President Obama Feels the MK-Ultra Gate Heat During the Royal

President Obama Feels the MK-Ultra Gate Heat During
the Royal Family State Dinner
Canada’s Sovereign and her Family have been staunch supporters of
coalition interests and objectives since diplomacy began in early 2004.
So it was not unexpected that when President Obama visited HRH
Queen Elizabeth that something would be done to put him on notice
that his egregious violations of American and international law would
not be tolerated.
There was no predicting with accuracy what was going to occur during the
President’s visit to the United Kingdom; only that there was a strong
probability that something would to show him his continuing the Bush
administration policy of secretly piggybacking on the R&D program and
acquiescing in Chinada - the profound existential threat to the peace,
security and prosperity of the 21st century - would be challenged.
During the State Dinner as the U.S. leader delivered his prepared remarks
the Queen’s husband, HRH the Duck of Edinburgh, not surprisingly effected a
protracted Execution M. [CSPAN @ 12:40] to “From that day to this you
have been our closest partner” (video), which speaks volumes for the chilly
relations between Buckingham Palace and the White House.
Then to make matters more substantively worse the band broke into ‘God
Save the Queen’ as he was delivering his toast to Her Majesty, which was
intended to make him uncomfortable. And from the expression on his face
when realizing he’d just been embarrassed over his complicity his facial
expression said it all.
View video
Obama's toast to the queen interrupted by the orchestra
CNN Wire
May 24, 2011
Read article
London (CNN) -- President Barack Obama's toast to Queen Elizabeth II
on Tuesday was interrupted when the orchestra at the state dinner
began playing "God Save the Queen" before Obama finished.
Following the queen's toast to him and the playing of the U.S. national
anthem, Obama began his toast by thanking her and commenting on
her reign and the close ties between their countries. The president
then asked the guests to stand and join him in toasting the queen.
"To Her Majesty the Queen," Obama began, but the orchestra -apparently thinking the president had concluded -- started playing the
British anthem.
Obama continued with his toast, speaking over the music in citing the
special relationship between the British and American people and
quoting William Shakespeare's tribute to "to this blessed plot, this
earth, this realm, this England" from "Richard II."
"To the queen," Obama concluded as the music played on. When the
music ended, Obama repeated, "to the queen," and the audience,
clearly confused by the turn of events, delayed a few seconds before
applauding.
What also got wide coverage in the U.S. and was also instantly interpreted
as him trying to mitigate the MK-Ultra snowball was how he signed a guest
registry.
Obama flubs in guest book, dates visit "2008"
by Stephanie Condon
CBS News
May 24, 2011
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President Obama slipped up when he signed the guest book at
Westminster Abbey in London today. Perhaps reminiscing over more
exciting times for him, the president mistakenly wrote the date as "24
May 2008."
Above the date, Mr. Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama wrote, "It
is a great privilege to commemorate our common heritage, and
common sacrifice."
A Westminster Abbey spokesperson confirmed it was indeed Mr.
Obama who wrote the wrong date, the Telegraph reports.
For Obama, 2008 forever?
by Alicia Jennings
NBC News
May 24, 2011
Read article
When President Obama signed the guest book at Westminster Abbey
today, he placed the date from before he was even president. After
inscribing the book with the words, "It is a great privilege to
commemorate our common heritage, and common sacrifices," he and
the first lady placed their signatures. And the president wrote dated
his entry "24 May 2008" -- today's date, but only three years earlier.
It is the accumulation of these events and growing angst over what is now
inevitable viz. a Watergate-style resignation that one understands how he
reacts when the use of the lexicon is employed in his presence.