Still no explanation of the origin or merit of newspaper’s vulgar photoshop gallery
Click here for clues. (The immmediate impulse is to dismiss it as a hoax on the part of the Telegraph – bear in mind that bomb hoaxes are punishable by law in the UK.) For hair-raising insights, see: Operation Blackjack Decoded. One of the most interesting and creative interpretations, IMhO, is OPERATION.
Steve Watson
Infowars.net
Thursday, Feb 5th, 2009
The London Telegraph is continuing to run a crude propaganda piece in it’s arts and culture section that depicts nuclear attacks on major cities, the formation of a world government, and a police state crackdown on citizens complete with concentration camps and the implementation of martial law.
As we revealed in our original article, the first installment of the gallery entitled “Operation Blackjack” featured on a section of the Telegraph website dedicated to art, culture, film and music but seemingly held no artistic credence whatsoever, comprising merely of a series of crude pictures designed to instill fear into the viewer.
Part 2, which we covered in a second article, cannot even be considered to have a plot, it just shows a series of major cities being nuked and then amateurish photo-shopped images of Nazi-style symbols on flags and police uniforms.
Now a third installment of the baffling piece depicts the fallout of nuclear attacks on London, New York City, Washington DC, Toronto, Mexico City, Portland, and Los Angeles.
This time the piece has been photoshopped in the style of a comic book, perhaps in a poor attempt to give it the impression that it has some artistic merit. The Telegraph received a great deal of complaints after our first two articles.
One of the first images shows a map marked “Teardrop – Eyes only” which features the flag of the newly formed “Union of North America” (UNA) – a new government composed of America, Canada, Mexico and Britain.
Some men in suits, presumably representatives of the “UNA” are looking at map and “the glasseye reports”, which constitute the scale of destruction wrought on the attacked cities. These men seem to be pleased with situation stating “this has exceeded our wildest expectations” and calling for “phase 2”.
Clearly from this we are supposed to deduce that these men, representatives of the new world government, are somehow involved in the events that have taken place, despite the fact that we were told religious extremist terrorists were the culprits.
(Article continues below)
The next set of images depict an announcement by the UNA to citizens everywhere that the union has begun carrying out military attacks on China, Syria and Iran, who are now apparently somehow also to blame for the earlier nuclear attacks.
Several more images show a state of martial law has been implemented and that concentration camps have been set up to hold collaborators and presumably anyone else who refuses to go along with the program.
Another image shows an “Amero” coin, indicating the creation of a new global currency.
What is the point of “Operation Blackjack”, why does it continue to run in the “arts and culture” section of a major British newspaper?
Is someone’s sick fantasy being afforded exposure on a major UK newspaper website or are we being prepared for something?
Could it be that in the fictionalization of false flag terror, the creation of detention centers and the push for global government, someone is attempting to relegate such real world issues to the pages of a comic book?
As we previously highlighted, the rude and hostile response to people who have attempted to get clarification from the Telegraph only deepens the mystery.
Contact [email protected] and politely ask for clarification on who the author of the piece is, why it continues being run when it obviously has no artistic merit, and if the Telegraph has considered the offense it is causing to people who live in the cities being depicted as victims of nuke attacks.
This article was posted: Thursday, February 5, 2009 at 10:50 am
June 22 came and went, and no nukes were set off
Prisonplanet.com
Wednesday, Jun 23rd, 2010
Remember Operation Blackjack? In early 2009 The London Telegraph mysteriously ran a series of pieces in it’s “culture” section depicting a co-ordinated round of nuclear attacks on major cities, begining in London and moving to New York City, Washington DC, Toronto, Mexico City, Portland, and Los Angeles.
The series began as a crude slideshow of photoshopped mushroom clouds and ended abruptly in a comic strip style several weeks later. This change was perhaps in response to a bombardment of complaints from readers who saw no artistic merit in the depiction of mass slaughter.
As the plot of the piece unfolded it became clear that the attacks were carried out not by extemist terrorists, but by a cabal of elite wannabe rulers intent on instituting a global police state and usurping control of the planet under the auspices of protecting its population from more destruction.
Their devious plan was seemingly foiled in the end by the prevention of another flase flag attack and by police and military unwilling to be the enforcers of a facist new world order.
Here is the five part series in full as a youtube video:
As the months passed by and the dates highlighted in the Blackjack series came ever closer, the piece which had promised “to be continued” morphed into a wider web phenomenon, with strange sites popping up, linked to the comic strip.
There were hidden hexidecimal codes, and other weird symbols in the piece that proved it was not simply hastily slapped together, but was intended to provoke thought and attract attention.
Readers were divided between whether the piece was a complete distraction, a real warning of an active agenda, or some kind of attempt to fictionalize false flag terrorism in order to either bring serious attention to it, or, on the flip side, to make it seem ridiculous and juvenile.
Amateurish photographs of unknown locations in London and all the other cities that had been attacked in the fiction piece were posted, prompting a fervored online scramble to identify what city and what area of that city were being shown.
The small but dedicated group who had followed Blackjack’s mysterious development and had enagaged in intense debate about what it all meant suddenly became the only people who could possibly prevent mass nuclear genocide. People were drawn in, some even began calling MI5 in panic.
Blackjack was the perfect hook, if scripted correctly it would put the recent batch of Hollywood conspiracy thrillers (think Knowing, The Number 23 etc etc) to shame. A Blackjack movie would play on the real life underground conspiracy that the piece has engendered.
The Prisonplanet.com forum now has a section devoted entirely to the Blackjack project, with members still musing on its meaning. One thread, started on June 17 last year has since attracted over 63,000 views and counting.
The overriding question remains – why was this thing published on the website of a major British newspaper?
Those who had “deciphered” the codes within it decided that the dates highlighted in Blackjack were for 2010 and 2011, the first of those being June 22 – yesterday.
Thankfully we can report that no nukes went off in London yesterday – phew.
Was that because the Blackjack piece provided forewarning? Probably not. However, the episode of X-files spin off Lone Gunmen, aired months prior to 9/11 – a depiction of the exact scenario of the attack, carried out by shady elements of intelligence and government, only to be foiled at the last minute – highlights that these kind of prior warning pieces have been used before.
There is no doubt that Operation Blackjack, whether you love it, loathe it or are indifferent to it has now become embedded in internet conspiracy theory culture.
This article was posted: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 at 5:33 am