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Officer Jack McLamb’s Operation Vampire Killer 2012 - Part 8

Rudy Davis
Rudy Davis - 417 Views
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417 Views
Published on 03 Aug 2021 / In News and Politics

Officer Jack McLamb’s Operation Vampire Killer 2012 - Part 8

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whoyourdaddy
whoyourdaddy 3 years ago

SWhere are the mailbox dots, y2k 90% population deaths and all the other bullshit this guy peddled.?
McLamb was perhaps best known for his claim that the government placed unobtrusive colored dots on people’s mailboxes so that troops serving the New World Order after martial law is declared would know what to do with the people living at each address. A blue dot meant that you were destined for a FEMA-operated concentration camp; pink indicated you were to be used for slave labor; red meant you were to be shot in the head immediately.

McLamb also was involved in the development of a right-wing housing community called “Almost Heaven,” located near Kamiah, Idaho, in 1994. The community was supposed to “make a stand” against the New World Order. McLamb’s partners in that failed venture included Bo Gritz, a decorated Vietnam veteran and follower of the racist and anti-Semitic Christian Identity religion, and Jerry Gillespie, a former Arizona state senator who opposed the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday and who coordinated the Arizona campaign for Gritz’s failed 1992 presidential bid.

In 1996, McLamb addressed a rally, saying that government officials were smuggling drugs into the United States in order to incite racial hatred. In 1999, he claimed that Vice President Al Gore was planning to reduce world population by 90 percent through some kind of Y2K plot. But when Y2K came and went without much of anything happening beyond the usual New Year’s celebrations, McLamb began to peddle his ideas on the tax protest circuit, though he didn’t leave his other ideas behind.

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