Jun 142021
 
 June 14, 2021  Posted by at 8:28 am Finance Tagged with: , , , , , , , , ,


Vittorio Matteo Corcos Sogni (Dreams) 1896

 

79% Of Democrats Support Employers Forcing Workers To Get Covid-19 Jabs (RT)
‘Pretty Safe’ Jab Will Protect Kids From Variant (ST)
CDC Claims Covid-19 Kills ‘Healthy Young Children’ (JTN)
The Killer in the Bloodstream: the “Spike Protein” (Whitney)
UK Lockdown End To Be Delayed (Pol.eu)
MP Warns Brits ‘Have To Learn To Live With Covid’ For ‘Rest Of Time’ (RT)
Why Is Britain Now The Capital Of Long Covid? (T.)
Wisconsin Top Court: Health Agency Lacks Power To Close Schools Over Covid (JTN)
Too Fat To Fly: FAA Updates Guidelines As American Obesity Crisis Grows (Fed.)
Biden Calls For Access To Wuhan Labs (RT)
Biden-Putin: What’s On The Table (ZH)
“Tesla Only Sold ~10%” Of Its Bitcoin Holdings: Musk Speaks, Bitcoin Moves (WS)

 

 

Look how young these inoculated kids are! 236 injuries and fatalities from vaccines in the 0-1 month old group!

 

 

Eric Clapton doesn’t agree

 

 

And that makes it alright?

79% Of Democrats Support Employers Forcing Workers To Get Covid-19 Jabs (RT)

A new poll shows that Democrats and Republicans are just about as divided on an employee’s right to choose whether to get vaccinated against Covid-19 as they are on a woman’s right to choose whether to abort her unborn child. Nearly 80% of Democrats agreed that employers should be able to force their workers to get Covid-19 shots, according to a CBS News-YouGov poll released on Sunday. In contrast, only 39% of Republicans approved of giving businesses such authority over their employees’ medical choices. The overall response was 56-44 in favor of forced jabs. Supporters of the two major parties are more split on vaccine choice than on Covid-19 inoculation in general. While 95% of Democrats have already been vaccinated or are at least considering it, 71% of Republicans are on board or thinking about taking the jab, the poll showed.

That result suggests some improvement in vaccine acceptance in the past two months. A Monmouth University poll released in mid-April indicated that 43% of Republicans don’t intend to get vaccinated against the virus. In the CBS News-YouGov survey, 29% of Republicans said they had ruled out the shots. Overall, only 18% of respondents said they won’t get vaccinated, while 71% said they had either already gotten a jab or planned to do so. The other 11% were undecided. The issue of employer-mandated vaccination is heating up, as a Texas judge on Saturday issued the nation’s first federal court ruling on whether workers can be ordered to receive Covid-19 shots.

Read more …

“Pretty” safe? Is that a slip of the tongue, or is it a warning?

‘Pretty Safe’ Jab Will Protect Kids From Variant (ST)

A scientist advising the government has declared that there is now a “very strong argument” to vaccinate children against the coronavirus as infections rise and evidence emerges that vaccination is “pretty safe”. Professor Peter Openshaw, vice-chairman of Nervtag, a committee that looks out for emerging respiratory threats, said there were indications that the Indian variant was more transmissible among children than the original Wuhan strain. Openshaw, professor of experimental medicine at Imperial College London, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “It strengthens the argument for extending vaccination to children. I’ve been sitting on the fence on this one, but on balance I’m coming to the view that there’s a very strong argument we should go there.


“Evidence has come out about the safety and efficacy of generating an antibody response in children. It looks like it is pretty safe and there are no adverse signals.” Coronavirus testing in secondary schools has collapsed in recent weeks, according to NHS Test and Trace. Nearly two thirds of secondary school pupils failed to take a test in the week before half-term. Data from Public Health England shows 282 Covid-19 outbreaks in schools in the past four weeks, compared with 88 in the previous four weeks.

Read more …

“In reviewing the medical literature and news reports, and in talking to pediatricians across the country, I am not aware of a single healthy child in the U.S. who has died of COVID-19 to date..”

CDC Claims Covid-19 Kills ‘Healthy Young Children’ (JTN)

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now claims that “healthy young children” can die from COVID-19. Marty Makary wants to see the evidence. “In reviewing the medical literature and news reports, and in talking to pediatricians across the country, I am not aware of a single healthy child in the U.S. who has died of COVID-19 to date,” the Johns Hopkins University professor of medicine and public health said Thursday. Archived versions of the CDC’s web page comparing COVID-19 and seasonal influenza show that it revised the “differences” in the section “People at High-Risk for Severe Illness” sometime between May 31 and June 8.

“The risk of complications for healthy children is higher for flu compared to COVID-19,” the earlier version says. “However, infants and children with underlying medical conditions are at increased risk for both flu and COVID-19.” The new version flips the emphasis as well as adding a new claim. “Overall, COVID-19 seems to cause more serious illnesses in some people,” it begins. “For young children, especially children younger than 5 years old, the risk of serious complications is higher for flu compared with COVID-19. However, serious COVID-19 illness resulting in hospitalization and death can occur even in healthy young children.”

Makary’s article in MedPage Today, a clinical news publisher where he serves as editor in chief, pushes back on calls to vaccinate kids ages 0 to 12 without comorbidities. He also recommends parents avoid vaccinating children who have recovered from COVID-19 infections, continuing his argument that natural immunity is just as good if not better than vaccine immunity. “The case to vaccinate kids is there, but it’s not compelling right now,” Makary wrote. He’s part of a movement of doctors at medical institutions around the world calling for far more cost-benefit analysis of COVID-19 vaccines for low-risk populations such as children.

Read more …

“..the spike protein is deadly even absent the virus. ..”

The Killer in the Bloodstream: the “Spike Protein” (Whitney)

The Spike Protein is a “uniquely dangerous” transmembrane fusion protein that is an integral part of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. “The S protein plays a crucial role in penetrating host cells and initiating infection.” It also damages the cells in the lining of the blood vessel walls which leads to blood clots, bleeding, massive inflammation and death. To say that the spike protein is merely “dangerous”, is a vast understatement. It is a potentially-lethal pathogen that has already killed tens of thousands of people. So, why did the vaccine manufacturers settle on the spike protein as an antigen that would induce an immune response in the body? That’s the million-dollar question, after all, for all practical purposes, the spike protein is a poison. We know that now due to research that was conducted at the Salk Institute. Here’s a summary of what they found:

“Salk researchers and collaborators show how the protein damages cells, confirming COVID-19 as a primarily vascular disease…. SARS-CoV-2 virus damages and attacks the vascular system (aka–The circulatory system) on a cellular level… scientists studying other coronaviruses have long suspected that the spike protein contributed to damaging vascular endothelial cells, but this is the first time the process has been documented…. … the spike protein alone was enough to cause disease. Tissue samples showed inflammation in endothelial cells lining the pulmonary artery walls. The team then replicated this process in the lab, exposing healthy endothelial cells (which line arteries) to the spike protein. They showed that the spike protein damaged the cells by binding ACE2…“If you remove the replicating capabilities of the virus, it still has a major damaging effect on the vascular cells, simply by virtue of its ability to bind to this ACE2 receptor, the S protein receptor, now famous thanks to COVID.”

Remember how everyone laughed at Trump when he said injecting household bleach would cure Covid? How is this any different? It’s not different, and whatever modest protection the vaccines provide as far as immunity, it pales in comparison to the risks they pose to personal health and survival. And did you notice what the author said about stripping-out the virus and leaving the spike protein alone?’ He said “it still has a major damaging effect” implying ‘blood clots, bleeding and severe inflammation.’ In other words, the spike protein is deadly even absent the virus. Here’s how Dr. Byram Bridle (who is a viral immunologist and associate professor at University of Guelph, Ontario) summed it up:

“We made a big mistake. We didn’t realize it until now… We thought the spike protein was a great target antigen, we never knew the spike protein itself was a toxin and was a pathogenic protein. So, by vaccinating people we are inadvertently inoculating them with a toxin.” Think about that for a minute. This is a very big deal, in fact, this is the critical piece of the puzzle that has been missing for the last 15 months. Just as the respiratory virus concealed the real killing-agent in Covid, (the spike protein) so too, the relentless hype surrounding mass-vaccination has concealed the glaring problem with the vaccines themselves, which is, they generate a substance that is “capable of causing disease.”

Read more …

How bad will the backlash be?

UK Lockdown End To Be Delayed (Pol.eu)

The U.K.’s final lifting of lockdown restrictions on June 21 is expected to be pushed back by Prime Minister Boris Johnson at a press conference on Monday evening, a government official confirmed to London Playbook. Multiple outlets report that Johnson, alongside cabinet members Rishi Sunak, Michael Gove and Matt Hancock have signed off on a month-long delay, after scientific advisers urged the prime minister to allow enough time for more people to get fully vaccinated. On Friday, The Sun reported that July 19 would be proposed as the new “Freedom Day” of lockdown end, with a review of numbers on July 5 that could see some or all restrictions lifted early.

“The prime minister sees this as the final stretch and wants people to be patient. We are nearly there, it’s one last haul,” a government source told The Times. The rules currently in place that will be kept include the wearing of face masks and limits on indoor and outdoor gatherings. The reopening of nightclubs is also set to be delayed. On the other hand, according to the Financial Times, some allowances may be made for weddings, allowing for larger gatherings as is the case for funerals. Health minister Edward Argar told Sky News on Monday that weddings and those who plan to wed “will be very much in [Johnson’s] mind at the moment.”

Despite reports that Sunak is not planning to extend the furlough scheme to support businesses, Argar said Johnson is “very mindful of the need for businesses and others to get what they need if they continue to be locked down.” On Sunday, 7,490 new COVID cases were reported in the U.K., a considerable increase from 5,341 a week before, on June 6.

Read more …

“If our very effective vaccines cannot deliver us freedom from restrictions, then nothing ever will.”

MP Warns Brits ‘Have To Learn To Live With Covid’ For ‘Rest Of Time’ (RT)

Covid Recovery Group chairman and MP Mark Harper opposes delays in the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions, arguing Brits will “have to learn to live with” the virus now that the vulnerable are jabbed, or suffer constant lockdown. Harper took to Twitter after an article on Sunday in the Telegraph citing an unnamed minister claimed the planned lockdown-easing date of June 21 could be delayed until as late as next spring due to the government’s concern about the spread of Covid-19 variants. The Forest of Dean MP warned in response that it “would be devastating for business confidence, people’s livelihoods and wellbeing” if the reopening were delayed, and would send “a clear message to employers and workers that, when Covid cases increase this (and every) autumn and winter, they cannot rely on Govt to keep our society open.”


“Now that the most vulnerable have been protected with their vaccine doses, we have to learn to live with this virus, rather than endure seasonal on-off lockdowns and restrictions,” Harper argued, noting that Chief Scientific Adviser Patrick Vallance has warned that coronavirus mutations “will appear for the rest of time.” Harper also pointed out that the most vulnerable people in the UK – who account for 99% of Covid-19 deaths and 80% of hospitalisations – will all have been offered two vaccine jabs by June 21, making it safer than ever to reopen. “We have to learn to live with it,” concluded Harper. “If our very effective vaccines cannot deliver us freedom from restrictions, then nothing ever will.”

Read more …

“Many of these patients don’t really believe mental illness will explain their symptoms. They want something tangible, something external like the virus.”

Why Is Britain Now The Capital Of Long Covid? (T.)

In April, the NHS chief executive Sir Simon Stevens promised to have 83 long Covid clinics open by the end of the month. The Office for National Statistics has estimated that more than 1 million people in Britain have suffered from long Covid. Danny Altmann, a professor of immunology at Imperial College, London, has predicted that long Covid could represent a long-term burden on the NHS comparable to arthritis, which costs the service an estimated £10 billion a year, some 8 per cent of the health budget. Altmann estimates that as many as 20 per cent of Covid sufferers could have longer symptoms; many of them will be younger patients who didn’t initially face severe illness.

It seems Britain is the long Covid capital of the world. This became immediately apparent to me upon moving back here from the US last month. American media has led much of the discussion on long Covid, but fear of the syndrome hasn’t penetrated public sentiment the way it has in Britain, where many young people are terrified of getting the virus not because they fear it will kill them, but because of the potentially debilitating after-effects. The question is why? Is there more long Covid here? And if so, for what reason? Are we simply doing a better job of diagnosing and discussing it, much as we lead the world in using genomic sequencing to find new Covid variants? Or might there be other cultural and societal factors underpinning our pervasive long Covid issue?

The answer could well be some combination of the above. The difficulty in researching long Covid is that every expert that you ask gives you a slightly different answer as to what the illness is and what causes it. “The simple answer is I don’t know [what causes this] and nor does anybody else,” says Dr Paul Harrison, head of Oxford University’s Translational Neurobiology Group. “We have to start with ‘nobody knows’ and keep that uncertainty — and therefore open-mindedness — at the forefront of our approach.” [..] “It’s psychosomatic,” says Jeremy Devine, a resident psychiatrist at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada. In March, he wrote a controversial column for The Wall Street Journal, arguing that long Covid was being incorrectly used as a catch-all for a whole host of ailments and issues, many of them psychological. There was a fierce backlash, with several UK-based patient groups writing furious letters to his supervisors.

“People do not like psychological explanations for physical symptoms,” he says. “They want something that’s perceived as real. Many of these patients don’t really believe mental illness will explain their symptoms. They want something tangible, something external like the virus.”

Read more …

“What is reasonable and necessary cannot be reasonably read to encompass anything and everything.”

Wisconsin Top Court: Health Agency Lacks Power To Close Schools Over Covid (JTN)

The Wisconsin Supreme Court has ruled against the city of Madison’s public health agency in a dispute over the power to close schools during the pandemic. A top city health official decried Friday’s decision, saying it would put children at risk. “The Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled that local health officers cannot close schools within their jurisdictions. We are extremely disappointed in the court’s decision, which has much further reaching implications than just this current pandemic,” health director Janel Heinrich said.. “This decision hinders the ability of local health officers in Wisconsin to prevent and contain public health threats for decades to come.”


The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty brought the case. WILL argued that Public Health Madison & Dane County overstepped its bounds by unilaterally ordering all schools, public and private, to close. WILL also argued the order infringed on parents’ rights to decide about their children’s education. Justice Rebecca Bradley wrote the majority opinion, saying Heinrich’s office had relied on an over-generalized reading of state law. “The power to take measures ‘reasonable and necessary’ cannot be reasonably read as an open-ended grant of authority,” Bradley wrote. “If Heinrich’s argument were correct, then the general provision would essentially afford local health officers any powers necessary to limit the spread of communicable diseases. This cannot be. What is reasonable and necessary cannot be reasonably read to encompass anything and everything.”

Read more …

One of the main causes of disease and death, also for Covid, and nothing is done about it whatsoever.

Too Fat To Fly: FAA Updates Guidelines As American Obesity Crisis Grows (Fed.)

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is demanding U.S. airlines submit plans with updated weight averages they will use for passengers and baggage moving forward by Saturday. According to the Wall Street Journal, “Airlines officials say the weight estimates used for passengers and baggage are going up between 5 percent and 10 percent.” “That will affect some flights, possibly requiring that more passengers get bumped or more baggage left behind,” the Journal reported. The new guidelines, and likely travel disruptions to come with them, are yet another symptom of American weight gain with no signs of abatement.

While the novel coronavirus — a virus exacerbated by excessive weight where 78 percent of those hospitalized with infection were overweight or obese — should have served as a wake-up call to the decades-long obesity crisis, Americans instead packed on the pounds with apparently little concern. According to a global Ipsos poll in January, two in five Americans reported gaining weight throughout the lockdowns still in place at the time. Those surveyed said they put on an average of more than 14 pounds, putting the U.S. seventh out of 30 countries in terms of pandemic weight gain. Most Americans appeared relatively unbothered by the weight. Less than half said they believed there was a link between obesity and complications from COVID-19 which data determined early on was a major risk contributor.

“Since the pandemic began,” Science Magazine reported in September, “dozens of studies have reported that many of the sickest COVID-19 patients have been people with obesity.” Overweight patients in one study published in August cited by the flagship journal were 113 percent more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 compared to patients of an otherwise healthy weight. Obese patients were found 74 percent more likely to end up in intensive care units (ICU) and 48 percent more likely to die. Pre-pandemic, more than 70 percent of adults 20 years old and older were already overweight with 42 percent categorically “obese” according to the CDC.

Read more …

Never has rhetoric been more empty.

Biden Calls For Access To Wuhan Labs (RT)

US President Joe Biden revealed on Sunday that he and other leaders in the G7 spoke about gaining access to the laboratories in Wuhan, China to determine whether Covid-19 was the result of a Chinese experiment gone wrong. During a press conference at the G7 conference in Cornwall, England on Sunday, Biden called on China to start acting “more responsibly in terms of international norms on human rights and transparency.” The president then revealed that one of the concerns he and other leaders at G7 had raised was that “we haven’t had access to the laboratories to determine whether or not” Covid-19 was the result of bats in Chinese marketplaces “interfacing with animals and the environment,” or “an experiment gone awry in a laboratory.”


“I have not reached a conclusion because our intelligence community is not certain yet,” Biden said, adding, however, that it was “important to know the answer” so the international community could predict and prevent another pandemic from happening in the future. “The world has to have access,” he argued, concluding that he and other leaders were trying to figure out a way to gain transparency. Former president Donald Trump has repeatedly argued that Covid-19 came from a Wuhan laboratory, and told podcast host Dan Bongino last month that he had “very, very little doubt” the virus originated from the Wuhan Institute of Virology. In a statement on Thursday, he demanded that China pay $10 trillion in “reparations” to the world for “what they allowed to happen.”

Read more …

Biden is outclassed 1000x. He comes with nothing.

Biden-Putin: What’s On The Table (ZH)

There is a lot of optimism and big press regarding the upcoming meeting between Biden and Putin. This will be the first meeting of the two since Biden took that seat behind the lovely desk in the Oval Office. There are many issues on the table for discussion and there is tension and excitement in the political press in both the West and especially in Russia. There is a growing belief that this could be a turning point or at least provide some small nudging of relations in a positive direction. This wishful thinking, although pleasant from a moral standpoint, does not reflect the realities of the current divide between the United States and Russia. This meeting simply cannot provide some sort of new start for relations between the countries and will probably look like a head-nodding and pretending-to-listen fest the likes of which we have never seen before.

Hours worth of hot air will be blown to throw words onto deaf ears with some background posturing to boot. One reason for the Russians to be suspicious of any offers from Washington is simply recent precedent. Over ten years ago when Obama was still full of Hope and Change his feisty new Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with a great big smile presented Foreign Minister Lavrov the infamous Russian Reset Button. The red button had the word “overload” accidentally written on it in place of “reset”. This mistake due to a fake desire to make it seem like Washington cared enough to learn one word of Russian was very telling as during the brief era of the Russian Reset, America’s Soft Power machine was working day and night to organize the Maidan in Kiev.

From a Western perspective this revolution was another piece of evidence that the people of Eastern Europe want nothing to do with naughty Moscow, but from a Russian perspective the Maidan was the beginning of an endless waking nightmare. This all led to the genocidal war in the Donbass breaking out, the return of Neo-Nazism to Europe, and the now official systemic racism that Russian speakers have to endure in the “Zimbabwe of Europe”. After an experience like that, can one really expect any sort of optimism from the Russian side because Biden sort of stepped back a bit on the whole Nord-Stream 2 thing?

Read more …

“But Musk walks on water, and he can assert anything, no problem.”

“Tesla Only Sold ~10%” Of Its Bitcoin Holdings: Musk Speaks, Bitcoin Moves (WS)

Why can’t this dude just shut up? That’s what people, including the SEC, want to know. But look, he just can’t. Apparently, no one can take his Twitter account away from Elon Musk, and Tesla isn’t putting it under adult supervision, as the SEC has suggested. So he was at it again today, responding to accusations by Magda Wierzycka, CEO of South African tech and financial services firm Sygnia, that he’d pumped up the price of Bitcoin by tweeting all manner of things, and then “sold a big part of his exposure at the peak.” So yes. Musk acknowledged in his tweet today that Tesla had in fact dumped part of its holdings of Bitcoin, but he argued that it wasn’t a big part, that it had “only sold ~10%” of its Bitcoin holdings.

And he came up with a rationalization why Tesla had dumped 10% of its Bitcoin holdings: “to confirm BTC could be liquidated easily without moving market.” That was a joke apparently. Over the past two months, the price of Bitcoin plunged from about $64,800 to around $33,000 at the low and now hovers at $39,000, after the current Musk-induced spike, with the plunge leaving a big-fat question market over his assertion that Bitcoin could be “liquidated easily without moving market.” But Musk walks on water, and he can assert anything, no problem. The second part of Musk’s tweet contained an effort to pump up the price of BTC by walking back his assertion in May that Tesla would no longer allow customers to pay for vehicles with Bitcoin because of the carbon footprint of Bitcoin mining, which was another one of his Bitcoin 180s.

At the time, that statement had whacked the price of Bitcoin. Bitcoin mining is of course the fiat-currency equivalent of “money printing.” But money printing has a tiny carbon footprint, because it needs just enough electricity to move credits by computer and the internet. You don’t need huge arrays of special mining rigs with special power supply and cooling equipment to print money. So today he tried to walk back his carbon-foot print concern, by tweeting: “When there’s confirmation of reasonable (~50%) clean energy usage by miners with positive future trend, Tesla will resume allowing Bitcoin transactions.”

Read more …

 

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Home Forums Debt Rattle June 14 2021

Viewing 31 posts - 81 through 111 (of 111 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #77357
    Mr. House
    Participant

    Ya know its funny, they’ve been censoring the price of assets for years because they do not like what they show (our leaders both public sector and private are god damn idiots) and now we’re surprised they’re censoring people in other areas where they don’t like what they’re saying (our leaders both public and private are god damn idiots).

    #77358
    upstateNYer
    Participant

    ctbarnum: go search “remote” grant writer jobs (FT, PT, contract) so you can avoid employment required vaccination. You’ve achieved more degree than I have, believe me. With the right degree they’ll hire you even if you haven’t written grants, assuming you can write grammatically correct sentences and organize a “sales” pitch properly. That’s all a grant application is … a business plan wrapped up in a sales pitch. Slanting the stats? No brainer. Trust me. 🙂

    #77359
    upstateNYer
    Participant

    Ct: expand your idea of what your “area of expertise” is.

    #77360
    Bill7
    Participant

    Germ posted: “CDC says vaccine link to heart inflammation is stronger than previously thought”

    https://thehill.com/changing-america/well-being/prevention-cures/558321-cdc-says-vaccine-link-to-heart-inflammation-is”

    Fits with the subtle-terrorization-of the-vaxxed thought I’ve had.

    Elites + : “How can we best destabilize this culture, as we did in SE Asia and South/Central America and the ME and.. ”

    Like this

    I could be wrong, of course.

    #77361
    ctbarnum
    Participant

    @upstateNYer

    That’s a possibility..I graduated with a masters in Industrial/Organizational Psychology in 2019 (right before COVID hit the US), but that goes in a lot of directions with types of research, both quantitative and qualitative. I was eligible, but didn’t apply for the certificate in cross-cultural studies that was newly applied. It never hurts to have a good understanding of stats and actually heightened the BS detector I already had. 😀

    I don’t know if it’s the “right” degree, but like most I sort of fell into it.

    #77362
    Bill7
    Participant

    Mr. House: I’m not seeing that they’re idiots. The Very Few have doubled their $ wealth (and much more importantly, probably tripled or more their effective power) in the last fifteen months. Appearing to bumble while getting most all you want is the Master’s Way.

    #77363
    Mr. House
    Participant

    Oh i don’t disagree Bill7, but then again why would you push for the outcome we’re heading toward then correct course ages ago. They’ve known for some time resources would begin to run short, but continued to push the never ending growth agenda. So now they think they can go full on iron fist in the span of five years? (they’ve shown their hand since Trump was elected). Though Trump is interesting and my heart of hearts tells me he was just playing a role, the perfect heel to show why they just had to start dehumanizing certain people and viewpoints. I just got off the phone with a very woke friend and she stated she wanted to end power, which made me laugh. Is that what the woke people think they’ll achieve with their stupid ideas, they’ll end power? People are so ignorant of their nature and history it makes one weep. If people were smart they’d realize too mavericks that get near the levers of power end up dead. Anyone who doesn’t was never against power to begin with.

    #77364
    Mr. House
    Participant

    And yes i think they’re trying to destabilize the US as much as possible, keep people confused, keep their eye off the ball. It’s like they’ve taken all of our complaints from the last 12 years and turned them into some twisted bizzaro ideology and the young are eating it up.

    #77365
    Mr. House
    Participant

    Did they know the never ending growth agenda was BS? Logic says yes because i freaking figured it out, but did they think that trying this shit at any time in the past wouldn’t fly? Did it take a combination of 9/11, the iraq war/war on terror, multiple financial crises and covid before they thought it was safe to totally change the story line?

    #77366
    upstateNYer
    Participant

    ctbarnum: “I graduated with a masters in Industrial/Organizational Psychology in 2019 (right before COVID hit the US), but that goes in a lot of directions with types of research, both quantitative and qualitative.”

    Good golly, please just stop buying into the mainstream narrative (said with deep affection, believe me) about what you “can do with” your degree. I have an AS, credits toward a BS (got close!). I’ve earned a boatload of money writing grants.

    #77367
    Bill7
    Participant

    > Is that what the woke people think they’ll achieve with their stupid ideas, they’ll end power? People are so ignorant of their nature and history it makes one weep. <

    I hear you, man. Can’t say much else, and with most everything now in the digital-surveillance domain, it wouldn’t matter if I did.

    Nature works for me.. birdies- especially the little ones- plants, most all of it.

    I (try to) ask myself every time I turn on this surveillance screen “ok, what soon time are you off off off, friendly l’il screenie?”

    #77368
    Mr. House
    Participant

    Honestly i think they’re moving too fast and mistakes are being made. It almost feels like desperation and not like some precision strike you see in the hollywood movies after periods of long planning.

    #77369
    John Day
    Participant

    Thanks for the kind words, Oroboros.
    Thanks for all the ongoing research work, Germ.
    And thanks for the family dynamics news, too.

    Thanks everybody. I read your stuff when I get the chance, but I’m out a lot.

    #77370
    Mr. House
    Participant

    @ctbarnum

    Its not what you know, its who you know. Seriously give up any ideals you were told would lead to success (except hard work, but sometimes even that). Kiss ass and make yourself available, you’ll get hired. My older brother got an MBA from the university of chicago, i asked him what he learned, his response: Networking.

    #77371
    Bill7
    Participant

    > but then again why would you push for the outcome we’re heading toward then correct course ages ago. They’ve known for some time resources would begin to run short, but continued to push the never ending growth agenda. So now they think they can go full on iron fist in the span of five years?but then again why would you push for the outcome we’re heading toward then correct course ages ago. They’ve known for some time resources would begin to run short, but continued to push the never ending growth agenda. <

    Ok, I get what you meant by “idiots” now.

    > So now they think they can go full on iron fist in the span of five years? <

    Yes.. and ? surveillancePhones, delivered Pizza n’ Fear seem to be working on most, to me.

    #77372
    sumac.carol
    Participant

    Just spoke to a friend who works in Canada’s federal health agency. She said that there have been over a million covid variants already identified. Almost all not dangerous but gives a sense of how poorly we are informed by media when they say there is concern about “a” new variant.
    Oh, and she is not getting vaccinated. Why not? Because she does not feel her health is good enough to withstand vaccination. Another interesting side note: her lab work required getting vaccinated, but vaccination was always followed up with antibody testing. On at least one occasion, her body did not produce sufficient antibodies, necessitating re-vaccination. Apparently, getting vaccinated without producing antibodies makes a person an asymptotic carrier. How many vaccinated people fall into this category?

    #77373
    Bill7
    Participant

    distractions from the present

    C Bukowski ‘Hollywood’- good escapism, esp if you’ve read a little of his earlier stuff.
    E Wharton ‘The House of Mirth’- really fine novel of manners; one to linger over. Second reading is better than the first, to me.
    J Marchese ‘The Violin Maker’- on Sam Zyg’s work, with the author’s life nicely mixed in.

    #77376
    ctbarnum
    Participant

    All valid criticisms and thanks for the suggestion. I’m looking into grant writing. 🙂

    #77382
    Mister Roboto
    Participant

    Not sure how appropriate this is, but as long as I’m walking out on Team Blue, I may as well give you all a little taste of how Wokesterism decided to try and sell itself right after Donald Trump’s 2016 victory. I believe this sort of thing is what is meant by the Yiddish phrase “rolling around like donuts”. Set your cringe-factors to maximum!

    #77383
    Bill7
    Participant

    On Mike Whitney’s columns: he sure is sloppy (or something).

    Typical Whitney column: 1) makes very non-mainstream assertion (often one I lean towards, but need solid evidence for)
    2) finds and quotes one science(y) person who agrees with him
    3) declares the matter settled, and pontificates from there..

    Mmm / hard to figure

    #77384
    WES
    Participant

    ctbarnum:

    There is nothing wrong with giving writing grants a try. The only person who has anything to lose is the person who first hires you! Realize they are taking all of the risks, not you!

    You get to see if you can write grants or not. You also get to see if you really enjoy writing, researching, and make enough money doing so. If you don’t like the work, or can’t make enough money, they get to pay for your learning experience!

    If they hire you it is because they either can’t write, see writing as beneath them, or are too busy doing something else more important (to them) or more profitable use of their time.

    My background is electrical engineering but I ended up writing machine, product handling, and robot manuals for a plastic injection molding manufacturer and I still don’t know how to write properly!

    #77385
    Bill7
    Participant

    Mr. Roboto: I think Woke-ism is *designed* to drive us away from the Democ**t Party. After all, as BubbaC is said to have said: “Where are they/you gonna go?” No organized place available at all for the Very Many? Perfect!

    “You’re all RacistDeplorableMalcontentLoserDefectiveBadPersons [for not being utterly ruthless, like us Winners] anyway, and not even Rich, to boot!”

    And Lo!, the Few give themselves permission to exterminate the Many

    #77386
    WES
    Participant

    OMG! Over 100 posts today! Way to go TAE! Must be something in the air or water today! And a Monday too!

    #77387
    WES
    Participant

    Bill7:

    The last group of woke idiots gave Lenin power!

    #77388
    Bill7
    Participant

    > Bill7: The last group of woke idiots gave Lenin power! <

    If only they didn’t (so, so curiously!) have control of the digital domain, and hence of the Many..

    I will try to move to Hungary or Russia- almost certainly a futile idea, for an old guy- but the present combinations and trends in the oligarchically Woke West make me want to puke (not die- I won’t give them that satisfaction).

    #77389
    sumac.carol
    Participant

    Phenomenal video explaining how modern farming, with petroleum-based fertilizer and glyphosate, has destroyed our health. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkNhFY-s4GM

    #77390
    Huskynut
    Participant

    @ Noirette
    Eric Clapton brings up some of these points, I was happy to see. Always liked him.

    Whereas I was always pissy that Stevie Ray Vaughan died instead of Clapton when Clapton offered his seat to Vaughan and the helicopter crashed. I always thought Vaughan was the better musician.

    But I shall gracefully retract and reconsider.. perhaps Clapton had an extra role to play in the human drama..

    #77391
    phoenixvoice
    Participant

    @ maxwell quest

    This is apt:
    “ So, to answer your question, I think they “really believe it”, especially if the status quo has been kind to them, i.e. degrees, success, wealth have been forthcoming. The ego needs an anchor and abhors chaos and insecurity. The response one most often encounters when trying to teach someone a new idea that is contrary to their worldview is instantaneous resistance with emotionality… like a braying donkey. This is experienced as a frontal attack and is rarely effective. Most often, one must be kicked down the rabbit hole via a crisis; one in which it’s clear that the old way of looking at things has failed.”

    I have suddenly changed long-held and cherished beliefs in my life…on more than one occasion. Always, it was a very harrowing experience that I was dragged into.

    @ Bill7
    I have found that you cannot convince people until they are open to it.

    There are chinks in the armor of those who believe the Covid narrative. One of the largest that I’ve found is that they don’t really believe that someone who has survived Covid and has not been vaccinated is equivalent to someone who has not contracted Covid and is unvaccinated. Many still feel vaccination is a personal decision and don’t believe others should be coerced into vaccination. Also, they vaccinate their children out of fear of the Covid disease — since it is fear that motivates them, fear can also change their motivation.

    I’m here in TAE because I needed to understand what was going on, and the MSM is fluff.

    #77300
    Dr. D
    Participant

    While I’m sure high-end weirdos do all kind of things for perfection, they’ve been separating flouir as long as there have been mills, called “bolting” as they essentially sift it over cloth.

    https://www.angelfire.com/journal/millbuilder/boulting.html
    http://www.deltamill.org/flour/sorting.html
    https://www.angelfire.com/journal/millrestoration/schematic.html

    I struggle to find a pic of an early wooden mill with the old cloth bolters, not drum-type, though I’m sure I’ve seen them.

    High tech and immeasurably complicated.
    MillCutawayPic
    https://krisdedecker.typepad.com/.a/6a00e0099229e8883301a73d9efd66970d-320wi

    In Dutch, for our host:
    https://archive.org/details/TheoretischEnPractischMolenboek

    …I mean, if anyone’s in the market for building a $100 million dollar, spanking new wooden windmill.

    #77301
    Dr. D
    Participant

    While I’m sure high-end weirdos do all kind of things for perfection, they’ve been separating flour as long as there have been mills, called “bolting” as they essentially sift it over cloth.

    https://www.angelfire.com/journal/millbuilder/boulting.html
    http://www.deltamill.org/flour/sorting.html
    https://www.angelfire.com/journal/millrestoration/schematic.html

    I struggle to find a pic of an early wooden mill with the old cloth bolters, not drum-type, though I’m sure I’ve seen them.

    High tech and immeasurably complicated.
    MillCutawayPic
    https://krisdedecker.typepad.com/.a/6a00e0099229e8883301a73d9efd66970d-320wi

    In Dutch, for our host:
    https://archive.org/details/TheoretischEnPractischMolenboek

    …I mean, if anyone’s in the market for building a $100 million dollar, spanking new wooden windmill.

    (Did that post?)

    #77403
    Dr. D
    Participant

    Raul must have repaired it, that didn’t post for hours — links probably seen as spam.

    109 responses. You must be doing something right.

    Germ, sorry to hear about your family. However, I’m sure 100% of us are in the same boat. We did, we do, everything we can. But if they won’t take the life preserver, what can you do?

    The downside of freedom.

    If this is as it seems, we have a following problem: with half the population gone, incapacitated, infertile, we are again as easily controlled with high-tech as the “Hunger Games”. With half the population, we are open season for China, needing food from us to survive. All those empty houses are bought up. By BlackRock, right now. All those immigrants come. There is a Hopi prophesy on this, after 1) White men 2) Wagons 3) Longhorns 4) Railroads 5) Telegraph lines. Past worlds ended in ice and floods, “The Fourth World shall end soon, and the Fifth World will begin. This the elders everywhere know. The Signs over many years have been fulfilled, and so few are left.” After that, “a dwelling place in the sky will fall to earth” and Blue Kachina comes. How often in history have there been dwelling places in the sky? Not to worry, as if people return to the old ways, they will survive and prosper again. Koyaanisqatsi. Or as Yankees would say, “Use it up, wear it out, fix it up, or go without.” In any case, I’d argue the Chinese attempting to absorb the U.S. they desperately need is one of the things we are challenged with, or will be shortly. We are both gearing up for war. However, they do not succeed.

    Yes, they are desperate because time has run out and nobody’s buying their plans. Resistance is far too high, they needed 20 more years of pasty dough-soft Milennials. As with polls, the support numbers are nowhere NEAR what they present. 40%? 5% true believers? Like: small. They are wildly, crazily outnumbered and if they push/oppress harder they only wake more people up and get more reaction. They can make a heck of a mess and fully intend to, but my diagnosis is: they lost.

    However, you can easily die in a war “your side” wins. Still dust and fog of war. Can’t tell what’s really going on.

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