Smithsonian
The Smithsonian Institute is an institution with black sun IHS symbol of the jesuit order, founded by the US government in Washington DC in 1846, with James Smithson (Royal Society) as donor and John Quincy Adams (Phi Beta Kappa), Andrew Jackson, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson (Sons of Liberty), jesuit Marquis de Lafayette as members. It is part of the corrupt establishment of the art scene and Science Church, promoting unscientific dogma's like the Big Bang Theory, Darwinism, Relatvity Theory. It is closely associated and interwoven with the corrupt education system and controls 19 museums, 21 libraries. |
The logo was designed Robert Dale Owen, who played a role in the spiritualism trend and the abolitionist movement with Abraham Lincoln. He oversaw the building of the Smithsonian in Washington DC near the obelisk, designed by James Renwick (part of Gothic revival), who also designed the building of City College NY. He worked as a US diplomat under president Franklin Pierce. His father Robert Owen introduced the 8 hour working day and was involved in socialist-communist experiments.
James Smithson was related to arms dealer Marcellus Hartley who with Joseph Seligman (profit from the American Civil War and railroad companies), Jacob Schiff (railroad empire with Edward Harriman) and Robert Cutting (Union Club, NYSE) founded the Continental Bank of NY.
Industrialist Alexander Graham Bell (AT&T, National Geographic Society) was a regent of the Smithsonian. The Cosmos Club of John Wesley Powell (vice-president of the AAAS) in Washington was used for meetings of the 33 National Geographic trustee's.
1st secretary Joseph Henry promoted abolitionists during the American Civil War and was also the 1st president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and 2nd president of the National Academy of Sciences, created by Abraham Lincoln.
He founded the Philosophical Society of Washington in 1871.
3d secretary Samuel Langley was 7th president of the AAAS and a professor at University of Pittsburgh and member of the American Philosophical Society (Jefferson as president). He established the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in 1890 and hired Charles Greeley Abbott (Philips Academy). They worked together with the National Geographic Society. From 1973 it worked together with Harvard College Observatory.
In 1909 Theodore Roosevelt and his son Kermit explored Congo for the Smithsonian and American Museum of Natural History (Henry Fairfield Osborn as director).
Cyrus Adler was president of the American Jewish Historical Society and participated in the Paris Peace Conference.
It preserves the ruby slippers of the Wizard of Oz.
In 1946 it created the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, in collaboration with US Army and US Navy.
Sidney Dillon Ripley was related to Sidney Dillon (Union Pacific Railroad).
Josef Allen Hynek (Project Blue Book) worked at Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
In 1970 Edward Thompson (Life magazine owned by Time) founded Smithsonian magazine and Air & Space. It contained contributions from Paul Theroux (BSA, father of Louis and Justin Theroux). Carey Winfrey covered the Jonestown massacre for The NY Times. It awarded the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Awards, created by postmodern artist Jeff Koons, to Elon Musk, Aziz Ansari, Jeff Bezos, David Lynch and Bill Hader. It awarded the James Smithson Medal to Elizabeth II and pope John Paul II.
Dame of Malta Lyndy Boggs was regent of the Smithsonian, US ambassador to the Vatican and married to Hale Boggs, member of the Warren Commission to 'investigate' the JFK murder.
Its Archive of American Art has a collection of Jackson Pollock paintings.
NASA astronaut Michael Collins (Edwards Air Force Base, Apollo moon landing) was director of the National Air and Space Museum from 1971.
Chairman David Rubenstein (Phi Beta Kappa, World Economic Forum, The Economic Club of Washington, Brookings Institution, American Philosophical Society) co-founded the Carlyle Group and was president of the Alfalfa Group and chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations. He funded the Institute for Advanced Studies.
Lonnie Bunch (Howard University, American Philosophical Society, Phi Beta Kappa, awarded by the NAACP) was director of National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC).
The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum organized a Star Trek exhibit in 1992. The Smithsonian collaborates with the US Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Nick Pope who worked for the Smithsonian Channel also worked for the Disclosure Project and Ancient Aliens. Gloria Steinem's sister worked for the Smithsonian. Andrew Huxley, son of Aldous Huxley also worked for the Smithsonian.
20th Century Fox produced Night at the Museum Battle of the Smithsonian with Ben Stiller, Amy Adams, the Jonas Brothers.
In 2009 it collaborated with Brandeis University, Goethe University Frankfurt, University of Chicago, Caltech, Google Research, Los Alamos and other institutions to launch the Event Horizon Telescope project. In 2019 it published the first image of a black hole.
The National Air and Space Museum was used in a scene of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (Hasbro) with Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox.
The Smithsonian Institute released The Day Kennedy Died about the JFK ritual, narrated by Kevin Spacey.
Robert McCormick Adams was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and American Philosophical Society. Ira Michael Heyman was member of the Bohemian Club. Gerald Wayne Clough (Phi Gamma Delta) was on the American Science Board. David Skorton was member of the American Philosophical Society, CFR and supported Anthony Fauci during the Covid19-ritual. Tamar Evangelistia-Dougherty was director at the Schomberg Center for Research in Black Culture.
David Wilcock, Tom DeLonge and Gaia blamed the Smithsonian for a cover-up of bones of giants.