11 Comments

Thanks for posting this, Richard.

@David Lamb Thanks for saving me the effort of writing all that out. I'll just add that I suspect there is much more to this story. CUI BONO? The folks who need the world to believe and fear that a deadly virus is waiting to kill them. James is only as good as the "whistleblowers" and "insiders" who come to him. That Pfizer "revelation", complete with "expert commentary" from the ubiquitous and dubious Malone sent up red flags for me. Let's hope James will now be free to expose the real truth about the scamdemic.

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THE TRUTH WILL OUT.

~ Shakespeare

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I think the drama around O'Keefe and the Board is far less important than the central issue of the 'interview' with Walker, which is the 'gain of function' issue. All of the attention is on the drama, while everyone accepts the 'gain of function' allegations as fact, without any scientific basis.

The problem is that the idea of 'gain of function' research is every bit as patently absurd as the idea that WTC building 7 collapsed from a fire.

What the science boils down to is that nobody in history has ever isolated and sequenced a virus, and the so-called 'virus' genetic sequences used are nothing but computer simulations. So how are these 'scientists' genetically modifying and weaponizing something that they've never been able to find?

Virology is a century-long con by the Rockefeller criminal cartel that's created perpetual fear and irrationality among the population to support the current chemical-based, anti-nature medical monopoly. And it's transparently fraudulent and anti-science. All one need do is sincerely research and understand the virus-isolation issue, and the whole scam is exposed.

I see the O'Keefe saga as supporting the irrational fear of 'viruses' and the government-led propaganda about 'viral' bio-weapons, and therefore I must be suspicious of O'Keefes motives. Is he just choosing to remain ignorant about 'viruses', or is this all just another show to support the Rockefeller/government propaganda?

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This is tough. I have logged thousands of hours of research over the past two years and still don’t have all of the puzzle pieces I want. I have studied the gain of function arguments as well as the no viruses arguments. I am very aware of the hospital death protocols which elevated so-called Covid deaths. I am aware of arguments exploring the effects of 5G radiation injury and how they can mimic pathogenicity. I am aware of the possibility of locally deployed toxins which sickened and killed many.

What is clear is that we have experienced a shit storm of confusing information. Teasing out the most viable threads is an herculean task.

One thing I’ve learned over the past two years is that there are many people far smarter than me. I have no credentials. Yet realize that even if I had the longest list of letters following my name I would still be one in a chorus of dissonant voices.

The military psychological operation inflicted upon the world has been in the making for many decades if not centuries. I realize that wrapping my head around it is not realistic in any short time frame. Putting together this puzzle will probably require the rest of my life. I urge others to be patient with themselves.

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I agree with all of that, Richard.

Centuries of propaganda have done their work, mostly banishing reasoning from human discourse, and sealed with pervasive threats and fear of individuals being banished from the tribe for the heresy of questioning. We're born into a world in which fitting in and becoming accepted & protected by the tribe is the priority, and in the fearful person this will dominate their life and cause the personality to reject any ideas that threaten status and safety.

That trouble is compounded by the pace of technological complexity advancing at many times the pace of general-population understanding and mastery of the technology, which has exponentially increased cluelessness and dependency. I think that if people could be completely honest, 99.9% would admit to being completely lost regarding knowing what to believe and what to reject. And this has long been the goal of the military psychological operations.

So yes, it takes dedication, patience, and many decades of being willing to look past the propaganda and consensus in order to begin to make sense of this human world.

I had a long head-start on the 'virus' isssue that enabled me to see through the 'covid' propaganda from day one. I'd already been following the work of German virologist/microbiologist Stefan Lanka for 20 years when the 2020 psyop began. And it took 25 years of dedication to understanding disease before that to even find Lanka's work.

I think your lack of 'credentials' is a positive. If we were reasoning beings by nature, calling someone a 'doctor', meaning someone who's completely indoctrinated, would be an insult rather than a credential. Reasoning skills and sincerity are the only credentials that matter in order to eventually understand anything.

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🙏Thank you for this correspondence 🙏

I am fortunate to have a broad liberal arts education: from physics, chemistry, biology and microbiology… then completing my degree in classical theater: Shakespeare, Chekhov, Ibsen, Moliere et al. In the middle of all that I graduated from Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Clown College, then got hired onto the big show. So I don’t mind being called a clown.🤡 😂

But I’m not a typical clown.

In fact, owning the Great Fool within allows me enormous latitude in lifelong education. I am more free to say “Fuck if I know!”

Thanks for providing me with perspective regarding your education and lengthy exposure to this subject matter.

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The willingness to admit "I don't know" is life-changing. I consider that step-1 in the 12-step program of becoming a genuine, reasoning human being. How we get there is a unique, individual journey.

Part of why its so important is that it's an acknowledgement that most of what we 'know' is simply what we've been told by others, and very little of it is objectively accurate or backed up by a solid chain of reasoning. So effectively we've all been heavily programmed, and we must face that in order to do something about it.

But there's a deeper and even more important aspect, and it's that the human personality through which we interact with the world isn't really the genuine being. Rather, it's an artificial construct of the mind built as a defense to fear & psychological trauma, which is pervasive in the human world. It's a psychological adaptation that would be temporary if we could ever get out of the endless cycles of trauma that we don't even see because its so normalized.

So the personality is all about seeking safety, and that tends to block out real reasoning because we aren't free to question the mass of beliefs that help us feel secure in the tribe.

I can see how clown college could be a spiritual experience, because it basically calls out the personality and says "come on, I know you're fake, so break through the fear and give up the pretense..." Our instincts tell us that, but most people are too afraid to listen.

I was fortunate to have very strong spiritual instincts as a kid, and then a near-death motorcycle crash when I was 18 showed me that I'm not this personality or even this body, which made it obvious that everything I'd been taught in school was meaningless. I started my life over from a point of knowing absolutely nothing, because all of the fear was gone.

Thanks for the discussion. I too appreciate it 🙏

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Yes, the majority are in trapped in personality. I agree that it is a safety/survival construct and that accessing our core of character (much like the core of an apple) is vital in uncovering our true identity and authentic power. Agreed, it is very much a spiritual path: the archetypal Hero’s Journey.

Clown College was an obviously wholesale departure from my long labor/search for scientific understanding. I had planned on following my father‘s footsteps and going to medical school, but 2 1/2 years into undergrad my soul simply refused. Intuitively, deep down, I knew that my path needed to change. CC was next, then onto the circus train for a nationwide tour.

The circus provided a harsh realization: that corporate entertainment is a black hole. I had never met a group so disempowered, disgruntled, and hopeless as these clowns. But the tipping point was the treatment of animals. I swear, I could communicate telempathically (that’s not a typo) with the elephants. They hated it there. So I jumped the train and rode my motorcycle from Cincinnati to Seattle with another young pilgrim who would become my best friend. I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance during breaks in Ohio, Indiana, Minnesota (Pirsig’s starting point,) South Dakota, Montana, and Washington State. Pirsig’s relentless search for Quality and eventual descent into institutionalization presaged my own.

Deductive reasoning, formal logic, have never been my strong suits. I can do it, but it takes enormous discipline and effort. By temperament I am a liberal arts guy, thus entry into the classical theatre world (for 12 years as a professional actor.)

In May 2005 a DVD showed up seemingly out of nowhere in the mail. It was an exploration of questions surrounding 9/11.

I saw Building 7 collapse for the first time, and immediately knew that my understanding of the world was in major need of revision. Maybe it was my physics background which enabled me to immediately identify the problem. Maybe it was just my ability to connect dots. But it was irrefutable to me. I didn’t possess the engineering skills to prove it but I still knew it. It was obvious. Yet when I showed the video clip to family and friends, to a one they looked at me like I had lost my mind.

By the time “COVID-19” rolled around I was way ahead of the curve.

Do you still ride? My beloved BMW R1100R has remained in the garage for about eight months. You know that wide-vision intuitive scanning process you need to ride safely? There are limits to it. I started seeing/scanning way more distracted and irritated and aggressive drivers around me. The risk clearly outweighed even my highly developed defensive riding skills. So I stopped riding. It’s painful, but necessary for keeping limb and life. My wife and I play a lot of golf, and I am not willing to risk that in this unhinged road environment.

On my Substack is an essay called “The Beetle Rodeo.” I explore much of what we have been discussing about personality versus character, and successfully navigating/penetrating the layers of accumulated trauma and the terrible consequences of self-estrangement.

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Sounds like some good instincts and experiences.

I was very interested in medicine, but by the time I graduated from high school I already saw that the establishment medicine was all about fighting nature rather than trying to understand it, so I focused on alternatives.

I get it regarding the circus. I was only there once as a kid, and the vibe was awful. I too could see that it was torture for the animals. The zoo was/is the same. I think there's some growth value to acting, if it helps one realize that the personality is a fake construct. But to stay in it as a career, trying to 'entertain' the clueless masses, helping them to stay clueless, must be awful. And I think that we still think its ok to treat animals that way is testament generally to the fact that we only pretend to be in an 'enlightenment' era.

Regarding Sept 11, I was aware of the con in real time, watching the first WTC collapse on live TV, watching it with my father. It was instantly clear that it was a controlled demolition; no other possibility. When the second building went the same way, it was doubly clear. Then later that day when bldg 7 was 'pulled' too, and I saw that the whole government/media complex was in unison constructing a fake narrative, I knew it was a false flag for something big coming.

I had a pretty diverse background that made it easy to see what was happening. First, I was lucky to have good genes. My father was a brilliant engineer and mathematician, who was on the design & development team for the 'titan' rocket engine for the Apollo program, working for Rocketdyne in CA. When that program successfully ended, Boeing bought Rocketdyne and my dad was transferred to PA to design helicopters, starting with the Chinook. He worked there all the way through to & including the V22 Osprey program, on which he was the head of the stress engineering team.

So I had engineering and an innate understanding of physics in my blood, and growing up I was extremely mechanically inclined. As a kid I disassembled every appliance and mechanical thing in the house & garage, because I needed to see & understand how they worked inside. As a teen I was a natural mechanic, and was regularly discussing with my dad mechanical, engineering, and physics ideas and problems.

My first 'career' after my mom's family restaurant business was as a GM-certified tech at a major Chevy dealership, which I landed with absolutely no formal training or experience. I went in for the interview with the service manager and asst manager, and they literally laughed when I said my only experience was learning from my dad since I was a little kid, and working on the family cars in the driveway. They looked at each other like 'we've got a comedian here thinking he's gonna get a job', so I said "ask me some questions". After a half hour of firing questions at me, I had a job. The best part about it turned out to be that there was a ton of training & development offered, and I took every opportunity available. I learned machining, welding, electronics, took all sorts of GM courses for different components, and soon was rebuilding engines and automatic transmissions, doing electrical & electronics troubleshooting, and knew inside & out any component on any vehicle.

Eventually I'd mastered that trade, and for me that means its time to move on, so I went back to school for criminal justice, and then into the police academy and police force. I worked for a bit in the suburbs but didn't like it, so I went into Philadelphia as a transit cop, where I made Sergeant and was a shift supervisor, state-cert municipal police instructor, and president of the officers association. Ten years of that was enough, and I landed a gig with the United Nations International Police Task Force in Bosnia, where I was a UN station commander for the first year, and then a regional-command level human rights investigator for the UN human rights office.

So when I was watching the WTC towers fall on TV with my dad, I'd only been back from Bosnia for a few months.

When I was a cop I'd also got my private pilots license, and I was the Chief Engineer for my local (Phila suburbs) fire company, and a state and nationally-certified fire service instructor. So I knew a bit about building fires and flying airplanes too.

And also before Sept 11 I'd been a subscriber to Mike Ruppert's 'From the Wilderness' newsletter, and like me he knew immediately that it was a false flag event and started writing and investigating. If you don't know Mike's story, he was a former LAPD officer who was exposing CIA drug trafficking in LA, and he wrote the first major book exposing the 9/11 false flag, and then was destroyed and 'suicided'.

Sorry for so much background, but I was lucky to have experience that enabled me to see through the lies on literally every aspect of the false flag coverup.

And same, I'd try to talk to others, even my own family, and people just wouldn't talk about it. It became the quick way to end a conversation. I thought I could make the world a better place when I was young, and now I was having to face the fact that people really don't want the truth. That, to me, is worse than what happened, because its the reason the criminal cabal knew they could get away with it, and its the reason it continues to happen, now with covid, Ukraine, Syria, Yemen, and whatever mass killing & destruction is next.

Now, I don't care anymore that people are uncomfortable with truth. I use 9/11 and covid as a test for people, and if they don't want to hear anything then I don't have any more time for them. Most of the acquaintances I had in 2019 I no longer have any contact with.

I do still ride a little bit. I have a FJ09, my 'old' R6 race bike, and a few antique/classic Yamahas.

The Beetle Rodeo is sharing a pretty accurate perception, and it takes some work to figure out that much. That's right up my alley. When I ended my law enforcement career after Bosnia, I went deep into medicine & psychology, becoming the focus of my life. And my sister teaches online classes on that specific topic of how to integrate what we call 'disowned aspects' of the personality. It's life-changing work. LMK if you want more info.

And just so you know, nobody gets anywhere with deductive reasoning, because it's not reasoning. So if it doesn't make sense to you, that's a good thing. You might be more rational than you realize.

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Stay the course, Sir and Ma'am.

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