"Black Sunday" Averted
(Conspiracy Nation, 02/10/08) – In 1977 the movie “Black Sunday” premiered. In the film, a demented war veteran (Bruce Dern) plots to kill thousands of Americans at the Superbowl in Miami by using a specially designed dart-gun from the Goodyear blimp which flies above the stadium. A week ago, Sunday, Feb. 3, 2008, fiction almost became reality. Reportedly, Kurt William Havelock, a restaurateur who was enraged over being denied a liquor license, had well-thought out plans to kill as many people as he could at Super Bowl XLII. (“Shocking Plot Revealed: Super Bowl Massacre Averted”, by Jon Shanks. The National Ledger, Feb. 9, 2008)
For some reason, news of the almost massacre took about four days to be made known to the public. The earliest report on the Havelock incident found by Conspiracy Nation is dated Feb. 7th, four days after the alleged near-disaster.
One report says Havelock, besides being armed with an assault rifle and two-hundred rounds of ammunition, also had “pipe bombs” in his possession. Days before the recent Super Bowl, neighbors had called police after they noticed “pipe bombs” in Havelock's garbage. (“FBI: Man With Pipe Bombs Planned To Kill Fans At Super Bowl,” Orlando News, Feb. 8, 2008)
Jack Cloonan, a former FBI special agent, mentions there were sharpshooters in place and “helicopters up” which would have made it difficult for Havelock to have gone forward with his alleged plan. (“Former Agent: Super Bowl Incident Should Be Wake Up Call,” by Jon Zimney. KTAR, Feb. 9, 2008)
The delayed-by-four-days release of the Havelock news coincided with an unprecedented “zombie eruption” which occurred on February 7th and 8th. (“'Release The Zombies'”, http://www.shout.net/~bigred/Zombies.html)
The 1977 film, “Black Sunday,” was directed by John Frankenheimer. He also directed the 1962 movie, “The Manchurian Candidate.” In that film, Staff Sergeant Raymond Shaw, the son of Elanor Iselin, wife of US Senator John Yerkes Iselin, is revealed to be a mind-controlled zombie. “Manchurian Candidate” was based on a novel by Richard Condon. Condon, according to the Wikipedia reference, wrote several books, some of which “are perhaps best described as secret history.”
An attack on the Super Bowl would have been the ultimate blasphemy. Controversial author Julius Evola (1898-1974) described how, in ancient Rome, their “sacred games” assumed the character of res divinae. It was “dangerous” to neglect the sacred games (negligere sacra certamina). The olden sacred games “have been replaced today by contemporary sports and by the plebeian infatuation with them.” An attack on the Super Bowl would have been an outrage against the gods. (Also notice how Roman numerals particularize various Super Bowls.) (“Revolt Against The Modern World,” by Julius Evola. Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions, 1995)
Conspiracy Nation
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