In
J. D. Salinger's book The
Catcher in the Rye,
the main character, Holden Caulfield, imagines that he is standing in
a field of rye next to a cliff and saving children who are playing in
the field from falling over the edge. Holden Caulfield sees himself
as the catcher in the rye.
Prior
to ever writing The
Catcher in the Rye,
J. D. Salinger had served in the US Army's Counter Intelligence Corps
(the precursor to the OSS/CIA). One of his fellow CIC officers had
been Henry Kissinger, a Zioinist Jew who went on to become a major
behind-the-scenes political heavyweight for many years. As a CIC
officer, Salinger had been directly involved in conducting
interrogations of Nazis at the end of WWII. He would therefore have
been involved in identifying those lucky Nazis who would be brought
over to the USA through Project Paperclip. He had a nervous breakdown
after the war and was hospitalized for a short while because of it.
This information about Salinger’s military past and his nervous
breakdown has apparently only come out in recent years.
More
than just being the imaginings of his main character, Salinger had
been a real 'catcher in the rye', saving Nazis from a certain fate.
Why
was this mediocre book about teenage angst propelled to the top of
the bestseller charts and forced on highschool students as required
reading for so many years? Salinger had friends in high places and
had served them well during the war, so perhaps this bit of good
fortune was just a token of their appreciation. But it seems to have
become more than just that...
The
Catcher in the Rye
has been a favorite book of a number of the media's most infamous
'lone-nut' killers/patsies/actors/hoaxes:
-
Mark David Chapman was completely obsessed with the book and
identified with the main character, and even intended to promote it
at his trial, had he gotten one. After killing John Lennon, he sat
down and calmly began reading it while he waited for the police to
arrive.
-
A copy of the book was found on a table in John Hinckley's hotel room
where he was staying when he attempted to assassinate President
Reagan.
-
A copy of the book was found among Sirhan Sirhan's possessions as
well.
-
Adam Lanza had chosen the book as a school study project. He had also
been researching past school shootings.
-
Even Lee Harvey Oswald reportedly had a copy of the book on his
bookshelves.
So
what's the connection?
Many
people suspect that this particular book has been used to trigger
these killer's mind-control programming. Although this is probably
true, it isn't very likely that particular passages in the book were
meant to trigger particular responses in these programmed killers.
Instead, it's more likely that the book itself is the trigger, and
its overall content has been used to engender a particular feeling or
attitude in the killers, a sense of affinity with the main character
-- a young nihilist who is going through a personal crisis as he’s
about to enter the real world for the first time and feels despondent
about it. At the same time, he is someone who for whatever reason
imagines himself saving innocents from a danger that only he is able
to see.
That
is what he feels he is required to do, or at least it's the best that
he feels he can do.
Whatever
might be made of any of this, one fact seems clear: In the programmed
killer's eyes, this book was a sort of motivational trigger. The
killer is Holden Caulfield, feeling what he feels, seeing himself in
the same light that Holden does. A chatcher in the rye.
This
is also how Salinger probably saw himself as well, at least during
the time that he was in the CIC. But he had a nervous breakdown from
that experience and spent some time recovering in a hospital, and
then he spent the next number of years writing his book, which
(because of his elitist connections) became an instant success and
made him financially secure enough from its guaranteed revenues that
he was able to just disappear from a world that he apparently wanted
nothing further to do with.
And
what about all the other catchers in the rye: Chapman, Hinckley, and
the other killers/patsies/actors/hoaxes that have been used in
high-profile government-assisted domestic terror operations over the
years? Did they all find an escape from their perceived hopelessness
by acting at the behest of their handlers?
Only
they can decide.
In
a very large number of cases, these 'lone-nut' killers have reported
hearing voices that had tormented them and encouraged them to act out
as they did. The voices usually increased over time and then suddenly
stopped soon after they had been caught and put away. Hearing voices
is a sure sign of mind-control programming. They can either be due to
electronic technology that can transmit sounds and voices into a
person's head, or they are the effect of multiple personalities that
have been created using hypnosis, drugs, electroshock, ritual abuse,
and/or any other forms of extreme trauma. In either case, the voices
can be used to trigger certain responses far better than a book, but
a book like The
Catcher in the Rye
can provide a more subtle motivational context for those responses,
especially when the killer sees himself as the main character, as
Chapman did.
Salinger
probably thought he was just catching killers when he was a young CIC
officer taking orders from his own handlers who he probably still
thought at that point were good guys. Only later would he likely have
discovered that they were actually as evil as some of those Nazis he
was interrogating. Only later he would have realized that he had
assisted in bringing some of the worst Nazis into the USA with new
identities under Project Paperclip. Perhaps this is what caused his
breakdown and later reclusiveness. Or perhaps it was from what he had
seen or even taken part in himself as a CIC officer.
From
the point of view of the Powers That Be -- those 'hidden masters' who
orchestrate world affairs large and small from their shadowy enclaves
of power -- Salinger was a mere pawn, just like the killers who have
sometimes been found in possession of his book. The book itself has
apparently been used as a prop, acting as a sort of trigger to keep
certain other pawns in play before sacrificing them in order to gain
a more powerful position on the board, or to eliminate a threatening
piece on the opponent's side.
Salinger
went completely incommunicado soon after his overnight success with
The
Catcher in the Rye
in 1951, and was little heard from again, hiding away at his
high-walled estate and eventually even going so far as to have his
picture removed from the cover of his book so nobody would recognize
him. The information about his past with the CIC only came out after
his death.
This
suggests a cover-up. Salinger got a very handsome payoff for his book
by having it made required reading in schools. That would assure that
there would be a certain number of guaranteed sales each year for
years to come, on top of any sales in bookstores.
One
thing is certain. By purposely associating Salinger’s book with a
number of these high-profile killers, the Powers That Be would have
effectively forced Salinger into one of two options: a) tell what he
might know and face possible murder, or b) hide from any potential
questions.
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