In Black Helicopters The Endgame Strategy, Keith's investigation takes quantum forward, chilling the reader with new * What are the secret forces behind the black choppers?; * Why are they terrorizing America?; * What is the "Quadrant Sign Code" of the New World Order?; * Is the government engaged in biological warfare experiments in the United States?; * Are the black helicopters connected to UFOs? Cattle Mutilations?; * Why does the media cover-up the existence of the black helicopters?: * What is the Endgame Strategy?. Utilizing his far-reaching research, including high level military informants, investigator Jim Keith uncovers new information and presents startling revelations about the truth behind black helicopters!
James Patrick Keith was an American author and conspiracy theorist, best known for the books Black Helicopters Over America and The Octopus, co-written with Kenn Thomas, detailing theories around the death of reporter Danny Casolaro. After starting his career with writing and editing the zines Dharma Combat and Notes from the Hangar, as well as contributing articles to Fate Magazine, Keith became an editor at Steamshovel Press. He also authored 12 books covering topics such as mind control, the New World Order, black helicopters, the Oklahoma City bombing, Illuminati and Men in Black. Keith died at Washoe Medical Center in Reno at age 49, following a fall at the Burning Man festival.
Although I am sympathetic to the author's concerns about government overreach, especially as it pertains to the internationalist establishment, I am skeptical of some of the sources he uses in the book. Also, much of the book doesn't deal directly with "black helicopters." I am quite skeptical of the "Vital Signs: the Quadrant Sign Code" he claims to have deciphered. Black Helicopters do exist. Who uses them and for what purpose is not definitively known.
More spurious scaremongering, the nadir of which has Keith claiming he's found a secret code hidden on the back of roadsigns to provide navigational information to invading armies. Two problems: a) any modern army would likely have its own navigational setup, like GPS or good old-fashioned maps, and b) there's already sufficient navigational detail on the FRONT of road signs... Full review: https://fakegeekboy.wordpress.com/202...