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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mae_BrussellMae Brussell - Wikipedia

    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 ).

  2. www.maebrussell.com › About Mae Brussell › About Mae BrussellBiography - Mae Brussell

    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.

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  4. Mae Brussell. 22 November 1963. The shot heard around the world. A beloved president dead. A nation crippled with grief. But for one Beverly Hills housewife and mother of five, it was a day that would become the catalyst for a mind-boggling journey into the shadowy world of lies, deception, cover-ups, conspiracy and murder.

  5. The Mae Brussell Research Library contains extensive handwritten cross-references and analysis by Mae on such topics as the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King, as well as the Watergate scandal, Charles Manson, mind control, bio-warfare, and the developing dominance of the military industrial ...

  6. "Dialogue: Conspiracy is a program which shares the political research of Mae Brussell. Her almost ten years of work are based on the theory that government is moved as much or more by conspiracy than by any democratic process." — KLRB, June 1972 This is a collection of Mae Brussell's recordings from 1971 to 1988.

  7. Oct 15, 2014 · Mae Brussell was born May 29, 1922, in Beverly Hills, her father Rabbi Edgar Magnin of the Wilshire Boulevard Temple, the man who blessed President Richard Nixon at the White House. Magnin’s...

  8. May 19, 2017 · Brussell was born in 1922, the daughter of a New York rabbi. The assassination of John F. Kennedy horrified her, and she set out to make her own determination of what happened. This led Brussell along many other tangents, which she shared with the listeners of Carmel, California community radio station KLRB-FM through the 1970s.

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