Regime Machine
Chapter Eleven - The Coup Within
Section 12 of 13
CHAPTER ELEVEN
The Coup Within
EVERY EMPIRE HAS a breaking point.
And every shadow government has a moment when it stops waiting for orders—
and starts making them.
In America, that moment came in the 1960s.
The Cold War was the cover.
But the target was control.
This wasn’t just surveillance.
It was assassination.
Mind control.
False flag attacks on U.S. soil.
And the scariest part?
None of this is theory.
It’s history.
In 1963, President John F. Kennedy was killed in broad daylight.
Shot in Dallas, Texas.
Officially: lone gunman.
Unofficially: the most obvious inside job of the 20th century.
Here’s what JFK was doing before he died:
- Pushing back against the CIA after the Bay of Pigs disaster
- Planning to “splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces”
- Refusing to invade Cuba
- Moving toward detente with the Soviets
- Threatening the military-industrial complex’s cash cow
He was young. Charismatic. Independent.
And to the regime machine, unacceptable.
- His head was blown open—and the Zapruder film proved it.
- Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested, then silenced.
- Jack Ruby, a nightclub owner with mob ties, shot Oswald on live TV.
- The Warren Commission told the public to move on.
- And then came Vietnam.
The war JFK resisted…
went full throttle after his death.
From the 1950s to the early 1970s, the CIA conducted illegal human experiments on U.S. and Canadian citizens.
Under the codename MKUltra, they tested:
- LSD, barbiturates, and electroshock
- Sleep deprivation and torture
- Hypnosis and sensory isolation
Targets included:
- Prisoners
- Mental patients
- Sex workers
- And unwitting civilians
Some were dosed without consent.
Some committed suicide.
Many never knew what happened to them.
And why?
Because the CIA wanted to learn how to erase memories, implant new ones, and control behavior.
The files were mostly destroyed in 1973—on purpose.
But enough remained to confirm:
This happened.
And it wasn’t science fiction.
This next one was almost too bold to believe.
But it’s real.
In 1962, top Pentagon officials proposed a plan to the Kennedy administration:
Stage fake terrorist attacks on American soil.
Blame them on Cuba.
Justify an invasion.
The plans included:
- Sinking boats of Cuban refugees
- Blowing up a U.S. ship
- Hijacking planes
- And faking funerals for “victims”
All to drum up war fever.
The document exists. It's declassified.
It’s called Operation Northwoods.
JFK said no.
One year later, he was dead.
There’s a difference between government and empire.
When the government loses control, it turns to the empire’s tools:
- Manipulation
- Assassination
- Psychological warfare
- Manufactured enemies
- Total secrecy
The CIA wasn’t just reacting to global threats.
They were creating them.
Abroad, and at home.
When JFK died, the country lost more than a president.
It lost the illusion that the people were in control.
Since then, every whistleblower has been hunted.
Every truth-teller, silenced.
And every rogue nation, toppled.
Because the regime machine doesn’t retire.
It adapts.
And sometimes, the biggest threat isn’t some faraway enemy.
It’s the man with a conscience inside the White House.
