Some Stuff I Think You Might Like #9
A regular round-up of all the best articles, videos, and podcasts that probably didn’t make your newsfeed.
Perhaps the biggest problem I have with a term such as “The Great Awakening” is that it seems to presume that the sole or, at least, the primary barrier to a mass elevation in human consciousness is nothing more than a simple lack of knowledge. No doubt, this is significant. I’d like to imagine that if more people grew wise to the kind of unrepentant scumbags who make up the global elite (as well as the mountain of corpses they sit atop of) then our species might not submit so meekly to their whims. Yet, however vigorously the system suppresses stories of NATO’s warmongering or the black box of depravity that is Hunter Biden’s Laptop, neither can it be denied that such information is already (if quietly) widespread.
Of course, it would be impossible to diagnose all the reasons behind our civilization’s collective inertia; there are as many of those as there are individuals gripped by it. What I do know, however, is that if something resembling The Great Awakening is ever going to occur, then the changes which facilitate it must first take place on a level far deeper than the purely rational. This will be no triumph of cognitive horsepower. Instead, quantum leaps of such magnitude can only be made when a society possesses the humility to recognize its servitude, the dignity to cast off the shackles of its intentionally warped perceptions, and ultimately, enough curiosity and courage to step out of the conceptual gulag and into the vast, unnerving reality being charted by independent content creators such as these:
1. The Dimming
It must have been nearly twenty years ago, back when your humble narrator was still in high school, that I can recall, printed in my biology textbook, an illustration of planes spraying the skies over farmland in order to elicit favorable growing conditions. And to be honest, I didn’t think much more about it. Even back then, nothing about this technology struck my adolescent mind as particularly futuristic, let alone implausibly so. Nevertheless, over the course of just the last couple years, evermore legacy news outlets have been laughingly proclaiming weather manipulation to be just another baseless conspiracy theory.
Dane Wigington begs to differ. It is the filmmaker’s assertion that, for the vast bulk of the last century, a network of international influencers have been involved in climate engineering experiments which seek to reduce natural sunlight by dispersing particles throughout the atmosphere. His evidence is unquestionably compelling and now, with European agriculture under attack and the UK media trying to repackage summer as the apocalypse, it would seem remarkably incautious to dismiss out of hand, the kind of terrifying possibilities presented by government-weaponized weather patterns.
As always, the video below is embedded from YouTube, but you can also watch the full documentary on non-Cabal owned sites here, here, and here.
2. France, Farmers, and the Failing ‘Extreme Center’ - Renaud Beauchard
If there’s any truth to the claims presented in The Dimming, you can bet your quickly diminishing retirement fund that they’re already well underway in France. Alongside their counterparts in the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, and elsewhere on the continent, the country’s farmers are being strangulated by legislation intent on driving them from their land (Schwab’s minion Macron promising yet more suicidal measures coming down the pipeline). All this arises after a decade of steadily mounting tensions – Islamic terror attacks, yellow vest protests, the police’s brutal enforcement of Covid tyranny – and now, in the wake of a bitterly contested election and with Europe’s dire economic situation worsening, it seems as though France might be reaching breaking point.
Written by Renaud Beauchard, a local lawyer and professor, this essay offers a fascinatingly bleak assessment of what may well become the first western nation to follow Sri Lanka into the abyss of the Great Reset.
Judging from the mood all over Europe, with new “peasant revolts” plus a Russia about to completely turn off the tap of the gas supply, Macron and his government have every reason to be worried about a popular anger which is already several notches above what it was when the massive Gilets Jaunes (“Yellow Vest”) protests erupted in late 2018. As bad as the Gilets Jaunes protests were for Macron then, the movement happened in an economic context incommensurably better than the current one, and while Macron also enjoyed an overwhelming majority in the National Assembly. Now Macron is facing an opposition which will be in a very good position to explain to the discontents why they should be discontented.
3. The Financial Agenda Behind the Curtain - Dave Cullen Talks to Melissa Ciummei
Maybe I’m a little biased given our shared Ulster origins, but I contend that ever since the scamdemic roll-out, Melissa Ciummei has been one of the most underappreciated voices in the pushback. Right from the earliest days of the hoax, she has been vociferously warning of what was truly unfolding, not because she saw through the Science™ or recognized the corruption of our political leaders, but rather because of a series of tells she noticed in her role as a financial investor. Indeed, she suspected the establishment would be looking for an excuse to jettison our old economic model as far back as the banking bailouts of 2008, and although her testimony is far from uplifting, her interview with the ever-excellent Dave Cullen is an hour you might someday find yourself glad of spending.
You can find their conversation on Bitchute, Rumble, and Odysee.
4. EyesisWatchin Podcast
I have only recently stumbled across Steve’s podcast, a statement which might be made about a majority of his rapidly growing audience. A tireless contributor within alt-media circles, his channel’s burgeoning success is well-deserved, the host uploading a new hour-long episode each week in which he discusses all the most pressing issues the MSM diligently ignores.
Steve is active on a variety of alt-tech sites, but you’ll probably find it easiest to catch him on Bitchute, Odysee, or Rumble.
5. How the USA Lost its Anti-Imperial Foreign Policy Tradition and How it can Be Recovered (Mahan vs Gilpin Unpacked) - Matt Ehret
As regular readers of these round-ups may already know, I’m a big fan of Matt Ehret’s work. For my money, he possesses an unparalleled capacity to place the west’s ongoing neoliberal shitshow within a broader historical and geopolitical context, describing the flow of power in relation to events and individuals not commonly mentioned in the dominant narrative. His is always a refreshing, extensively researched perspective and one which this time addresses the long-running ideological battle between those who wish to see the US returned to the anti-imperial system it was conceived as, and other, more cynical actors who would prefer to cash in on the marauding, nation-annihilating bully it has become.
Such is the image projected by Mark Milley’s ranting anti-China attacks or the relentless demonization of Russia sweeping across mainstream media ever day- both nations who have repeatedly called for cooperation and friendship with the USA. If it were simply belligerent words then we could brush off these childish attacks as mere foolish rhetoric, but sadly these words are backed by extraordinarily dangerous action. From escalating military maneuvers on Russia’s border, to belligerent military expansion in China’s backyard, everywhere one looks, we find the same lemming-like commitment to playing a nuclear game of chicken in the hopes of psychologically breaking the Multipolar Alliance.
6. Bonfire of Teenagers - Morrissey
Whenever I first published my article entitled Another Vaccine Side-Effect: The Death of Rock ‘n’ Roll, I had a number of readers message me to defend one artist or another who never submitted to the jab. At the time, this sparked an idea for a review series in which I might give my thoughts on releases by freedom-minded, genuinely counter-cultural musicians but frankly, these releases come so sporadically, I’ve not yet figured out a way to efficiently curate the information.
In the meantime, here is the latest offering from the always freedom-minded, genuinely counter-cultural Morrisey. So much have the political opinions of the Smith’s former frontman scandalized industry gatekeepers that he has been dropped from his record label BMG and is now struggling to find another to publish Bonfire of Teenagers. The title track is a reference to “England’s 9/11”, the Manchester Arena Bombing when an Islamist terrorist blew himself up alongside twenty-two others (mostly young girls) at a 2017 Ariana Grande concert. Naturally, the UK’s diversity propaganda machine was keen to sweep the anti-immigration implications under the carpet, Morrisey’s promotor-repelling indignation practically oozing from the lyrics:
Bonfire of Teenagers
Which is so high in May north-west sky
Oh, you should've seen her leave for the arena
On the way, she turned and waved and smiled: "Goodbye"
Goodbye
And the silly people sing: "Don't Look Back in Anger"
And the morons sing and sway: "Don't Look Back in Anger"
I can assure you I will look back in anger 'till the day I die
Bonfire of Teenagers
Which is so high in May north-west sky
Oh, you should've seen her leave for the arena
Only to be vaporized
Vaporized
And the silly people sing: "Don't Look Back in Anger"
And the morons swing and say: "Don't Look Back in Anger"
I can assure you I will look back in anger 'till the day I die
Go easy on the killer
Go easy on the killer
Go easy on the killer
Go easy on the killer...
7. Some Shameless Self-Promotion
I’m really not sure why, but part three of my Klaus Schwab and the Men Who Molded Him series has so far proved the most difficult to write. The more you look into the life of a man such as Henry Kissinger, the more obscure his story seems to become - the details distorted both by the vitriol of his detractors as well as the propaganda of his apologists. What appears quite demonstrable, however, is that no matter how sympathetic his biographer, it was the one-time Secretary of State who first ushered Klaus Schwab into the upper echelons of the transatlantic elite.
For those who missed the previous installments in the series, you might also enjoy my piece on Klaus’s Nazi-collaborating father as well as my profile of Dom Hélder Câmara, Schwab’s spiritual mentor. Part four is currently in the works and so, without giving too much away, I’ll just say that its focus is a man who helped Schwab establish the earliest iterations of the World Economic Forum, providing the framework from which to transform the organization into the globalist juggernaut it is today.
When examining Kissinger’s most contentious of résumés, it can seem as though nowhere on earth has been spared the horror of his genius. With time, it is likely that his legacy will be measured not in awards or ghostwritten books but in corpses too numerous and mutilated to calculate, and yet today - in large part due to the assistance of Klaus Schwab - it is Europe where his name echoes most resonantly.
As stated in the video at the beginning of this article, the two men first met at the Harvard Kennedy School where Schwab, studying a Masters in Public Administration, would catch the much sought-after attentions of Professor Kissinger. This was nothing short of life-changing for the future WEF chairman. Naturally, being ushered under such an illustrious wing constituted an immense boost to the career ambitions of this fiercely ambitious young business mind, even if the motivations of his mentor remain rather more difficult to define.
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