Note below, the two excerpts* taken from my previous post of January 24th entitled, 55.55; W.W; Double You; Discrimination (Here):
After the January 24th post I decided to further investigate the plight of black pilots during World War I and II. Note this next excerpt taken from Wikipedia:
It seems that Identical Number Sequences hounded the life (and death) of Eugene Bullard as well, note the following other excerpt from his wiki page:
Note as well, the mention of another black combat pilot of WWI-- Ahmet Ali Çelikten, and in particular note this excerpt taken from his wiki page:
As you can see by the second excerpt, the 22.2% can be regarded as another addition to the pattern of Identical Number Sequences as mentioned in the first excerpt. Because of this, I decided to continue following on the line of research that this statistic indicates-- Discrimination. This brings me to another Regiment of WWII that I have since learned about recently: The Tuskagee Airmen.
Note the following excerpt regarding Tuskegee Airmen from a website(Here), and in particular, note the consistent pattern of Identical Number Sequences:
Note this Wikipedia excerpt from the web site (Here):
Why is it that much of women's history ... where they rise up and find their voice against discrimination... against other women even, gets downplayed?! Reminds me of the "invisible women" -- Armed Forces wives united to form their own voice against discrimination. My mother was an "invisible woman"-- she suffered the humiliating and abusive situation of being an Armed Forces wife-- cruelly "invisible"... rejected in ways that sicken me today. I believe the type of torture my mother endured during her stint as an Armed Forces wife, which was further heightened due to her and my father being from the minority "Acadian" group in Canada, had led to her breakdown... had led to her being diagnosed wrongly as manic depressive... led to psychiatrists administering the highly addictive drug "Valium" to her. By this means, they shut her up, as well as so many other women who were breaking down... and on the verge of properly fighting back. The drug Valium robbed me of my mother from the age of 11, who spent the most part of my childhood (and my siblings) in various mental institutions (where ever my father had been stationed). After I had grown to adulthood, they rediagnosed my mother as being bi-polar and thus she went through detoxification-- a procedure that according to her account, lasted 9 months... 9 months of incredible pain of withdrawal. After this time, my mother was put on the drug "lithium", which although still numbing certain parts of her brain, at least she is able to function in the outside world. In other words, my children could at least enjoy the benefit of having their grandmother-- such a wonderful vibrant woman.
The authorities and psychiatrists are constantly looking for ways of digging themselves out of their own hole. Constantly trying to find new ways of keeping people from rising up against oppressive forces that continually attempt to exploit and enslave them.
In light of the other pattern that has occurred as of late in regards to the name/word "Brown" (and diminutives), it's interesting to note one of the greatest achievements toward black freedom, had come by battling the State-sponsored school segregation and declaring it as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1954 in Brown v. Board of Education.
UPDATE (January 27):
Since the trail has led us to women. Note this excerpt from Wikipedia Article (Here), and note in particular her date of birth-- January 26... that was yesterday, the same day of this post.
Note as well, her last name Coleman, fits in with the "coal"/"cole" cluster of patterns that has occurred as of late, not to mention "Elizabeth" as well via the etymology of "beth"-- meaning "house" in origin (also the name as our letter B)..
*For reasons that I won't go into detail except to say that my January 19 th post (Here) included a series of patterns other than identical number sequences. The patterns were clusters included : Flying Aces; Pilots; Color; Gays; and Brown.
I decided to begin by researching Flying Aces who were of African descent... hence brown. Note the following:
Jesse LeRoy Brown (13 October 1926 – 4 December 1950) was the first African-American naval aviator in the United States Navy, a recipient of the Distinguished Flying Cross, and the first naval officer killed in the Korean War.So what are the chances that his surname would be "Brown".
*When I look at the cluster group once again, I think of discrimination. How Gays and Blacks have been discriminated against. Note this excerpt that I then found:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_African_Americans Of the 48,603 blue discharges issued by the Army between December 1, 1941 and June 30, 1945, 10,806 were issued to African Americans. This accounts for 22.2% of all blue discharges, when African Americans made up just 6.5% of the Army in that time frame.[36]
After the January 24th post I decided to further investigate the plight of black pilots during World War I and II. Note this next excerpt taken from Wikipedia:
Note the following excerpts from Bullard's wiki page:Before the Tuskegee Airmen, no African American had been a U.S. military pilot. In 1917, African-American men had tried to become aerial observers, but were rejected.[5] African American Eugene Bullard served in the French air service during World War I, because he was not allowed to serve in an American unit. Instead, Bullard returned to infantry duty with the French.[6]
Eugene Bullard
- Eugene Jacques Bullard was the first African American military pilot.[1] He was one of two black combat pilots in World War I with Ahmet Ali Çelikten.
- He then became a pilot in the Lafayette Flying Corps in the French Aéronautique Militaire
It seems that Identical Number Sequences hounded the life (and death) of Eugene Bullard as well, note the following other excerpt from his wiki page:
- On 23 August 1994, thirty-three years after his death, and seventy-seven years to the day after the physical that should have allowed him to fly for his own country, Eugene Bullard was posthumously commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the United States Air Force.
- He died in New York City of stomach cancer on October 12, 1961 at age 66.[1]
Ahmet Ali |
Ahmet Ali Çelikten may have been the first black military pilot in aviation history[4] and the only black pilot in World War I a with Eugene Jacques Bullard. His grandmother came from Bornu (now in Nigeria) as a slave.[4][5]He too had been descended from slaves, residing in Turkey.
As you can see by the second excerpt, the 22.2% can be regarded as another addition to the pattern of Identical Number Sequences as mentioned in the first excerpt. Because of this, I decided to continue following on the line of research that this statistic indicates-- Discrimination. This brings me to another Regiment of WWII that I have since learned about recently: The Tuskagee Airmen.
Note the following excerpt regarding Tuskegee Airmen from a website(Here), and in particular, note the consistent pattern of Identical Number Sequences:
- Tuskegee Army Air Field, located at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, was the training center for all black fighter pilots during World War II.
- Congress activated the all-black 99th Fighter Squadron on March 22, 1941.
- 66 of the Tuskegee aviators died in combat.
- 33 Tuskegee Airmen became prisoners of war.
- None of the bombers they escorted was lost to enemy fighters.
- They flew 15,533 sorties between May, 1943 and June 9, 1945.
- White American pilots were not allowed to fly more than 52 missions, but black American pilots often flew up to 100 missions due to lack of replacements.
- The all-black 477th bomber group was activated and scheduled to
- fight in the Pacific, but the war ended before their deployment.
The definite pattern involving Identical Number Sequences is astounding!! I should point out at this time, that although I haven't verified any of the above stats from the site, I have no reason to believe them untrue or not properly researched, and regardless, nor is it necessary for the purpose of this post and/or mandate of this blog to provide proof, what is important, is that the patterns have surfaced whether proved true or otherwise. Another incredible pattern that occurred in relation to the site, is in regards to a list of related books, where one in particular stood out, note the following excerpt:
Double V: The Civil Rights Struggle of the Tuskegee Airmenby Lawrence P. Scott, William M. WomackPaperback - 322 pages (December 1998)Michigan State Univ Pr
Note the reference of Double V in the books title, and then note this next excerpt taken from my previous post:
- On April 12, 1945, the United States Army Air Force arrested 101 African-American officers. They were charged with disobeying a direct order from a superior officer - a charge that carried the death penalty upon conviction. They had refused to sign an order that would have placed them in segregated housing and recreational facilities. The central theme of Double V is the promise held out to African-American military personnel that World War II would deliver to them a double victory, or "double v" - over tyranny abroad and racial prejudice at home. Book details how 101 Tuskegee Airmen, by refusing to live in segregated quarters, triggered one of the most significant judicial proceedings in U.S. military history. Double V uses oral accounts and government documents to portray this little-known struggle by one of America's most celebrated flying units.
The thing I find most peculiar about number 5 is that the roman numeral is V, and if you transpose the 5 for V in 55.55, you get "VV.VV"... or you can look at it another way: W.W a set of W's... "double U"... or as another way of saying it ... DOUBLE YOU!!
Of course what I failed to mention in the above, butt have mentioned in previous posts, is that the French pronunciation of "W", is equivalent to saying "Double V" in English.
What I'm reminded of at this point is the French saying "C'est la vie" (pronounced: say la vee); directly translated, this means "It is life". So, the French word "vie" (vee) which means "life", in a cryptic way can be equated with the letter "V" as found in French "W" (pronounced double V) in much the same way that I had equated in my previous post, our English word "you" with the letter "U" as found in English W (pronounced double U).
It's a bit of a tongue twister... and mind twister. Essentially, what we get from the two versions as translated in English, is a cryptic "double you" and "double life". Now then note this next excerpt taken again, from my previous post:
Now, with that in mind read the following taken from the header of my Toumai Blog:
So, how much more proof does one need to finally come to accept that each of us are nott only "double you's", butt we are "double lives"... two lives living in what only "appears" to be a single body. Essentially we have two worlds... an inner world that runs parallel to our outer world. For the first time in history we are able to see this truth more clearly. What we have long considered to be "our" subconscious mind, is really that of our inner twin who are able to influence our thoughts and actions in such a way that distinct and obvious patterns such as what you see in the above, occur. These patterns are generated by inner twin's working together in a way that we are oblivious to, butt can now see because they are effectively at this point in time, revealing these patterns in such a way that the truth can no longer be denied. The patterns form a "coded" message/language, one that the inner twin world implement in order to achieve their goal-- to come out and communicate to us in our outer twin world.
- The Genetic discovery of "Tetragametic Chimera humans", reveals that parts of our body can belong to a twin. This gives room to consider the subconscious as belonging to a twin. The research involved in this blog and my new Pronoiasecret blog provides evidence that proves what "appears" to be synchronicity in many cases, are patterns generated by inner twin's working together in a bid to "come out" as well as "communicate" to us at this point in time.
Note this Wikipedia excerpt from the web site (Here):
African American: Double V campaignParticipants in the Double V campaign, 1942. From the collection of the National Archives and Records Administration.So as you can see, it appears that women were also involved in this Double V Campaign and perhaps it had even began via their efforts.
The African American community in the United States resolved on a Double V Campaign: Victory over fascism abroad, and victory over discrimination at home. Large numbers migrated from poor Southern farms to munitions centers. Racial tensions were high in overcrowded cities like Chicago; Detroit and Harlem experienced race riots in 1943.[41] Black newspapers created the Double V Campaign to build black morale and head off radical action.[42]Most Black women had been farm laborers or domestics before the war.[43] Despite discrimination and segregated facilities throughout the South, they escaped the cotton patch and took blue-collar jobs in the cities. Working with the federal Fair Employment Practices Committee, the NAACP and CIO unions, these Black women fought a “Double V” campaign—against the Axis abroad and against restrictive hiring practices at home. Their efforts redefined citizenship, equating their patriotism with war work, and seeking equal employment opportunities, government entitlements, and better working conditions as conditions appropriate for full citizens.[44] In the South black women worked in segregated jobs; in the West and most of the North they were integrated, but wildcat strikes erupted in Detroit, Baltimore, and Evansville where white migrants from the South refused to work alongside black women.[45][46]
Why is it that much of women's history ... where they rise up and find their voice against discrimination... against other women even, gets downplayed?! Reminds me of the "invisible women" -- Armed Forces wives united to form their own voice against discrimination. My mother was an "invisible woman"-- she suffered the humiliating and abusive situation of being an Armed Forces wife-- cruelly "invisible"... rejected in ways that sicken me today. I believe the type of torture my mother endured during her stint as an Armed Forces wife, which was further heightened due to her and my father being from the minority "Acadian" group in Canada, had led to her breakdown... had led to her being diagnosed wrongly as manic depressive... led to psychiatrists administering the highly addictive drug "Valium" to her. By this means, they shut her up, as well as so many other women who were breaking down... and on the verge of properly fighting back. The drug Valium robbed me of my mother from the age of 11, who spent the most part of my childhood (and my siblings) in various mental institutions (where ever my father had been stationed). After I had grown to adulthood, they rediagnosed my mother as being bi-polar and thus she went through detoxification-- a procedure that according to her account, lasted 9 months... 9 months of incredible pain of withdrawal. After this time, my mother was put on the drug "lithium", which although still numbing certain parts of her brain, at least she is able to function in the outside world. In other words, my children could at least enjoy the benefit of having their grandmother-- such a wonderful vibrant woman.
The authorities and psychiatrists are constantly looking for ways of digging themselves out of their own hole. Constantly trying to find new ways of keeping people from rising up against oppressive forces that continually attempt to exploit and enslave them.
In light of the other pattern that has occurred as of late in regards to the name/word "Brown" (and diminutives), it's interesting to note one of the greatest achievements toward black freedom, had come by battling the State-sponsored school segregation and declaring it as unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1954 in Brown v. Board of Education.
UPDATE (January 27):
Since the trail has led us to women. Note this excerpt from Wikipedia Article (Here), and note in particular her date of birth-- January 26... that was yesterday, the same day of this post.
Elizabeth "Bessie" Coleman (January 26, 1892 – April 30, 1926) was an American civil aviator. She was the first female pilot of African American descent[1] and the first person of African American descent to hold aninternational pilot license.[2][3]
Note as well, her last name Coleman, fits in with the "coal"/"cole" cluster of patterns that has occurred as of late, not to mention "Elizabeth" as well via the etymology of "beth"-- meaning "house" in origin (also the name as our letter B)..
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