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Mae Magnin Brussell (May 29, 1922 – October 3, 1988) was an American radio personality and conspiracy theorist. She was the host of Dialogue: Conspiracy (later renamed World Watchers International).
Biography. Complacent Beverly Hills housewife Mae Brussell had quite an awakening in 1963 when President Kennedy was assassinated, and again when she read and cross-indexed the massive 26-volume Warren Commission Hearings. She saw that the international terrorist network that had made up the Axis powers during.
Roberts, known only to Stephanie Caruana and conspiracy theorist Mae Brussell, purportedly began gathering information in the file when Howard Hughes stole his invention for processing synthetic rubies, hence the title "Gemstone".
One of the conspiratorial pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that intrigued Mae Brussell: the man who supposedly shot Kennedy, Lee Harvey Oswald, defected to the Soviet Union in 1959 where he was called Alik and married Marina, a young Russian woman (this is a photo of them in Moscow).
The Realist was the first satirical magazine to publish conspiracy theories. [3] It was the first magazine to carry Mae Brussell 's work on conspiracies, [3] which covered the kidnapping of Patty Hearst, the Watergate scandal, the assassination of JFK and other conspiracy theories.
Sep 6, 2021 · THE MAE BRUSSELL PROJECT seeks to preserve the library and make its contents available to the public. The project has two phases: preservation of the physical library, and the scanning and publishing of the information.
This is a collection of Mae Brussell's recordings from 1971 to 1988. The archive begins in June 1971, a month after Mae began her radio career as a frequent guest on KLRB's Dialogue, which expanded into KLRB's regular segment Dialogue: Assassination and from there into Dialogue: Conspiracy and World Watchers International.