Just a very brief one on the runway layouts of Heathrow Airport, as I just wrote all this, published it, and the whole lot got deleted.
After WW2, the Zionist Jews who run everything decided to put their mark on the UK, a country that was now firmly it's bitch. This is an edited version of the history of Heathrow up until that point, courtesy of Wikipedia:
Heathrow Airport originated in 1929 as a small airfield (Great West Aerodrome) on land south-east of the hamlet of Heathrow from which the airport takes its name... Development of the whole Heathrow area as a much larger airport began in 1944... The airport was opened on 25 March 1946 as London Airport and was renamed Heathrow Airport in 1966.
Something notable about Heathrow Airport after the war was it's layout. Here's an aerial view from the 1950's:
It resembles a hexagram, a six pointed star. More to the point, the two lines that converge near the top, despite missing the final parts, converge to where an eye appears to be... a similar design to the six pointed star that can be extrapolated from the pyramid on the dollar bill, and how it spells "mason":
This is quite interesting since the hexagram is the symbol that perfectly encodes the number 666 in order to hide it in plain sight - six points, six lines, six angles.
This is a satellite view of how Heathrow Airport looks like today. I've drawn a few lines in MSPaint to show what lies in the apex now...
I'll zoom in on the area right at the top of the pyramid, where the eye was on the original picture: As well as a road/track layout that suggests an inverted pentagram, there's a concorde that lies within the "eye". Triumph of man over God, perhaps?
Bonus pic showing the pentagram:
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