Man regrets his choices in life - wasting the most valuable gift of all

"Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards." - Soren Kierkegaard

The perpetrators do not require cooperation from anybody from this point onwards

 

By Dr. Michael Yeadon May 5, 2024

Now, I’m well aware this is terrifying and a common reaction is to dismiss it. However, it fits horribly well with what we know already. I’m probably able to imagine it because parts of it are already proven in my mind (the intentional harms from the totally superfluous injections).

I continue to recommend two things.

1. Invest your own time & thought into waking up others. Be selfless. It’s your best defence to dilute what’s coming, as more people will become allies in unpredictable ways.

2. Do something rather than nothing to prepare for a period of discontinuity. I’m talking basic food and water, basic meds, some things you can barter with, some skills you might have, something to defend yourself with, better yet, a safe place to be if the SHTF. If you’re already a grower, great. Grow stuff. I don’t think I can do that. I’m not in one place long enough. You might be bored on a narrow diet, but enough calories and nutrients plus clean water means you can sustain yourself for some considerable time. Time means you don’t HAVE to go out into the melee when it’s at its worst. If there are people you can trust with your life, talk with them. Get right with the power in your universe that is important for you.

If nothing happens, laugh.

Unfortunately, the way I see it, the perpetrators of the ongoing “cv-19 super crime” need do nothing more than to play out their existing hand, to reduce the population to any value they choose.

Here’s my near term summary of what I think they’re up to:

1. A new event will trigger obligatory digital ID (eg for rations).

2. If 1. isn’t a financial crisis, one of which they can trigger at any time, will destroy all sovereign currencies and steal almost all private property (David Rogers Webb). Total dependence upon the state in order even to be fed. CBDC (digital-only money) introduced.

3. Lies about a wave of pandemics. Pharma will pretend to make mRNA vaccines. Govts will mandate them (if WHO hadn’t already done so). Digital ID validity will depend upon being up to date on jabs. No jab, no food. CBDC simply won’t work.

4. Rinse and repeat until population reaches their desired levels. I think it’s likely many countries will be completely emptied, removing the need for the authorities to have to pretend that recovery is even the dream, let alone intent.

The perpetrators have such control of main media and almost all internet traffic. If we reach point 1. without insurrection, we’re done in any case.

The perpetrators do not require cooperation from anybody from this point onwards.

Best wishes,

Mike

National Sword | Plastic Pollution

 PODCAST

Operation National Sword

When China joined the World Trade Organization, they started taking in the most of the world’s scrap. The shift coincided with a ramping up of global exports, and China sold wares all around the world in shipping containers. Rather than sending these containers back to China empty, it made sense to fill them with heavy bales of recycling. This made the whole cycle more cost-effective, and it became cheaper to send recycling to China than anywhere else. Cities around the world were able to subsidize their recycling program with the money from selling their waste, while also not having to deal with as much of the process — at least until National Sword.

Basically, National Sword was China’s ban on foreign recyclables. It banned four categories and 24 types on imports starting in 2018. And National Sword has steadily expanded, banning more recyclables since then, and it could potentially lead to the banning of all incoming recyclable materials by 2020, but that piece isn’t entirely clear yet. No one is sure exactly why this shift in policy happened, but some experts point to one particular turning point: a documentary film.


 The little girl washes her face in the gray plastic-polluted water and eats fish that have choked on bits of plastic.

diving into mermaid-lore

 🪄 Beachcombing's Bizarre History Blog

5/1/2024

Karl Banse: The Man Who Made the Case for Mermaids 

Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern , trackback

Just a quick post as we move towards the summer. The podcast goes on with me and Chris recently talking about fairy artifacts, the Philip experiment (‘how to invent a ghost’) and this month ‘spectral evidence: the supernatural in court’. I, meanwhile, am diving into mermaid-lore, a love that started many years ago on this blog.  How i used to enjoy mermaid Monday.

In my explorations I ran across this superb, superb academic article that deserves to be better known. In 1990 the prestigious marine biologist, Karl Banse published a piece ‘Mermaids – their biology, culture and demise’ in that esteemed periodical Limnology and Oceanography. I have a back run in one of my French chateaus, I think.

The article makes the case that… Well, let’s break it down.

There were three species of sea-mammals that correspond to the mythical mermaid: Siren sirena – Mediterranean-Lusitanian distribution; Siren indica – restricted to the Atlantic side of the Americas; Siren erythraea –  the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea, and the Indonesian archipelago.

There were sightings further to the north, particularly in the Atlantic and these were mermaids moving icewards to look for Arctic shells to use as currency in their warmer homes.

The reason that we have not found a real mermaid is that they were wiped out by a plague of jellyfish in the early modern period.

The bibliography is the most extraordinary mix of sobre marine biology and mermaid ficts including The Little Mermaid, naturally in the original Danish. I also liked this sentence: ‘In considering the culture of mermaids two facts of life in the marine realm the lack of fire (hence no pottery or metallurgy) and the absence of fibers suitable for baskertry, clothing, or ropes must be considered…’

Banse was having some fun – an extended version of the paper had been read at a symposium celebrating his sixtieth birthday. I would have loved to have heard the stunned silence. But as a wimpy humanities scholar I confess to wondering, on my first read through, whether KB had simply gone off the deep end and no one had had the courage to tell him so.

As far as real mermaids are concerned I’ve been gathering together all the sightings I can find for the home islands (Britain, Ireland). I have moments where I wonder if there is not something there. I’ve been particularly impressed at the arguments that manatee ended up on the wrong side of the Atlantic from time to time. If anyone knows a marine biologist who is up for some fun, I’d love to share the best eye-witness accounts.  drbeachcombing AT gmail DOT com

 


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  4. Swearing to Mermaids
  5. Mermaids, Ahoy!

 




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