This Video Requires a  FREE  Participant Membership or Higher

  

Mae Brussell Channeled by Karl Mollison 22Jan2019

From https://feralhouse.com/the-essential-mae-brussell/ & https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mae_Brussell

Mae Magnin Brussell May 29, 1922 – October 3, 1988 was an American radio personality. 

She was born in Beverly Hills, California. Her father, Edgar Magnin, was a Reform rabbi at the Wilshire Boulevard Temple. Her paternal great-grandparents, Isaac Magnin and Mary Ann Magnin, were the founders of I. Magnin, an upscale women’s clothing store in San Francisco, California. 

She attended Stanford University in Palo Alto and received an Associate degree from the University of California, Berkeley. 

Distraught by the murder of President Kennedy, she purchased all 26 printed volumes issued by the Warren Commission report, and attempted to make sense of them by cross-indexing the entire work. Mae was disturbed by the contradictory information and unreported realities she discovered. 

As a result, she subscribed to many major newspapers and magazines, whose stories she filed and organized, uncovering connections and patterns behind government and corporate malfeasance that she found disturbing. 

Her career in radio started in May 1971, when as a guest on the independently owned radio station KLRB, she questioned the 26-volume Warren Commission Hearings. She suggested Lee Harvey Oswald might not have been the only person involved in the assassination of the president. 

She became a weekly guest. 

Shortly after, she became the host of Dialogue: Conspiracy, later renamed World Watchers International. 

From 1983 to 1988, she hosted the same show on KAZU, a radio station based in Pacific Grove, CA. 

Additionally, she wrote articles that were published in The Realist, a magazine published by Paul Krassner. An impressed John Lennon donated money so Krassner could afford to print Mae Brussel’s work. She also published articles in Hustler, People’s Almanac, and the Berkeley Barb. 

Brussell was profiled on episode six of Slate’s Slow Burn podcast. She was married, and had five children. 

She inspired an entire generation of anti-Fascist conspiratorial investigations. 

“Mae’s work may be more relevant now than in her heyday. Like those of many other freedom fighters throughout history, the ghost of Mae Brussell will never rest till justice is served.”—Tim Cahill 

“The main Brussell thesis, if I dare risk commit the sin of summary on her complex work, was that an ex-Nazi scientist-Old Boy OSS clique in the CIA using Mafia hit men changed the course of American history by bumping off one and all, high and low, who became an irritant to them.”—Warren Hinkle, San Francisco Examiner columnist 

She remained on the air weekly until her final broadcast in June 1988. She died of cancer on October 3, 1988 in Carmel, California. 

See https://www.maebrussell.com/Mae%20Brussell%20Articles/Mind%20of%20Mae%20Brussell.html

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *