The Executive Order 11110 Myth: What JFK Really Did DD

On June 4th, 1963, 171 days before his assassination, President John F. Kennedy walked into the Oval Office and signed a document that conspiracy theorists claim sealed his fate. Executive Order 11,110. With the stroke of a pen, according to the theory, Kennedy challenged the most powerful financial institution in the world, the Federal Reserve.

The theory goes like this. Kennedy authorized the US Treasury to issue 4.3 billion in United States notes, silver certificates backed by the government’s silver reserves. These notes bypassed the Federal Reserve entirely. They were debt-free currency, money the government could print without borrowing from private bankers.

And 5 months later, Kennedy was dead in Dallas. Proponents of this theory ask, “Was it a coincidence, or did Kennedy sign his own death warrant the day he dared to challenge the bankers who controlled America’s money supply?” If you want to understand one of the most controversial theories about Kennedy’s assassination and the truth behind Executive Order 11,110, hit that like button because this isn’t just about money. It’s about power.

Who controls it? Who profits from it? and what happens when a president tries to take it back. Let’s start with the conspiracy theory because before we can understand the truth, we need to understand what millions of people believe. The theory is simple. The Federal Reserve created in 1913 is a private banking cartel that controls America’s money supply.

When the US government needs money, it doesn’t print it itself. It borrows it from the Federal Reserve and the Fed charges interest, billions of dollars in interest, every year forever. The national debt, currently over $30 trillion, exists because the government borrows money from the Fed instead of printing it debt-free.

Every dollar in circulation represents a dollar borrowed at interest. The more money the government borrows, the richer the bankers get. But what if a president decided to break free? What if a president said, “We don’t need to borrow money from private bankers. We can print our own currency backed by silver or gold debt-free.

” According to the conspiracy theory, that’s exactly what John F. Kennedy did on June 4th, 1963 with Executive Order 11,110. The order supposedly authorized the Treasury Secretary to issue silver certificates, currency backed by silver, in the US Treasury’s vaults. For every ounce of silver, the government could print new money, debt-free, no interest, no Federal Reserve.

In total, according to the theory, Kennedy brought 4.3 billion in United States notes into circulation, red seal notes, not green Federal Reserve notes. These were governmentissued debt-free dollars. And if Kennedy had continued this policy, the theory claims, the Federal Reserve would have been obsolete. The government wouldn’t need to borrow from banks.

the national debt would stop growing. The power of the private banking cartel would be broken. But Kennedy never got the chance. On November 22nd, 1963, he was assassinated. And according to the theory, the day Kennedy died, all of those Kennedy bills, those red seal silver certificates were removed from circulation, destroyed, never mentioned again.

The theory concludes Kennedy was killed by the same forces that killed Abraham Lincoln, who had printed debt-free greenbacks during the Civil War. Presidents who challenged the banking system don’t survive. It’s a powerful story. It makes sense. It explains motive. Kennedy threatened the most lucrative monopoly in human history, the power to create money.

And for that, he was killed. But there’s a problem with this theory. A big problem. It’s not true. Let’s talk about what executive order 11,110 actually did. Because the truth is more complicated and more interesting than the conspiracy theory. On June 4th, 1963, Kennedy signed two things. First, a bill from Congress, public law 8836.

Second, executive order 11,110, which implemented the law. What did the law do? It authorized the Federal Reserve to issue one titler and $2 notes. Previously, small denomination currency had been issued by the Treasury in the form of silver certificates, paper money backed by silver. But silver was becoming too expensive.

Industrial demand for silver was driving up its price. The government’s silver reserves were being depleted. Kennedy’s solution, [snorts] phase out silver certificates, replace them with Federal Reserve notes, and authorize the Treasury Secretary to issue any remaining silver certificates needed during the transition.

That’s what executive order 11,110 did. It delegated to the Treasury Secretary the power to issue silver certificates during the phase out period. It wasn’t an attack on the Federal Reserve. It was a transition plan to give the Federal Reserve more control over small currency denominations. In other words, Executive Order 11,110 strengthened the Federal Reserve.

It didn’t weaken it. Let’s look at Kennedy’s own words. In a special message to Congress on January 17th, 1963, Kennedy proposed eliminating silver certificates. He said, “I recommend repeal of those acts that oblige the Treasury to support the price of silver and repeal of the special 50% tax on transfers of interest in silver and authorization for the Federal Reserve system to issue notes in denominations of $1 so as to make possible the gradual withdrawal of silver certificates from circulation.

” Read that carefully. Kennedy wanted the Federal Reserve to issue one bills. He wanted to eliminate silver certificates. He wasn’t trying to bypass the Fed. He was giving the Fed more power. And on June 4th, 1963, when Kennedy signed the bill in the executive order, he said, “I again urge a revision in our silver policy to reflect the status of silver as a metal for which there is an expanding industrial demand.

Except for its use in coins, silver serves no useful monetary function.” Kennedy wanted to get rid of silverbacked currency. He wanted Federal Reserve notes to replace them. So where did the conspiracy theory come from? It started in the 1990s. Author Jim Mars in his book Crossfire suggested that Kennedy was trying to challenge the Federal Reserve.

Other conspiracy theorists expanded on the idea. They claimed Kennedy issued 4.3 billion in debt-free United States notes with red seals. But here’s the problem. Kennedy never issued red seal United States notes. Those notes, officially called US notes or legal tender notes, had been authorized since the 1860s. They continued to be printed until 1971, but Kennedy didn’t create them.

They existed long before he became president. What Kennedy did issue briefly were silver certificates during the transition period. These had blue seals, and they weren’t debt-free. They were just a different form of currency backed by silver reserves. the 4.3 billion figure. That refers to the total amount of silver certificates still in circulation when Kennedy took office.

He didn’t print 4.3 billion in new money. He gradually phased out that old money and replaced it with Federal Reserve notes. So, the entire conspiracy theory is based on a misunderstanding of what executive order 11,110 actually did. But let’s be fair. Let’s examine the bigger question. Did Kennedy oppose the Federal Reserve? Was he planning to challenge the banking system in some other way? The answer is no.

Not based on the evidence we have. In October 1960, during his presidential campaign, Kennedy gave a speech in New York City. He said, “I do not, let me make clear, advocate any changes in the constitution of the Federal Reserve system. It is important to keep the day-to-day operations of the Federal Reserve removed from political pressures.

Kennedy supported the Federal Reserve. He believed it should remain independent. He never proposed ending it or replacing it with governmentissued currency. Iris Stole, author of JFK Conservative, researched Kennedy’s economic policies extensively. He found no evidence that Kennedy was planning to end the Federal Reserve.

Stole told Politifact, “What Kennedy would think of the Federal Reserve now is hard to know because it changed under President Richard Nixon when the dollar was delin from gold. But in Kennedy’s time, he supported the Fed. He worked with the Fed and Executive Order 11,110 gave the Fed more power, not less.” So why does the conspiracy theory persist? Why do millions of people believe Kennedy was killed for challenging the bankers? Because the theory touches on something real, something that makes people uncomfortable.

The Federal Reserve is a private institution with public power. It was created by bankers in secret meetings. It operates with minimal oversight. It has created trillions of dollars out of thin air. And the national debt has exploded since 1913 when the Fed was established. Those facts are true and they make people angry. They make people suspicious.

So when someone says Kennedy tried to fight the Fed and they killed him for it, people want to te believe it because it confirms their suspicions about how the system works. But wanting something to be true doesn’t make it true. Let’s address the other part of the conspiracy theory.

The claim that Kennedy’s red seal notes were destroyed after his death and removed from circulation. First, Kennedy never issued red seal notes. Red Seal United States notes existed, but they weren’t Kennedy’s creation. They had been issued since the 1860s under the Legal Tender Act. They continued to be printed until 1971, 8 years after Kennedy’s death.

Second, silver certificates, the blue seal notes Kennedy did authorize, weren’t destroyed after his death. They were gradually phased out over several years, exactly as Kennedy had planned. In March 1964, Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dylan halted redemption of silver certificates for silver dollars.

By June 1968, all redemption of silver for certificates ended, but the notes themselves remained in circulation for years. The idea that all of Kennedy’s special currency was destroyed the day he died, pure fiction. It never happened. And here’s the kicker. Executive Order 11,110 was never repealed by Kennedy’s successors. It remained on the books.

Lynden Johnson didn’t cancel it. Richard Nixon didn’t cancel it. It stayed in effect until 1987 when Ronald Reagan issued Executive Order 12,68 as part of a general cleanup of obsolete orders. If Kennedy’s order was so dangerous, if it threatened the Federal Reserve’s power, why did it remain in effect for 24 years after his death? Why didn’t the bankers who supposedly killed Kennedy immediately repeal the order? Because the order didn’t threaten them, it helped them.

It facilitated the transition to full Federal Reserve control over all paper currency. Now, let’s talk about the real issues surrounding the Federal Reserve. Because even though the Kennedy theory is false, the concerns about the Fed are legitimate. The Federal Reserve was created in 1913 after a secret meeting of bankers on Jackal Island, Georgia.

The meeting included representatives of JP Morgan, the Rockefellers, and the Rothschilds. They drafted the Federal Reserve Act, which Congress passed and President Woodrow Wilson signed into law. The Fed is not a government agency. It’s a private corporation owned by member banks. It has the power to create money out of thin air. It sets interest rates.

It controls the money supply. It operates with minimal congressional oversight. And it has never been audited. Since the Fed’s creation, the US national debt has exploded. In 1913, the debt was 3 billion. Today, it’s over 30 trillion. And every dollar of that debt generates interest payments. interest paid to the Federal Reserve and its member banks.

Critics argue that this system is unconstitutional. Article one, section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to coin money, regulate the value thereof, not private banks. Congress, but Congress delegated that power to the Fed. And for over a century, the Fed has created money, charged interest, and profited enormously while the American people sink deeper into debt.

Those [snorts] concerns are valid. Presidents should question the Federal Reserve. Congress should audit the Fed. The American people should understand how money is created and who benefits. But John F. Kennedy didn’t fight that fight. He wasn’t a crusader against central banking. He wasn’t a martyr killed for challenging the financial elite.

Kennedy was a pragmatic politician. He worked within the system. He supported the Federal Reserve. and executive order 11,110, the order supposedly proving he challenged the bankers, actually gave the Fed more power. So, if Kennedy wasn’t killed for executive order 11,110, who benefits from the conspiracy theory? Who wants people to believe this false narrative? Possibly the same people who benefit from other JFK conspiracy theories by flooding the discourse with false theories.

By making people believe in Executive Order 11,110 or altered Zaprooter films or fake autopsy photos, the real evidence gets lost. The real suspects get ignored. If everyone’s arguing about whether Kennedy challenged the Federal Reserve, no one’s examining the LBJ conspiracy, the oil depletion allowance, the Texas trip, the sweet AF group, the financial motives of billionaires who stood to lose hundreds of millions if Kennedy lived.

Follow the money. Always follow the money, but follow the right money trail, not a fake trail about silver certificates. The real trail, the one leading to Dallas, to Texas oil barons, to political machines, to men with everything to lose if Kennedy succeeded. Executive Order 11,110 is a red herring, a distraction, a false theory that sounds compelling but collapses under scrutiny.

The real question isn’t whether Kennedy challenged the Federal Reserve. The real question is who benefited from his death. And the answer isn’t bankers in New York. It’s oilmen in Texas, politicians in Washington, CIA operatives in Miami, mafia bosses in Chicago and New Orleans. Those are the trails worth following.

Those are the theories worth examining. But the Federal Reserve theory, it’s based on a misunderstanding, a misreading of Executive Order 11,110, a desire to believe that Kennedy was a hero fighting against the financial elite. Kennedy was many things, but he wasn’t that hero. Not in this case. If this story challenged what you thought you knew about Kennedy and the Federal Reserve, do something powerful.

Hit that like button. Every like tells YouTube this kind of fact-checking matters. Subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss our investigations into the myths, theories, and truths behind history’s greatest mysteries. Every day, we examine conspiracy theories with facts. We challenge popular narratives with evidence.

We separate truth from fiction. Because history deserves accuracy, not just compelling stories. Now, I want to hear from you. Drop a comment. Did you believe the executive order 11,110 theory? Does this change your perspective? Are you in the US, Europe, Middle East, Asia? Our community spans the globe. Share your thoughts. Share your city.

keep this conversation alive because some conspiracy theories are true, but some are distractions, some are myths that sound good but fall apart under examination. Thank you for watching and remember, history doesn’t repeat, but it echoes. Question everything. Examine the evidence. Follow the money, but make sure you’re following the right money trail.

Executive Order 11,110 is June 4th, 1963, 5 months before Dallas. Did it get Kennedy killed? No. But it tells us something important. Even false theories can teach us something about power, money, and the questions we should be asking. The Federal Reserve is worth questioning. The national debt is worth examining.

The power to create money is worth debating. But John F. Kennedy didn’t die fighting that fight. He died for other reasons. Reasons we’re still uncovering. Reasons that have nothing to do with silver certificates. The truth is out there, but it’s not an executive order 11,110.

On June 4th, 1963, 171 days before his assassination, President John F. Kennedy walked into the Oval Office and signed a document that conspiracy theorists claim sealed his fate. Executive Order 11,110. With the stroke of a pen, according to the theory, Kennedy challenged the most powerful financial institution in the world, the Federal Reserve.

The theory goes like this. Kennedy authorized the US Treasury to issue 4.3 billion in United States notes, silver certificates backed by the government’s silver reserves. These notes bypassed the Federal Reserve entirely. They were debt-free currency, money the government could print without borrowing from private bankers.

And 5 months later, Kennedy was dead in Dallas. Proponents of this theory ask, “Was it a coincidence, or did Kennedy sign his own death warrant the day he dared to challenge the bankers who controlled America’s money supply?” If you want to understand one of the most controversial theories about Kennedy’s assassination and the truth behind Executive Order 11,110, hit that like button because this isn’t just about money. It’s about power.

Who controls it? Who profits from it? and what happens when a president tries to take it back. Let’s start with the conspiracy theory because before we can understand the truth, we need to understand what millions of people believe. The theory is simple. The Federal Reserve created in 1913 is a private banking cartel that controls America’s money supply.

When the US government needs money, it doesn’t print it itself. It borrows it from the Federal Reserve and the Fed charges interest, billions of dollars in interest, every year forever. The national debt, currently over $30 trillion, exists because the government borrows money from the Fed instead of printing it debt-free.

Every dollar in circulation represents a dollar borrowed at interest. The more money the government borrows, the richer the bankers get. But what if a president decided to break free? What if a president said, “We don’t need to borrow money from private bankers. We can print our own currency backed by silver or gold debt-free.

” According to the conspiracy theory, that’s exactly what John F. Kennedy did on June 4th, 1963 with Executive Order 11,110. The order supposedly authorized the Treasury Secretary to issue silver certificates, currency backed by silver, in the US Treasury’s vaults. For every ounce of silver, the government could print new money, debt-free, no interest, no Federal Reserve.

In total, according to the theory, Kennedy brought 4.3 billion in United States notes into circulation, red seal notes, not green Federal Reserve notes. These were governmentissued debt-free dollars. And if Kennedy had continued this policy, the theory claims, the Federal Reserve would have been obsolete. The government wouldn’t need to borrow from banks.

the national debt would stop growing. The power of the private banking cartel would be broken. But Kennedy never got the chance. On November 22nd, 1963, he was assassinated. And according to the theory, the day Kennedy died, all of those Kennedy bills, those red seal silver certificates were removed from circulation, destroyed, never mentioned again.

The theory concludes Kennedy was killed by the same forces that killed Abraham Lincoln, who had printed debt-free greenbacks during the Civil War. Presidents who challenged the banking system don’t survive. It’s a powerful story. It makes sense. It explains motive. Kennedy threatened the most lucrative monopoly in human history, the power to create money.

And for that, he was killed. But there’s a problem with this theory. A big problem. It’s not true. Let’s talk about what executive order 11,110 actually did. Because the truth is more complicated and more interesting than the conspiracy theory. On June 4th, 1963, Kennedy signed two things. First, a bill from Congress, public law 8836.

Second, executive order 11,110, which implemented the law. What did the law do? It authorized the Federal Reserve to issue one titler and $2 notes. Previously, small denomination currency had been issued by the Treasury in the form of silver certificates, paper money backed by silver. But silver was becoming too expensive.

Industrial demand for silver was driving up its price. The government’s silver reserves were being depleted. Kennedy’s solution, [snorts] phase out silver certificates, replace them with Federal Reserve notes, and authorize the Treasury Secretary to issue any remaining silver certificates needed during the transition.

That’s what executive order 11,110 did. It delegated to the Treasury Secretary the power to issue silver certificates during the phase out period. It wasn’t an attack on the Federal Reserve. It was a transition plan to give the Federal Reserve more control over small currency denominations. In other words, Executive Order 11,110 strengthened the Federal Reserve.

It didn’t weaken it. Let’s look at Kennedy’s own words. In a special message to Congress on January 17th, 1963, Kennedy proposed eliminating silver certificates. He said, “I recommend repeal of those acts that oblige the Treasury to support the price of silver and repeal of the special 50% tax on transfers of interest in silver and authorization for the Federal Reserve system to issue notes in denominations of $1 so as to make possible the gradual withdrawal of silver certificates from circulation.

” Read that carefully. Kennedy wanted the Federal Reserve to issue one bills. He wanted to eliminate silver certificates. He wasn’t trying to bypass the Fed. He was giving the Fed more power. And on June 4th, 1963, when Kennedy signed the bill in the executive order, he said, “I again urge a revision in our silver policy to reflect the status of silver as a metal for which there is an expanding industrial demand.

Except for its use in coins, silver serves no useful monetary function.” Kennedy wanted to get rid of silverbacked currency. He wanted Federal Reserve notes to replace them. So where did the conspiracy theory come from? It started in the 1990s. Author Jim Mars in his book Crossfire suggested that Kennedy was trying to challenge the Federal Reserve.

Other conspiracy theorists expanded on the idea. They claimed Kennedy issued 4.3 billion in debt-free United States notes with red seals. But here’s the problem. Kennedy never issued red seal United States notes. Those notes, officially called US notes or legal tender notes, had been authorized since the 1860s. They continued to be printed until 1971, but Kennedy didn’t create them.

They existed long before he became president. What Kennedy did issue briefly were silver certificates during the transition period. These had blue seals, and they weren’t debt-free. They were just a different form of currency backed by silver reserves. the 4.3 billion figure. That refers to the total amount of silver certificates still in circulation when Kennedy took office.

He didn’t print 4.3 billion in new money. He gradually phased out that old money and replaced it with Federal Reserve notes. So, the entire conspiracy theory is based on a misunderstanding of what executive order 11,110 actually did. But let’s be fair. Let’s examine the bigger question. Did Kennedy oppose the Federal Reserve? Was he planning to challenge the banking system in some other way? The answer is no.

Not based on the evidence we have. In October 1960, during his presidential campaign, Kennedy gave a speech in New York City. He said, “I do not, let me make clear, advocate any changes in the constitution of the Federal Reserve system. It is important to keep the day-to-day operations of the Federal Reserve removed from political pressures.

Kennedy supported the Federal Reserve. He believed it should remain independent. He never proposed ending it or replacing it with governmentissued currency. Iris Stole, author of JFK Conservative, researched Kennedy’s economic policies extensively. He found no evidence that Kennedy was planning to end the Federal Reserve.

Stole told Politifact, “What Kennedy would think of the Federal Reserve now is hard to know because it changed under President Richard Nixon when the dollar was delin from gold. But in Kennedy’s time, he supported the Fed. He worked with the Fed and Executive Order 11,110 gave the Fed more power, not less.” So why does the conspiracy theory persist? Why do millions of people believe Kennedy was killed for challenging the bankers? Because the theory touches on something real, something that makes people uncomfortable.

The Federal Reserve is a private institution with public power. It was created by bankers in secret meetings. It operates with minimal oversight. It has created trillions of dollars out of thin air. And the national debt has exploded since 1913 when the Fed was established. Those facts are true and they make people angry. They make people suspicious.

So when someone says Kennedy tried to fight the Fed and they killed him for it, people want to te believe it because it confirms their suspicions about how the system works. But wanting something to be true doesn’t make it true. Let’s address the other part of the conspiracy theory.

The claim that Kennedy’s red seal notes were destroyed after his death and removed from circulation. First, Kennedy never issued red seal notes. Red Seal United States notes existed, but they weren’t Kennedy’s creation. They had been issued since the 1860s under the Legal Tender Act. They continued to be printed until 1971, 8 years after Kennedy’s death.

Second, silver certificates, the blue seal notes Kennedy did authorize, weren’t destroyed after his death. They were gradually phased out over several years, exactly as Kennedy had planned. In March 1964, Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dylan halted redemption of silver certificates for silver dollars.

By June 1968, all redemption of silver for certificates ended, but the notes themselves remained in circulation for years. The idea that all of Kennedy’s special currency was destroyed the day he died, pure fiction. It never happened. And here’s the kicker. Executive Order 11,110 was never repealed by Kennedy’s successors. It remained on the books.

Lynden Johnson didn’t cancel it. Richard Nixon didn’t cancel it. It stayed in effect until 1987 when Ronald Reagan issued Executive Order 12,68 as part of a general cleanup of obsolete orders. If Kennedy’s order was so dangerous, if it threatened the Federal Reserve’s power, why did it remain in effect for 24 years after his death? Why didn’t the bankers who supposedly killed Kennedy immediately repeal the order? Because the order didn’t threaten them, it helped them.

It facilitated the transition to full Federal Reserve control over all paper currency. Now, let’s talk about the real issues surrounding the Federal Reserve. Because even though the Kennedy theory is false, the concerns about the Fed are legitimate. The Federal Reserve was created in 1913 after a secret meeting of bankers on Jackal Island, Georgia.

The meeting included representatives of JP Morgan, the Rockefellers, and the Rothschilds. They drafted the Federal Reserve Act, which Congress passed and President Woodrow Wilson signed into law. The Fed is not a government agency. It’s a private corporation owned by member banks. It has the power to create money out of thin air. It sets interest rates.

It controls the money supply. It operates with minimal congressional oversight. And it has never been audited. Since the Fed’s creation, the US national debt has exploded. In 1913, the debt was 3 billion. Today, it’s over 30 trillion. And every dollar of that debt generates interest payments. interest paid to the Federal Reserve and its member banks.

Critics argue that this system is unconstitutional. Article one, section 8 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to coin money, regulate the value thereof, not private banks. Congress, but Congress delegated that power to the Fed. And for over a century, the Fed has created money, charged interest, and profited enormously while the American people sink deeper into debt.

Those [snorts] concerns are valid. Presidents should question the Federal Reserve. Congress should audit the Fed. The American people should understand how money is created and who benefits. But John F. Kennedy didn’t fight that fight. He wasn’t a crusader against central banking. He wasn’t a martyr killed for challenging the financial elite.

Kennedy was a pragmatic politician. He worked within the system. He supported the Federal Reserve. and executive order 11,110, the order supposedly proving he challenged the bankers, actually gave the Fed more power. So, if Kennedy wasn’t killed for executive order 11,110, who benefits from the conspiracy theory? Who wants people to believe this false narrative? Possibly the same people who benefit from other JFK conspiracy theories by flooding the discourse with false theories.

By making people believe in Executive Order 11,110 or altered Zaprooter films or fake autopsy photos, the real evidence gets lost. The real suspects get ignored. If everyone’s arguing about whether Kennedy challenged the Federal Reserve, no one’s examining the LBJ conspiracy, the oil depletion allowance, the Texas trip, the sweet AF group, the financial motives of billionaires who stood to lose hundreds of millions if Kennedy lived.

Follow the money. Always follow the money, but follow the right money trail, not a fake trail about silver certificates. The real trail, the one leading to Dallas, to Texas oil barons, to political machines, to men with everything to lose if Kennedy succeeded. Executive Order 11,110 is a red herring, a distraction, a false theory that sounds compelling but collapses under scrutiny.

The real question isn’t whether Kennedy challenged the Federal Reserve. The real question is who benefited from his death. And the answer isn’t bankers in New York. It’s oilmen in Texas, politicians in Washington, CIA operatives in Miami, mafia bosses in Chicago and New Orleans. Those are the trails worth following.

Those are the theories worth examining. But the Federal Reserve theory, it’s based on a misunderstanding, a misreading of Executive Order 11,110, a desire to believe that Kennedy was a hero fighting against the financial elite. Kennedy was many things, but he wasn’t that hero. Not in this case. If this story challenged what you thought you knew about Kennedy and the Federal Reserve, do something powerful.

Hit that like button. Every like tells YouTube this kind of fact-checking matters. Subscribe and turn on notifications so you never miss our investigations into the myths, theories, and truths behind history’s greatest mysteries. Every day, we examine conspiracy theories with facts. We challenge popular narratives with evidence.

We separate truth from fiction. Because history deserves accuracy, not just compelling stories. Now, I want to hear from you. Drop a comment. Did you believe the executive order 11,110 theory? Does this change your perspective? Are you in the US, Europe, Middle East, Asia? Our community spans the globe. Share your thoughts. Share your city.

keep this conversation alive because some conspiracy theories are true, but some are distractions, some are myths that sound good but fall apart under examination. Thank you for watching and remember, history doesn’t repeat, but it echoes. Question everything. Examine the evidence. Follow the money, but make sure you’re following the right money trail.

Executive Order 11,110 is June 4th, 1963, 5 months before Dallas. Did it get Kennedy killed? No. But it tells us something important. Even false theories can teach us something about power, money, and the questions we should be asking. The Federal Reserve is worth questioning. The national debt is worth examining.

The power to create money is worth debating. But John F. Kennedy didn’t die fighting that fight. He died for other reasons. Reasons we’re still uncovering. Reasons that have nothing to do with silver certificates. The truth is out there, but it’s not an executive order 11,110.

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