Operation Brownstone and Operation Brownstar -- CIA's Network Abuse of Minors in Blackmail Leverage Arbitrage ('nambla' backronym)
58 2017-01-20 by browneyeofprovidence
Operation Brownstone
The CIA embroils politicians in sex scandals involving minors and then surreptitiously records it. They then use this as blackmail leverage to puppeteer the politician. They do this with business executives, activist leaders, celebrities and other public figures including news anchors. If they go against the CIA, their reputation is destroyed by a doxx and other scandalous revelating (Brian Williams, Dennis Hastert, Bill Cosby, etc). Now these people are not innocent. They did something bad, but there is an intelligence incentive to do this, which in some cases may very well blur the line between criminality and entrapment.
People such as Epstein and Alephantis, who have unusual amounts of political power, whose aquisition cannot be explained or is ill-gotten by some mean beyond simply money or 'social networking' (no one is that likeable), are very likely people working as contractors or within the agencies to blackmail people. They are more like private eyes who found very powerful dirt on other very powerful people.
Here is more information on this activity, which is synonymous with "brownstown operations", which has come to mean blackmail leverage.
- George Webb explains Browstone operations
- Corbett Eye Opener: The Real Hastert Scandal
- Possible LASK link to diplomats
- https://underthegrayline.wordpress.com/tag/operation-brownstone/
- https://steemit.com/pizzagate/@azra/day-68-where-is-eric-braverman-or-long-island-serial-killer
- http://www.neonnettle.com/features/414-did-george-hw-bush-really-run-a-child-prostitution-ring-in-the-80s-
- http://shermsays.blogspot.com/2009/07/early-brownstone-operation-sex-and.html
What's in a Name?
If you decide to research this, you may want to remember the name of the operations before proceeding. I've devised an easy mnemonic.
Brownstar should be easy to remember, because an anus or browneye is often drawn simplistically as an asterisk in cartoons.
Brownstone not so much, except that when you kill--say, a child--that you've raped, it's known that it will defecate itself, and therefore, it's best to kill them atop a megalith, so that you get bonus for 'browning the stone', a ritual-slaying-points for paying homage our polytheistic anglopagan, celtic and druidic ancestors.
Also I think blood turns brown on stone.
If you think I'm being hyperbolic, you aren't reading the stuff I am. For the intrepid researcher I will say, beware, black waters are ahead of you. But keep in mind, the truth is a light that can never be subdued.
9 comments
n/a freedmason 2017-01-20
Once you understand this, you'll stop coming up with coincidence theories about pizzagate. This is ROUTINE for politicians.
n/a fadedmouse 2017-01-20
Everyone is a puppet, or at least enough that the "real boys" don't matter. The government as we know it is all smoke and mirrors.
n/a ericN 2017-01-20
How long before George Webb's stuff gets taken down? It's amazing how far and deep this runs. Watching his "Where is Eric Braverman?" series, it seems that pizzagate is but a small fraction of the goings on.
n/a Goddaqs 2017-01-20
"Brownstar" really?
n/a sheasie 2017-01-20
"announced" at /r/CIA
n/a jonnywut 2017-01-20
This theory fits the idea that the pizzagate response was totally unprofessional yet clearly backed by power.
n/a [deleted] 2017-01-20
[removed]
n/a 911bodysnatchers322 2017-01-20
Sorry, QC, I missed your comment I guess 3 wks ago. Sorry to come back to it (necropost) but to answer your question, according to George Webb (cliff notes part 13), he mentions that Tyler Drumheller had something to do with the Finders case and Paul Rodriguez is a journalist who met with George who was an expert in the original Finders case.
Apparently it's a brownstone, just as you suspected. It's one of the first that we can point to very far back, and it turns out they've just been wash-rinse-repeating the same operations since.
n/a quantumcipher 2017-01-20
All good. Interesting to see the correlation, though not exactly surprising at this point.