF THE FORMER | |
| PRESIDENT TO REMOVE THE LUCIDITY TEMPLATE FROM THE PRESIDENT�S | |
| MIND. DURING THIS OPERATION, THE OUTWARD SHELL OF THE | |
| ANTI-PSIONIC FIELD IS TO REMAIN EMPLACED TO PRESERVE THE | |
| CLANDESTINITY OF THIS OPERATIONAL CAVITATION FROM ANY FREEHOLD | |
| MENTALISTS WHO MAY HAPPEN TO BE PRESENT IN THE VICINITY OF PALM | |
| BEACH. (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE THREE). | |
| [3-1]EVALUATION-TEAM EAST�S MAIN EVALUATION OF THE | |
| EX-PRESIDENT�S MENTAL STATE IS UNCHANGED. EVAL-TE HAS | |
| DETERMINED THAT THE EX-PRESIDENT IS CONTINUING TO SUFFER MENTAL | |
| DETERIORATION WITHIN TWO PREDOMINATE FORMS: 1) THE FORM OF | |
| EPISODIC AND PROGRESSIVE MILD DEMENTIA, WHICH INTERFERES WITH | |
| HIS DAILY ACTIVITIES. CONFIRMED CONTINUING SIGNIFICANT | |
| BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE FORMER PRESIDENT INCLUDE | |
| IMPRESSIONISTIC THINKING, PROBLEMS IN CONCENTRATION AND FOCUSED | |
| ATTENTION, A DECLINE IN DISCURSIVE THINKING, AN AVOIDANCE OF | |
| READING, WHICH INCLUDES IMPORTANT LEGAL BRIEFS AND PERSONAL | |
| PAPERS, AND AN INABILITY TO MAKE IMPORTANT DECISIONS CONCERNING | |
| COMPLEX MATTERS. 2) THE FORM OF LONGSTANDING, LIFELONG | |
| PATHOLOGICAL NARCISSISM THAT COMPELS HIM TO NEGLECT AND/OR TO | |
| SUBVERT COMMONLY HELD MORAL NORMS, THE LAW, AND THE DUTIES OF | |
| HIS CURRENT STATION AND FORMER OFFICE. REFERENCE FOR THIS ARE | |
| FOUND IN THE LAST GIVEN REPORTS SUPPLIED BY LIASONS FBI/CSS AND | |
| JCS/CSSE (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE FOUR). | |
| [4]FBI/CSS AND JCS/CSSE REPORT NO INFORMATION SUPPLIED REGARDING | |
| CURRENT JUDICIAL INVESTIGATIONS AND OTHER MATTERS CONCERNING THE | |
| FORMER PRESIDENT, ESPECIALLY CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTATION RETRIEVED | |
| FROM VARIOUS TRUMP PROPERTIES. DESPITE THIS, AT THIS TIME, | |
| DEPARTMENTAL ORDERS HAVE BEEN ISSUED AND THE SECURITY LEVEL IS | |
| ENCODED YELLOW. GIVEN THE CONTINUED POSSIBLITY THAT THE FORMER | |
| PRESIDENT MAY HAVE BEEN COMPROMISED BY CRIMINAL ENTITIES AND/OR | |
| FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS AND MAY NOT BE HIS OWN MASTER, THE EMPLACED | |
| PROCEDURAL ACTIONS FOR SECURITY IN THE EVENT OF A MAJOR HOSTILE | |
| PENETRATION OF GOVERNMENT ARE STILL CONSIDERED ACTIVE (SEE | |
| ATTACHMENT FILE FIVE). | |
| ATTACHMENTS: | |
| FILE ONE: CURRENT PROGRAM SECURITY 20220222 | |
| FILE TWO: CURRENT MENTAL LOCK STATUS OF FPOTUS | |
| FILE THREE: MEETING PARAMETERS BETWEEN FPOTUS AND IKORCENI | |
| STEMPLE | |
| FILE FOUR: CURRENT MENTAL OF FPOTUS | |
| FILE FIVE: CURRENT STATUS RELEVANT JUDICIAL | |
| INVESTIGATIONS/SECURITY REQUIREMENTS | |
| GYPHSIGNATURES DIRECTORATE RECORDED BELOW | |
| SECRETARY, FIRST ARCHON 19660318-SN227 | |
| DIRECTORATE CONFIRMS FINAL SUMMARY REPORT W/ATTACHMENTS | |
| 20220722-1425 1015GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION - - ACCESS LIST D | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| Newport, Oregon & Mar a Lago, Florida | |
| Late October 2022 | |
| Mack Stemple had always enjoyed Newport, Oregon. His visit this | |
| morning was much the same for many years. He had enjoyed his | |
| morning breakfast of razorback clams with fried eggs, hash | |
| browns and toast, at Aunt Macey�s Eatery, on SW Bay Boulevard, a | |
| popular local restaurant that looked out over the anchorage, and | |
| bay, of this sleepy coastal Oregon town. Because of his ability | |
| to teleport, he had known many fine places and their restaurants | |
| over the years. | |
| It was going to be a fine morning along the coast, he thought, | |
| as he stepped out onto the boulevard into the early morning | |
| light after it had stopped raining and the air was cool. The | |
| fog had blown out to sea and the temperatures were still in the | |
| middle 40s. He could see from the few people on the boulevard | |
| that they were comfortable in the morning chill, wearing their | |
| hooded, wool-lined windbreakers. Soon that would change when | |
| the winter rains would come. Then the coastal people would be | |
| switching over to warmer hooded jackets and raincoats. | |
| Mack Stemple walked down the boulevard, enjoying the fresh sea | |
| air. As he walked along, he occasionally stopped and window | |
| shopped the various shops and stores that were along the | |
| boulevard. As he did so, he thought back upon the memories of | |
| his past. | |
| He was thankful for his psionic abilities. With teleportation, | |
| he was well-traveled. With telepathy, he could listen to many | |
| people�s thoughts and experience their memories. One could gain | |
| a certain wisdom in that, he thought. Pausing in his walk, he | |
| faintly sensed the sounds, the brain pulses of many people in | |
| his immediate area. Making the usual, precautionary area scan, | |
| he expanded his psionic awareness out to about 1600 meters, | |
| about a mile. In his mind, he could faintly sense the outline | |
| of the maze of buildings that stretched inland from the | |
| boulevard, as well as of the ships and docks of the harbor. He | |
| could hear the sound of most of the brain pulses in that area. | |
| Many times, because of his scans, he had escaped the dangers | |
| that were found in many places he had visited. | |
| Mack had spent a lifetime living in a way largely hidden from | |
| ordinary people. He was once ordinary himself, a normal young | |
| boy. His elementary school days were very much like his | |
| classmates. He had the usual joys and hurts. To his surprise | |
| he began to change during his junior high school years. He | |
| first began to develop various telepathic gifts that provided to | |
| him both pleasant and unpleasant advantages over his classmates. | |
| Soon other psionic gifts followed. | |
| He remembered those autumn days of long ago when he was | |
| approached by strangers, who were also psionics, various Star | |
| People elders, who knew what he was going through, and who would | |
| help him in his adjustment to his new powers. They would teach | |
| him many things. They would tell him that he would live, very | |
| likely, for a thousand years. They advised that at the twilight | |
| of a normal human life span, he would turn his interests | |
| outward, and would finally leave Earth, going off into the | |
| marvel and mystery of the Star People�s far flung stellar | |
| civilization. | |
| As he walked along the boulevard, he realized that those days | |
| had come. He was now in that human twilight. His parents were | |
| dead and also his wife, Callie, who died several decades ago in | |
| a car accident. She was a woman to be grieved. A shrewd, | |
| independent, educated, coastal Washington state woman, Callie, | |
| her curious full name, Calanthe Poulain, was many things, an | |
| intriguing, even a highly erotic, woman. She was short, five | |
| feet five inches tall, small pert breasts, boyish hips and | |
| figure. Unlike her friends, she was a daring woman, wearing | |
| halter tops and short cutoff denim shorts, despite the cool | |
| weather that was found along the Washington coast. Her short, | |
| blond hair was invariably in the form of a page boy haircut. | |
| Until Mack had met Callie, he wasn�t conscious of the fact that | |
| there was more than one form of that kind of haircut. Mack | |
| rarely delved into his eidetic memory. As he remembered, some | |
| page boy styles were longer, others were shorter, and Mack had | |
| loved them all. This hairstyle was a style she had chosen when | |
| she was young, and it suited her well. Callie was an | |
| enthusiastic swimmer. While young, she could be found swimming | |
| at local municipal pools, marveling the boys by her formidable | |
| athletic skills, her enthusiasm, and an atypical fine body | |
| muscle tone that made other, more beautiful women, envious. | |
| Mack reflected that Callie sometimes had the youthful pretty | |
| girl�s awkwardness in the presence of truly beautiful women. | |
| Callie weathered that awkwardness well. She had that advantage | |
| that pretty girls eventually knew. She understood that an | |
| erotic, pretty woman could many times, be much more interesting | |
| to men than many beautiful woman. Men were generally less | |
| intimidated by a pretty, compared to a beautiful, woman. To | |
| Mack, smitten by her charms, she was not merely pretty, she was | |
| beautiful, mystery to him. She was a psi-blank and Mack | |
| couldn�t read her mind. He loved every moment of his life with | |
| her and was heart-broken for years after her death. It was a | |
| somber day when he had scattered her ashes from a helicopter off | |
| the shores of Whidbey Island, a place which they had both loved. | |
| Then there were the others that had died. His good friends in | |
| New York, Preston and Sheryl Callendar were now dead. They both | |
| died last month, their deaths only several weeks from each | |
| other. Mack had attended their funeral on Long Island, in the | |
| presence of their sons, their wives, and their children. He was | |
| pleased that that family had drawn close, which was uncommon | |
| from what Mack had known about the wealthy. He knew that he was | |
| always welcome among the Callendars. Tome, one of his psionic | |
| colleagues, was a friend of one of their sons. | |
| Mack�s mind ranged over the others in his past. His first | |
| junior high school girlfriend, Kaitlyn, he hadn�t seen in | |
| decades. He had lost her to another boy, whom she loved and | |
| later married. Kaitlyn was not like Callie. She was a | |
| genuinely beautiful woman, having long, lustrous black hair and | |
| luminous eyes. She was a mysterious, dour girl, having an | |
| unhappiness that Mack could not understand. Like Callie, she | |
| was also a psi-blank and Mack could never directly know her | |
| thoughts. Though he had lost her, it was good that she had | |
| married his competitor in love, a boy who proved to be a much | |
| better man than he was. Through him, she had many children and | |
| grandchildren. As far as Mack knew, she was now a joyfully, | |
| fulfilled woman, and he wished the best for her and her family. | |
| Mack reflected that most of his other classmates from his | |
| academic years were dead or ailing in rest homes. Most of the | |
| relationships that he had known among the normals were gone. | |
| Much of the world that he had grown up and lived in was, in many | |
| ways, gone. For Mack, the 1960s and 70s were the times he most | |
| identified with. | |
| Nowadays, he felt himself out of place, not being a part of | |
| society, of the world, as he formerly had been. It was as he | |
| had thought. His twilight days had come and he would need to go | |
| off-planet as well. He had spent his last Earth year | |
| off-planet, in another world with a Pleistocene biosphere, | |
| called Lantos 5. Mack felt the desire of returning there, to | |
| Lantosmere, the floating city in the sky of that world. | |
| Compared to the pristine nature of Lantos 5, an entire planetary | |
| preserve, never to be settled or developed, Earth had lost its | |
| luster. | |
| As he walked along, Mack reflected back again upon his security. | |
| The ability to do an area scan made a great difference to his | |
| security. He thought about the maze of buildings that were | |
| within his scan area and the ways he could escape if he was | |
| pursued for some reason. He briefly focused his attention on | |
| that and figured his escape routes from where he was walking. | |
| This was something he was trained to do, habitually, since his | |
| teenage years, after he had acquired many of his powers. | |
| There was little to fear in Newport for people such as him. | |
| Most people were psi-open norms, people that had minds that | |
| psionics could enter into easily and learn their inmost | |
| thoughts, generally without a hint of detection. These minds | |
| could be psionically attacked and represented no danger. There | |
| were others, the psi-blanks, those who had been gifted with | |
| anti-psi minds that a psionic ordinarily could not enter into. | |
| Attempting to use a psionic attack discipline at or around these | |
| people would cause that psi-blank mind to project an anti-psi | |
| damper field some fifty feet or fifteen meters around them. | |
| These persons, if armed with weapons, or had martial arts | |
| training, could be very dangerous. But Mack was prepared to | |
| deal with these people if the need arose. | |
| #Post#: 33211-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:13 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Many people, if they know what Mack was, would fear him. Mack | |
| was also someone rare among psionics. He was a Controller. He | |
| had the ability to control the minds of the psi-open around him. | |
| It was a power that Mack had not necessarily wanted, and he | |
| used it rarely. Among the Star People, this skill was heavily | |
| regulated, and he faced an Examen from a Censor every month to | |
| investigate how he had used this special skill. Mack never | |
| wanted to be a Controller. He had always wanted to be a Healer, | |
| but, as it is with life, life serves out many differing, | |
| contrary things. As it is with many, we all go through life, | |
| wanting certain things, and are many times frustrated in our | |
| wants. | |
| Mack did use his psionics on behalf of various secret American | |
| governmental agencies as he was sanctioned by the Star People. | |
| For decades he functioned as a clandestine agent. His most | |
| important activity was when he had used his skill as a | |
| Controller in January, 2017, when he put a mind lock upon the | |
| newly elected American President, Donald Trump. The immediate | |
| cause for doing so was because the the American government | |
| determined that the President was mentally unstable and, | |
| frankly, pathological, with no real, fundamental loyalty to the | |
| country. | |
| Trump was a psi-blank, and given how his mind was resistant to | |
| psionics, it could only be accessed with a psionic construct | |
| called an analog module. And so it was decided, in early 2017 | |
| by the leaders of the AAP, the American Anti-Psi Program, the | |
| Archon Directorate, that they needed the help of their potential | |
| adversaries, the Star People, using an analog, to put mental | |
| controls upon the new President. This, the AAP decided, was | |
| needed to prevent any possible disclosure of the existence of | |
| psionics, a fearful result that could lead to serious social and | |
| political consequences in human society. Mack reflected that it | |
| was, operationally, the most unusual mind lock that he had put | |
| upon the president. It was accomplished when he was no longer | |
| in the humanoid form. He was in the pod form when it happened. | |
| He had shape-shifted into the form of a sphere the size of a | |
| child�s marble. This was the most radical of psionic abilities | |
| apart from teleportation. The Star People were shape-shifters, | |
| and the pod form was the most radical of those shapes. | |
| Mack reflected upon the many benefits of the pod form, the | |
| ability of the Star People to shape shift down from the humanoid | |
| form into the form of a sphere, usually around 3 inches or 7.6 | |
| centimeters, or even smaller, 1 inch or 2.5 centimeters. In the | |
| sphere form, one could sleep or function in an imagined virtual | |
| reality created by one�s own mind. The virtual reality was, for | |
| most psionics, in the form of a small, comfortably furnished | |
| room with windows and closets. The virtual reality mode | |
| permitted the display of the visual area outside of where the | |
| pod form was located. It meant for a kind of radical camping | |
| life-style for psionics. Mack, many times, had rested for the | |
| night by putting his pod form down at a secluded favorite beach | |
| or island along the Pacific or Atlantic coasts, or onto mountain | |
| ridges secluded from human society. Mack particularly loved | |
| various massif sites in the Bob Marshall Wilderness or in | |
| Glacier Park. In his teenage years, he had loved Knife Blade | |
| Ridge and Greathouse Peak in the Snowy Mountains. These sites | |
| allowed for some spectacular views of the countryside in that | |
| virtual reality. If he was with friends, at the same location, | |
| and if they were telepathically linked together, they could | |
| share the same virtual reality and have a convivial time | |
| together in a shared, common virtual room. | |
| In that virtual setting, one could recharge one�s psionic powers | |
| through the background electromagnetic energy that coursed | |
| through the world. A psionic could also revert back to the | |
| humanoid form physically changed or merely dressed differently | |
| from what he entered into it. The virtual reality allowed one | |
| to change one�s appearance in the real world. Since Mack�s | |
| entire wardrobe was available to him in the virtual reality he | |
| frequently changed clothes, and his pocket litter, on coming | |
| back. In the pod form, he could also fly. | |
| It was a wonderful ability, to be able to fly at one�s will. | |
| When Mack was in his early 20s, he acquired this ability, and, | |
| if he couldn�t teleport to a certain location since he hadn�t | |
| been there before, and put the site into his eidetic memory, and | |
| if he didn�t want to do a telepathic astral projection, he could | |
| travel there by pod flight. All psionic pods could fly at a | |
| certain point in psionic development. Eventually, everyone in | |
| the pod form could attain supersonic flight, even spaceflight. | |
| Like teleportation, it was something that had radically changed | |
| his life. | |
| Mack came out of his thoughts as he walked along the boulevard. | |
| That was five years ago. He crossed the boulevard and went up | |
| to a bench next to the shore overlooking the bay. He was | |
| grateful for the warmth of the sun and the bracing cool air. As | |
| he sat down, he was pleased to watch the harbor seals leaping | |
| and cavorting in the harbor, feeding on the swarms of fish he | |
| sensed telepathically. In the distance, he could also see | |
| pelicans further out in the bay, also feeding. He enjoyed the | |
| fresh, bracing air in the morning quiet. | |
| The quiet was welcome. He let the silence come over him and his | |
| thoughts receded into the background as he enjoyed the vista | |
| before him. He watched the seagulls as they passed above and | |
| before him, occasionally diving into the water, snatching up | |
| prey, their cries breaking briefly the silence of the moment. | |
| Mack watched the luminous rills of water, reflecting the bright | |
| morning light, moved across the bay and seemed kind of hypnotic | |
| movement that was comforting to his eyes. There was little | |
| traffic on the road behind him. | |
| Flight was a great joy for him, Mack reflected. It was a | |
| fascinating moment in his life when he emplaced the mind lock on | |
| the former president. Mack rarely used the pod form for flight | |
| in the busy skies of Earth. Very few of the Star People did so, | |
| for most were not comfortable with flying on a planetary surface | |
| that had a lot of aircraft, though the aircraft were of little | |
| danger to them. It was no problem for Mack, when he was flying | |
| at a subsonic speed in that form, when he emplaced the mind lock | |
| onto Donald Trump, when the newly-elected President was flying | |
| from Washington DC to his home in Florida. Mack remembered that | |
| the President was eating a hamburger at the time. No one had | |
| seen the faint disturbance in the air that Mack�s pod form made | |
| in its flight to Air Force One. | |
| Mack was pleased how it was accomplished. The President�s | |
| plane, Air Force One, was flying south at 35,000 feet. The | |
| President was guarded by two Air Force F-15s that were flying | |
| parallel behind and above the presidential plane by several | |
| thousand feet. It was sometimes said that Trump was annoyed | |
| that his fighter escort didn�t fly alongside Air Force One so | |
| that he could see them. | |
| Mack, flying at Mach 3 in stealth mode, encountered the | |
| Presidential plane and its two escorts above Raleigh, North | |
| Carolina. While he was in stealth mode, he was very hard to see | |
| since his disturbance in the air was minimal. He was | |
| undetectable by radar. If he wasn�t in stealth mode, he would | |
| have been detected immediately and classed as some kind of | |
| missile that had come out of nowhere. | |
| Mack swooped down from 51,000 feet between the two fighters | |
| flying at 47,000 feet. Mack then went behind and then | |
| underneath Air Force One. He flew up to the front of the bottom | |
| of the plane where, in his cabin, the President was eating his | |
| hamburger and fries. When Group Mind Potomac, as part of the | |
| Secret Service, dropped its anti-psi damper field, Mack locked | |
| onto the President�s mind. When he sensed America�s most | |
| powerful group mind, Group Mind Potomac following his | |
| consciousness, Mack entered Trump�s mind and emplaced the mind | |
| lock, putting in the lucidity feature. After Group Mind Potomac | |
| confirmed that the seals to the mind lock were sound and | |
| unbroken, Mack broke away from the plane formation and abruptly | |
| teleported to walk again in his favorite haunts around Pike�s | |
| Market in Seattle. He was later happy to learn that the mind | |
| lock was functioning in the manner desired by those in authority | |
| who wanted it. | |
| As he sat on the bench, overlooking the bay at Newport, enjoying | |
| the wind and sea air, Mack wondered if he should go to a quiet | |
| place behind a building along the boulevard and drop down into | |
| the pod form to change clothes to be more comfortably dressed | |
| when he teleported to Florida. The air would be hot and muggy | |
| there. Usually the winds would be warm blowing inland from off | |
| the Atlantic. Palm Beach was usually a comfortable place, being | |
| an island, and, of course, Mar a Lago itself would be | |
| comfortably air-conditioned. | |
| He had been to Mar a Lago a number of times before, and it was | |
| annoying to coming near to Trump again, even if he was needed to | |
| remove the lucidity template of Trump�s mind lock. Why not | |
| leave the template in place? The lucidity template enabled | |
| Trump to think more clearly only when Mack was in his presence. | |
| And Mack�s coming into Trump�s presence was very rare. | |
| The lucidity template created a biostasis that protected Trump�s | |
| brain biologically in that it slowed the rate of his mental | |
| deterioration. But Trump�s mind was deteriorating anyway. If | |
| Mack stayed away, Trump�s mind would continue to deteriorate. | |
| Perhaps the Archon Directorate wanted Trump to mentally decline | |
| faster. Removing the template�s biostasis could certainly cause | |
| a more rapid deterioration. Perhaps that�s what the Archons | |
| actually wanted. If this was so, Mack wondered if this was | |
| advisable. | |
| Mack had to wonder, should the mind lock have ever happened? It | |
| would not have happened unless the Archon Directorate had been | |
| so demanding for it. Given the precarious nature of having | |
| America, a planetary superpower, led by an unstable, inadequate | |
| man, and other, calculating, unscrupulous men, the Star People | |
| ultimately decided that the American Anti-Psi Program had to be | |
| supported in this. And so it came to be that the President�s | |
| mind, along with the others, had to be locked down for global | |
| anti-psionic security. | |
| Ordinarily, psionics would be unable to enter the mind of a | |
| psi-blank, but Mack was given permission to use a military grade | |
| Prefect analog module, something usually used off-planet, to | |
| augment his own psionic abilities. This enabled him to | |
| overpower Trump�s anti-psi defenses, even the advanced anti-psi | |
| damper fields that the AAP could employ to defend the United | |
| States. Mack felt that the whole situation was strange, very | |
| strange. Potential adversaries were helping each other keep | |
| secret the existence of psionics from the rest of human society. | |
| No doubt, it had been quietly argued among the Archons of the | |
| AAP, the nature and intensity of the mind lock, and the level of | |
| control that was desirable. | |
| There were actually two forms of intensity in mind control; they | |
| were called, respectively, heavy and light. Heavy mind control | |
| involves the heavy-handed control over a person�s mind, usually | |
| calling for the person controlled, into doing things that | |
| violated the controlled persons goals and values. These | |
| compulsions could involve extreme things such as murder, theft, | |
| suicide, et cetera. Given that the mind control command matrix | |
| for these compulsions are put into a person�s subconscious, | |
| these strong compulsions, if they exist for a long time, can | |
| cause a mental disintegration for the person so affected. The | |
| compulsions, futilely warred against, shut out the ability of a | |
| person to live normally. Heavy mind control, though, does not | |
| permit a long life. Light mind control is different, which | |
| involves minor compulsions, not involving personal values dear | |
| to the person affected. These compulsions cause little harm to | |
| the affected, controlled person. This is the form of mental | |
| control or mind lock that was decided upon for Trump. Trump | |
| would have a mind lock that would allow minimal light mind | |
| control but would achieve the desired result for American | |
| security. Mack wondered what he would have done if the Archon | |
| Directorate had demanded a heavy mind control of some type that | |
| meant the rapid mental destruction of the President. | |
| Mack reflected how much his psionic gifts had changed him, some | |
| for the good and some bad. Sometimes his psionic gifts were a | |
| cause of a certain alienation from human existence. It had | |
| helped him to live after a dark, bitter childhood. He had | |
| suffered child abuse from his father. That was how it was with | |
| much of human experience. There is the good and the bad, the | |
| distance and relation between beings and things. We are never | |
| immediately connected to what is around us. How do we make the | |
| things that exist in our lives, fit as they ought? | |
| How do things fit? Mack wondered. This was that anguish on how | |
| normals fare in their experience of war. Mack had experienced | |
| war in Vietnam during the Tet Offensive, and so he came to that | |
| pain as well. Soldiers, upon deployment, see many strange sites | |
| and alien societies that cause great wonder. Then there are the | |
| wonder of modern weapons and their destructiveness. Then there | |
| are the horrors of war. One finds out that one may be imbued | |
| with power, even great power, but one still finds oneself very | |
| small in the immensity of the universe. | |
| He sat in silence and thought of the people that he had known | |
| over the years and how that most of them were now dead. He | |
| thought of the faces of the young girls and the women. He | |
| thought of the faces of the murderers he helped to arrest, or | |
| even to kill. There had been a lot of joy and pain in this | |
| world. That was the way it was with psionics, even those many | |
| that were now off-planet, small in the immensity of the | |
| universe. Even in an interstellar civilization, everyone is | |
| part and parcel of the rest of humanity. Life is a great | |
| mystery. | |
| Mack sat in the sun and silence. He let the silence deepen | |
| around him, enjoying the cold wind and warm sun until it was to | |
| go to Mar a Lago and beyond. | |
| When the time came, Mack looked down at his hooded, lined | |
| windbreaker. He decided that before he�d go, he would need to | |
| change. He would remove and put his jacket into karg storage. | |
| He got up and walked back across the boulevard and went into an | |
| area behind one of the shops where he was hidden from view. He | |
| then focused on the teleport site in West Palm Beach, Florida. | |
| As it mentally came into focus, his chosen site was an underpass | |
| of Interstate 95, on Mercer Avenue. He sensed that the | |
| temperature there was in the upper 70s. The air was moderate | |
| and a light breeze was blowing. Mack focused more deeply and | |
| was soon able to mentally peer out from the teleport site, which | |
| was next to a concrete column which would visually conceal his | |
| teleport arrival. Telepathically, he looked up the length of | |
| concrete columns one way; and then down the other. He didn�t | |
| see anyone. The underpass was empty of people. | |
| Now he decided upon doing a limited passive telepathic scan, to | |
| a quarter of a mile or around 400 meters from his chosen | |
| teleportal site in West Palm Beach. He faintly sensed the faint | |
| outline of the buildings that extended out from his site in the | |
| underpass. He sensed the brain pulses of the people that were | |
| in the area. He then sensed the radio traffic. He listened in | |
| on the usual police chatter that didn�t involve Mercer Avenue. | |
| A fire department was more interesting. Briefly, Mack listened | |
| to radio chatter involving an emergency situation concerning a | |
| fire to the east of the site in West Palm Beach. He focused | |
| again on the brain pulses of the people within the scan area. | |
| He sensed nothing unusual. Most likely, the people he was to | |
| meet, the Secret Service, would have their agents immediately | |
| outside his scan area at the agreed rendezvous site, which was | |
| close to a mile away towards the east. They would possibly be | |
| able to sense him when he arrived by teleportation. That, of | |
| course, was part of the plan. | |
| His presence would be detected fairly soon after his arrival. | |
| The Secret Service cowls knew the sound of his brain pulse. | |
| They would be powerful. One of their number would be linked to | |
| Group Mind Potomac which was located back in Washington DC. | |
| This group mind could have, possibly, as much as thirty minds | |
| linked together, making it the most powerful group mind | |
| controlled by the AAP in the United States. | |
| Mack decided to proceed. He took off his windbreaker and gave | |
| another long look at Newport and the distant harbor. Would he | |
| ever return here? He draped it over his left arm and teleported | |
| the windbreaker into one of his kargs, or personal | |
| paradimensional storage bays. With his hands and arms free, for | |
| a moment he felt the cold air of Newport harbor and then, | |
| smiling, he teleported. | |
| #Post#: 33212-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:15 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Having arrived at West Palm Beach, Mack found himself standing | |
| in the shade next to a column under the underpass beneath the | |
| very busy Interstate U.S. Highway 95, next to Mercer Avenue, | |
| which went through the underpass below that busy Interstate. | |
| Not unexpectedly, the hot and humid air, pungent with the odor | |
| of automobiles and tropical vegetation hit him immediately, very | |
| different from the clear, crisp, clean cold ocean air of | |
| Newport, Oregon. Mack had expected this. He had been here | |
| before, recalling having used this teleport site several times | |
| before, coming to Florida. He had found and mentally saved this | |
| site when he was looking for teleport locations during an astral | |
| projection in the 1980s. | |
| Mack didn�t immediately sense the light, cool telepathic touch | |
| of a mentalist passively scanning his area. He had expected it | |
| since he was within five miles of Trump�s Mar a Lago. This | |
| meant that he had arrived undetected. He departed his ingress | |
| point next to the column and walked northeast, walking along the | |
| railroad tracks and to one of the Stub Canals until he came to | |
| Boyd Street. Crossing the railroad tracks, he walked along the | |
| canal and crossed the remains of the old Boyd Street Bridge, now | |
| covered with grass, and now closed to everything except | |
| pedestrian traffic. He was momentarily struck by the fetid odor | |
| of the canal. Going onto Charles Street, he headed east, | |
| walking briskly, passing a small church, observing many of the | |
| people in this residential area out tending gardens and lawns, | |
| something that had to be done year-round in Florida. At this | |
| point he withdrew his surface thoughts behind a screen or fa�ade | |
| of fabricated surface thoughts meant to deceive any telepath who | |
| should happen to start listening to his thoughts. The thoughts | |
| were that of an old man out on a late morning walk, and his many | |
| pleasures fishing for catfish in northern Florida. They were | |
| meant to be boring and to cause a telepath to quickly lose | |
| interest in him. It�s worked many times before, thought Mack. | |
| As he came to Parker Avenue, he heading south, reducing his | |
| walking pace as he approached the rendezvous site. After | |
| several minutes, after reaching Upland Road, he sensed the faint | |
| touch of another telepathic mind. He was now being scanned. | |
| The telepath wasn�t too far away. The source of the telepathy | |
| was at the agreed rendezvous site, a parking lot three blocks | |
| away on Belvedere Avenue. Soon another mind came into contact | |
| with his mind. Behind this mind, Mack sensed other minds, the | |
| American government�s most feared group mind, Group Mind | |
| Potomac. This had to be Deputy U.S. Marshal Devin, whom Mack | |
| was advised, was serving as the actuary of Group Mind Potomac, | |
| whose members were in Washington D.C. The group mind listened | |
| briefly to Mack�s thought fa�ade and Mack sensed a fleeting | |
| mistrust of the fa�ade. If Mack was a fugitive from their | |
| custody, this mistrust would indicate that it was time for Mack | |
| to soon deploy a smoke canister and teleport away to safety | |
| before a psi-damper field would be deployed around him. But | |
| since he was expected at the rendezvous, he continued walking. | |
| The government minds remained trained on him, listening to the | |
| fabricated old man�s memories of fishing catfish, and of the | |
| meals he�s had, the Cajun seasonings, then other images of | |
| memories of the women the old man knew, thoughts of their | |
| nakedness and spirit of independence. Mack was quite proud of | |
| this fa�ade. He had spent several hours preparing it, as he had | |
| with several dozen other facades, a skill needed for psionics to | |
| survive in more hostile areas. Soon Mack could see several men | |
| standing on the sidewalk at Belvedere Avenue. One of them was | |
| watching him with a pair of binoculars. Mack, at this point, | |
| dropped the fa�ade but kept his thoughts shielded behind a white | |
| noise screen usually the sound heard by psionics when the | |
| focused on psi-blanks and other persons with various mental | |
| conditions. One of the meeting conditions that Mack was | |
| permitted was to keep his mind shielded, until needed, while he | |
| was in the presence of cowls, government mentalists. Since | |
| everyone was now in line of sight, they�d be able to keep their | |
| telepathy covert, tunneling the telepathy in a specific | |
| direction, in a line of sight orientation. | |
| Hello, Mack. I advise site condition is Code Green. It was | |
| Devin and his telepathy was crisp and clear. The code indicated | |
| that the group mind had scanned the site for several hours and | |
| had not detected any mentalist activity in the area by freehold | |
| mentalists, those capable of telepathy but who hadn�t been | |
| drafted into government service. Some of them could be lurking | |
| around the wealthy of Palm Beach and West Palm Beach areas. | |
| Mack could also sense the confidence and the pleasure behind the | |
| group mind. Mack was also aware of something else. The cowls | |
| had a definite power advantage over him, something which was | |
| usually the other way around. | |
| U.S. Marshal James Devin, a man greatly respected by Mack, was a | |
| typical, athletic mentalist, 5�9�, in his 30s, light yellow polo | |
| shirt, brown pants, light gray windbreaker. He�d been in the | |
| USMS for seven years, working very quietly in the AAP. He will | |
| be the cowl to monitor Mack in entering Trump�s mind. He would | |
| also be the actuary of Group Mind Potomac, America�s largest and | |
| most powerful group mind which was back in Washington D.C. Mack | |
| knew that Devin respected and trusted him, but since Mack, a | |
| full psionic, soon to be able to be rated for interstellar | |
| service, Devin would be wary of Mack�s power. | |
| As he came closer into view, more within line of sight telepathy | |
| which cannot be overheard by other telepaths, Mack responded, | |
| Hello, Devin. Hello, Group Mind Potomac. After a few minutes | |
| and brisk walking, Mack finally arrived at Belvedere Avenue and | |
| approached the men at the parking lot. At this point telepathic | |
| silence would be maintained. | |
| In front of him, was Marshal James Devin. He could see that | |
| James was little changed in the last three years. James had | |
| dark hair, broad shoulders, and a no-nonsense look about him. | |
| Mack could sense behind the screened mind of James the patina of | |
| a multiplicity of other minds. He sensed the sheer power of | |
| that group mind. Next to him was a tall, thin man, gray haired | |
| man, Michael Collins, the Secret Service supervisor, an aprator, | |
| a man who could mentally suppress psionic activity to a distance | |
| of 150 meters around him. Mack had met Michael before. The | |
| third man, supposedly a Secret Service man, named Brooks, was | |
| also a cowl. Mack suspected that he was not mentally linked | |
| into Group Mind Potomac. This, no doubt, was because he was to | |
| serve as an observer to what Mack and Group Mind Potomac were | |
| going to do at Mar a Lago. | |
| He looked again at the leader of this team, Michael Collins, | |
| tall, at 6�2�, in his 50s, thin, but not as wiry as Devin, | |
| wearing a light gray summer suit with matching lighter gray | |
| tie. He�s been in the Secret Service, Presidential Detail, for | |
| almost 20 years He had served under Presidents George W. Bush, | |
| Barack Obama, and lastly, under Donald Trump. That he had | |
| survived continuous employment under Trump was a wonder, given | |
| that Trump had done his best to undermine the integrity and | |
| inner security of the Secret Service. Collins was a man who did | |
| not suffer fools gladly, a man who would not to mince his words. | |
| No doubt he had crossed Trump over the years and gotten away | |
| with it. Collins said what he thought, to anyone if it was a | |
| matter he felt the matter important. He considered Trump�s | |
| character and actions disgraceful, debasing both to himself and | |
| his office. It was remarkable that Trump hadn�t fired him. | |
| Agent Sam Brooks, who stood next to the Secret Service car, was | |
| another mentalist, skilled in telepathy, was a man that Mack | |
| knew slightly. He was a bald-headed man, stockier, supposedly | |
| hardened by martial arts. He was in his thirties. In his face | |
| and manner he looked like a hard man. He would monitor Mack and | |
| Group Mind Potomac as they entered the former President�s mind. | |
| After shaking hands with these men, they went to the Secret | |
| Service car for the trip to Mar a Lago. After they got in, | |
| Collins reviewed the ground rules to the visit to Mar a Lago. | |
| These rules were to be followed without exception. Collins | |
| empathized the obvious, �We�re under the strictest security. | |
| Our car has been swept by electronic and telepathic means. From | |
| this point on, your cell phone should be turned off.� | |
| �I don�t have one,� said Mack. He did have a burn phone in a | |
| karg in his personal paradimensional storage. It was not | |
| accessible in this universe. | |
| Collins continued. �While at Mar a Lago, we�re not to say | |
| anything that will reveal anything about the AAP. In future | |
| years, our conversations on video will be lip read by | |
| historians.� | |
| Mack nodded at that. All of the men knew that this was already | |
| occurring with historical films and video. The men lapsed into | |
| silence as Agent Brooks started the car and soon had it going | |
| towards Mar a Lago. | |
| Mack reflected on the pretextual basis of their presence at Mar | |
| a Lago, which involved an incident when Mack was physically | |
| assaulted at Mar a Lago by Trump�s bodyguard, Milo Doubek, in | |
| 2018. The plan was very simple. After their arrival, they | |
| would walk down the same sidewalk where Mack was assaulted by | |
| Milo Doubek. At that point, Mack would be asked some questions | |
| concerning that assault. In his briefing at the Prefecture of | |
| the Star People, he was warned that they could possibly be | |
| observed by the former President from the windows of his office. | |
| It could be possible that Trump may want to directly see Mack | |
| again, though Mack has caused the former President aggravation, | |
| and had no desire to see him. This was not operationally | |
| necessary or to be sought. Their operational task was to remain | |
| distant and complete it, a quick in and out. | |
| After the brief questioning under Trump�s window, they would | |
| enter Mar a Lago itself and transit the building to enter onto | |
| the courtyard plaza that overlooked the swimming pool between | |
| the buildings to the north. At that place, at one of the | |
| tables, the men would sit and have a drink. Mack and Group Mind | |
| Potomac through Devin, would psionically invade Trump�s mind and | |
| removed the lucidity template of the mind lock. Mack would | |
| cavitate through the psi-damper screen which surrounded much of | |
| Mar a Lago, with Group Mind Potomac following, monitoring | |
| everything that he would do. When the penetration of Trump�s | |
| mind had been completed, and the lucidity feature from Trump�s | |
| mind had been removed, the AAP would then drop the psi-damper | |
| screen. The psi-damper screen would remain up during the | |
| penetration of Trump�s mind to preserve clandestinity. If there | |
| was a stray non-governmental mentalist somewhere close in West | |
| Palm Beach, or in Palm Beach itself, the team would remain | |
| undetected in their telepathic activity towards the President. | |
| After this, the team would depart Mar a Lago. The Secret | |
| Service would reduce its anti-psi contingent. All psi-damper | |
| screens around the former president would be withdrawn and Trump | |
| would, unknowingly, be left defended only by the natural | |
| anti-psi defense that is inherent in his own mind. After that, | |
| Mack would have a luncheon with the team at a restaurant in West | |
| Palm Beach before his teleportive egression. | |
| The men remained silent for the remainder of their trip to Mar a | |
| Lago. Mack wondered how Trump was coping with the seizure of | |
| all the government documents he had stolen when he had left | |
| office. From what he�d heard on the news, over a hundred of the | |
| documents were highly classified. He wondered how many were | |
| copied and sold, and now in the hands of the Russians or other | |
| countries. Mar a Lago was a security nightmare. Trump cared | |
| little about security other than immediately about his person. | |
| Mack psionically listened in on the police and emergency bands | |
| and the occasional phone calls coming from wealthy persons in | |
| large limousines that occasionally passed by. The conversations | |
| were desultory, nothing of interest, except for the young woman | |
| in the convertible after they had crossed Bingham Island. She | |
| was highly creative and artful in her love talk to a friend in | |
| West Palm Beach. | |
| Soon Mar a Lago, the creation of socialite Marjorie Merriweather | |
| Post, came into view, and it was as grand as Mack remembered it. | |
| From the car, the men could see the white walls and the | |
| distinctive tan clay roof tiles for which it is well known. Its | |
| adapted Hispano-Moresque style was, to Mack�s knowledge, unique | |
| in its scale in Palm Beach. The rare Doria stone from Genoa, | |
| used for its white wall facing was noteworthy. The | |
| Mediterranean-style villa had a two story family structure, | |
| whose first floor, Mack and the security men knew from prior | |
| experience. The ocean fa�ade of the house was largely | |
| rectangular and Mack was familiar with that as well. He and his | |
| friend, Preston Callendar several decades ago, had also walked | |
| along its west side, along the crescent shaped line of cloisters | |
| that faced towards Lake Worth. He, Preston and his wife were a | |
| lot younger back then. | |
| When the Secret Service car passed the security checkpoint at | |
| Mar a Lago, they parked very close to where they had parked when | |
| Mack was brought to the mansion back in 2018. As they walked up | |
| the sidewalk, Collins asked Mack the usual questions about | |
| Doubek and the assault that Mack had suffered in front of the | |
| windows of Trump�s office. Mack answered the questions, and | |
| emphasized how he avoided striking Doubek prior to grappling him | |
| and throwing him to the ground. None of the men looked towards | |
| Trump�s office windows. | |
| When the agreed questions were answered, the men entered the Mar | |
| a Lago mansion by the private entrance at the end of the | |
| sidewalk. Passing down a corridor, whose ceiling was graced | |
| with scrolled motifs of gold, they came upon an ornate, gilded | |
| room, and going through several large tall mahogany double | |
| doors, they proceeded down another corridor and exited the | |
| building again into a delightful shaded, tree-lined plaza that | |
| overlooking the fountain and the swimming pool to the west. | |
| There were various tables, some of which were occupied by Club | |
| members and the usual people seeking patronage from Mr. Trump. | |
| As they sat down at one of the tables, Mack could see from the | |
| clientele that Trump was still working the public for money and | |
| influence. It was obvious that some of the people were not club | |
| members but outsiders seeking favors from the former president. | |
| At this point the men heard a plane flying overhead as it was | |
| going for a landing at the airport in West Palm Beach. No doubt | |
| the overflights were annoying Trump who had forbidden them | |
| during his Presidency. | |
| As they enjoyed the beauty of the plaza, Mack reflected that | |
| Trump, and some 30 officials of his Administration, had to be | |
| put under a mind lock, which prevented them disclosing the fact | |
| that psionics were present in human society, a security breach | |
| that loomed largely in the minds of the leaders of the AAP. | |
| This concern of the AAP was atypical. Who could imagine until | |
| Trump that a President and his Administration couldn�t be | |
| trusted with national secrets of the highest order? It was a | |
| great pity. | |
| The mind lock worked very simply. It was meant to prevent the | |
| person controlled from having any interest or make any inquiry | |
| regarding psionics in general and the AAP in particular. During | |
| the four years of his Administration, the mind locks on Trump | |
| and on his officials worked as they were supposed to. There was | |
| no security breach of the AAP by the Administration. | |
| The mind lock did not confer, ordinarily any benefit for the | |
| person�s mind that had been so locked. That meant that Trump, | |
| cunning in many ways but intellectually lazy, remained | |
| vulnerable to his chronic poor judgement, and his other, unhappy | |
| mental deficiencies. But mental control presupposed a certain | |
| mental clarity. Trump had to be communicated with and his mind | |
| needed to be lucid during select personal interactions. In this | |
| case, a lucidity feature had to be built into the mind lock so | |
| that Trump could be mentally clearer in the presence of Mack. | |
| This feature enhanced Trump�s mind, particularly the frontal | |
| lobes and hippocampi in his brain. This would increase his | |
| ability to reason and remember, in effect returning Trump�s mind | |
| to what it had been like in the late 1970s and early 1980s. It | |
| had worked fairly well during the time of the Trump | |
| Administration. But now that Administration was voted out of | |
| office, the utility of the mind lock had diminished. | |
| Most likely, Trump was getting some minor headaches because of | |
| his mind lock. Trump had a lot of headaches for other reasons, | |
| the legacy of a lifetime of bad conduct. Also, because of his | |
| poor health, brought about by his age, his bad diet, and a lack | |
| of healthful exercise, the former President was suffering from a | |
| gradual, perceptible increase of dementia. At a certain point, | |
| the President lucidity would eventually, be fatefully | |
| compromised, in which even his native cunning would not help him | |
| escape. | |
| Mack, and the others, sat quietly and enjoyed the shade of the | |
| trees around the plaza. Following their operational brief, they | |
| remained silent or made minimal conversation. Mack watched the | |
| birds flitting through the trees and shrubs around the | |
| courtyard, cardinals, buntings, and yellowthroats. He listened | |
| to their calls and the color of them as they flitted through the | |
| branches. | |
| Soon the men were greeted by a white coated steward who asked if | |
| they were there to see the President. Mack replied according to | |
| the operational brief, �Maybe. I�m here to see Mr. Trump if I | |
| can. I don�t have an appointment.� The steward frowned at | |
| this, because casual visitors to Mar a Lago were highly unlikely | |
| to see the former President. He also knew that the other men | |
| were Secret Service agents and were forbidden the use of club | |
| facilities. | |
| �I�m a former acquaintance of Mr. Trump, and these men were | |
| interviewing me,� said Mack apologetically. �I am having these | |
| men here as my guests.� | |
| The steward face lightened up at that and took the men�s order | |
| of drinks, whiskey and water for Mack, vodka and ginger ale for | |
| Devin, and a small glass of cognac for Collins. Brooks, the | |
| designated driver, ordered a coke. | |
| The men were then approached by a man whom they all recognized | |
| as a former Presidential aide named Grover Hardisty. Apparently | |
| a watcher had singled them out. �Do you men have an appointment | |
| to see the President?� the aide asked. In Mar a Lago, Trump was | |
| still considered the President of the United States. | |
| Mack answered according to the operational brief. �I don�t have | |
| an appointment,� he said, �but I�d like to see him. I�ve known | |
| him for many years.� Per the briefing, it was deemed likely | |
| that Trump would not want to see him. Mack had caused him | |
| aggravation. | |
| Hardisty frowned at Mack�s request. No doubt that he�s heard | |
| many claims of friendship or acquaintance with Trump from many | |
| callers over the years. He asked for Mack�s name, and wrote it | |
| down on a notepad. He said he would check with the President, | |
| but he said that it was doubtful that Trump would see him. Mack | |
| said that he understood that. | |
| As the aide departed the white-coated steward returned with the | |
| ordered drinks and Mack watched as Devin payed the tab. This | |
| expense, Mack noted, would come out of the operational funds | |
| that were hidden within the USMS. | |
| As Collins gave the signal, making a closed fist of his right | |
| hand and opening it, Mack and Devin proceeded with the | |
| telepathic entry into Trump�s mind. | |
| #Post#: 33213-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:17 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| He watched as Devin took out his cell phone and set it on the | |
| table in front of them. With Mack and Collins silently watching | |
| Devin set the timer function. According to the brief, Devin | |
| lightly tapped his finger once to the table indicating he was | |
| ready. Devin looked at another Secret Service agent that was | |
| standing at the edge of the courtyard and nodded. That man | |
| nodded as well. Mack sensed that he was the man in charge of the | |
| psi-damper field surrounding most of Mar a Lago. | |
| Mack closed his eyes and began the cavitation of the anti-psi | |
| damper field around them all. As he shielded his own mind, he | |
| could sense the emotional excitement of Devin and Group Mind | |
| Potomac. At that moment, Mack sensed Devin�s movement starting | |
| the stop watch on his phone and the closing of his eyes. As | |
| their minds touched, Mack sensed briefly the many minds of | |
| others, thousands of miles away inside and outside Washington | |
| DC. At that point, Mack, Devin and the Group Mind began their | |
| cautionary mental shielding, something that would give | |
| themselves privacy, and would aid in the penetration of Trump�s | |
| mind. | |
| As the cavitation got larger, Mack focused his mind outward, | |
| sensing fleetingly the courtyard with its trees, its people, and | |
| the birds that flitted among the branches of the trees. He | |
| sensed Devin�s mind closely joining him, monitoring him. And | |
| behind Devin�s mind, Mack again briefly, through the shielding, | |
| the other minds, of Group Mind Potomac. Then that perception | |
| was gone, now safe behind the shielding. | |
| Mack focused to the buildings south from where he was sitting. | |
| As he cavitated through the psi-damper field, he sensed the | |
| faint outline of walls and corridors, towards that part of Mar a | |
| Lago where the Trump family lived. He telepathically reached | |
| further into the building. He sensed a number of other minds | |
| and the faint outlines of their bodies as they walked down | |
| various corridors. Soon Mack was telepathically at the office | |
| where Trump would be located. He could sense the faint outlines | |
| of the office�s furniture, chairs, desk, wall paintings, | |
| carpeting and windows. As he cavitated more deeply into the | |
| psi-damper field into Trump�s office, he heard Trump�s | |
| distinctive brain pulse sounding at the end of the room. | |
| Mack focused more deeply. He and Devin soon sensed the bodily | |
| telemetry of Trump. The telemetry indicated that Trump was | |
| sitting at his desk, that he was hunched over the desk with his | |
| head in his hands. When Mack, Devin, and Group Mind Potomac | |
| reached Trump�s mind, the men felt the cascade of Trump�s rage | |
| and grief wash over them. As Mack focused more intently on the | |
| former President�s mind, they soon heard the stream of thoughts | |
| running through Trump�s mind. They were thoughts and anger | |
| about the last election. Then Mack began telepathic | |
| visualizations of Trump�s brain in the electromagnetic sphere. | |
| It began as a faint visualization but soon became more distinct. | |
| They first saw a dull, gray shimmering sheet of light | |
| surrounding Trump�s brain, the telepathic shield that was part | |
| of the mind lock and was designed to prevent further psionic | |
| tampering of Trump�s brain. As Mack focused on the shielding at | |
| the front of Trump�s brain, several telepathic glyphs, called | |
| seals, appeared in the visualization, seemingly attached to that | |
| shimmering light. Each seal, notated in the Blackfoot language | |
| was dated January 2017, and was brighter than the dull gray | |
| light surrounding Trump�s brain. These seals were the outer | |
| telepathic lock and access point to Trump�s brain and enabled | |
| telepathic minds and group minds the ability to confirm that | |
| these locks remained active with its seals unbroken. They also | |
| permitted diagnostics of Trump�s brain. | |
| Mack telepathically opened his specified portion of the | |
| telepathic seal that granted him entry. After that, Devin and | |
| Group Mind Potomac opened their side of the telepathic seal | |
| granting them entry. Then Mack and the telepaths entered | |
| Trump�s brain area. Behind that light, they saw through the | |
| telepathic visualization the darker outward structure of Trump�s | |
| brain and heard the sound of Trump�s distinctive brain pulse as | |
| Trump�s neural pattern was synapsing. | |
| Underneath the outer structure of Trump�s brain, the men could | |
| see the neural pattern that went through Trump�s brain. This | |
| visualization, as part of the mind lock, was represented as thin | |
| filaments of light that followed the neurons throughout Trump�s | |
| brain. It was a thick web of telepathic light. Mack and Group | |
| Mind Potomac circumnavigated the surface structure of Trump�s | |
| brain before probing into that web of light. Outwardly, the | |
| brain appeared normal for a man of Trump�s age and health. For | |
| elderly men, such as Trump, there would be the usual | |
| disturbances of the brain caused by age, ill-health, or | |
| injuries. These disturbances would cause changes in a brain�s | |
| neural pattern. | |
| Mack focused more deeply and took the scan under the surface | |
| structures of Trumps brain, passing folds of neural tissue and | |
| complex patterns of arteries, veins and nerves and briefly | |
| inspected how the filaments of telepathic light coursed through | |
| Trump�s tissue. Then they came to the center of Trump�s brain, | |
| to the former President�s pair of hippocampi and amygdala found | |
| on both hemispheres of his brain. Mack focused his scan on the | |
| volume and activity of these organs. It was what he had | |
| expected. Trump�s hippocampi were smaller, and his amygdalae | |
| were larger than normal. The hippocampi, shaped as sea horses, | |
| were involved primarily with declarative or short term memory. | |
| Trump was notorious about his problems involving memory, both | |
| short-term and long term. The amygdalae, which rested at the | |
| end of the hippocampi, were involved with inputting and | |
| processing emotion. That they were larger than normal was also | |
| a physical sign of Trump�s past life. Trump had suffered | |
| serious child abuse. When he was young, he had lived in fear. | |
| The emotional neglect and abuse he suffered from his | |
| narcissistic parents had caused him unutterable grief. | |
| Mack focused on the neural structure. The telepathic | |
| visualization indicated a dull color of red appearing in the | |
| neural structure. This color coding related to the mind lock | |
| that Mack had placed on Trump in 2017, a mind lock that | |
| inhibited Trump from investigating the American Anti-Psi Program | |
| or AAP. Mack left this feature of the mind lock untouched. | |
| Mack focused more deeply. A duller, darker red color coding | |
| along the neural structure appeared. This was located primarily | |
| at the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. This had to do | |
| with the lucidity feature of the mind lock. The telepaths could | |
| see that these telepathic threads of light extended from the | |
| cortex down to the hippocampi in both hemispheres and into the | |
| other areas of Trump�s brain. Mack hesitated briefly about | |
| shutting down this part of mind lock. The mind lock had | |
| augmented and improved the lucidity of Trump�s brain, enabling | |
| more effective human interaction with others but only when Mack | |
| was in present. Mack wondered for a moment, if, perhaps, | |
| Trump�s brain could be improved. At this moment, Mack regretted | |
| briefly that he was a Controller, and not a Healer. Mack | |
| abruptly dropped the mental command prompts in Trump�s brain for | |
| the lucidity. The duller, darker red telepathic threads of | |
| light faded away. Trump was now still under the mind lock, but | |
| the help for his lucidity contained in the template in the mind | |
| lock was now gone. Group Mind Potomac then gave telepathic | |
| queries to the telepathic command matrix of the mind lock to | |
| confirm the change in the command list and the removal of the | |
| lucidity feature. | |
| Mack focused more intentionally on the neural structure. He | |
| watched as that structure of Trump�s brain seemed to deteriorate | |
| before his telepathic gaze. The lucidity feature of the mind | |
| lock had its biological advantages. It was a form of biostasis, | |
| a telekinetic augmentation to the brain that prevented | |
| biological aging and deterioration to all parts where the | |
| biostasis reached. Mack watched as the biological functioning of | |
| the neural pattern in many areas faded. In some areas, it even | |
| disappeared. Mack thought, Trump�s going to have more problems | |
| in thinking and memory. His conduct would become even more | |
| irrational and antisocial. | |
| Mack withdrew from the visualization of Trump�s brain and | |
| briefly focused onto Trump�s consciousness, his surface | |
| thoughts, sensing the anger and despair in the stream of | |
| thoughts. After that, Mack, Devin, and Group Mind Potomac | |
| plunged more deeply into Trump�s mind. They briefly listened to | |
| Trump�s subconscious thoughts, filled with turmoil of thoughts | |
| of anger, grief and revenge. After that they delved briefly | |
| into Trump�s morphic memories. They went quickly through that | |
| jumble of memories where Trump had imagined his past, his | |
| grandiose depictions of himself and how he related to others. | |
| The telepaths marveled at how many of these memories seethed of | |
| anger and grievance. To no surprise to Mack and to Group Mind | |
| Potomac, they discovered Trump had unconsciously morphed many of | |
| his unsavory, well-known historical acts into memories where he | |
| glorified himself or considered himself to be the undeserved | |
| victim of others. Probing deeper into Trump�s mind, they came | |
| to Trump�s eidetic memories. The telepaths discovered that Trump | |
| had few of them. Most of these forgotten memories shaped Trump | |
| into the man he was. They were vivid, painful memories of his | |
| childhood trauma. The anger and fear of these memories were | |
| almost overpowering. As with most people, Trump had no access | |
| to eidetic memories. | |
| Mack hesitated briefly, and Devin and Group Mind Potomac waited. | |
| Below these memories was Trump�s collective unconscious. | |
| Looking at this part of Trump�s unconsciousness was part of | |
| their brief, but it did involve danger. The collective | |
| unconscious was the place where the monsters dwelt, a place in | |
| the mind, which, when it erupts into consciousness, destroys | |
| individuals, societies, and peoples. Mack, and then Group Mind | |
| Potomac, plunged into this forbidding region. In their | |
| visualization, they found themselves standing on a flat surface | |
| in utter darkness. Mack immediately recognized it as the abyss | |
| spoken about in Jewish, Christian, Muslim, and Buddhist | |
| religious literature. They sensed that they were being watched | |
| by reptilian, man-eating creatures in the darkness. Then the | |
| telepaths began to see terrifying images of the demonic that has | |
| existed for centuries throughout human history. They couldn�t | |
| see any beings of light, nothing countering the darkness that | |
| surrounded Trump. In a sense, the telepaths concluded, that | |
| Trump has always been possessed by the demonic. | |
| Mack, Devin, and Group Mind Potomac came out of that depth of | |
| Trump�s mind, returning to the outer visualization of Trump�s | |
| brain. They paused for a moment and enjoyed a collective sigh | |
| of telepathic relief. It was too bad, thought Mack, that Trump | |
| was influenced by the demonic and shunned connection to the | |
| divine. He allowed this unshielded thought to go to Group Mind | |
| Potomac. He sensed an agreement coming from the group mind. | |
| Mack and Group Mind Potomac came out of the remaining layers of | |
| visualizations until they were at the surface visualization of | |
| Trump�s brain. The telepaths then moved to the outside of the | |
| mind lock�s protective telepathic shielding of light and power | |
| that enwrapped Trump�s brain. Mack then closed his portion of | |
| the telepathic screen. His telepathic act also created a glyph | |
| in Blackfoot on the screen that annotated a new date of October | |
| 2022. Devin and Group Mind Potomac then closed their side of | |
| the telepathic shield which created their telepathic glyph and | |
| dated it. At this point the updating of Trump�s mind lock was | |
| now completed and the shielding was secured. | |
| Mack and Devin came out of their mind scan. Devin looked at the | |
| stop watch on his smart phone and stopped it. Devin smiled and | |
| showed it to Mack. They had been in and out of Trump�s mind in | |
| only 9 seconds, a quiet demonstration of the enormous power of | |
| psionics and group minds. | |
| �We�re done here,� said Devin softly. Collins nodded. | |
| The men sipped on their drinks and Mack listened quietly as | |
| Devin and Collins spoke of the community events occurring in | |
| Palm Beach and West Palm Beach. Mack found the time enjoyable. | |
| The heat and shade of Palm Beach now felt good to him, far | |
| different from the cold of Newport, Oregon, but he missed the | |
| autumnal weather to be found in Oregon. He would miss the | |
| brisk, bracing sea air. It was too bad that he wouldn�t be | |
| returning to Newport. | |
| As the men finished their drinks, Collins quietly said that it | |
| was time to go. Mack nodded in agreement. The men silently got | |
| up and left the plaza passing through the building to get to the | |
| parking lot and their car on the south side of Mar a Lago. They | |
| went down the ornate corridors quickly and exited the building | |
| at Trump�s main entrance. Walking down the sidewalk towards the | |
| parking lot, Mack heard the hurried footsteps of a man coming | |
| from behind them. Turning, Mack, and the other men, could see | |
| Trump�s aide, Hardisty approaching them. | |
| �The President will see you now, Mr. Stemple.� the aide said. | |
| Mack looked at Collins, who nodded his assent, his face | |
| disliking the idea but permitting Mack to see the former | |
| President. The meeting would have some value. It would be | |
| something interesting to see. Trump would be less lucid | |
| compared to his other meetings. Despite this, Mack realized | |
| that it was highly unlikely that anybody in higher authority | |
| wanted Mack and Trump to ever meet again. | |
| With Brooks remaining by the car, Mack, Devin and Collins | |
| followed Hardisty inside and through the ornate doors that led | |
| into that part of Mar a Lago where Trump kept as his personal | |
| residence. Mack noted the same richly appointed corridor that | |
| he had went down previously in July 2018. It had been unchanged | |
| in the last four years. Passing several Secret Service agents | |
| guarding Trump�s large office door, Mack entered Trump�s office. | |
| He sensed that Collins, Devin and several other Secret Service | |
| men remaining behind, outside the office, at the corridor | |
| doorway, discreetly watching him. | |
| #Post#: 33214-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:20 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Entering Trump�s office, he found the ex-President sitting at | |
| his desk next to the window. Usually quite careful in his | |
| appearance, Trump was disheveled, his face haggard, his eyes | |
| tired and swollen. He did not immediately acknowledge Mack�s | |
| presence. He did not even look at Mack. Instead of greeting | |
| him, he reclined back in his chair and closed his eyes. | |
| Had he been crying or raging? Mack watched as Trump remained | |
| reclined in his chair with his eyes closed. The aide, Hardisty, | |
| quietly announced Mack�s presence. Trump then opened his eyes | |
| and scrutinized Mack. Mack sensed in those eyes an abyss of | |
| pain and of anger. Mack silently watched Hardesty leave to go to | |
| a side door where several he and other aides stood and watched. | |
| He observed that several of those aides had open notebooks and | |
| were taking notes. | |
| Trump didn�t say anything to him and so Mack looked over the | |
| room. He had been here before. This office, where Trump did | |
| his business, was different from another, more grandiose office, | |
| where Trump ordinarily greeted his influential visitors. Mack | |
| had never been to that office. He wasn�t important enough. | |
| This office, shaded from the morning sun, was a kind of refuge | |
| for Trump, and a place to meet other, lesser known persons. It | |
| was a good office, as offices tend to go. It had the usual | |
| large portrait of Donald Trump on one office wall. | |
| Interestingly, on another wall, a large wall plaque with the | |
| seal of the President of the United States was also present. | |
| Mack turned and looked at Trump as he sat down in one of the | |
| chairs behind him. He said, �Last time I saw you, Mr. Trump, | |
| when we were at Restaurante Courbet, you were at the top of your | |
| world, at the summit of your power. The world was at your feet. | |
| What happened?� | |
| Trump�s eyes were dull with fatigue. �That�s a foolish question | |
| and you know it.� He said. �I was betrayed, cheated, and chased | |
| out of office in a way not ever seen before in politics. I won | |
| the election. That�s the truth.� Trump�s voice was tired as | |
| well. | |
| He continued. �Trump�s always been a winner. Trump�s won it by | |
| a landslide, by 8 million votes, and the other side knows it. | |
| Trump was treated worse than any other President in history, | |
| despite the fact that Trump�s been the greatest American | |
| President since Abraham Lincoln. The deep state and the fake | |
| news media were out to get Trump and these traitors did their | |
| best to destroy him. They cheated Trump out of what was | |
| rightfully his, the Presidency. If the truth be told, I�m still | |
| the President. | |
| Trump breathed in a bushel of air. �I railed against the | |
| election results,� he said. �I warned the people, the **** | |
| people. For some reason, Trump, a man ever ready to tell the | |
| truth, wasn�t believed, wasn�t trusted by too many **** **** | |
| people. | |
| �I entered lawsuit after lawsuit in the courts but they wouldn�t | |
| give me any justice. Imagine that! The courts betrayed me in | |
| some 60 **** lawsuits. They said I didn�t have any proof, **** | |
| them! All the things that Trump�s done for the courts, getting | |
| these justices onto the courts, and they wouldn�t do anything | |
| for him. They�ve betrayed Trump for their precious law, | |
| conspiring against the law and order president. They�re all | |
| traitors working for the deep state!� | |
| Trump paused, closed his eyes and was silent for a moment. Then | |
| he said again, more softly, �Imagine the enormity of it all. | |
| They�ve betrayed the greatest! Trump was the greatest American | |
| President that�s ever lived. Trump brought peace and prosperity | |
| to so many people and then this happens, the stab in the back!� | |
| �Perhaps, Mr. Trump, you�ve gotten onto a lot of peoples� | |
| nerves,� said Mack. �Many people tend to think of you as just | |
| another spath.� | |
| �A what?� | |
| �A narcissist.� | |
| Trump glared at Mack. �Don�t get smart with me, Stemple!� he | |
| bellowed. �You�re nothing but a **** nobody, a little worm that | |
| can be squashed at any time! Trump towers over you like a | |
| mountain! You�re nothing but a worm on the **** pavement, ready | |
| to be stepped on! Imagine the arrogance of that! People | |
| calling me a narcissist, some kind of nut! What kind of fool | |
| says that? Everyone who�s honest knows that I�m a stable | |
| genius!� | |
| As Mack calmly met his glare, Trump continued, �I�m tired of all | |
| of the mud people: the ****, the Jews, the greasers, the | |
| liberals, the ****, messing with the American people, feeding | |
| them nonsense and fouling them with their filth. I�m tired of | |
| the deep state. When it comes down to it, the liberals, the | |
| ****, the ****, and the greasers aren�t citizens as far as | |
| Trump�s concerned. Trump knows what�s best for the American | |
| people. | |
| �It�s like I�ve always said, Trump�s the one who knows more than | |
| most. Trump knows more about things, many things, than the | |
| generals, the admirals, the diplomats, other politicians and the | |
| economists combined. Trump�s always been well-endowed in | |
| everything, something that�s been the envy of many. I hate the | |
| envious, choke artists who can�t be winners. I hate all forms | |
| of weakness.� | |
| Trump paused and fixed his eyes at Mack. �Why are so many | |
| people so afraid of a leader who�s strong? Why don�t they | |
| admire strength when they see it? Don�t they know what a good | |
| thing that they had in Trump? | |
| �It was through those damned Dominion voting machines and the | |
| **** routers, the Italian satellites, the secret vote counts in | |
| Germany and Italy, the **** smart Chinese thermostats, that I | |
| had lost the election. The deep state did its best to destroy | |
| me.� | |
| �That�s hard to imagine,� said Mack. | |
| Trump went on. �Trump�s a law-and-order president despite the | |
| **** courts working against him. They don�t support any **** | |
| truth or justice. They didn�t investigate the **** routers and | |
| thermostats that were hacked, that changed the votes in many | |
| states. They let me be betrayed by all the stupid choke artists | |
| that are the filthy vermin of our country.� | |
| Trump sank into silence. When Mack didn�t continue, Trump said, | |
| �I�m still President, you know. Biden wasn�t truly elected. | |
| The election was a sham, a disgrace to honest citizens. Trump | |
| won by a landslide, by more than 8 million **** votes. � | |
| Trump lapsed into silence. He looked searchingly at Mack for a | |
| long moment. Then he said, �Did you destroy my Presidency, | |
| Stemple? I know that you�re dangerous. I know that you could | |
| have done it during the January 6 business. I've heard way too | |
| much about **** Mack the Knife, all those wild stories about | |
| you. | |
| He glared at Mack, and said, furiously, "It's been reported that | |
| you've been seen lurking in and around the Willard Hotel back | |
| then. At the present time, I'm missing some seven aides that | |
| were hired back then. They can't be found and their truck and | |
| two hired cars are gone. It's like those men had stepped off | |
| the face of the earth. I think that it�s **** possible that | |
| you�ve been helping the **** deep state all along. I think | |
| that, somehow, you have something to do with these missing men." | |
| Trump paused. Then he said, "Maybe you're the one who's | |
| involved in their disappearance. I still think that it's likely | |
| that you've killed my friends, Leonard Malcolm and Parker | |
| Simonsen, despite what you�ve said concerning them.� | |
| Mack shook his head and said, �The Royal Canadian Mounted Police | |
| officially declared that Leonard Malcolm died of exposure in a | |
| roadside ditch outside of Ft. McCloud, Alberta. Parker Simonsen | |
| died as a suicide when the FBI and police, with a warrant for | |
| his arrest, came to his home. He stuck a revolver barrel into | |
| his mouth and blew his head off as they entered his office.� | |
| Trump glared at Mack, apparently unconvinced. �I�ve learned | |
| from Stivers, and some of my other aides, Stemple, that you�re | |
| the best field man around, that you�re fully capable of setting | |
| traps that could destroy your enemies, no matter how powerful | |
| they are.� | |
| Mack smiled faintly. �It�s not that way, Mr. Trump. I�m | |
| overrated.� | |
| �I don�t believe that you�re just another man,� snapped Trump. | |
| �I�ve heard too many stories saying you�re highly dangerous.� | |
| �I�m overrated,� said Mack. | |
| �I wonder about that. I wonder how it is that you�re so | |
| invisible to people. When I was President, my aides could **** | |
| learn very little about you. I�ve heard the talk, but it�s only | |
| just that, talk.� | |
| �Why should you wonder, Mr. Trump? I�m only a little worm, | |
| remember? Worms just bury themselves into the woodwork. I�m in | |
| that woodwork. You�re out in the open.� | |
| Trump paid him no attention. He continued, �Then there was the | |
| case of my former bodyguard, Milo Doubek. He died at the hands | |
| of the police, but I still wonder about that. Did you, somehow, | |
| Stemple, trap Doubek into having the police kill him? Why did | |
| he turn his gun onto the police?� | |
| Mack answered, �I�ve heard from the police accounts, Mr. Trump, | |
| that Doubek carried his pistol in his hand openly in public, and | |
| when confronted about it, said he had been betrayed by the �old | |
| man�, that is to say, his boss. It was at that point he turned | |
| his gun towards the police. It causes me to ask the question, | |
| did you, his last boss, betray him, Mr. Trump?� | |
| Trump�s eyes flashed in greater anger at that. �I didn�t betray | |
| anyone, Stemple! That�s simple idiocy! You�ve **** betrayed | |
| me, Stemple! Somehow you did so! You demanded that I call the | |
| police for a minor nosebleed. Imagine the nerve of that! You | |
| making **** demands on me, the President of the United States!� | |
| Mack said, �Agent Jenkins was seriously injured in July 2018 and | |
| had to receive detailed medical treatment. From what I�ve | |
| heard, he was put on medical leave for several months. So much | |
| for it being a simple nosebleed.� | |
| �No,� said Trump. �A nosebleed is no ground for having an agent | |
| put on leave. The Secret Service, like too many of the other | |
| traitors, are just a **** bunch of pansies.� | |
| �Agent Jenkins� doctors would disagree with you.� | |
| �Well **** the doctors! I still think that Doubek�s death has | |
| something **** wrong with it.� | |
| �Something wrong about it is right,� said Mack. �Why was Doubek, | |
| walking down Claxton Street with a drawn pistol in his hand, in | |
| an area near where I was staying in Lake Worth? Was that a | |
| coincidence, Mr. Trump? Or was it rather the case of you and | |
| Doubek were actually trying to murder me?� | |
| Trump scowled at that. | |
| Mack continued. �Was Doubek�s assault upon me after the assault | |
| upon Agent Jenkins, and his later following me, with a drawn | |
| pistol, part of a contemplated murder attempt? Was it some kind | |
| of experiment in political murder that you two were | |
| experimenting in 2018? Were you two men planning more murders | |
| in 2019 and 2020?� | |
| �You�re a light-weight!� snapped Trump. �You�re a worm, not a | |
| man. You�re not worth the trouble, dead or alive. But I still | |
| can�t stop thinking of Malcolm and Simonsen. You�re a killer, | |
| Stemple. You�re sheer poison around wealthy people, the salt of | |
| the Earth. Death seems to follow you. I still think that | |
| you�ve killed those friends of mine.� | |
| �Those are delusions,� said Mack. | |
| Trump glared at Mack, and then sighed. He slumped back in his | |
| chair and closed his eyes. | |
| His rages apparently exhaust him, Mack thought. He�d apparently | |
| had an angry morning. | |
| #Post#: 33215-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:22 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Mack let the quiet settle in for a moment and then he changed | |
| the subject. �When I was at the White House, Mr. Trump, I saw | |
| that you had only your father�s picture on the Oval Office desk, | |
| and there were no other family pictures.� | |
| Trump opened his eyes and looked at Mack. �That�s right | |
| Stemple. I�m a chip off the old block. I like to think how | |
| much farther I�ve gone in life compared to my father. I am a | |
| man much greater than he was. In fact, my father was nothing | |
| compared to me.� | |
| �I can�t disagree with that. But the shadows of the past seem | |
| to always darken the present. Our fathers were dark figures. | |
| They wanted us to be killers, to use their language. Isn�t that | |
| something we have in common, the shared nothingness of bad | |
| fathers? Couldn�t it be said that your father murdered your | |
| brother Fred?� | |
| Trump looked at Mack for a long moment, and then said, | |
| �Everybody gets what they deserve.� | |
| �But the grief of those days still linger. Did you or your | |
| brother deserve what you got?� | |
| Trump glared at Mack. �My family was as normal as any other | |
| family.� | |
| �And so, Mr. Trump, it was all sunny, delightful family bliss?� | |
| Trump glared at Mack. �Yes, it was delightful!� He snapped. | |
| �As you know, I�ve had the same delightful family experience, | |
| the same type of father. It was all joy amid the tears. I | |
| suspect that that�s the reason you�ve put up with me for so | |
| long.� | |
| Some of the anger went out of Trump�s eyes. But the | |
| defensiveness remained. �Our family got along okay, Stemple. | |
| It toughened us up in the end.� | |
| �And our fathers smiled upon us, Mr. Trump.� | |
| �Yes, they did, I think. And they certainly got away with | |
| murder over the years. My father laughed at all the **** he got | |
| away with. He got away with a lot, like I have, and will.� | |
| �Is that why you�re laughing now? Is that why we can both laugh | |
| now?� | |
| �I get away with a lot, Stemple, much like my father. I have a | |
| lot of laughter. I can **** on whomever I will.� | |
| �You�re overjoyed.� | |
| �You�re wrong, Stemple. I�m way on top of the world. I�m outta | |
| sight. My father would have never believed that his son became | |
| President of the United States. He didn�t think that much of | |
| me.� | |
| �Why did it have to happen that were we both destroyed in our | |
| youth? We both found no victory in that.� | |
| �I wasn�t destroyed. I toughened up and fought when I could. I | |
| was a man who went from strength to strength.� | |
| �So it was, Mr. Trump, the power of positive thinking, of | |
| growing in strength through joy.� | |
| Trump didn�t reply, his tired, angry eyes fixed on Mack. | |
| Mack continued. �But why did we both have to cry as much as we | |
| did when we were very young? Why did we have to be so afraid in | |
| all those years of joy?� | |
| Trump smiled grimly. �What tears and what fears could we have | |
| had in all that family bliss?� | |
| Mack smiled again faintly. �I can clearly see that we�ve had a | |
| lot of the same joy in all that family bliss.� | |
| �People get what they deserve.� Trump�s smile disappeared. | |
| �You�re up to your old tricks, Stemple. You�re trying to play | |
| again with my head.� | |
| �I�m a player, Mr. Trump. I think you know it. It�s much like | |
| golf. We both know that you love the game and like to wield the | |
| club.� | |
| �That�s a fact, Stemple.� | |
| �And we�ve both clubbed and were clubbed in our youth.� | |
| �That�s the way it was.� | |
| �At least our clubs were exclusive,� said Mack. | |
| Trump smiled grimly. �People have to be special to get into | |
| those clubs.� | |
| �I agree, Mr. Trump. You have to have the bruises. You have to | |
| have the high marks and the low marks.� | |
| �That�s the way it is. It�s a tough place to measure up to, | |
| Stemple.� | |
| �Did we both measure up?� | |
| �I did, Stemple. Look at where I�m at now.� | |
| �Yes, and I�m the worm. But was it worth the cost?� | |
| Trump remained silent. | |
| Mack continued. �When it came to the club, I preferred to duck | |
| out. I like to be seen but little seen.� | |
| �You�re invisible, Stemple. No one can see you. You hide like | |
| a worm in the woodwork. You have a different kind of cunning | |
| from me.� | |
| �I didn�t like how my father hit me.� | |
| �Mine hit me, Stemple, but with his words. Powerful things, | |
| those words and the feelings behind them.� | |
| �I agree, Mr. Trump. They killed your brother.� | |
| �I hate you.� | |
| �I know.� | |
| Trump sighed. �It isn�t fair, Stemple. You�re invisible and | |
| I�m out in the open. You seemingly haven�t aged at all since | |
| the 1980s. Your hair is slightly grayer, but you move and act | |
| like a younger man. Life just isn�t fair.� | |
| �But our fathers told us that life�s unfair.� | |
| �It is, Stemple, and everyone�s an enemy. Our fathers showed us | |
| that.� | |
| �But it doesn�t have to be that way. Friendship is possible.� | |
| �But in the end, no friendship ever lasts. That�s a fact.� | |
| �But isn�t it a fact that we love and are loved by many people, | |
| making friendship possible?� | |
| �Perhaps, Stemple, but we�re also players in a rough game, and | |
| I�m the best there is.� | |
| �Perhaps you could have been more like me, Mr. Trump. Perhaps | |
| you could have been less visible, but that�s the problem with | |
| the club. The club may be exclusive, but you�ve got to get away | |
| from it. The club rules may catch up with you. The world is | |
| closing in on you.� | |
| �My father wouldn�t have ever permitted that, Stemple. He would | |
| have insisted on me following the club�s rules. He would�ve | |
| wanted me to walk in front of the crowd, to be the chief, the | |
| leader over all others.� | |
| �So he really said he loved you and wanted you to succeed?� | |
| �He did, Stemple. I�m the best there is, a chip off the old | |
| man�s block.� | |
| �But the tears of grief we shed in the past remain.� | |
| �Life has its bad moments. There�s got to be a lot of tears.� | |
| �And so, Mr. Trump, we must be thrashed by the club, and the | |
| club rules.� | |
| �Everyone gets hurt, Stemple, but one can duck the club. I�ve | |
| managed to do it for years playing the game.� | |
| �And so, in the end, you�re like me, Mr. Trump. You�re never | |
| seen. You�ve never shown your true self.� | |
| Trump smiled. �That�s the way it is and how it should be. I�m | |
| never seen. Do you believe me?� | |
| �I do, Mr. Trump.� | |
| �I�m in everybody�s sight, Stemple, but I�m outta sight. When | |
| you�re outta sight, you�re outta mind, especially to those | |
| thinking about destroying you. They don�t know me and they hate | |
| it when I�m outta sight and outta reach.� | |
| �But we all get touched sometime.� | |
| �But I don�t want to be touched.� | |
| �But we all do crave to be touched, Mr. Trump.� | |
| �I want things, all things, to be on my own terms.� | |
| �But that rarely happens.� | |
| �I hate you, Stemple.� | |
| �Do I remind you of yourself, Mr. Trump? Of a road you didn�t | |
| travel?� | |
| �You don�t, Stemple. I love myself, my achievements, instead of | |
| doing what you do, hiding away like a contemptible worm.� | |
| �Our fathers did not love us. They didn�t even love | |
| themselves.� | |
| �Well, Stemple, bully for them.� | |
| �They were bullies then, weren�t they?� | |
| �That�s the way it�s got to be. Better to have the club instead | |
| of not having it. One can thrash things with the club.� | |
| �Then, perhaps one should be invisible.� | |
| �I�m invisible, ain�t I, Stemple? Who knows who I am, really? | |
| Though I�m out in the open, I�m hidden like you.� | |
| �You�re hidden, I agree, but being out in the open makes you a | |
| target.� | |
| �It makes it better for wielding a club and thrashing things.� | |
| �The world is closing in on you, Mr. Trump.� | |
| �I�ll strike out if I can, Stemple, unlike you, hiding in the | |
| woodwork.� | |
| �You may not succeed.� | |
| �I will. I hate enough and I�m willing to do what needs to be | |
| done to succeed.� | |
| �Why strive with all that hatred, Mr. Trump? Why not choose the | |
| happiness of love?� | |
| �I�m not buying into that ****, Stemple. I�m giving the world | |
| all the love that the world gave me back in return.� | |
| �That�s a hard sell, Mr. Trump. Our fathers gave us their all.� | |
| �My father was that to me, Stemple. I received the full force | |
| of that love. I won�t risk myself for that kind of love | |
| anymore.� | |
| �Our fathers failed us, I agree, but life is a risk and love is | |
| a risk. Besides, you�ve done a lot of risky things over the | |
| years.� | |
| �I know the risks, Stemple. And as you know, I�m good at the | |
| game.� | |
| �But what if the world finally makes you play by its own rules | |
| and takes away your club?� | |
| �Life�s like golf, Stemple. The rules aren�t very strict with a | |
| player who knows how to game the system.� | |
| �Sometimes you can�t play that game, Mr. Trump. Eventually, | |
| others may want to force you to play a different game.� | |
| �Well, bully for them.� | |
| �Maybe they�ll come after you with bigger clubs.� | |
| �I�m the best there is, Stemple. I know I can�t be beat. I�ve | |
| already beaten the best.� | |
| �Our fathers didn�t think so about us.� | |
| �Our fathers were contemptible, but they knew the winning | |
| strategy. They knew that everyone else is dirt. In the end, | |
| everyone is dirt, and everyone�s part of the mud people.� | |
| �I thought, Mr. Trump that you said that it was the mud people | |
| who robbed you of the Presidency?� | |
| �They did. But I didn�t know what to do at the time. I wasn�t | |
| angry enough like our fathers. I didn�t step on them hard | |
| enough.� | |
| �But can you step enough on the mud people, Mr. Trump? Mud�s | |
| like water. It doesn�t break like a twig, but merely reforms | |
| around the step. Sometimes the mud traps the foot stepping into | |
| it.� | |
| Trump glared at Mack. �You�re a worm, Stemple, one of the mud | |
| people.� | |
| �But aren�t we the same mud of what our fathers wanted us to be, | |
| Mr. Trump?� | |
| �Maybe for you, that�s the case. For me, I became my own man, a | |
| person not like my father.� | |
| �Maybe that�s why your father hated you, a chip off the old | |
| block.� | |
| �I don�t mind receiving hatred from anyone.� | |
| #Post#: 33216-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:24 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| �So all that hatred was not important?� | |
| Trump sighed. �People get what they deserve,� he muttered. | |
| Mack looked at him in silence, and said, �I came here, Mr. | |
| Trump, at the request of the Secret Service supervisor, Mr. | |
| Michael Collins, who had me clarify some issues regarding the | |
| Doubek assault both upon me and Agent Jenkins back in 2018. It | |
| was for that reason you�ve seen me again outside your office | |
| windows today. That�s why I�m here and why I wanted to see you | |
| one last time. | |
| �I came to say goodbye. After today, like you�ve said, I�m a | |
| worm, and now, this worm going further into the woodwork. I�m | |
| going to ground and I won�t be found, either by you or by | |
| anyone. The apartment and the mailing address in Fort Benton, | |
| Montana have already been closed down. The US Marshal Service | |
| that administers Witness Protection Program, and serves as my | |
| liaison service, will not know where I am. Of course, they�ve | |
| never actually known where I have been living for many years | |
| anyway. | |
| �I�ll be leaving Montana and no one in that state will know | |
| where I�ve gone. If you really need to contact me, the only | |
| person that will serve as a contact will be Nolan Tarp, formerly | |
| of Laramie, Wyoming. You won�t be able to directly contact him | |
| either, but if you have one of your people post a general | |
| community message on the Wyoming Craigslist asking for the | |
| services of a provost actuary, he may respond with a telephone | |
| call to the number your people list. The recognition sign that | |
| he will offer your people will be the word �Cordova�. The | |
| recognition parole your people will need to give him in return | |
| will be the word �Barksdale�. Anyone calling, inquiring about | |
| what a provost actuary is or does, is not going to be him. He | |
| may not necessarily respond to your attempts to contact him. If | |
| he�s interested, you can expect that he will demand a stiff | |
| payment for his information and for his other services. He will | |
| initially require your people to make multiple cash payments by | |
| means of a dead drop. He will be expensive. He will also set | |
| the protocol for any face to face meetings. I would stress to | |
| your people to never anger him. He has the power of retribution | |
| and he will have backup.� | |
| �I�ve heard about Tarp from some of my aides. I�ve heard he�s a | |
| great field man,� Trump said. �I�ve heard that he�s a cold, | |
| hard man.� | |
| �He is.� | |
| Trump sighed again. �Why in hell are you are so young looking? | |
| We�re both about the same age, in our 70s. I�m looking and | |
| feeling like an old man. You look like you�re still in your | |
| late 30s or early 40s.� Trump moaned. �It just isn�t fair. | |
| You�re in obvious good health; much like we were in the 90s. | |
| I�m old and feeling my age and yet, you�re standing before me | |
| lookin� and movin� around as if you�re young and in the prime of | |
| life. It just isn�t fair.� | |
| Mack smiled. �It�s all due to plain living and high thinking.� | |
| �Don�t get smart with me, Stemple! Remember who I am? Trump�s | |
| the big man here. From what you�re telling me, Tarp might be | |
| bigger than you, a real stand-up guy, possibly a better field | |
| man than you are.� | |
| �You�re probably right,� said Mack. �And he�s also a killer | |
| from what I hear.� And Mack thought silently to himself, and he | |
| has an antipathy towards you. | |
| Trump paused and looked mournfully at the seal of the President | |
| of the United States on one of his walls. Mack could see the | |
| anger rising again in his eyes. | |
| �Perhaps I should hire him. Now is the time for blood! Now is | |
| the time to punish the deep state! I�m done being soft with | |
| people! People have had it too easy with me. Now is the time | |
| to smash some heads!� Trump leaned back in his chair and closed | |
| his eyes. Then he said, "What wealthy people need in this | |
| country are their own enforcers for order in the nation, even | |
| their own private armies. With that they can protect and | |
| enforce their rights." He lapsed into silence. | |
| These are the utterances of treason, thought Mack. He | |
| contemplated taking his leave at this point. | |
| Then Trump sighed and said again, �It just isn�t fair. I won | |
| the **** **** election by a landslide. Trump�s the greatest | |
| American President that ever lived. He�s too much loved by too | |
| many **** people for that to have occurred. | |
| �Even Pence turned traitor, that **** coward. On January 6th, | |
| he went to the Senate and certified the election. He should | |
| have been hung by my people when they stormed the Capitol. If | |
| he had refused to certify that fake 2020 election, like he was | |
| supposed to, and had it turned over to the House of | |
| Representatives, I would have been voted in and would�ve | |
| remained President. That�s the trouble with all these | |
| Christians like Pence, no backbone, all bleating sheep with | |
| their **** consciences! It�s too much the golden rule this and | |
| the golden rule that! Don�t they know that they who have the | |
| gold rules? They�re all sheep, **** mud people loving the **** | |
| mud people, especially in the presence of the **** deep state. | |
| The sheep need to be kicked and kicked again! They need to have | |
| their consciences beaten out of them! It�s time for blood and | |
| struggle, and men must become wolves again!� | |
| Mack interrupted him. �I hear, Mr. Trump, that Pence didn�t | |
| trust the Secret Service agents guarding him. I think that he | |
| heard the people shouting �hang Mike Pence� and didn�t like that | |
| as well.� | |
| �Well, bully for Mike Pence. If he had left like he was | |
| supposed to, that damned election certification would not have | |
| taken place!� snapped Trump, who leaned back in his chair again | |
| and closed his eyes. He was quiet for a moment. Then he | |
| muttered, �People who think they can go their own way and betray | |
| Trump and all good patriots, ought to be put to death. I should | |
| have been President for life. It was all these **** traitors | |
| who prevented that from happening.� | |
| Mack had heard enough. �It�s the time for me to go, Mr. Trump.� | |
| Mack wondered how Trump�s associates and aides were able to put | |
| up with his malice. | |
| Trump opened his eyes. They were very tired. �Before you go, | |
| have you tried the food here, Stemple?� | |
| �I have, back in the 90s, with Preston Callendar, when we came | |
| to visit you during �the Season�.� | |
| �Was it good?� | |
| �It was. I also enjoyed your hors d�oeuvres the last time I was | |
| here.� | |
| �That�s really the case, Stemple. What Trump offers is always | |
| good. Trump�s a good man, a strong man, though these facts are | |
| not recognized by many. Trump is a great man, one of the | |
| greatest that�s ever lived. It�s too bad that so many have | |
| refused to acknowledge Trump�s greatness. | |
| �You know, Trump�s one of the world�s richest men. He�s | |
| entitled to respect and power. But Trump never seems to get | |
| what he deserves. I�m tired Stemple, tired of it all, tired of | |
| all the lesser men speaking out of turn, not knowing those who | |
| are rightfully their masters. | |
| �I�m tired of the American people, the stupid sheep, yearning | |
| for a master and never finding one, throwing patriots like Trump | |
| down into the gutter like a gum wrapper or something. There are | |
| too many mud people, the ****, the liberals, the greasers, the | |
| Jews, the **** having the talk of freedom and failing to see the | |
| need for a strong man. My people don�t believe in any kind of | |
| freedom apart from Trump. | |
| �Perhaps I�m another **** **** Christ, according to the modern | |
| prophets who support me, a better Christ than the ones who came | |
| before me. Perhaps all those who oppose me are demon inspired. | |
| Perhaps we need a new religion in this country, one that | |
| recognizes me for who I truly am.� | |
| Trump sighed. �Perhaps I should have entered professional golf. | |
| Did you know that I was one of the greatest players of the | |
| game? I should have gone professional. That�s what I should | |
| have done. If I had done that, I�d be doing something that I | |
| love and would not have had to deal with the fake media and all | |
| these **** mud people. I sure hate all the **** that has been | |
| dished out to me, all about the routers, the thermostats, the | |
| **** Italian satellites, and the stolen election.� | |
| Mack smiled faintly at that. �If you had taken up golf, then | |
| you wouldn�t need to steal. That was quite an embarrassment | |
| having the government seize back those classified documents that | |
| you stored here.� | |
| �I declassified those documents, Stemple. I also own them. | |
| They were a record of my administration and they�re rightfully | |
| mine. To hell with any law that says otherwise. To hell with | |
| the public, and all those bleating sheep, who complain about the | |
| **** national security. If I want something, I can damn well | |
| take it. I have the authority since I�m rightfully the | |
| President. | |
| �Trump won the election and has always been a great winner. | |
| Trump went farther than my father in affairs, much farther that | |
| he ever dreamed. Everyone must concede that Trump is a great | |
| man. People have blamed me for the insurrection on January 6. | |
| Those were my people and I love them. I don�t understand why | |
| people don�t understand the work of patriots. I didn�t have | |
| anything to do with the January 6th insurrection. Those | |
| patriots acted out their anger because of conviction, anger that | |
| the election had been stolen from them and that the courts | |
| weren�t doing anything about it. | |
| �If the **** sheep bleat for law and order, to hell with them! | |
| To hell with law and order! Why should patriots, supporting | |
| Trump, give any respect to a rigged system? Pence that **** | |
| rat, was disloyal to me! If he hadn�t certified the election, | |
| it would have been decided in Congress and I would have remained | |
| President! Pence�s a **** rat, a disgrace! | |
| �I should have been with my people on their march to the Capitol | |
| on January 6th, but it was not to be! My cowardly aides | |
| manhandled me into the limo and back to the White House. | |
| Imagine that! Trump should�ve stormed into the House and Senate | |
| with his supporters. If the police resisted, Trump could�ve | |
| commanded them to stop. And if they didn�t stop, he would have | |
| ordered them killed. As far as I�m concerned, only I and my | |
| people count! And if the truth be told, at bottom, even they | |
| don�t count! Only I alone count! Only my will counts!� | |
| Trump stopped, exhausted. His face was red and covered with | |
| sweat. | |
| #Post#: 33217-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:26 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Mack watched as shadows seem to darken in the room. Outside, | |
| the lawn and sidewalks were under the shade of clouds. A storm | |
| was probably blowing in from the coast. | |
| After a moment of silence, Mack said quietly, �What you�re | |
| saying is to be expected from what we went through. This is the | |
| same dark shadow, standing behind both of our fathers who also | |
| thought that they, and their will alone, counted.� | |
| Trump didn�t immediately reply. Eventually with weary eyes, he | |
| muttered, �It�s like I�ve always said, everyone gets what they | |
| deserve in the end. That was the way it was with my father. He | |
| took the heat, and gave the heat, and didn�t care what other | |
| people thought.� | |
| �And that�s the way it�s going to be with you,� Mack replied. | |
| �Like I�ve said, I�m a chip off the old block. It�s the same | |
| with you, Stemple, and don�t try to say otherwise. We�re both | |
| made of the same dust and chips, the same damned mud of our | |
| fathers.� | |
| �I agree. In a certain way, our fathers still rule us even from | |
| their graves. And that includes all the inevitable enablers of | |
| that darkness which came after them.� | |
| Trump nodded. �Yeah, that�s how it was for me. There were the | |
| professionals who had supported my father, who helped him make | |
| his money. I�ve learned a lot from them and really did | |
| appreciate what they�ve done over the years. Then there were | |
| the toadies who sponged off of the Trumps back then, and still | |
| try to do so. They�re contemptible. Then there are those **** | |
| **** others, the damned crimpers who made our lives hell. They | |
| included those **** **** shrinks, the blackleg doctors, who | |
| enabled all that fatherly love in my teenage years.� | |
| Mack nodded. �I�ve experienced similar doctors like that in my | |
| school years, Mr. Trump. I�ve experienced their inhumanity. I | |
| gave them little cooperation when they refused to reveal | |
| themselves to me. They remained in the shadows and wouldn�t | |
| allow me the right of refusal to their treatment and control. | |
| I�m sure you didn�t like them pouring cold water onto all your | |
| youthful dreams. � | |
| Trump agreed. �That�s true. I really hated those crimpers." | |
| He said. "I still do. As far as I�m concerned, no **** **** | |
| shrink is going to shrink my greatness.� | |
| �But, Mr. Trump, in order to be happy, we�ll ultimately have to | |
| forgive our fathers and their doctors what they�ve done to us. | |
| I know this is a hard saying, but like you�ve said, we�ve had to | |
| become hardened and this forgiveness should be part of our | |
| hardness.� | |
| �I�ve already done that, Stemple. Can�t you see it? I�m loaded | |
| with forgiveness, but I�m not going to stop thinking of what | |
| those crimpers really are. My father was a little man who | |
| needed crimpers around him. In a way, if the truth be told, my | |
| father was a chip off the block of who I am. My father was only | |
| chips and dust compared to me.� | |
| Mack smiled faintly. �Speaking of chips off the old block, | |
| isn�t it true, Mr. Trump, that you hate me because I�ve failed | |
| to become a chip off the block, whereas you had? And isn�t | |
| being a chip off the block a failure, because you�ve failed to | |
| become what you should�ve been in the first place?� | |
| Trump glared at him. �That�s a bunch of nonsense and you know | |
| it, Stemple." He said. "I�m nothing like my father. I�m a very | |
| great man, the best there is. I�m far ahead of what my father | |
| accomplished. He�s nothing, compared to me. As for those | |
| doctors, in the end, what my father finally said about them is | |
| true: �what they say doesn�t pass the smell test�. Even my | |
| father backed away from them. He showed them what an NDA meant. | |
| �What we got from those doctors, Stemple, was a lot of the bait | |
| and stick all around. But one has to fight them. And we | |
| learned the great truth. The winners stick it out. The losers | |
| can�t.� | |
| �I could agree, Mr. Trump, that what we got was years of bait | |
| and stick aplenty.� | |
| Trump wasn't finished. �Yes, and we had to kiss the stick, to | |
| become the cold killers our fathers wanted us to be, Stemple. | |
| If people are angry about us, they should�ve realized that we�re | |
| only doing what our fathers taught us. That�s what I became. | |
| I�m only what my father wanted me to be. I really respected my | |
| father.� | |
| �Perhaps you did respect him in a certain way, Mr. Trump. I do | |
| find troubling your expression of kissing the stick. Isn�t it | |
| true that the doctor�s bait and stick only meant in the end the | |
| same thing, a stick?� | |
| �That�s true, Stemple. At a certain point, the bait and stick | |
| became one for us." Trump sighed and said, sadly, "It was at | |
| that point that I knew that the bait or stick meant nothing at | |
| all. The only thing that meant was the stick, the control over | |
| others. I didn�t want to let them control me. As far as I | |
| could see, they didn�t follow any rules or morality. They | |
| didn�t acknowledge my humanity.� | |
| Mack nodded at that. �I�ve experienced that same inhumanity, | |
| Mr. Trump. But I�d say it�s not simply a matter of control in | |
| battling our fathers and their doctors. It�s fundamentally a | |
| battle for freedom and human dignity.� | |
| Trump looked at Mack for a long moment and then said, �That�s | |
| missing the point of it all, Stemple. They didn�t care at all | |
| about our freedom or dignity. Let me repeat that. Freedom is | |
| nothing without having the power to control others, to stop them | |
| from thwarting one�s will. They didn�t give a damn about us. | |
| They weren�t concerned about our emotions, our rage. They were | |
| only the paid tools of our fathers and they were going to have | |
| us conform to their will. It�s like I said, there are no rules | |
| or morality fighting those people, or anyone else when it comes | |
| to it. They have no truth since they�ve always bending their | |
| truth towards the control they�re seeking. Speaking of myself, | |
| they�ve shown me that nothing is real and that everything�s a | |
| fraud.� | |
| After a moment, Mack could hear a jet plane flying overhead, | |
| coming into a landing at the airport in West Palm Beach, | |
| something that the President had forbidden when he was at Mar a | |
| Lago during his presidency. Trump had lapsed into silence. | |
| Mack thought that it was time to go. | |
| �Damned airplanes,� the ex-President muttered. �I�m the winner. | |
| I�ve always won the battles I fought. You can�t deny that. I | |
| can�t be touched by anyone. No one is ever going to hold me | |
| accountable for anything. As far as I�m concerned, I�m the **** | |
| Teflon Don, the **** forty-fifth President of the United States. | |
| I won that election, and Biden wasn�t ever truly elected. The | |
| election was a sham, a disgrace to all honest patriots. Trump | |
| won by a landslide. Trump won by more than 8 million votes. | |
| Trump glared at him. �You�re more like me than you want to | |
| admit, Stemple. You�re much like my former bodyguard, Milo | |
| Doubek. At bottom, we�re all killers. I�ve heard the stories | |
| about you as being �Mack the Knife�. You�re known as a master | |
| of the balisong and I�ve heard that you could kill a man with a | |
| folded balisong, without the blade being flicked out.� | |
| �I am skilled in stick fighting, if that�s what you mean, Mr. | |
| Trump. The folded balisong is actually a mercy. Someone | |
| confronting you doesn�t have to die by the blade. That person | |
| can be killed or disabled by a stick.� | |
| �That�s the problem with you, Stemple. You�re always holding | |
| back. You�re not going out for the blood, the kill, like you | |
| should be doing. That�s a grave weakness. You�re always | |
| lurking in the shadows and not living out in the open.� | |
| �Knives and sticks are for ambush killers, Mr. Trump. That�s | |
| part of living in the shadows. That�s a part of our world, a | |
| part of who we are. Our fathers and their doctors lived in the | |
| shadows and were highly skilled in their ambushes as well.� | |
| �I haven�t thought of it that way, Stemple. They gave us the | |
| bait, the stick and even the blade. Their words, I think, | |
| became a matter of life and death for us, and they ultimately | |
| chose death for us, a living death.� Trump rubbed his sad, | |
| tired eyes and looked at Mack and smiled weakly. | |
| The two men heard another airplane pass over Mar a Lago, going | |
| in for a landing at the airport in West Palm Beach. Trump's | |
| weak smile began to fade. | |
| Mack was getting tired of this conversation. It was time to | |
| draw it to a close. They would never reconcile since, for | |
| Trump, words no longer had any meaning. He said, �I can agree | |
| that the doctors didn�t care about us. In the end, they were | |
| indifferent to our emotional and professional development. But | |
| that was who they were. Early on, we had to admit that they | |
| were hirelings, enablers of our fathers, and that dictated how | |
| they behaved. They were also narcissists. | |
| �Do you know why we�re ultimately different, Mr. Trump? Why, | |
| unlike you, I never became a chip off the old block? At twelve | |
| years of age, I fell in love with a girl and was touched by the | |
| eternal. I was able to grasp onto the possibility of love, of | |
| intimacy. That is what divides us, the possibility of love. | |
| Though I eventually lost the girl, I grabbed onto the eternal | |
| and held onto it.� | |
| Trump glared at him. �That�s the same **** stupidity on your | |
| part, Stemple, talking about religion, that pitiful disease of | |
| weak people, of choke artists, and mud people. Don�t talk to me | |
| about that. I don�t want to hear it. I live in the light of | |
| day and not in the shadows, like you do. I�ve enjoyed my wealth | |
| and power and I don�t cower away hidden from people. I�m loved | |
| by millions and have been intimate with many women. I have my | |
| own strength and I shall overcome all opposition.� | |
| �That sounds like your father talking.� | |
| �That�s the truth, Stemple, though you don�t want to admit it.� | |
| Mack tried another conversational tack. �You said that nothing | |
| is real, that everything�s a fraud. When we were both young, we | |
| both lied, sometimes on a big scale. We lied a lot, to our shame | |
| and to the shame of others. We had to lie because lies were | |
| sometimes a necessary survival skill because of the abuse we | |
| suffered. After all, we suffered from childhood post traumatic | |
| stress disorder. Of course, it didn�t work for us. It certainly | |
| didn�t work for me. I found that love makes all things | |
| possible, even if that love is eventually thwarted or not | |
| reciprocated. I�ve found that we are sustained by love and it | |
| brings us out of the hollowness of our lives. Love enriches us. | |
| If you can give yourself to love, you can give up the fraud, | |
| and all those defenses that you use to separate yourself from | |
| love and happiness.� | |
| Trump glared at him. �At bottom, nothing is real, Stemple, not | |
| even **** love. Why open yourself up to being hurt again? Love | |
| is just another crimping of the mind. Look at what happened to | |
| us. I see things as they are. I use words to disclose and | |
| conceal who I am. By words, I can create and recreate myself. | |
| By words I become god-like. | |
| �I don�t hide like a worm in the shadows, like you do. I remain | |
| in the sunlight, out in the open, ready to take on all comers. | |
| I�m still hidden though. Nobody sees me, like you�ve said. | |
| People only see and know what I allow them to see and know. | |
| That is power, true power. The tongue is a great force by those | |
| who know how to speak, when it�s backed by wealth. That�s why I | |
| am the way I am. I don�t always tell the supposed truth. I | |
| tell my own truth, and my words are my strength, not weakness. | |
| �Why do RINOs make a fuss about the truth? They�ve been lying | |
| to the public for decades, long before I came along. Why should | |
| their truth be more important than my truth? My truth is my | |
| own, and it�s who I am. My truth�s more important to me than | |
| theirs. My truth, backed by wealth and power, must win out in | |
| the end.� | |
| Mack shook his head. �That�s the impasse between us.� | |
| �You�re a worm, Stemple, a **** worm. You never stand up for | |
| yourself, don�t you? You always hold back, never going in for | |
| the kill. You talk just like a worm. In the end, you don�t | |
| have any **** self-respect.� | |
| �I�m just not that kind of stand-up guy,� said Mack, smiling. | |
| �Because of my past, I seek to avoid trouble. I admit I�m | |
| always guarded in my dealing with people, especially those in | |
| authority. I will honor my own humanity and not respect any | |
| authority that would diminish that humanity. Why should I | |
| strive for the acclaim of others like you do? I like fading | |
| into the woodwork. And as we�ve both agreed, you�re out in the | |
| open.� | |
| Trump softened his glare at Mack. He sighed and said, �Living | |
| in the shadows isn�t a sign of self-respect, Stemple. It�s | |
| highly subversive. I can sense your disrespect for those who | |
| have power. Everything�s based on respect. Only an idiot or an | |
| ass can�t see that. | |
| �Life�s based on respect. It�s all about the golden rule: he | |
| who has the gold rules. You ought to respect your betters. | |
| We�re the golden people who rule this country and especially the | |
| government. You have to accept that. You, and people like you, | |
| don�t count in the scheme of things.� | |
| Mack smiled at that. It was time to do the man a jag, testing | |
| his supposed superior vocabulary. �Though, unlike me, you have | |
| weakness and age in your body, Mr. Trump, you have a certain | |
| kind of majesty. Your thrasonical manner does point to a | |
| lambent, bubaline majesty that towers above us all. You hold | |
| onto the horns of power much like the monarchs of old, as they | |
| themselves held onto their power, arrayed in all their splendor, | |
| as in those ancient days long past. Though, nowadays, many | |
| would say that they find you agrestic, your majesty makes even | |
| those skeptical of you to pause and to wonder. Though you are | |
| hebetudinous and incogitant to many, many others find you highly | |
| aestival despite your other gnathonic followers.� | |
| Trump didn�t see the jag, that he�d been insulted in the | |
| supposed flattery. He smiled broadly at Mack and said, �Ain�t | |
| that the truth, Stemple. That�s what I would say myself and I | |
| always have the best words.� | |
| �The truth matters, Mr. Trump. Words matter in the end, even | |
| like the simple braying of the cattle in the field matters.� | |
| �No, Stemple, the truth doesn�t matter. Neither do words. | |
| People should take life in stride, as it is, as they find it. | |
| People shouldn�t be angry with me. I only tell things as they | |
| are.� | |
| Mack looked at Trump sadly and shook his head. He said, �Most | |
| people would disagree with you, Mr. Trump. Our fathers never | |
| gave us the words and the truth we wanted to hear, though we | |
| needed them. At a certain point, the words that we received | |
| hurt us badly.� | |
| Trump smiled grimly at Mack. �They only showed us the hard | |
| things in life, that there is no such thing as God, or love, or | |
| friendship, something I�ve already told you. In the end, it�s | |
| like I said. There aren�t any friends, only enemies. Why do | |
| you and so many others draw away from that simple truth?� | |
| �Then, indeed, your supposed friends are your enemies.� | |
| �I hate you.� | |
| �I know that, Mr. Trump.� | |
| �I�ve always hated you. I�m always naked before you.� | |
| �We�re both naked in a manner of speaking. We�ve been cut from | |
| the same cloth, the same fabric of existence. And that fabric | |
| is very threadbare.� | |
| �Despite all that, Stemple, nobody needs to feel sorry about me. | |
| I don�t need any man�s pity. I think another man�s pity is | |
| contemptible. I follow my own rules and morality and I spit on | |
| any man I want to. I don�t think I have to say I�m sorry to | |
| anyone, for anything I�ve ever said or done. Great men don't | |
| have to. Through many struggles, I've made my bones over the | |
| years, and, in any dispute, I know that made guys are always in | |
| the right even when they're wrong. Nobody ever said that they | |
| were sorry to me. Nobody�s ever apologized to me. Certainly | |
| the crimpers, the blackleg doctors didn�t, and why should they? | |
| I am the strongest man, the greatest man, a man of awesome | |
| power. I�ve had the power and I�ve enjoyed that glory of power | |
| over others. And if I have my way and that power again, I�ll | |
| have my enemies pay with their wealth and blood!� | |
| �So, in the end, it�s about wealth and blood, Mr. Trump? Wasn�t | |
| that our fathers� view of things? Why don�t we consider again | |
| their words and how they had affected us both? Aren�t we | |
| living the living death they planned for us?� | |
| �You just don�t get it, Stemple. Words don�t mean anything, | |
| anything at all.� Trump sighed, his eyes bloodshot and weary. | |
| �Why should they?� He sank back in his chair and was silent, | |
| except for his troubled, tired eyes. | |
| Mack didn�t respond to that. At this point, what can one say? | |
| As the silence began to deepen, Trump looked at Mack with his | |
| tired eyes and said, �It�s too late for the both of us.� | |
| The two men looked into each other eyes for a long moment. Then | |
| Trump wearily laid his head back in his chair and closed his | |
| eyes. | |
| Mack stared at the silent man. �And we shall both go to our | |
| respective dooms, Mr. Trump. I�m sorry in however I have | |
| offended you.� Trump did not immediately respond. | |
| As Mack got up from the chair, he heard Trump softly say, "Only | |
| worms apologize, Stemple. Why aren't you the kind of worm like | |
| all my followers?" | |
| Mack left the darkened room into the hallway, where he joined | |
| Collins and Devin. Following Collins, going down the hallway, | |
| they went back into the brightness of the outside. Walking | |
| across the white cement pavement, they returned to the Secret | |
| Service vehicle, where the driver Brooks waited. As they were | |
| getting into the car, Mack wondered how Mar a Lago, a place of | |
| majesty and beauty, could have so much evil and unhappiness | |
| within it. | |
| Soon their car went out of the parking lot, onto the road. As | |
| they arrived at the exit, Mack watched as they were waved | |
| through the exit by the friendly guards. Mack was thankful for | |
| having finally left the place. He didn�t look back. | |
| #Post#: 33218-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: The Last Farewell At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: March 12, 2023, 11:29 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| They went to dine at a seafood restaurant by the water in West | |
| Palm Beach, a restaurant known for its seafood and by its fine | |
| carpeting, amber colored oak walls and tables. Mack was | |
| familiar with the seafood to be found in Florida. | |
| Mack enjoyed eating the many kinds of deep sea fish that often | |
| graced many Floridian tables. Mack was also skeptical of the | |
| local oysters, much preferring the oysters to be found in the | |
| Northern states such as Maine, Washington and Alaska. He was | |
| assured by Collins that he wouldn�t be disappointed with the | |
| cuisine of this restaurant. He wasn�t. The men went for a | |
| specialty offered by this establishment, oyster pie. They dined | |
| on dinner salads and slices of oyster pie topped with a thin | |
| crust coated with parmesan cheese and thinly grated shallots and | |
| garlic. | |
| At one point of the dinner, Collins asked Mack a question in the | |
| usual coded language, since they were in a moderately filled | |
| restaurant and there was a chance of being overheard. �In the | |
| last sense,� Collins asked, �would you consider your interviews | |
| with AUTARCH a war of words?� AUTARCH was the informal code | |
| word for Trump within the AAP. | |
| Mack could think of more unflattering code words for the man. | |
| �I suppose so,� Mack replied. �The man was always challenged | |
| people with his words.� | |
| Devin intruded. �Who would you say that won in your | |
| conversations?� he asked. | |
| �I suppose it would be in the eye of the beholder, Devin. Many | |
| would say that AUTARCH had won all his conversations with me | |
| since I couldn�t persuade him to change his ways or his | |
| policies.� | |
| �You spoke with him, Mack, in a manner that many people would | |
| have dreamed to speak to him if they had the opportunity to do | |
| so,� said Collins. �I suppose that you had the best chance, of | |
| any, in changing his opinions.� | |
| �I suppose so,� said Mack. �I wanted him to acknowledge what | |
| he�s experienced in life. I wanted him to acknowledge the grief | |
| he�s experienced and what grief he�s visiting upon others.� | |
| �AUTARCH wouldn�t ever acknowledge his own grief,� said Collins. | |
| �He seeks to shut himself off from all of the hurt he�s | |
| experienced. By his words, he closes himself off from others.� | |
| �Regrettably, that may be the case.� said Mack. | |
| �I think that he�s beyond words. Perhaps, he�s never listened | |
| to anyone.� said Devin. �Perhaps, like all the others, you�ve | |
| allowed him to verbally escape, letting him win his | |
| conversations like all the others who�ve talked to him over his | |
| lifetime.� | |
| �Perhaps,� said Mack. �The man always needs an escape. | |
| Certainly, on one level, AUTARCH must always be, in his own | |
| eyes, the winner.� | |
| �Then he won your war of words,� said Devin, �and your | |
| conversations with him were, in the end, pointless.� | |
| �I would disagree,� said Mack. �It had to be ventured. That | |
| man is a lost soul, and a lost soul has need for those rare, | |
| frank words that should be spoken, even if those words are to be | |
| rejected.� | |
| �He�s a lost soul,� agreed Collins. �Perhaps, in the end, you | |
| didn�t win. But it doesn�t matter whether you�ve won or lost. | |
| The words of many of his supporters will cover his false words | |
| with their own false words, and the tragedy will go on.� | |
| �It will go on for a long time,� agreed Mack. �But it cannot | |
| last. Liars eventually burn themselves out.� | |
| �I hope that that is so,� said Collins. �I'm impressed how | |
| you've spoken to Trump out of the commonality of a harsh | |
| childhood.� | |
| Mack nodded. �I think that�s why AUTARCH had put up with me. | |
| We�ve suffered much at the hands of narcissists. We�re much the | |
| same, like two old derelicts living on the streets. We�re both | |
| beggars in the end. The only difference between us is that he�s | |
| a better panhandler than me, and the alleys and cardboard boxes | |
| he sleeps in are a bit bigger.� | |
| �One thing is clear,� said Devin. �AUTARCH has won all his | |
| critical battles. I think that he�ll eventually escape | |
| punishment for his crimes. I think we�ve failed in dealing with | |
| him.� | |
| �He won�t escape who he is,� said Mack. �Narcissists in old age | |
| descend into a living hell which they spent a lifetime creating. | |
| After he�s lost his health in old age, he�ll be lonely and | |
| angry, at war with his doctors, nurses, and their aides. He�ll | |
| know that his family, who will visit him from time to time, will | |
| not truly love him. It will only be their inheritances that | |
| will bond them to him, and to each other. As his money is | |
| frittered away, even they will leave him. He will hate and be | |
| hated by many. Nobody will please him. His memories will haunt | |
| him. Behind all that vainglory, he�ll know himself for who he | |
| is, a hollow man, and it will gnaw at him. He will die a | |
| bitter, dejected man.� | |
| �He�s then little more, in the end, a derelict, sleeping in a | |
| cardboard box in an alley somewhere,� said Devin. | |
| �Precisely,� said Mack. | |
| Collins gently brought the conversation back to other subjects. | |
| Mack didn�t participate much in those discussions, except for | |
| talking about some fly fishing in Montana and Idaho. From what | |
| he heard of fishing from Devin, Devin had done a lot of fly | |
| fishing in Pennsylvania. They spoke about how their wives | |
| prepared baking and pan-frying trout. The conversation went | |
| well with the food. | |
| Later, Collins, Devin and Brooks, drove Mack to a secluded park | |
| in West Palm Beach. The men walked to a place among some hedges | |
| and trees to a place where Mack would be concealed from view and | |
| from where he could teleport unseen by the public. Only these | |
| men would be privileged to witness his teleportation, something | |
| that was rarely done. | |
| Along the way, Devin asked, �Is it true that you�ve walked on | |
| the Moon, then on Mars, and later Europa and Pluto, with Prisca | |
| Lovec, in the humanoid exoform available to the Star People?� | |
| �We have done so,� said Mack. | |
| �Some derelict life you live,� said Devin smiling, �some | |
| cardboard box.� | |
| �All human life is more limited than you think, Devin. We are | |
| all faint particles in the immensity of the universe. In the | |
| end, we�re all derelicts in existence, I think.� | |
| Mack and the men paused and watched, in silence, the blossomed | |
| bushes gently swaying in the breeze. It was a moment of beauty, | |
| in the stillness, in the color of the bright sunlight. Mack | |
| reflected, that what Devin, Collins, and Brooks didn�t know, was | |
| that Mack wouldn�t be returning to another part of the Earth�s | |
| planetary surface. He would leave the universe as they knew it | |
| and teleport directly into the paradimension where the Star | |
| People live. | |
| He would teleport to the Solargate, the great paradimensional | |
| biodome of the Star People, and would find himself standing on | |
| one of the portal plates in the forum located there. He would | |
| then gaze upon the great gas giant Saturn and the glory of its | |
| rings as it could be seen through the dome�s massive firmament. | |
| Shortly after that, he would see his longtime girlfriend, | |
| Prisca, coming towards him through the crowded forum. She will | |
| have been waiting for him for a long time. It would be good to | |
| look into her brown eyes and to embrace her. It would be good | |
| returning home. | |
| He would miss living in America. He had loved and served his | |
| country for a long time, but now the war for its existence was | |
| being handed down to other generations of humans and psionics. | |
| Mack wished them well. He reflected that without love and | |
| trust, without community, no nation can continue to exist. And | |
| that was true of the American nation. | |
| Mack softly said goodbye to the three men standing under the | |
| shades of the trees in front of him. They replied their | |
| goodbyes back to him. Mack mentally concentrated upon the act | |
| of a deep space teleportation. He visualized standing at his | |
| place on one of the Solargate�s portal plate�s familiar to him. | |
| He felt time and space change all around him, and then he was | |
| gone. | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION --ACCESS LIST D | |
| ENCODED GLYPHSCRIPT ONLY | |
| THIS REPORT CANNOT BE PUT INTO ANY OTHER MEDIA FORM WITHOUT | |
| CENTRAL ACCESS PERMISSION. | |
| SCI/SCIF-POTOMAC | |
| SCI/SCIF-PARKHAM | |
| SCI/SCIF-CHEYENNE | |
| SUMMARY REPORT 20221107 | |
| ARCHON DIRECTORATE | |
| 20221107-0255 0900GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| [1]GENERAL PROGRAM SECURITY STATUS IS UNCHANGED. PROGRAM | |
| SECURITY HAS BEEN DETERMINED BY INTERNAL AFFAIRS TO BE SOUND. | |
| (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE ONE). | |
| [2-1]GROUP MIND POTOMAC CONFIRMS THAT THE MIND LOCK EMPLACED ON | |
| PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP BY PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE REMAINS SOUND. | |
| GROUP MIND POTOMAC CONFIRMS BY ITS MOST RECENT EXAMINATION THAT | |
| ITS SEALS ARE INTACT AND THAT ITS FUNCTIONING DIAGNOSTICS ARE | |
| WITHIN PARAMETERS. | |
| [2-2]EVALUATION-TEAM EAST�S MAIN EVALUATION OF THE PRESIDENT�S | |
| MENTAL STATE REMAINS UNCHANGED. REFERENCE FOR THIS IS FOUND IN | |
| THE REPORTS SUPPLIED BY LIASONS FBI/CSS AND JCS/CSSE (SEE | |
| ATTACHMENT FILE TWO). | |
| [3-1]THE OPERATION TO REMOVE THE LUCIDITY TEMPLATE OF THE FORMER | |
| PRESIDENT�S MIND LOCK HAS BEEN COMPLETED. ARCHON DIRECTORATE | |
| HAS DETERMINED THAT PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE COMPLETED THIS | |
| OPERATION SUCCESSFULLY AS MONITORED BY GROUP MIND POTOMAC. THE | |
| PSI-SUPPRESSION FIELD WAS CAVITATED TO PRODUCE THIS RESULT. THE | |
| ACTUARY OF GROUP MIND POTOMAC WAS U.S. DEPUTY MARSHAL JAMES | |
| DEVIN; THE OPERATIONAL HEAD OF THIS OPERATION WAS SECRET SERVICE | |
| SUPERVISOR, MICHAEL COLLINS. | |
| [3-2]THE PSI-SUPRESSION FIELD WAS REMOVED FROM THE VICINITY OF | |
| THE FORMER PRESIDENT AS OF 1100 HRS, 20221022. EVAL-TE HAD | |
| DETERMINED THAT THE PRESIDENT�S ANTI-PSI MIND SHALL BE | |
| SUFFICIENT TO PROTECT HIM IN THE FUTURE. IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED | |
| THAT TRUMP, IN HIS MENTAL DETERIORATION, WILL CONTINUE TO REMAIN | |
| A DANGER TO NATIONAL SECURITY GIVEN HIS PROBABLE ACCESS TO | |
| UNRECOVERED CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTATION AND TO HIS LACK OF LOYALTY | |
| TO THE CONSTITUTION. UPON THE ADVICE OF THE IG, AN APRATOR AND | |
| A COWL WILL STILL REMAIN ASSIGNED TO HIS SECURITY DETAIL (SEE | |
| ATTACHMENT FILE THREE). | |
| [4]FBI/CSS AND JCS/CSSE REPORT NO INFORMATION SUPPLIED REGARDING | |
| JUDICIAL INVESTIGATIONS CONCERNING THE PRESIDENT. THE MIND | |
| LOCKS THAT REMAIN EMPLACED UPON THE NINE OTHER GOVERNMENT | |
| OFFICIALS ARE STILL FUNCTIONING ACCORDING TO PARAMETERS AND | |
| THEIR SEALS ARE INTACT. THE REMAINING ELEMENTS OF OPERATION | |
| PLAN ANVIL ARE NOW CANCELLED. THE SECURITY LEVEL IS STILL | |
| ENCODED RED PER INTERNAL SECURITY GIVEN THE ONGOING CRIMINAL | |
| CONSPIRACY INVOLVING THE 2020 ELECTION AND THE INSURRECTION OF | |
| JANUARY 6. (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE FOUR). | |
| ATTACHMENTS: | |
| FILE ONE: CURRENT PROGRAM SECURITY 20220407 | |
| FILE TWO: CURRENT MENTAL LOCK STATUS/MENTAL STATUS OF FORMER | |
| POTUS | |
| FILE THREE: MAR A LAGO OPERATIONAL STATUS BRIEF | |
| FILE FOUR: CURRENT STATUS RELEVANT JUDICIAL | |
| INVESTIGATIONS/SECURITY REQUIREMENTS | |
| GYPHSIGNATURES DIRECTORATE RECORDED BELOW | |
| SECRETARY, FIRST ARCHON 19660318-SN227 | |
| DIRECTORATE CONFIRMS FINAL SUMMARY REPORT W/ATTACHMENTS | |
| 20221718-0321 17250GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION - - ACCESS LIST D | |
| ENCODED GLYPHSCRIPT ONLY | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| �----------------------------------- | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION --ACCESS LIST H | |
| ENCODED GLYPHSCRIPT ONLY | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| THIS REPORT CANNOT BE PUT INTO ANY OTHER MEDIA FORM WITHOUT | |
| ARCHON ACCESS PERMISSION. | |
| SCI/SCIF-POTOMAC | |
| SCI/SCIF-PARKHAM | |
| SCI/SCIF-CHEYENNE | |
| ARCHON REPORT 20230417 | |
| ARCHON DIRECTORATE | |
| 20230417 1730GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| [1]ARCHON DIRECTORATE HAS BEEN ADVISED THROUGH THE IKORRCENI | |
| PREFECTURE THAT PSION ADRIAN MACHEATH STEMPLE IS NOW OFF-SYSTEM | |
| AND SHALL NO LONGER BE EMPLOYED FOR FIELD WORK WITHIN THE UNITED | |
| STATES OR IN ANY OTHER COUNTRY ON-PLANET. HIS NEW ASSIGNMENT | |
| INVOLVES STRICTLY INTERSTELLAR ADMINISTRATION. IT IS UNLIKELY | |
| THAT HE SHALL EVER RETURN TO THE UNITED STATES. | |
| [2]PSION VIGIL STEMPLE HAS BEEN ASSIGNED TO THE PREFECTURE OF | |
| PLANET LANTOS 5, FOR THE NEXT TWO YEARS. KNOWN INFORMATION | |
| ABOUT THIS PLANET IS THAT IT HAS A PLEISTOCENE BIOSPHERE AND | |
| THAT IS LACKING ANY ORIGINAL HUMANOID SAPIENTIAL SPECIES. THIS | |
| INFORMATION WAS PROVIDED BY PREFECTURE CONTACT, PSION MARK | |
| EAGLECLAW, IN THE LAST IKORRCENI MEETING (12-2022) CONCERNING | |
| STAR SYSTEMS OF INTEREST TO HUMANITY. | |
| [3]PSION VIGIL STEMPLE WITH HIS COMPANION, PRISCA LOVEC, HAD | |
| VECTORED TO THAT STAR SYSTEM 4 MARCH 2023. PSION MARK EAGLECLAW | |
| ADVISES THAT, PER HIS ASSIGNMENT DUTIES, HE SHALL CONDUCT, AS | |
| NEEDED, PATROL AND CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS. HIS PRIMARY DUTY | |
| STATION WILL BE ON LANTOSMERE, THE CITY FLOATING IN THE SKY OF | |
| THAT PLANET, AND IN THE LANTOSGATE, THE PARADIMENSIONAL BIODOME | |
| THAT IS ASSOCIATED WITH THIS INTERSTELLAR JURISDICTION (CALLED | |
| THE LANTOS GATESTATA). HE MAY ALSO DO DEEP SPACE PATROL WORK | |
| WITHIN THAT JURISDICTION, IN A THREE PERSON STARSHIP. IT HAS | |
| BEEN DISCLOSED THAT VIGIL STEMPLE IS NOT YET RATED FOR | |
| INVESTIGATIVE WORK WITH THE IKORRCENI STARFLEET AND WILL NOT YET | |
| BE ASSIGNED TO THIS TYPE OF DUTY. THIS INFORMATION WAS PROVIDED | |
| BY PERMISSION OF PREFECT AKKO KRYKR SALIC. | |
| [4]PREFECT SALIC ADVISES THAT PSION WARWICK DAVID COTA WILL | |
| REMAIN AVAILABLE FOR THE MAINTENANCE OR REMOVAL OF ALL REMAINING | |
| ACTIVE MIND LOCKS THAT HAVE BEEN EMPLACED ON AMERICAN CITIZENS | |
| AS HAVE BEEN SANCTIONED BY THE AAP FOR PROGRAM SECURITY. | |
| GYPHSIGNATURES DIRECTORATE RECORDED BELOW | |
| FIRST ARCHON 19660318 | |
| SECOND ARCHON 19880211 | |
| THIRD ARCHON 19870104 | |
| FOURTH ARCHON 19991023 | |
| FIFTH ARCHON 19940523 | |
| 20230417 10:22 GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION - - ACCESS LIST H | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| ***************************************************** |