Fakes of the week – Pardons & State “charges” – Gaza videos – US nuclear weapons
Wed 4:26 pm +00:00, 29 Jan 2025
Source: https://mileswmathis.com/trake.pdf
Pictures and links won’t copy and paste, see the link above for both
Fake News Continues Under Trump
by Miles Mathis
January 28, 2025
We will start with prosecutors seeking state charges against those pardoned by Trump. Impossible,
since the President can pardon state charges as well, and often has. Besides this would be an obvious
instance of double jeopardy: being tried for the same thing twice. Can’t happen. But Wikipedia and
Google lie and tell us the President cannot pardon state offenses. Some attorneys are asking why the
internet is mistaken on this. It is because the internet is not mistaken, it is simply lying. Why? So that
they can draw out these fake news stories for several more years, I guess. Those J6 people Trump
allegedly pardoned were just actors, and they were never in jail for a second. So there was nothing to
pardon.
In a related incident, one of those J6 actors just pardoned by Trump, Matthew Huttle, was allegedly
killed by a sheriff’s deputy in Hobart, IN, yesterday. What are the odds! Can you say, “The end of a
role and a faked death?” How obvious could they be? You will say he can’t be an actor! Oh no, then
why does he have Los Angeles and Mission Viejo on his locations list at Instantcheckmate? We also
find another problem there, since his uncle Dale Huttle was also arrested in the J6 fraud. But in these
internet stories they say he is 61. Instantcheckmate lists him as 73. That’s the exact same age as his
brother Donald Huttle. How does that work? Can you be the same age as your brother? Maybe they
are twins! Guess what Donald Huttle does, according to his page at LinkedIN. Private investigator.
So probably ex-police or military. He also has Aurora, CO, on his list, indicating military. He is
related to Richard Roethler, 68, of Eielson AFB, AK. And his son Scott Roethler of Fort Hood, TX.
We also link to the Gajewskis, giving us the expected Jewish link. Roethler is also a Jewish name.
Huttle appears to be a Jewish name as well, see the prominent Huttles of New Jersey, married to Jews
and in the State Assembly in a district always led by Jews (Weinberg, Haider, Vainieri, Cowan,
Janiszewski).
They are pushing pictures and film of “ten of thousands of Gazans returning on foot to destroyed
homes”. Except for one problem: it’s all CGI again. It is fake footage from a drone, and doesn’t look
real at all. Remember, I showed you in my paper on Hawaii that this drone footage is some of the
easiest to fake. Hollywood has a program that can fake scanning footage from the air like this with the
touch of a button.
But the worst of the week, and among the worst of all time, is this story from Epoch Times, reprinted
today at Zerohedge. I very much encourage you to read it. Epoch Times requires a membership, but it
is free at Zerohedge. I have saved it if they take it down. It is about the Minutemen missiles or ICBMs
in Montana. I have told you before they are dummy missiles in fake silos, and amazingly they pretty
much admit it here. They don’t tell you so outright, but they give you so many clues you will get there
by the end yourself, unless you are very dense.
I will lead you through it. We start with lots of the usual numerology and onomastics. In sentence two
we are told the Judith mountains rise majestically in the distance. Is that really the first thing we need
to know here? No, so it must be a clue. It is the name Judith, of course, telling us we are dealing with
the usual suspects. In sentence three we are told of rancher Ed Butcher, who happens to be how old? . .
. you get one guess. That’s him above, so don’t guess 33. Your second guess should be 81, aces and
eights, the right answer. Does it matter how old he is? Do we care? No, it was included only as a
signal. We are told his windshield was cracked by a bird a few days earlier. Again, what does that
have to do with anything? It is another signal they are effing you, and that this is fiction. You are the
bird on the windshield, as you are about to see.
Butcher is giving us a tour, since the 60ft, 80,000lb missile is in a silo on his ranch. It has been sitting
there for 60 years, and we are told they are now going to update it. Reminds us of the fake nuclear
power plants, doesn’t it, most of which have been sitting there even longer with no updates, way past
their mothball dates. Like this missile, they were all just given extensions on paper.
In 1964, when Butcher was in high school, his father sold a one-acre plot to the Air Force for $100,
allowing it to house this single missile with a nuclear warhead, sitting thousands of miles away
from a potential target. As a weapon of mass destruction, it can deploy up to three Mk12A nuclear
warheads, each with a yield of 300 to 350 kilotons of TNT. Each warhead is more than 20 times more
powerful than the atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, which resulted in the deaths
of 140,000 people.
Does that sound right to you? The government wants to put a 60ft missile on your cattle ranch,
endangering you for the rest of your life, but they only buy one acre and pay you only $100?
Ridiculous. Who would believe such a thing? Is that the way you imagined it worked all these years?
This is especially amusing:
During the peak of the Cold War, following the Cuban Missile Crisis, which brought the United States
and Soviet Union closer to nuclear war than ever before, everyone was anxious about a potential nuclear
exchange, Butcher recalled, and “duck and cover” drills were routine in schools. Despite the context,
Butcher adapted to living near the missile. He never truly feared a nuclear attack on “Missile Country.”
Logic told him that the Minuteman III would be launched long before any Soviet missile could reach its
target. Butcher, a ffth-generation rancher with 400 to 500 cattle, remarked: “They’d be hitting an empty
hole.”
Great logic, dumbass. And when they hit that empty hole, you and all your cattle would be turned to
molten glass. That is if any of this were real, which it isn’t. Obviously he isn’t scared because he
knows the whole thing is a bluff. How could he know? Well, he isn’t just a rancher, he’s a wealthy
bigwig in Montana who has been a State Senator. He has a graduate degree, though Wiki refuses to tell
us what in. Most ranchers don’t have PhDs. He is currently a State Representative, though he didn’t
win an election. He was appointed to replace someone.
And there’s another problem: do you really think the Epoch Times and Zerohedge are going to be
allowed by the Pentagon to publish the exact location of this “hidden” silo? I guess they are counting
on the Russians and Chinese not reading those sites. But wait, Epoch Times IS Chinese. It was started
by Chinese Americans and is linked to the whole Falun Gong fake movement. It has editions in
Taiwan and Hong Kong, which are in Chinese, so the Chinese don’t even have to translate. But the
Chinese don’t monitor that, as we know. They are too busy releasing mutant viruses and giving away
AI programs for free to do that.
Next we get this brilliant story:
Butcher said that he had observed the Minuteman III missile outside the hatch at least once during
scheduled maintenance. “I was counting cows out in the pasture,” and the security gate to the missile
silo was open, Butcher said. “One of the cows got inside near the missile.”
So the guard let him come in on on his horse and fetch the cow.
His father, who was a licensed pilot, would also check on the cattle from the air. “He’d always turn
before he got to the missile [silo],” Butcher said. “ He didn’t want to be fying over if they decided to set
it of. That was the closest thing Dad had for concerns” about nuclear missiles.
“Other than that, he didn’t care.”
Wow, that’s some top-notch security, right? They allow this rancher to check his cattle from the air,
and the only reason he doesn’t fly right over the hatch is because he decided not to. Which means the
air space is unrestricted. Again, is that how you have imagined this worked all your life?
You will be glad to know Northrop Grumman will be given $141 billion of your taxdollars to replace
400 dummy missiles and update their dummy silos by 2038, extending bluffing capabilities out to
2075. But wait, let’s do some math. Subtracting 38 from 75, we find these new missiles have a shelf
life of 37 years. So why did the older missiles last from 1965 to 2038, or 73 years? Old hardware lasts
twice as long as new hardware? So much for technical advancement, eh?
However, on Jan. 18, 2024, the Air Force announced that the project’s costs had reached a critical NunnMcCurdy breach, which is when initial estimate thresholds are exceeded by 25 percent or more,
triggering a review. The cost of the Sentinel program is now estimated at $140.9 billion, representing an
81 percent increase from the program’s 2020 budget.
Oh, goody, more numerology! In case we missed it the first time, we get aces and eights twice more.
That’s three in this short article. Tell me that is a coincidence.
But wait, I spoke too soon.
Airmen from the 90th maintenance group are responsible for maintaining and repairing
ICBMs on alert status within the F. E. Warren missile complex, as they are one of three
missile bases part of Air Force Global Strike Command on Dec. 18, 2019.
That’s the subtext to a picture. Why do we need to know the exact day of this photo? We don’t, except
to get aces and eights in there a fourth time. And there is apparently more of this article at Epoch
Times, so maybe it comes up again













