Jim Morrison
[back] Music
Military connection
I met the Spirit of Music. . . . An appearance of the devil in a Venice canal. Running, I saw a Satan or Satyr, moving beside me, a fleshly shadow of my secret mind, . . - Jim Morrison
I believe in Morrison's incantations. Break on through. Kill the pigs. Destroy. Loot. F*** your mother. All that s***. Anything goes. Anything. - Oliver Stone
[2000] Mind Control in the Field of Art by Wes Penre
[vid] David McGowan, Military Industrial Entertainment in Laurel Canyon, Trans Resister Radio interview David McGowan talks about his article series Inside the LC: The Strange but Mostly True Story of Laurel Canyon and the Birth of the Hippie Generation
Book
[2000] Music of Time by Preston Nichols Most of the world believes Jim
Morrison died in 1971. From an objective point of view, the coroner's report
raised more questions that it answered, but I person-ally know that Morrison did
not die. He took some combination of drugs and alcohol and became catatonic. He
was more of a vegetable than a human being at that point. To the best of my
knowledge, there was a meeting of producers who discussed what to do about their
fallen rock star. Keep in mind, Morrison was viewed as a god in some circles.
The producers reportedly came to a conclusion that his music would probably sell
well if he had died as opposed to being confined to an institution. The best
solution was to fake his death.
Quotes
Timing is a curious thing. When I first started this series in May of 2008,
the fact that Jim Morrison’s father had served as the commander of the ships
involved in the Gulf of Tonkin ‘incident’ had gone virtually unreported for some
four-and-a-half decades. Readers were shocked – shocked, I tell you! – when I
began this series by trotting out that revelation. Some even accused me of
making it up, or of somehow twisting the facts.
But as fate would have it, as December of 2008 rolled around, the mainstream
media was suddenly awash with reports of the unusual Morrison family connection.
On December 8, for example, the Los Angeles Times carried a report on Admiral
George Stephen Morrison, described therein as “a retired Navy rear admiral and
the father of the late rock icon Jim Morrison.” According to the Times report,
“Morrison had a long career that included serving as operations officer aboard
the aircraft carrier Midway and commanding the fleet during the 1964 Gulf of
Tonkin incident, which led to an escalation of American involvement in Vietnam.”
(emphasis added)
The very next day, on December 9, the New York Times followed suit with a report
by William Grimes: “George S. Morrison, who commanded the fleet during the Gulf
of Tonkin incident that led to an escalation of the Vietnam War and whose son
Jim was the lead singer of the Doors … Aboard the flagship carrier Bon Homme
Richard, Mr. Morrison commanded American naval forces in the gulf when the
destroyer Maddox engaged three North Vietnamese torpedo boats on Aug. 2, 1964. A
skirmish and confused reports of a second engagement two days later led
President Lyndon B. Johnson to order airstrikes against North Vietnam and to
request from Congress what became known as the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, allowing
him to carry out further military operations without declaring war.” (emphasis
again added) Part XIII
Inside The LC: The Strange but Mostly True Story
of Laurel Canyon and the Birth of the Hippie Generation
The Doors Singer Jim Morrison used the occult code name Lizard King and The Exterminating Angel. He was involved with mind control.12: SCIENCE No. 12-EXTERNAL CONTROLS Deeper Insights into the Illuminati Formula