"Ich bin ein Berliner"

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"Ich bin ein Berliner" is a famous quote, speech and book by John F. Kennedy, spoken at .... on June 26 in his last year 1963. It is one of the best-known speeches of the Cold War and among the most famous anti-communist speeches.[1]

whatever, he's dead, not on 22-11 (33 - see more: 33 numerology), but by now, 2024, he should be.

Think about this quote. Holistically.

In the timeframe.

The context.

The esoteric meaning, of this quote, by this man, from his head !! in this FRAGMENTED city....

Twenty-two [22 !! see more: 22 numerology] months earlier, East Germany had erected the Berlin Wall to prevent mass emigration to West Berlin. The speech was aimed as much at the Soviet Union as it was at West Berliners. Another phrase in the speech was also spoken in German, "Lasst sie nach Berlin kommen" ("Let them come to Berlin"), addressed at those who claimed "we can work with the Communists", a remark at which Nikita Khrushchev scoffed only days later. The speech is considered one of Kennedy's finest, delivered at the height of the Cold War and the New Frontier.[1]

My buddies (the previous US Governments and military industry)

have

CHOPPED UP

this iconic city

and this man

Speaking to an audience of 120,000 on the steps of Rathaus Schöneberg, Kennedy said,

says

Two thousand years ago, the proudest boast was civis romanus sum ["I am a Roman citizen"]. Today, in the world of freedom, the proudest boast is "Ich bin ein Berliner!"... All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin, and therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words "Ich bin ein Berliner!"

I mean ...

Kennedy used the phrase twice in his speech, including at the end, pronouncing the sentence with his Boston accent and reading from his note "ish bin ein Bearleener", which he had written out using English orthography to approximate the German pronunciation – his actual pronunciation though is fairly close to correct German and much better than how he is usually quoted. He also used the classical Latin pronunciation of civis romanus sum, with the c pronounced [k] and the v as [w] (i.e. "kiwis romanus sum").

For decades, competing claims about the origins of the "Ich bin ein Berliner" overshadowed the history of the speech. In 2008, historian Andreas Daum provided a comprehensive explanation, based on archival sources and interviews with contemporaries and witnesses. He highlighted the authorship of Kennedy himself and his 1962 speech in New Orleans as a precedent, and demonstrated that by straying from the prepared script in Berlin, Kennedy created the climax of an emotionally charged political performance, which became a hallmark of the Cold War epoch.[1]

That he is a citizen of that fragmented city

not in 1989, at the Fall of Ze Wall...

no, somewhere in the early 1960s, when the Iron Curtain got completed....


Berlin 1963 [1]

I mean....

HOW SATANIC must an Irish at most Kennedy and this Clownworld be...

and twice prescriptive programming that I recognize:

  1. spoken 22 months AFTER Berlin Wall as for 5 months later to the date his head would just be as
  2. FRAGMENTED as JFK's iconic watermelon cartoon physically FRAGMENTING head
  3. only released to the public through Zapruder 11 years after 63 = 9...
  4. the date of the ultrafamous speech you can pronounce as "To 66" - June 26 = 26-6 = 2-66

no further questions, your honor.

FRAC 13 Paper Rockets

check out Geris' and mine already getting to 5 year ancient comedy, about exactly this iconic historic schizophrenic on all sides quote

references