[Laura Magdalene Eisenhower] Whistleblower Laura Magdalene Eisenhower, Ike’s great-granddaughter, outs secret Mars colony project
In a public statement, Laura Magdalene Eisenhower, great-granddaughter of former President Dwight David Eisenhower (1890-1969), has exposed her attempted recruitment from April 2006 through January 2007 by a secret Mars colony project.
Ms. Eisenhower’s account of her targeting by time travel surveillance and attempted manipulation by trained intelligence agents attached to a Mars colony project was revealed in an ExopoliticsRadio.org interview, and in an extensive written statement at Ms. Eisenhower’s website.
Ki’ Lia, a Stanford-educated artist, futurist and colleague of Ms. Eisenhower, has provided a corroborating first hand witness account of her and Ms. Eisenhower’s attempted recruitment into a secret human survival colony on Mars, available at Ki’ Lia’s website.
The alleged purpose of the secret Mars colony was to provide a survival civilization for the Earthling human race in the event of planned (such as HAARP or bio-weapon induced) or natural cataclysm (such as by solar flares) which would depopulate the Earth. Both Ms. Eisenhower and Ki’ Lia identify Dr. Harold E. (Hal) Puthoff, a former researcher at Stanford Research Institute, as a behind the scenes coordinator of the secret Mars colony project.
In revealing these secret Mars colony plans, Ms. Eisenhower and Ki’ Lia have emerged to join a growing cadre of independent whistleblowers disclosing secret technologies and extraterrestrial-related covert operations of U.S. military-intelligence agencies and corporate entities.
[Tony Shaffer] Shaffer was born to a Jewish family in Liverpool, the son of Reka (born Fredman) and Jack Shaffer, who was an estate agent with his wife's family.[1][2] He was the identical twin brother of writer and dramatist Peter Shaffer, elders of Brian. He graduated with a law degree from Trinity College, Cambridge.
Shaffer's most notable work was Sleuth (1970), which he adapted for the film version of the same name, and starred Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine, and was Oscar nominated. He received Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America for both versions: for Best Play in 1971, and Best Screenplay in 1973. His other major screenplays include the Hitchcock thriller Frenzy (1972) and the British cult thriller The Wicker Man (1973) with whose director, Robin Hardy, Shaffer had previously set up a television production company Hardy, Shaffer & Associates 47 Catherine Place London SW1 TAT 2755 & 8134. A major theme in Shaffer's work is the playing of psychological games between people. His two best known works - Sleuth and The Wicker Man - both revolve around this idea; so do his lesser known credits Murder by Confusion and Rebearth.
FUNERAL ADDRESS FOR TONY given by Sir Peter Shaffer CBE 12 November 2001 Highgate Cemetery 2PM GMT All rights reserved. "I come here unprepared,- because the truth is I could never be prepared for this. It is too harsh a task for me, or, I would think, for most people. As twins, we shared the same First Home, the Womb; then the same school; then the same experience of coal-mining, in the Second World War; the same University,- and eventually the same Profession, And how enthusiastically Tony pursued that is known to you all. He was the most gleeful of Playwrights, and also - to coin what I hope is a new word - of Scriptwrights: the suffix W.R.I.G.H.T. implying the careful hammering out of work, which no one respected more than he. "I've got to do a hand's turn now" he would say, going off to his desk ... and there he hammered out the baroque filigree of his intricate best pieces, with glittering skill—then used an equal skill, to conceal the laboure, and ensure above all the amazement of his audience. The Oxford Dictionary defines the word 'Prestidigitation' beautifully as 'formal magic tricks performed as entertainment'". Add the words brilliant Verbal and Narrative" then you have Tony's style in essence. He was a consummate Prestidigitator. It was the pride of his writing life. Every one of his stage games - now witty, now wicked - was constructed solely for our intelligent delight:--- From him to us, with glee. That colossal glee in pursuing his craft extended into his personal life, and made him irresistible to so many people as a man. There were kindled by him - exhilarated - some times, let it be said, enraged - but far more often, enthralled. His public presence is out there for all all to share. His private presence in my own life is impossible for me to share. I was Petie to him and he was Tonay to me, in response. And these slight distortions of our names actually denoted the chaffing intimacy of two complex, contrasting but endlessly corresponding spirits. Though very different in our personal lives and loves, and for very long periods separated by thousands of miles in different homes and countries, we were inextricably part of each other. And I can only tell you that under all that quirky bluffness of his I felt from him always and always an ever-burning and never wavering lovingkindness that at some moments I'm sure I scarcely deserved. He was always my elder brother - although just by five minutes - and always with a firm arm around my shoulder, should I wish it. When it came to physical suffering, in his last ghastly few years, he was the bravest of the brave - a quality which his less stalwart brother could not hope to emulate. All of us in his family will bear this out, and all now feel a loss impossible to put into words. In this I know I speak for his our beloved joint brother Brian; my dearest nieces Claudia and Cressida; and their grreat and wonderous mother Carolyn; and of course his rightly celebrated wife Diane Cilento who is present today among us. When I was writing this out yesterday a lady friend of mine came into the room and enquired kindly "Have you finised with that yet?" And I thought to myself - "Never. Thank God." May an awaiting and merciful God please receive Tony's soul - and be gleeful too at the receiving. I have been given some honours in this world, but only one of them is irreplaceable: to have been his Brother."