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007 who was he, really?

Wiggs Dannyboy

Last Laugh Foundation
ICMag Donor
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How 'bout a little description there Pet? That's a 52 minute video, not gonna be watching something that long, without a basic description.
 

PetFlora

Well-known member
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My original title was shortened, not by me

"This was a live Camelot Roundtable Event recorded in July 2011. This is now being made available free on Youtube.

A conversation with MIKE SPARKS, JIM MARRS, GREG HALLETT, DR. JAMES FETZER & DR. JIM VIKEN. Hosted by Kerry Cassidy.

We discuss the real James Bond and what he knew... black projects, the secret space program and much much more..."
 

floralheart

Active member
Veteran
I can only imagine you're video is about John Dee, who coded and signed his correspondence to Queen Elizabeth I with 007. I credit the foundation of Harvard (1636) to both of them.

He's the father of the Rosicrucians, the rose and the cross. He's an early student of Henry VIII's Cambridge.

John was accused of attempting to use witchcraft to kill Elizabeth's forerunner, Queen Mary. Queen Mary later died under mysterious circumstances.

I believe John Dee had a lot to do with the foundation of modern America. The ideas, more than the actions.
 

watts

ohms
Veteran
When i was a kid me and my dad were watching a 007 movie on TV, i asked him who is 007 and he said just an actor..then i said "I mean who is the real 007" He just shook his head at me and acted like i was slow.
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
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When i was a kid me and my dad were watching a 007 movie on TV, i asked him who is 007 and he said just an actor..then i said "I mean who is the real 007" He just shook his head at me and acted like i was slow.



:nono:
 

mofeta

Member
Veteran
There was a real 007 working for MI6 (British intelligence), and I don't know much about him.

On the other hand, Ian Fleming's fictional 007, James Bond, was based on a real person named Porfirio Rubirosa.

Rubirosa was a real character, loved money, gems, fast cars and women. He bedded all the stars (including Marilyn Monroe), and lots of super rich women.

The main thing he was known for was the size of his dick:

Famously, his attraction lay not only in his mesmerising charm but his bedroom prowess — and his remarkable physical endowment. Along the Riviera and in the nightclubs of Paris and Manhattan, Rubi was known as 'Toujours Pret' — always ready — and the large peppermills in Parisian restaurants came to be known as 'Rubirosas' in homage his impressive appendage.

Porfirio Rubirosa Article
 

igrowone

Well-known member
Veteran
007 is more of a composite character, taken from various people
Sidney Reilly(something like that) was the main inspiration?
there was a PBS mini series years ago about him
late 1800's/early 1900's, nearly overthrew the bolshevik revolution which would have stopped communism before it ever got started
also the proverbial lady killer, his history is mysterious
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
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aaff1326_zpsa83138ef.jpg
 

PetFlora

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The people in the round table discussion are ardent students of what's really going on behind the curtain of false reality. Citing PBS is akin to quoting a politician- if their lips are moving, they're lying. Their #1 job, like MSM, is to deflect the truth

007 is more of a composite character, taken from various people
Sidney Reilly(something like that) was the main inspiration?
there was a PBS mini series years ago about him
late 1800's/early 1900's, nearly overthrew the bolshevik revolution which would have stopped communism before it ever got started
also the proverbial lady killer, his history is mysterious
 

dddaver

Active member
Veteran
I thought Sean Connery was. You mean he wasn't really? ...FUCK ME! Next somebody's gonna say there ain't no Santy Claus. Well damn.
 
G

gloryoskie

Had to neg rep PetFlora for that.^^

Everyone lies, the MSM's job is to sell advertising time,
not to tell the truth.

Tell your friends. Media's highest priority is revenue.

007 character knew the difference between the truth and
what passed for common knowledge. Remember, if you live
in bad faith the truth will appear to you as lies.

That's what makes the 007 fiction so entertaining. He always
tries to turn the bad guy before everything gets blown up.

Good stuff.
 

igrowone

Well-known member
Veteran
The people in the round table discussion are ardent students of what's really going on behind the curtain of false reality. Citing PBS is akin to quoting a politician- if their lips are moving, they're lying. Their #1 job, like MSM, is to deflect the truth

PBS series was interesting, not saying it was the 'truth', if there is such a thing as the 'truth' but Ian Flemming did mention Sidney Reilly, he is an historical character, how much of him was in 007? that's debatable
 

Madjag

Active member
Veteran
Ian Fleming lived near a small settlement area along the mid-north shore of Jamaica near Oracabessa. His home was known as Goldeneye. Around the same the time there was a famous bird researcher who wrote the definitve book on Caribbean birds. Fleming used his name.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Bond_%28ornithologist%29

James Bond (January 4, 1900 – February 14, 1989) was a leading American ornithologist, an expert on the birds of the Caribbean. His name was appropriated by writer Ian Fleming for his fictional spy, James Bond.

Ian Fleming, who was a keen bird watcher living in Jamaica, was familiar with Bond's book, and chose the name of its author for the hero of Casino Royale in 1953, apparently because he wanted a name that sounded 'as ordinary as possible'. Fleming wrote to the real Bond's wife, "It struck me that this brief, unromantic, Anglo-Saxon and yet very masculine name was just what I needed, and so a second James Bond was born." He also contacted the real James Bond about using his name in the books and Bond replied to him, "Fine with it." At some point during one of Fleming's visits to Jamaica he met with the real Bond and his wife as shown in a made for DVD documentary about Fleming. A short clip was shown with Fleming, Bond and his wife. Also in his novel Dr. No Fleming referenced Bond's work by basing a large Ornithological Sanctuary on Dr. No's island in the Bahamas. In 1964, Fleming gave Bond a first edition copy of You Only Live Twice signed "To the real James Bond, from the thief of his identity". In December 2008 the book was put up for auction, eventually fetching $84,000 (£56,000).[3][4]
 
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