1960s - Random

in THE 1960s2 years ago (edited)

The craziest thing about the Swinging-Sixties wouldn't necessarily be Apollo 11 landing on the moon in 1969 (assuming they did as some believe the moon-landing was faked). I'm not going to say they didn't land on the moon. But I will say it looks like NASA used tax-payer dollars to make it possible which is fine to the extent they're accountable to how they spend their money. I would audit them in order to see how they've been spending our money these past four decades.


The craziest thing wouldn't even be the Vietnam Civil War which France was in. Other countries like China were involved. America shouldn't have interfered, most likely. Only thing worse is how America left Vietnam in the 1970s. The 1960s was during the Cold War Era which went from 1947 to 1991 regarding America and Russia. But if the USSR was so bad, then it would be possibly counterproductive to get involved in an internal Vietnam Civil War because that would leave America vulnerable if Russia was to attack. People can argue that America was perhaps helping the correct half of Vietnam to battle Ho Chi Minh. I would agree with that idea. But I still wouldn't get involved in that kind of way. Our main enemy is not communism, fascism, or even certain countries. Instead, the root of the problem would be more so the globalists and others who are often the puppet-masters of the pawns pulling strings. We also battle ideas too. Too often, we get distracted, it's called Divide & Conquer.


The craziest thing regarding the sixties on my mind is how government in concert with others ended the life of JFK in 1963 and then went on to coin the term "Conspiracy Theory" to demonize anybody questioning details regarding JFK who was trying to separate America from the Federal Reserve. JFk and Abraham Lincoln have something in common with each other. JFK printed out 4 billion dollars worth of not Federal Reserve money but Treasury Notes or perhaps they were United States Notes. Lincoln did the same thing, he had 400 million dollars printed. Oddly, shortly after, both Abe and JFK were murdered. The money they printed were called Greenbacks.


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1963 - Greenback Money Five Dollars 5 - United States Note, Abraham Lincoln Abe 31601494_1.jpg


1963 - United States Note - Some are worth a thousand dollars now.


1914 - Greenback Money Five Dollars 5 - Federal Reserve, Abraham Lincoln Abe 31601494_1.jpg


1914 - Federal Reserve Note - Five Dollars - Lincoln - worth $130 USD


1960s - Random
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1960

1960 world population: 3,021,475,000.


January 21 - Coalbrook mining disaster: A coal mine collapses at Holly Country, South Africa, killing 435 miners.


February 5 – The first CERN particle accelerator becomes operational in Geneva, Switzerland.


March 6 - Vietnam War: The United States announces that 3,500 American soldiers will be sent to Vietnam.


May 9 – The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announces that it will approve birth control as an additional indication for Searle's Enovid, making it the world's first approved oral contraceptive pill.


June 22 – The United States Naval Research Laboratory SOLRAD 1 Galactic Radiation and Background program satellite is successfully launched by a Thor-Ablestar rocket (along with navigation satellite Transit 2A), serving as the first successful U.S. reconnaissance satellite over the Soviet Union and returning the first real-time X-ray and ultraviolet observations of the Sun. I would argue they were able to get Americans to be ok with spying on Russia due to the formation of the Cold War which may be at least partly blamed on that thing America and Russia signed in 1942 to put them in a limbo where they were both supposed to be allies with each other to go after Hitler. After 1945, after the end of WWII, Russia and America became enemies. There may be different reasons, factors, nuance, to how the Cold War started and continued for roughly four decades. I'm not blaming it all on that thing which was signed in 1942. But I am saying that is my go-to example. I mentioned NASA in my Random 1950s post.


June 24 - Joseph Kasa-Vubu is elected as the first President of the independent Democratic Republic of the Congo.


August 9 – The government of Laos is overthrown in a coup.


August 17 - The newly named Beatles begin a 48-night residency at the Indra Club in Hamburg, West Germany.


August 19 - Cold War: In Moscow, American U-2 pilot Francis Gary Powers is sentenced to 10 years in prison for espionage.


September 5 - 1960 Summer Olympic Games: Muhammad Ali (at this time Cassius Clay) of the United States wins the gold medal in light-heavyweight boxing.


October 1 - Nigeria and Cameroon become independent from the United Kingdom.


October 5 – White South Africans vote to make the country a republic.


October 12 - John F. Kennedy speaks before the Ministerial Association of Houston, Texas, saying, in part, "I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute; where no Catholic prelate would tell the American President, should he be Catholic, how to act; and where no Protestant minister would tell his parishioners for whom to vote."


December 11 – MGM's The Wizard of Oz is rerun on CBS only a year after its previous telecast, thus beginning the tradition of annual telecasts of the film in the United States.


December 12 – The Supreme Court of the United States upholds a lower Federal Court ruling that the State of Louisiana's racial segregation laws are unconstitutional, and overturns them.


1961

January 17 - President Dwight Eisenhower gives his final State of the Union Address to Congress. In a Farewell Address the same day, he warns of the increasing power of a "military–industrial complex."


January 20 – John F. Kennedy is sworn in as the 35th President of the United States.


January 25 - Disney's One Hundred and One Dalmatians is released in cinemas.


February 15 - United States President John F. Kennedy warns the Soviet Union to avoid interfering with the United Nations' pacification of the Congo.


April 20 – Fidel Castro announces that the Bay of Pigs Invasion has been defeated.


May 21 – Civil rights movement: Alabama Governor John Patterson declares martial law in an attempt to restore order, after race riots break out.


December 31 – Ireland's first national television station, Telefís Éireann (later RTÉ), begins broadcasting.


1962

January 3 – Pope John XXIII excommunicates Fidel Castro for preaching communism.


January 15 – Portugal abandons the U.N. General Assembly, due to the debate over Angola.


January 26 – Ranger 3 is launched to study the Moon; it later misses the Moon by 22,000 mi (35,000 km).


March 21 – The Taco Bell fast food restaurant chain is founded by Glen Bell, in Downey, California.


March 26 - Baker v. Carr: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that federal courts can order state legislatures to reapportion seats.


April 14 – A Cuban military tribunal convicts 1,179 Bay of Pigs attackers.


September 12 – President John F. Kennedy, at a speech at Rice University, reaffirms that the U.S. will put a man on the Moon by the end of the decade.


September 23 – The animated sitcom The Jetsons premieres on ABC in the U.S.


October 1 - Lucille Ball and Vivian Vance return to TV with The Lucy Show, two years after the end of I Love Lucy (Vance is the first person to portray a divorcée on a weekly series).


October 5 - Dr. No, the first James Bond film, premieres at the London Pavilion, featuring Sean Connery as the hero.


November 7 – Richard M. Nixon loses the California governor's race. In his concession speech, he states that this is "Richard Nixon's last press conference" and "you won't have Nixon to kick around any more".


November 21 – The Sino-Indian War ends with a Chinese ceasefire.


1963

March 18 – Gideon v. Wainwright: The Supreme Court of the United States rules that state courts are required to provide counsel in criminal cases for defendants who cannot afford to pay their own attorneys.


March 22 – The Beatles release their first album, Please Please Me, in the United Kingdom.


April 1 – The long-running soap opera General Hospital debuts on ABC Television in the United States.


June 10 - President John F. Kennedy signs the Equal Pay Act of 1963 into law.


June 11 - In Saigon, Buddhist monk Thích Quảng Đức commits self-immolation to protest the oppression of Buddhists by the Ngô Đình Diệm administration.


June 11 - President John F. Kennedy broadcasts a historic Civil Rights Address in which he promises a Civil Rights Bill and asks for "the kind of equality of treatment that we would want for ourselves".


August 28 – Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his "I Have a Dream" speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to an audience of at least 250,000, during the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. It is, at that point, the single largest protest in American history.


November 18 – The first push-button telephone is made available to AT&T customers in the United States.


November 22 - Assassination of John F. Kennedy: In a motorcade in Dallas, Texas, U.S. President John F. Kennedy is fatally shot but NOT by Lee Harvey Oswald because there were multiple shots from different angles. The body of JFK was quickly taken several places within hours of the shots. His face was blown up pretty badly. The general public was sold the Magic Bullet Theory. After this, the CIA and others begun coining the phrase Conspiracy Theory as an attack to go after people who were being redpilled from that event in world history. Many words were weaponized including words like racist, sexist, hate speech, etc, etc, and also "CONSPIRACY THEORY" as a way to mock people who questions narratives and propaganda. It's similar to the term of "FAKE NEWS" which was very similar in demonizing REAL NEWS. They try very hard to co-opt words to change their meanings including changing the word GAY to go from stupid or happy to mean homosexual for example. Oswald was the scapegoat. There are so many books, documentaries, about the murder of JFK. We can talk for years about all of the details and believe me people have been researching it for the past six decades.


November 23 - The first episode of the BBC television series Doctor Who is broadcast in the United Kingdom.


November 24 - Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of John F. Kennedy, is shot dead by Jack Ruby in Dallas, an event seen on live national television.


November 25 – State funeral of John F. Kennedy: President Kennedy is buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Schools around the nation cancel classes that day; millions watch the funeral on live international television. Lee Harvey Oswald's funeral takes place on the same day.[20]


November 29 - U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson establishes the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination of John F. Kennedy. But if Oswald did it, then case closed. Obviously, there is so much we don't know. Reminds me of the Jan6 commission task force thing or the 9/11 task force thing. Like, why would the government investigate itself? It wouldn't.


December 3 – The Warren Commission begins its investigation into the assassination of US President John F. Kennedy.


December 7 – The first instant replay system to use videotape instead of film is used by Tony Verna, a CBS-TV director, during a live televised sporting event, the Army–Navy Game of college football played in Philadelphia, United States.


December 8 - A lightning strike causes the crash of Pan Am Flight 214 near Elkton, Maryland, United States, killing 81 people. Frank Sinatra, Jr. is kidnapped at Harrah's Lake Tahoe.


December 26 – The Beatles' "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and "I Saw Her Standing There" are released in the United States, marking the beginning of Beatlemania on an international level.


1964

February 9 – The Beatles appear on The Ed Sullivan Show, marking their first live performance on American television. Seen by an estimated 73,000,000 viewers, the appearance becomes the catalyst for the mid-1960s "British Invasion" of American popular music.


February 25 – Cassius Clay (later Muhammad Ali) beats Sonny Liston in Miami Beach, Florida, and is crowned the heavyweight champion of the world.


February 29 – U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson announces that the United States has developed a jet airplane (the A-11), capable of sustained flight at more than 2,000 miles per hour (3,200 km/h) and of altitudes of more than 70,000 feet (21,000 m).


March 6 - Malcolm X, suspended from the Nation of Islam, says in New York City that he is forming a black nationalist party.


March 9 - New York Times Co. v Sullivan (376 US 254 1964): The United States Supreme Court rules that under the First Amendment, speech criticizing political figures cannot be censored.


March 14 – A Dallas, Texas, jury finds Jack Ruby guilty of killing John F. Kennedy assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. But that is retarded because if Oswald killed JFK, then Oswald is bad and Ruby killed a bad guy. But truth be told, government in concert with others killed JFK. Ruby is punished because Oswald is innocent. Otherwise, it doesn't make sense.


March 30 – Merv Griffin's game show Jeopardy! debuts on NBC; Art Fleming is its first host.


April 7 – IBM announces the System/360.


May – The first fatality occurs at Disneyland in California, United States: a 15-year-old boy is injured while riding the Matterhorn Bobsleds and dies three days later as a result of his injuries.


July 27 – Vietnam War: The U.S. sends 5,000 more military advisers to South Vietnam, bringing the total number of United States forces in Vietnam to 21,000.


August 1 – The final Looney Tune, "Señorella and the Glass Huarache", is released before the Warner Bros. Cartoon Division is shut down by Jack Warner.


August 5 - Vietnam War: Operation Pierce Arrow – Aircraft from carriers USS Ticonderoga and USS Constellation bomb North Vietnam in retaliation for strikes against U.S. destroyers in the Gulf of Tonkin. However, Tonkin was a false flag similar to 9/11 and Jan6. America shouldn't have been involved in the Vietnam Civil War.


September 26 – The sitcom Gilligan's Island, starring Bob Denver as Gilligan premieres on CBS in the United States.


1965

March 20 - The Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 begins.


May 12 - West Germany and Israel establish diplomatic relations.


May 22 - Several hundred Vietnam War protesters in Berkeley, California, march to the Draft Board again to burn 19 more cards. Lyndon B. Johnson is hung in effigy. The first skateboarding championship is held.


July 20 – Rock musician Bob Dylan's influential single "Like a Rolling Stone" is released by Columbia Records.


September 9 - Hurricane Betsy roars ashore near New Orleans with winds of 145 mph (233 km/h), causing 76 deaths and $1.42 billion in damage. The storm is the first hurricane to cause $1 billion in unadjusted damages, giving it the nickname "Billion Dollar Betsy". It is the last major hurricane to strike New Orleans until Hurricane Katrina 40 years later. In other words, they had 40 years to prepare for the next storm and yet they failed. It's like being outside of Noah's Ark while it's raining. You could have been on the ark but you just sat there and you did nothing. Prevention is better than correction. You have no excuses. You were given plenty of time to prepare. But you chose not to.


September 25 – The Tom & Jerry cartoon series makes its world broadcast premiere on CBS.


October 15 – Vietnam War: The Catholic Worker Movement stages an anti-war protest in Manhattan. One draft card burner is arrested, the first under the new law.


October 30 - Vietnam War: Near Da Nang, United States Marines repel an intense attack by Viet Cong forces, killing 56 guerrillas. A sketch of Marine positions is found on the dead body of a 13-year-old Vietnamese boy who sold drinks to the Marines the day before.


1966

January 12 – United States President Lyndon Johnson states that the United States should stay in South Vietnam until Communist aggression there is ended.


April 1 – Animated sitcom The Flintstones airs its series finale on the ABC network in the United States.


April 30 - The Church of Satan is formed by Anton Szandor LaVey in San Francisco.


August 16 – Vietnam War: The House Un-American Activities Committee starts investigating Americans who have aided the Viet Cong, with the intent to make these activities illegal. Anti-war demonstrators disrupt the meeting and 50 are arrested. This committee's files and staff were transferred on that day to the House Judiciary Committee in 1975.


September 8 – The classic science fiction series Star Trek premieres on NBC in the United States with its first episode, titled "The Man Trap" (actually seen first on September 6 on CTV in Canada).


September 9 – NATO decides to move Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe to Belgium.


October 15 - U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signs a bill creating the United States Department of Transportation.


December 18 – Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas, narrated by Boris Karloff, premieres on the CBS network, beginning an annual Christmas tradition in the United States.


1967

Probably in 1967, Warner Bros. becomes a wholly owned subsidiary of Seven Arts Productions, thus becoming Warner Bros.-Seven Arts. Also, Gunsmoke was canceled but then they got it back.


February 24 – Moscow forbids its satellite states to form diplomatic relations with West Germany.


March 6 – Mark Twain Tonight starring Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain, premieres on CBS television in the United States.


March 9 – Joseph Stalin's daughter, Svetlana Alliluyeva or Lana Peters, defects to the United States via the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi.


March 14 - The body of U.S. President John F. Kennedy is moved to a permanent burial place at Arlington National Cemetery. This is 4 years after he was murdered by the government.


April 5-10 – Six-Day War (approach): Israeli fighters shoot down 7 Syrian MIG-21s.


April 10 - Oral arguments begin in the landmark Supreme Court of the United States case Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967), challenging the State of Virginia's statutory scheme to prevent marriages between persons solely on the basis of racial classifications.


May 1 - Elvis Presley and Priscilla Beaulieu are married in Las Vegas.


May 12 – The Jimi Hendrix Experience release their debut album, Are You Experienced.


May 19 — Yuri Andropov becomes KGB chief in the Soviet Union.


1968

Probably in 1968, United Artists pulls eleven Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons in its library from television due to the depiction of racist stereotypes towards African-Americans. These cartoons come to be known as the Censored Eleven.


The Khmer Rouge is officially formed in Cambodia as an offshoot movement of the Vietnam People's Army from North Vietnam to bring communism to the nation. A few years later, they will become bitter enemies.


January 23 – North Korea seizes the USS Pueblo, claiming the ship violated its territorial waters while spying.


April 2 - The film 2001: A Space Odyssey premieres in Washington, D.C.


April 3 - Martin Luther King Jr. delivers his "I've Been to the Mountaintop" speech in Memphis, Tennessee.


September 24 – 60 Minutes debuts on CBS and is still on the air as of 2021.


October 25 – Led Zeppelin makes their first live performance, at Surrey University in England.


November 5 - 1968 U.S. presidential election: Republican candidate Richard Nixon defeats the Democratic candidate, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, and American Independent Party candidate George Wallace.


December 20 – The Zodiac Killer is believed to have shot Betty Lou Jensen and David Faraday on Lake Herman Road, Benicia, San Francisco Bay, California, his first confirmed victims.


1969

June 20 - Apollo 11 lands on the moon. An estimated 650 million people worldwide, the largest television audience for a live broadcast at this time.


November 10 – Sesame Street airs its first episode on the National Educational Television (NET) which was an American educational broadcast television network owned by the Ford Foundation and later co-owned by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. It operated from May 16, 1954 to October 4, 1970, and was succeeded by the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), which has memberships with many television stations that were formerly part of NET. PBS started in 1969. I was born in 1985 and would watch PBS shows especially in the 1990s and that included Sesame Street. PBS starting replacing NET in 1970. PBS was founded by the presidents of the WGBH Educational Foundation which started in 1951 and NET of 1954. Ford may have connections with Rockefeller who were connected to Rothschild.


November 25 – John Lennon returns his MBE medal to protest the British government's involvement in the Nigerian Civil War.


December 7 – Frosty the Snowman aired on the CBS network.


Sort:  

The craziest thing regarding the sixties on my mind is how government in concert with others ended the life of JFK in 1963 and then went on to coin the term "Conspiracy Theory" to demonize anybody questioning details regarding JFK who was trying to separate America from the Federal Reserve. JFk and Abraham Lincoln have something in common with each other. JFK printed out 4 billion dollars worth of not Federal Reserve money but Treasury Notes or perhaps they were United States Notes. Lincoln did the same thing, he had 400 million dollars printed. Oddly, shortly after, both Abe and JFK were murdered. The money they printed were called Greenbacks.

Dear @joeyarnoldvn , Do you think Lincoln and Kennedy were assassinated by the globalists trying to get the issuance rights of the US dollar?😯

 2 years ago  

Yeah, globalists probably helped kill Lincoln and Kennedy, I don't know how many people were involved, I may not know all of the different reasons they try to kill people, one of the reasons has to do with money like you said. Other U.S. Presidents were shot including Reagan. I think some people shot at Andrew Jackson and then he later became a president and then people compared Trump to Andrew Jackson because they're both very tough people. They both try to work very hard and get things done.