What If Stranger Things Was Only the Tip of the Upside Down? by Me Stuff
When Fiction Looks Suspiciously Like Classified History
Read on SubstackTHIS is where I hide the best stuff... and hey... there are lots of posts so go search the BLOG ARCHIVE - (͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
When Fiction Looks Suspiciously Like Classified History
Read on SubstackOn this podcast with Tom Nelson, I discuss my works and perspectives on global warming, suggesting it’s based on faulty science and used for political manipulation by oligarchs desiring a neo-feudal society. I critique figures like Mark Carney and the broader economic and political systems, outlining historical and contemporary efforts to promote true industrial growth and reveals deeper geopolitical motives. I also touch on my new debunking exposing the Roswell UFO incident as a manufactured legend. -
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On Oct. 10, Trump’s physician, Dr. Sean P. Barbabella, announced that after conducting a battery of tests, he found that our president “remains in exceptional health” and that he had received “immunizations, including annual influenza and updated Covid-19 booster vaccinations.” It’s likely the president received a Pfizer mRNA shot.
Trump—perhaps the busiest man on the planet—can’t be expected to do a deep dive on the epidemiology, safety, and efficacy of these shots. Like most patients, he had no choice but to trust the experts.
Doing so makes sense when the experts are trustworthy and follow what the data tells them. Unfortunately, when it comes to public health, and to the Covid-19 mandates in particular, trust in federal health agencies and health care professionals has been shattered beyond recognition.
So much of what people think they know about America’s recent drug and mRNA approvals just isn’t so. As a result, I wonder if the President of the United States received a full disclosure of the available data so he could weigh the risks versus the benefits of mRNA Covid shots.
To exercise truly informed consent, he would have needed to know (at a minimum) the following:

The Fed (is not federal but an illusion) - this group is the "INVISIBLES" - the death cult who is truly running the world...at least a million years...
The Federal Reserve Board Abolition Act (H.R. 1846 and S. 869, 119th Congress, 2025-2026), introduced by Rep. Thomas Massie in the House and Sen. Mike Lee in the Senate on March 4, 2025, calls for abolishing the Fed’s Board of Governors and regional banks within one year of enactment, liquidating Fed assets and transferring net proceeds to the Treasury. It echoes earlier efforts like Ron Paul’s 1999 bill to “end the Fed”, but the odds of its passing are slim.
Less radical are proposals to curb the independence of the Federal Reserve.
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Substantial precedent exists for that approach, both in the United States and abroad. In the 1930s and 1940s, before the Fed officially became “independent,” it worked with the federal government to fund the most productive period in our country’s history. More on that shortly.
In a Sept. 1 Substack post titled “Fed Faces Biggest Direct Challenge by a President Since JFK – and This Is a Good Thing”, UK Prof. Richard Werner cited multiple studies showing that central bank independence not only does not reduce inflation but can actually harm economic performance.
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The Federal Reserve’s track record, like the ECB’s, is less than pristine. In a 2002 speech honoring Milton Friedman, then-Fed Chair Ben Bernanke famously admitted, “Regarding the Great Depression … we did it. We’re very sorry. … We won’t do it again.”
Bernanke was referring to the Fed’s failure to act as lender of last resort during the banking panics of the early 1930s. Instead of expanding liquidity, the Fed tightened it. Its goal was to curb excessive stock market speculation, but reducing the money supply raised borrowing costs and triggered a contraction that cascaded globally. The result was a decade of mass unemployment, deflation, and social upheaval.👇
A RARE GOLDEN COMET: Most comets are green, and sometimes blue. In June Lake, California, amateur astronomer Dan Bartlett is tracking a rare golden comet. Introducing, Comet ATLAS (C/2025 K1):
"This comet was not supposed to survive its Oct 8th perihelion (0.33 AU)," says Bartlett. "But it did survive, and now it is displaying a red/brown/golden color rarely seen in comets."
What's going on? The chemistry of this Oort Cloud comet is strange. It lacks the carbon compounds normally found in comets, according to spectroscopy by David Schleicher of the Lowell Observatory. "All of the carbon-bearing species, including CN, are unusually low," he wrote in Astronomer's Telegram #17362.
In sunlight, cometary gases turn green because of diatomic carbon (C2), and blue because of ionized carbon monoxide (CO+). Subtracting these colors apparently leaves gold. We don't know exactly why--or if it may have something to do with its recent close encounter with the sun.
"The comet is fairly impressive at 9th magnitude," says Bartlett. That makes it a relatively easy target for backyard telescopes. Point your optics to the boundary between Virgo and Leo in the eastern sky shortly before sunrise. Sky maps: Nov. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.
more images: from Chris Schur of Payson, Arizona; from Richard Sears of Ballico, California

By Dmitry Trenin
Over the past year, Russian analysts have effectively become Trumpologists. Every statement from the US president, often several a day, is dissected and debated in real time. Since Donald Trump’s remarks frequently contradict one another, following his train of thought can feel like a virtual roller coaster ride – dizzying, unpredictable – yet impossible to ignore.
But one should not get carried away by the spectacle. Trump’s tactics are straightforward. He can be abrasive and threatening one moment, charming and conciliatory the next. At times he presents himself as “one of us,” at others as “one of them.” The real question is whether there is a coherent strategy behind this chaos. Nine months into his second term, there is enough evidence to draw some cautious conclusions.
First, Trump’s ultimate goal is personal glory. He wants to go down as the greatest president in US history – the man who restored America’s dominance and reshaped global politics. His strategic vision begins and ends with his own legacy.
Second, he is determined to suppress America’s economic rivals. In this, his policies are blunt but consistent: tariffs, trade wars, and the repatriation of production to US soil. For Trump, global competition is not about mutual gain but national survival.
Third, and most relevant for Russia, Trump wants to be seen as a global peacemaker. But in his vocabulary, “peace” really means truce. He is not interested in complex negotiations or long-term settlements. His aim is to get all sides into one room, stage a handshake, declare victory, and move on. Once the cameras are gone, the details, and the responsibility, are left to others. Should conflict resume, Trump can say he brought peace; it was others who spoiled it.
This formula does not work with Russia. Moscow has tried to explain to the US president the real origins of the Ukrainian crisis – and that Russia’s conditions for peace are not “maximalist” demands but the minimum basis for a lasting settlement. Trump, however, is uninterested in history or nuance. His focus is always the immediate result, the headline moment. After eight months of dialogue, progress remains intermittent at best.
There are also external limits to Trump’s freedom of action. For all his bluster, he is neither “the king of America” nor “the emperor of the West.” He cannot ignore Washington’s entrenched anti-Russian consensus, shared by Democrats and many in his own Republican Party [ED and their billionaire backers]. Nor can he completely disregard US allies in Europe, however little he may respect them. Despite his self-image as a political maverick, Trump is still constrained by the machinery of the American establishment.
Even so, the “special diplomatic operation” – Moscow’s direct dialogue with the Trump administration – has served its purpose. It has demonstrated to Russia’s partners that Moscow is genuinely committed to a fair and durable peace. It has shown Russia’s soldiers and citizens that their leadership continues to pursue the declared objectives of the Ukraine military operation. And it has clarified for the Kremlin the limits of Trump’s real power.
The talks may have slowed, but communication continues along two channels – Lavrov-Rubio and Dmitriev-Witkoff. Yet diplomacy, as ever, is not a substitute for strength. Its purpose is to consolidate what has been achieved on the battlefield. A diplomatic operation can assist, but it cannot replace, a military one.
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Via https://www.rt.com/news/627078-dmitry-trenin-trumps-diplomacy/
As Richard Nixon continued to lie about the war in Vietnam, many Americans felt that ongoing protest was the key to the nation's salvation.
OCT. 24, 2025__ "Baltimore cops swarmed and handcuffed a high school student after an artificial intelligence tool mistook his bag of Doritos for a weapon.Taki Allen, 16, was hanging out with his friends after football practice at Kenwood High School Monday night when all of a sudden, armed officers approached him."It was like eight cop cars that came pulling up for us. At first, I didn't know where they were going until they started walking toward me with guns, talking about, 'Get on the ground,' and I was like, 'What?'" Allen told local outlet WBAL-TV.The student described the moment he was handcuffed by police: "They made me get on my knees, put my hands behind my back, and cuffed me. Then, they searched me and they figured out I had nothing.”Allen said police then found the bag of Doritos he had been eating shortly before."
👉PITF: in 1994, the CIA's Directorate of Intelligence commissioned the Political Instability Task Force (PITF), formerly known as the State Failure Task Force, a clairvoyant-esque squad of social-scientist brainiacs charged with churning global political data into global instability forecasts.
*** CIA= Cocaine Import Agency