|
|
|
J. F. Kennedy |
|
Abraham Lincoln |
American Presidents Appear Chosen by Name, And Their Fate
Set By The Numbers
There is something very spooky about the
history of American presidents. It is almost as if the electoral process has no effect. Certain people are destined to be
our nation's leaders no matter what. And certain presidents appear cursed to die in office.
For example, if you study
the names of the men we elected to this high office, there are a lot of them with double letters. Names like Roosevelt, Hoover,
Kennedy, "Bill" Clinton and "Jimmy" Carter are quick to pop up. The other winners include Adams (with two "a's" in the name),
Dwight D. Eisenhower (two d's and three e's), and Nixon (with two n's). I think you get the picture.
Using this formula,
it is easy to see why George W. Bush defeated Al Gore in our last election. Even though Gore out-polled Bush in popular votes,
Bush was destined to win because he had two g's and two e's in his name.
A few years ago I met a very unusual man who
liked to study numbers and statistics like this. When he pointed out this phenomenon behind the winners in American presidential
elections I did not believe him at first. But then, after searching through U. S. history records, I found that he was quite
right. The candidates with the double letters were always the winners, especially if their opponent was an unfortunate with
a name like Al Gore.
Because Gore did not choose to be known by his full first name, Albert, he had little chance to
winning over a man named George. The name Albert Gore, if you notice, also has two e's in the full name, but the letters are
separated by first and last names. George, which contains both g's and e's in the same name, was clearly the winning favorite.
Had Al's first name been Allen, I predict that he would have been the winner.
You may perhaps write this off to a subconscious
decision by American voters to trust or simply just prefer names with double letters. But there is another peculiar thing
about our presidential history that is harder to explain and is much more disturbing.
Ever since Benjamin Harrison
(with two r's) was elected to office in 1840, every president going into office on even number years except Ronald Reagan
(three a's) has died in office. And there was an assassination attempt on Reagan's life and it was disclosed he was suffering
from Alzheimer Disease after he left office. Some believe Nancy Reagan may have been running the country during his final
days in office. Was Reagan mentally dead while still serving as our president?
This is especially troublesome because
George W. Bush was elected on a triple zero election year, 2000.
The story is that Chief Tecumseh was a Shawnee who
wanted the American Indian tribes to break away from the reservation and return to their old ways. He established a village
at Tippecanoe Creek, Ohio, called Utopia Town where his followers gathered. While he was away, William Henry Harrison, then
an army general, got into a skirmish with the people at Tippecanoe Creek and Tecumseh's brother was killed. This happened
in 1811.
Tecumseh was so angered that he gathered a band of about 2000 warriors and joined the British in battles against
the Americans in the War of 1812. Later, when Harrison sought the presidency in 1840, Tecumseh cursed him.
The curse
reads that if Harrison wins the office of Great Chief "he will not finish his term. He will die in office. And when he dies
you will remember my brother. You think that I have lost my powers. I who caused the sun to darken and Red Men to give up
firewater. But I tell you Harrison will die. And after him, every Great Chief chosen every 20 years thereafter will die. And
when each one dies, let everyone remember the death of our people."
Harrison was the ninth elected president and just
as Tecumseh predicted, he became the first president to die in office. His term lasted only one month. He became ill and on
April 4, 1841, shortly after taking office, he died.
The death list has continued right on cue ever since.
--Abraham
Lincoln was elected in 1860. He was murdered in 1865.
--James Garfield, elected 1880, took office in 1881, assassinated
Sept. 19, 1881.
--William McKinley, elected to his second term in 1990, assassinated on Sept. 14, 1901.
--Warren
G. Harding, elected 1920, died of a heart attack on Aug. 2, 1923.
--Franklin D. Roosevelt, elected 1940, died of ill health on Apr. 12, 1945.
--John
F. Kennedy, elected in 1960, assassinated Nov. 22, 1963.
In a book "Mysteries of the Unexplained published by Reader's
Digest, 1982, I found some interesting synchronicities linked to the Kennedy assassination.
There is a federal mint
in Dallas that issued a dollar bill just two weeks before Kennedy was shot there. It is now known as the Kennedy assassination
bill. Since Dallas is the location of the 11th of 12 Federal Reserve Bank districts, the bill has the letter K, or the 11th
letter of the alphabet, printed on its face. Also the number 11 appears in each corner. The serial number of this bill begins
with K and ends with A, suggesting "Kennedy Assassination. Kennedy was shot on the 11th month of the year. Adding the two
elevens on either side of the bill makes 22, the date of the shooting. The series number is 1963, the year Kennedy died.
The
writer of the article points to yet another interesting set of synchronicities connected with both the Kennedy and Lincoln
assassinations, which occurred exactly 100 years apart.
Both men were shot on Friday and in the presence of their wives. They were both shot
by bullets in the back of the head. Lincoln was shot in the Ford Theater and Kennedy was shot in a Lincoln, manufactured by
the Ford Automobile Co. Both men were succeeded by vice-presidents named Johnson. Both accused assassins were murdered before
they could be brought to trial.
Do you ever get the feeling that our lives here are nothing more than a chess game
and that we are all pawns, being manipulated by jokesters?
|
|
|