Sorry for the thin content here – we have one week here in Brooklyn till the movers come, and plowing through 40 years’ accumulated detritus, sorting what is to be moved, stored, sold, donated, and jettisoned, while taking care of last-minute medical stuff before we move 300 miles away from where all our doctors are, and other necessary things too numerous and trivial to bore you with, has consumed all of my energy (I’m no spring chicken, after all).
Here are a couple of items to pass along, though:
— Making the rounds is an anonymous essay called The Spartacus Letter: an extremely detailed and sourced exposition of the global catastrophe caused by the Wuhan Red Death, and a bitter indictment of those involved in its origins and (mis)management – including, at the end of the piece, a remarkable bit of tinfoil-hattery regarding graphene oxide and brain-computer interfaces. The letter was posted to Twitter by, among others, Robert Malone, the inventor of the mRNA vaccine, and I have yet to see a serious rebuttal. If half of what it says is true, it’s time for tumbrels and lap-posts. I’ve saved a copy so it won’t vanish; you can read it here. Let me know what you think.
— Steve Sailer takes a good hard look at the latest FBI crime stats, here. His specialty is saying the obvious things that nobody else will; his latest is no exception.
— Finally, a splendid piece at AG from an anonymous frog by the name of “17th Century Shyteposter”, about hubris and acts of God. Here. (As an OG dissident-right/frog-Twitter/NRx type myself, I’m starting to get the feeling that our time has come: the analysis we’ve been offering for more than a decade is becoming more and more obviously correct, more and more of us who used to be hidden in dark corners of the Internet are coming to public prominence, and our memes are everywhere.)
10 Comments
Brain-computer interfaces have been an openly expressed goal of transhumanists and globalists for 30 years, and the graphene oxide material is another avenue of research the mad hatters at various companies have been working on for years. There is nothing tin foil hat about any of it as both avenues have been openly investigated and the research literature is not hidden if one looks for it.
Globalist elites have decided to use Covid to radically restructure the entire Western world, and their plans are in full gear.
That anyone thinks the Covid passports will disappear if Covid does is probably too stupid to live.
Our betters are trying hard to normalize a Chinese style social credit system run through smart phones. This will be tied to ones bank account and health records.
At least half the population is so demoralized and psychically fractured that they are sleepwalking into a dystopian nightmare even Orwell and Huxley could barely imagine.
All of the information presented in the Spartacus letter is sound, and people need to realize the past 18 months have not been an accident.
Our best hope right now, considering the scale of the censorship and the near total passivity of the general population in the face of having
our basic rights denied to us using Covid as an excuse, is to pray that the massive internal contradictions of the globalists plans will undermine the entire project, as will the general level of incompetence that characterizes the managerial class that is rolling all this insanity out.
Pray, and prepare to defend our basic civil liberties which have been upended for nearly 2 years.
AD,
I spoke of “tinfoil-hattery” because the claim that we are about to be enslaved by way of direct brain control seemed, well, rather beyond what I would imagine possible in any technically plausible near future.
That said, the only attempt I have seen at rebutting the claim about nanoparticles was a ridiculously transparent diversion; it said that the vaccine used nanoparticles as a suspension medium, and that there were no nano-“computers” or “robots” involved. This is a pathetic attempt to brush away Spartacus’s claim, as the nanoparticles legitimately used in the vaccine are lipids. So if there really are graphene oxide particles in there, it wants explaining – and yes, graphene oxide is, as you say, an avenue being pursued in BCI research.
This is a dangerous moment, a hinge in human history. Your sense of how serious all of this is is quite right, and that so few people understand how bad things could become — and how quickly — is very worrisome indeed.
I’ve noticed a great escalation in the writing and reading of post-apocalypic literature. I’ve read a good deal of it myself, and found much of it to be entertaining and even educational- bad circumstances, good people trying to survive and still stay ‘human’, necessity of working together to rebuild a culture, and the other necessity of defending against the worst that humanity can produce. In extremis, good people vs. good people, killing one another in the fight for resources.
W. Forstchen’s novel “One Second After” among the best imo.
Dystopian fiction resonates with more and more people; some of those people are thinkers, many if not most just ‘feel’ in their gut that s*** is going to come down hard, and that they need to think past it.
It’s likely gonna take me awhile to find the precise authoritative bookmark but my understanding is the [purported] nanoparticles are encased (for delivery) within lipids.
Perhaps a distinction without a difference but …
Now that I’ve neurons firing and synapses connecting I seem to recall a Japanese “ordered” study of the, as I recall Pfizer concoction, that somehow leaked.
BTW – Taking notice of all the ‘Daves’ here, I googled ‘what do you call a group of Daves. no joy. But ‘doves’ came up, close enough for government work.
“According to the United States Geological Survey, a group of doves is known as a dule, and a group of turtle doves is also known as a pitying. These collective nouns specifically describe groups of doves or turtle doves, though other words are suitable for describing three or more doves, including the words “group” or “flock.”
A ‘pitying’ of Daves!
Oboy DaveB, am I gonna be a hit next Sunday school!
But – getting back to serious – as I’m unable to quickly locate precisely what I had in mind I’ll simply say ‘Yeah Malcolm, you are correct however it may be we’re both right’:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5439223/
Concerning that Japanese study I referenced one might listen to between the 20 & 35 minute timestamps in the below video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9E2UkhCWosg
..”we have one week here in Brooklyn till the movers come, and plowing through 40 years’ accumulated detritus, sorting what is to be moved, stored, sold, donated, and jettisoned,.”
Or, what is another sure fire way to start more arguments. We did the same 3 years ago and what a nightmare. My wife insisted on keeping nearly everything.
Mick Jagger…approaching the Great Forgetting?
https://www.msn.com/en-us/music/news/nobody-recognized-mick-jagger-when-he-grabbed-a-beer-at-a-local-bar-the-night-before-a-rolling-stones-concert/ar-AAP3eF3?li=BBnb7Kz
‘The locals’ maybe Whitewall have some reasonable explanation for why that mighta been:
http://coldfury.com/2021/10/01/local-color/
Re: Jagger
“ To me he’s one of the heroes of this country
So why’s he all dressed up like some old man” — Clark