Waiter, there is a bug in my woo - Explorers' Guide to SciFi World
bugs...
bugs...
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Hello humans. | |
| Hello. | |
| Let me close that. | |
| There we go. | |
| Hello humans. | |
| Waiter, gasson. | |
| Which actually means boy in French. | |
| And it comes from the fact that all the French restaurants take their lineage from basically French public houses. | |
| But waiter, there's a bug in my woo. | |
| And today is about the bug doings. | |
| It's possible. | |
| Okay, so we analyze all different kinds of stuff. | |
| Humans are really into that. | |
| We like patterns. | |
| We like dividing the patterns, fractalizing, so to speak, the patterns, even coming up with algorithms for the fractals for the patterns. | |
| And we play mind games with them. | |
| We just keep going and splitting and slicing and dicing and this sort of thing. | |
| It's fine. | |
| You know, it occupies us, right? | |
| We analyze all different kinds of stuff, including ourselves, but we rarely analyze our species as a whole and where it's headed in the species' actions as a whole on this planet. | |
| So we know about things like the world wars, and the Wu people, the people that understand that all of history is just the conspiracies that have been allowed to be written down by the victors in warfare, understand that world wars are a designed product of the powers that be. | |
| And so at that level, the Wu people understand that things are not as they are presented and they are not as the underlying paradigm would present them, which is to say organic. | |
| So the war does not erupt because Archduke Duke Ferdinand gets blown away, right? | |
| It had been planned long before that. | |
| So all of these things are planned. | |
| They're all gamed out. | |
| We know that the powers that be are manipulating us. | |
| The power elite are the enemies of humanity. | |
| We know that they're really dumb, stupid bastards and want to reduce humanity down to 500 million, which we all know isn't enough to support them. | |
| So, you know, their minds, I think, are captured. | |
| They just don't grasp what they're doing and how much under the control of, as I say, the bug they are. | |
| Now, the bug is just my appellation, my label for the enemy that I see on the other side of these very definitely non-human actions. | |
| Now, it's not to say that there's not aspects of humanity involved in them, but there are aspects of the total overall drama that's unfolding or theater that's unfolding that make it appear to be not 100% organic in terms of human nature. | |
| So humans are a distributed life form. | |
| We're not a hive mind. | |
| Humans are not necessarily really good thinkers, right? | |
| There's a lot of dummies and even smart people make stupid decisions. | |
| But we basically think independently of each other. | |
| So why? | |
| So I asked myself then, why would humans willingly adopt a hive mind paradigm, right? | |
| Which would be the large organizations, all right? | |
| So like nationalism I can understand, right? | |
| But I can't understand subsuming oneself to an ideology and especially an ideology that is antithical to the underlying fundamental of human nature, which is individualism. | |
| We're all individuated. | |
| We think individually. | |
| We act individually, etc., right? | |
| We're born individually and we shall die individually. | |
| And it's not like this with the insects and their paradigm is entirely different from ours. | |
| And I see aspects of the bug's presence. | |
| And so I label anti-human patterns being overlaid on humanity as coming from the bug. | |
| It's convenient, right? | |
| It doesn't matter if there's a bug out there or not. | |
| It doesn't matter what the cause is. | |
| It's just a placeholder, a variable name. | |
| And so I can say, okay, there's a bug out there where the bug's doing this. | |
| Like Catherine Austin Fitz calls the bad guys Mr. Global. | |
| So she has a way of characterizing the bad guys here on Earth in this little group called Mr. Global. | |
| And people, you know, it's difficult. | |
| You have to do analysis, and some people seem to be doing like Mr. Global's work and yet may just be acting in their own personal interest and not aware that they're being utilized or piggybacked off of or even happen to just fit into a niche that Mr. Global needs to have at that moment. | |
| And so Catherine Austin Fitz's characterization of Mr. Global I take as factual and it's a good characterization. | |
| It basically is a description of the powers that be. | |
| She, I think, limits it more to the financial kind of a thing, right? | |
| And so the structure of my world is that I've got a placeholder up here, which is bug. | |
| And under that, we can find Mr. Global. | |
| And we can see the powers that be and the elite. | |
| And we can put in, you can put in all of the various different secret societies like the Knights of Malta, you know, the Freemasons, all the offshoots of all of these. | |
| You can put in there Catholic Church, even the CCP today. | |
| All of these organizations here are descriptors, basically, for, or all these labels here are descriptors for organizations that function in a strict top-down hierarchy. | |
| There's nothing decentralized about them. | |
| There's no equanimity in terms of decision-making in the ranks. | |
| And so we see this imposition of this authoritarian structure. | |
| In my understanding of the world of reality, authoritarianism is not human-oriented. | |
| It doesn't arise naturally in human societies. | |
| So I can't find authoritarianism arising even in the most brutal empires of the past. | |
| And I see authoritarianism arising at a very specific point in past human history and being supportive of and therefore inculcated into the humans in specific kinds of organizations, like the Catholic Church, you know, all the churches in the hierarchy, this sort of thing, right? | |
| Which is not the structure that humans would naturally evolve. | |
| Humans are kind of curious. | |
| We have these inbuilt limits to us, right? | |
| So you can know about 145 people. | |
| If you've got 308 people in your tribe, it's difficult to know everybody at a level other than, for many people, it then becomes a casual level. | |
| And it alters the internal dynamic. | |
| So in the past, humans would usually split the tribe or somewhere around that 145 to 150 mark, split off and you'd have two tribes, etc., right? | |
| And so that's a native kind of level of functionality here. | |
| So humans online may follow hundreds of people, but they're not actually engaged in the same way that you have to be engaged at a personal level in a tribal situation or on personal contact. | |
| And so the nature of humans as emotional beings transferring emotion to and from each other through our energy bodies, our etheric bodies, etc., requires a certain amount of energy that is depleted if you get much beyond this 145 person limit, at least in that daily kind of interaction stuff. | |
| Now, now, in modern times, we have an entirely screwy fucking world. | |
| You're supposed to keep track of all this shit. | |
| There's hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of people that you're supposed to understand what they're doing. | |
| You're supposed to pay attention to celebrities and politicians and know who all these fuckers are. | |
| And it's like, you know. | |
| And basically, you'll populate your world with about 145 people, and that'll be about it, even if they're remote like this. | |
| So I see things, right? | |
| And I see that there are, if we look at things in a, quote, evolutionary lens or a historical lens, insofar as we can trust our own history because we know it's been destroyed and removed from us, | |
| then we find that there are areas in which the nature of what it is to be human is in the process of, has or is in the process of crossing over into a boundary from human into unhuman, inhuman, which I just put down to the bug, right? | |
| I just put the bug at the top of all of this because the nature of the bug and because of the nature of the vagus nervous system, actually, and how we have extremely finely tuned vagus nervous systems and can produce all kinds of emotions, and bugs have none, basically none. | |
| And in between there, you find reptiles and amphibians and all the other lesser vagus nerve beings, and they are greatly lesser. | |
| So we actually have out here humans and we have, you know, basically whales and dolphins. | |
| Whales at all. | |
| All right. | |
| And in there, we have to include, even though it doesn't appear to be operating off of the same kind of structure as a vagus nerve, we have to include cuttlefish because cuttlefish have a language that's biophotonic. | |
| They talk to each other with light. | |
| They live way at the bottom of the ocean. | |
| They can kill you. | |
| They're sort of like a squid with a case over the head. | |
| They have big brains like octopi. | |
| They have all the tentacles like octopi. | |
| They're very dexterous and so on. | |
| And so I actually put them up here in terms of potential for sophisticated emotional responses. | |
| Even though, insofar as examining them, while there is something that is akin to a vagus nervous system, it does not structure the same way as ours. | |
| But I think it's close enough that this structure performs the same function. | |
| And so cuttlefish also, that whole large species. | |
| Anyway, so we're up here, and then in between us and the bugs are basically all of the reptiles. | |
| Those, all of the, what I call the unshielded ones, right? | |
| These are all of those species that have nervous systems that may include a vagus nervous system, which appears to be an implant on this planet. | |
| But their nerves are not covered with a layer of specifically hardened fats to protect it from the various kinds of radiation. | |
| So we see these things in themes ancillarily hit. | |
| So in Battlefield Earth, I think it was like L. Ron Hubbard's sci-fi movie, right? | |
| Or book. | |
| In there, the space aliens came here to Earth, but they couldn't go out of their domes because they were very radiation sensitive. | |
| They were big buggers and all of this, and they were radiation-sensitive. | |
| And us little guys would go in out and do the mining and bring them gold. | |
| They wanted gold. | |
| So everybody's greedy in the universe. | |
| Anyway, though, but the issue was that their vagus nervous system, their nervous system was not shielded the same way as ours was. | |
| And we share this with dogs and cats. | |
| They have vagus nervous systems. | |
| They're very emotional beings. | |
| And it's also shielded. | |
| So some of the predatory vertebrates that are not reptilian do have advanced vagus nervous systems. | |
| Horses, cattle, less so. | |
| None in the fowl or the, you know, no birds have any vagus nervous system to speak of. | |
| So basically it's all the live birthing animals. | |
| None of the oviparous animals have a vagus nervous system or an emotional response that you can count on because they have the unshielded nerves. | |
| And this is really key. | |
| But I'm not going to go into it much. | |
| But anyway, this structure up here, so the bug here uses, in Wu world, in sci-fi world, the bug uses reptiles. | |
| It creates the reptilians and controls them. | |
| And these reptilians are not like you see the big hurking lizards with human type shoulders and stuff, right? | |
| But the bug controls the reptilian mind because the bug is able to psychically deal with their unshielded nerves and put impulses in there and make them do what they want because the reptilians basically are unthinking creatures. | |
| In any event, though, so in our world here, we have, this is all the woo stuff, all of the weird UFO contact E crap that comes out, you know, all of the strange-ass shit on Gaia, that sort of thing. | |
| But it's true that we have humans and whales and stuff, but we're going to talk about humans at the moment. | |
| And it's also true that it's convenient to think about the bug and the bug's idea of a hive mind, which is basically a pyramid power structure with one top bug and every other bug equally subordinate underneath it, right? | |
| And so this is all power structures. | |
| And they're all hive mind, basically, where there's something directing the whole of the hive, as opposed to the organic nature of tribal interaction and the growing of a nation, right? | |
| This is the growing of a structure. | |
| And so I see in I can easily take these collective labels for the elite or powers that be and just assign them conceptually to an off-world influence that's captured all of these fuckers because these are all being implemented by humans. | |
| And it is possible, I grant, that there is a subclass of humans that is operating, that is either particularly weak to bug influence or is operating in their own interest, still being directed by the bugs, and thus are willing participants in that sense, right? | |
| But I don't see humans naturally developing these kinds of things. | |
| It's not that I'm saying that humans are stupid, but I'm just saying that left to his own devices and his own vices and personally knowing the history involved, would Karl Marx have written the Communist Manifesto or Das Kapital and involved himself with Engels at all? | |
| And I say no. | |
| He was disrupted deliberately from a very hedonistic track to produce those works for the Fabian Society. | |
| So in my understanding of things, something in the Fabian society caused money to be produced and circumstances to be engineered such that Karl Marx would write these books. | |
| And you have to understand this was not a labor of love of Karl Marx. | |
| He wanted to die in a hedonistic pleasure explosion, right? | |
| He was not a self-denying man of the people, that sort of thing. | |
| This was a guy that was a toady to the royals and totally consumed with his own vices. | |
| And he was interrupted in all of that, and it took some significant amount of stuff for that to have happened. | |
| So I look at these examples on Earth over long periods of time, a little here, a little there, and they all start adding up to the bug, you know, the interference, the influences. | |
| And here we are now, in a strange kind of a way, at sort of like a point of maximum bug doings, right? | |
| Maximum bug intrusions into our lives. | |
| And the bug activity works because the bug is able to sense and deal with harmonics within humans and to resonate with those harmonics and do things that cause those harmonics to shift ever so slightly on moss, and thus we move certain ways, right? | |
| Sort of hurting us in a sense. | |
| But those harmonics are not captured. | |
| They're just manipulated. | |
| And so they, and in order for this to occur, the bug has to do a huge amount of work. | |
| It has to put thousands and thousands and thousands, tens of thousands, millions of humans to work over centuries to get us to where we are now. | |
| Because the bug has altered every fundamental aspect of life, right? | |
| Look at how it attempted to alter biology, sex, gender, appearance Of humans, you know, the pink hair and all of the changes in humans. | |
| These are responses. | |
| And not the tattooing and stuff is actually not bug-directed. | |
| It's a response to the bug. | |
| We see this in other things. | |
| It's changed economics. | |
| Just tons of stuff. | |
| Religion, politics, of course. | |
| But foods, air, the chemtrails, all of that shit. | |
| Science by forbidden subjects. | |
| We can't go certain ways. | |
| You can't talk about the ether. | |
| You can't look at things that way. | |
| All of this stuff is forbidden. | |
| History, of course, huge. | |
| That's a giant one. | |
| The bugs altered our history, wiping out vast quantities of it from us, restricting it from us, directing humans to destroy it, and so on. | |
| Humans would do that anyway, I think, too, but not to the degree that we've got here. | |
| And look, you know, it turns everything into its own. | |
| So we've gone from economic, from having an economic, being an economic nation and having an economy in our nation to having a financial system, right? | |
| And everything the bug does is systemic. | |
| It's always a system because that's the way hives work. | |
| Just like neural net programming. | |
| It's basically you create an algorithm and have millions of little things that each do their own little bit interacting with each other to take that algorithm and express it. | |
| And that's what the bug is doing to humans. | |
| And that's what it's been doing for a long time. | |
| Any given aspect or any given chunk of humanity has to be examined as to whether it was a captured function of the bug. | |
| And we can see this in like Nazism, you know, certainly. | |
| Fascism at that level is certainly a captured operation from the bug. | |
| And then the bug just changes the labels, and now it has the new fascism called antifa or anti-fascism. | |
| And it has climate, the next one is going to be the climate guys. | |
| The Extinction Rebellion people are going to be the new fascists and providing, trying to provide this top-down control. | |
| It alters all of these things in order that it can reinforce the totality of its control. | |
| When any one aspect of it is breaking, it can attempt to shift the human attention to some of these other aspects here. | |
| And we see that all the time, the control of the new cycle, the attempt to distract and control the mind. | |
| So it's all mind control at that stage. | |
| And that's all the bug has. | |
| The bug has no power. | |
| We cannot be physically overwhelmed by the bug. | |
| The only thing that can happen is that the bug can dominate enough minds so as to cause those minds to be self-reinforcing and to live in a particular illusion of a particular world that doesn't really exist, and then to do things that are counter human nature, that are counter to human nature, right? | |
| And so, but it alters everything in order for this process to continue and to keep going. | |
| The last time there was a major, in my opinion, the last time there was a major pushback against the bug, it basically engineered a social collapse. | |
| And that was like, that was the collapse of the Bronze Age. | |
| And that was like 11, I think it was like in the 1100s BC, right? | |
| Scientists will put it down maybe, you know, 1101 or, you know, 1199. | |
| Somebody will just pick a number and they'll fixate on it, right? | |
| But it was a collapse of the Bronze Age. | |
| And it collapsed, the civilization collapsed in a, it collapsed insofar as our current modern history thinks of it. | |
| But that collapse of the civilization then actually disintegrated in the historical writings into a tribal society. | |
| So there was a civilization arising or had arisen or was structured and had been placed there that had collapsed in the 1100 BC era. | |
| And it was a mining-based civilization, right? | |
| And we see that it collapsed. | |
| And as it collapsed, the overall trading civilization also collapsed with it. | |
| And people went back to a tribal civilization, to a tribal organization. | |
| So the civilization, so basically civilization, eh, it's not such a good idea. | |
| So anyway, so the thing is that when the civilization collapsed, it wasn't like humanity died or people stopped digging copper or, you know, to make bronze, copper and tin and stuff. | |
| There was still all this mining going on. | |
| There was just no centralized or close to centralized direction of the activity. | |
| And so in that sense, in that sense, I think at that point, it was a rebellion, an early rebellion against the centralized activity and authority, and also was accompanied by weather changes at that point. | |
| So I think that we were getting into a period akin to right now. | |
| And the people dissipated into tribes, and thus civilization collapsed, but human activity didn't collapse. | |
| Humanity obviously didn't collapse. | |
| We're here now. | |
| And we still did all of the stuff and there was still history and this sort of thing. | |
| It was just not a centralized, organized structure. | |
| And in that sense, the civil, the civics, the civ, which is the unity, was removed, but everything still existed. | |
| So here we are now. | |
| We're in a similar period of time where there's similar kinds of energies as had occurred at the collapse of the Bronze Age. | |
| And I mean, like planetary and, you know, where the sun is, that sort of thing, right? | |
| Because that would be, hang on a second, that'd be like 3,000 to 3,400 years ago in that range. | |
| We were at a similar point in space relative to the transition from one age into another. | |
| And these are very powerful things and energies change as the sun goes moving around. | |
| And so here we are now going through the change of all of these things here, these all native aspects of humanity, into whatever the bug wants us to have. | |
| Now bear in mind that insects are oviparous. | |
| They lay eggs, right? | |
| And they're even less attached to their eggs than a chicken might be. | |
| And a chicken is not attached to its egg at all. | |
| It just has an instinct to do these things and then to take off when the eggs hatch and instruct the imprinting beings on it in its behavior. | |
| That's all. | |
| Insects have even less of an association with the eggs. | |
| So insects have a particular view of life that they are attempting to express, and their expression of that life is not life to life. | |
| It's more like manager to consumer. | |
| So there's a whole lot of things in... | |
| So let me think how to phrase this. | |
| Efficiency of scale, humans discover. | |
| We discovered that real early, real easy. | |
| And we do efficiency of scale, but we have a tendency to set a limit at it. | |
| So in other words, we have an efficiency of scale. | |
| Instead of one person grinding their corn in a bowl, a region, you could get a bunch of men together and they would build a water wheel and build a mill. | |
| And then usually at the direction of somebody that knew how to do it and so on. | |
| And then that person would run the mill and everybody would bring their grains and that mill would grind it and you wouldn't have to go through all of that kind of labor. | |
| And so this was efficiency of scale, where it's not necessary that everybody own their own grinding implement. | |
| Now, we see mass production way early in human history. | |
| And in this mass production, we find just some weird, strange things. | |
| Like in the Mesoamerican period, they had these little dishes made out of stone that they ground their corn in order to make it edible. | |
| And there were production facilities in Aztec society that just produced those kind of vessels. | |
| So it's as though there were whole cities that were devoted to just making corn grinding vessels. | |
| So early mass production as an idea that took over this society and they did two or three of these ideas and their whole social order collapsed and people fled basically. | |
| And these two or three of these ideas force them into mass production at the expense of the rest of the society. | |
| It's estimated, I mean, this is just such a confusing thing. | |
| If you go and look at some of these areas of ruins, there are actually scientists that, I don't know if they're valid or not, but if you go and look at these areas of ruins, which I've seen in Mexico, you'll find areas where indeed there were apparently tens of thousands of, or there were tens of thousands of regular vessels being made in a very laborious process that would have taken thousands, | |
| if not tens of thousands, of people involved in it day after day after day to the exclusion of everything else, including, you know, growing food, gathering food, this sort of thing. | |
| And so why did they become obsessed, right? | |
| Why did the social order become obsessed with this single, in this case, there were actually three aspects of it, but a single aspect of their social order. | |
| It would be like our social order becoming so obsessed with football that we devote half of our entire population to the creation of footballs. | |
| Not playing with them or anything, just making them. | |
| Half of all of our social order goes to making footballs, and then basically all of the rest of the social order collapses because there's not enough people to pick up the trash and do all this other stuff. | |
| We're just also obsessed with the creation of footballs. | |
| And, you know, so why does aberrant behavior move through a social order and grip it to the point where it becomes a mass psychosis that alters the energy balance of that social order leading to its collapse? | |
| You could say that that's even what happened with Nazi Germany. | |
| And, you know, it's extremely complex. | |
| There's not a single point of entry into any of this to where you can say it pivots on this point. | |
| But each and every one of these things compound to tell me that in the sum, we have an antithical and destructive nature or a destructive theme or thread through history that I do not find to be human-like at all. | |
| I can see humans getting into mass psychoses and these sorts of things and have seen examples of that. | |
| You know, the grain gets contaminated and the whole village gets loopy on ergot, right? | |
| LSD kind of experiences and all kinds of weird shit happens. | |
| That is perfectly understandable. | |
| But to get tens of thousands of people to try and have a shared experience is not an organic human kind of a thing, right? | |
| It is at one level. | |
| A lot of people taking drugs and having that kind of experience, sure. | |
| That certainly is common throughout history. | |
| There have been areas that humans would devote just to the sacred pastime of psychedelics. | |
| And tens of thousands of people would gather, very much like Burning Man does today, and they would have vast parties, right? | |
| But we wouldn't take that same kind of energy and alter our society in an attempt to create that going 24 by 7365. | |
| So in those societies that ritualized such use, in fact, they ritualized it in such a way that that could not happen. | |
| And so we see the drinks at Elysium, right, where the mysteries, where you would take these drinks and it was a psychedelic drink and everybody would go and basically find God. | |
| But they wouldn't let you take those things as recreational because it diluted it. | |
| In fact, when people did do that, it was punishable by death and they were killed. | |
| So anyway, the bug doings here, we're at this point, as had been encountered in previous parts of human history, where we're faced with power pyramids that are freaking out, right? | |
| All of the structures here that the bug has used to replace the organic nature of humanity, every one of these things here, so you get like, you know, the purple hair people, right? | |
| They're all freaking out. | |
| You know, the politics, you've got all the left and the anti-fon, all of these people here, they're all freaking out now. | |
| Our foods that are a point of maximum corruption. | |
| Have to really work to get decent nutrition. | |
| It's not like you can just eat and not worry about it. | |
| Our air is tainted. | |
| We've even got the disease aspect of it. | |
| If, you know, the bioweapon and so on, they've tainted war. | |
| The bugs do war in a particular way. | |
| They try and make us do war. | |
| They're very efficient, right? | |
| Bugs are very efficient at colonizing individual thinking organisms because they play off and they resonate, get our vibrations moving in a sympathetic resonance with their goals, and then they let us do their work because they don't have very much power. | |
| They're not into technology that much the way that we are and all these other different issues. | |
| But at this point, we have a burgeoning war coming out into the open, right? | |
| And this war is nominally against these guys. | |
| And so I know, for instance, that like the Patriots in the U.S., the Patriots in New Zealand, and Australia and France and England and Denmark, etc., etc., Sweden, etc., all of these guys that, you know, are people of the land and so on, they're all fighting up in here, and all these guys are basically fighting this corrupt power pyramid from the bug, even if they don't recognize it. | |
| So I know that, or my paradigm for the Wu is that we've got the Patriots. | |
| Let me get rid of some of this here. | |
| It's not necessary anymore, I don't think. | |
| But look at how much they've altered everything, including history. | |
| Really pisses me off about the history. | |
| But anyway, so, you know, so it's personal with me, right? | |
| I got a lot of personal vendettas against this bug. | |
| So I'm quite happy to be enjoined in battle at this moment with the bug and the forces, right? | |
| But we've got the global patriots, which I can think of as, I think of them as orgos, right? | |
| organic humans, these guys. | |
| And within the Patriots, we have the subsection of the military that's in the process of doing devolution against these guys. | |
| The devolution is the movement of everything away from the power structure. | |
| It literally is the removal of the body from the body politic. | |
| It's just removing it, letting the political structure stand there on its own and collapse because it can't support itself. | |
| These guys, they probably are not aware of the bug, right? | |
| They probably don't think that far in terms of the range of the battles and all of that kind of thing. | |
| Especially the military, there may be some guys in the military that have a clue. | |
| And they know that the battle is much larger than this and will go along much longer than the battle against these guys. | |
| This might take two or three years to get the majority of them kicked down to powerless, and then maybe it's going to take another 30 or 40 years to clean up globally, right? | |
| But the battle against the bug will continue for some time because the bug is patient and it will just try and recreate and start up over again. | |
| And a lot of the military, certainly none of the Patriot guys, none of the organic humans, in my opinion, really, understand that on the other side of all of their enemies is this single enemy, that is whatever kind of thing we have to characterize it in. | |
| At the moment, my label is the bug. | |
| And so the bug in my woo is doing things, but it's forcing the humans to do things so rapidly because it's getting pushback, because of the organic nature of humans, the bug can't control it. | |
| It'll never ever win. | |
| All of the so how much of the movies, let me just, we just have to ask it as questions, really. | |
| How much of all of the dystopian movies and how much of all of the humanity is weak and headed towards doom movies are at the direction of the bug attempting to control our minds and pre-load us for its purpose? | |
| Probably a great much amount of that. | |
| If we look at the change in art over time, why is it that we are drowning in a morass of anti-human propaganda, Attacking our gender, saying that, you know, if you look at TV, there is no strong male role model. | |
| Masculinity is toxic, feminist, it isn't femininity anymore. | |
| It's estrogen dominance or something, right? | |
| And so there's masculinity, but there's no longer femininity. | |
| There's feminism and estrogen dominance, which is this shrill has aspects of evil in it too, this shrill concept of reality that is attempting to force reality to conform to the concept as opposed to the concept actually reflecting the reality, you know, an examination of reality. | |
| And so much of our mindsets are being controlled here in this sense by the media. | |
| And look at how our media is being weaponized and used against us by these guys here. | |
| And that, I think, comes from there, because it controls all of these aspects in order that they might be self-reinforcing, that we might not ever see the bug and might think we are living within an organic reality that's self-determining. | |
| And this is not the case. | |
| And the universe is bland about this. | |
| It's up to us to get our ass out of this, and it's up to us to defeat the bug. | |
| There is no external savior in this regard. | |
| The bug will actually use external saviors against you, putting them up there and letting them fall, putting them up there and letting them fall, such that you will become disenchanted and it controls your emotions and so on and so on. | |
| This is what gives rise to the idea of loosh in the conspiracy world as that these beings are feeding on that negative energy. | |
| There are energy eaters, so to speak, but the bug is not an energy eater. | |
| And in fact, one of the bugs driving needs is to dampen energy, right? | |
| To reduce humanity so that we're not so energetic and not so psychic. | |
| Or we are psychic. | |
| That drives the bugs crazy because we broadcast and we don't know we're broadcasting and we can't control that broadcast. | |
| And so for the bugs, it's like being in the largest possible stadium here on Earth, maximally filled with humans, at the loudest rock concert ever, 24 by 7, just continuously, just being around us. | |
| And so it wants to dampen us all down. | |
| Thus, now we're getting into the, it's not, you know, we're not running out of energy. | |
| All of our energy systems are stupidly constructed. | |
| Like I was saying about the scale, right? | |
| With the water wheel. | |
| It makes a lot of sense to do water wheels. | |
| It doesn't make sense to try and straighten all the rivers in order to put water wheels on all the rivers across the nation to provide this on a mass scale. | |
| So there are some points of scale where you just want to stop. | |
| We see this even in dealing with software. | |
| There are some points in the concurrency and latency issues where it's not worth trying to chase further and control it in your programming. | |
| It makes sense, like Buckminster Fuller said, that Buckminster Fuller noted after an analysis that he was paid to do in the 30s, that our electricity systems were a little bit screwly created, that they didn't really make a lot of sense, | |
| and that the way to really make sense would have been to follow human occupation of the planet, in which case electricity would first snake down all the coast because people live closer to the coast. | |
| Then it would follow all of the rivers, and so it would naturally cross the nation in a much more like root kind of a structure, right? | |
| And what do we get? | |
| No, we get this approach to trying to grid the nation, not because it is easiest or more efficient in any way to do it that way, and it cost us a great deal to do it that way, but because it had some benefits for control. | |
| Again, it was something that, you know, the battle between Tesla and well, I can't think of his name. | |
| Yeah, Edison, yeah. | |
| And, you know, the various different electrical companies and how they approach to distributed electricity and so on. | |
| There are non-organic structures being laid over, and way early, like in the 1800s, being laid over industrial development that makes one wonder, that brings up the question. | |
| You know, it was so much more expensive to try and drive electricity along these particular ways that had sort of been in existence as opposed to following the path of least resistance down the coast with the most customers. | |
| Instead, we see these companies going to great expenditures and then basically justifying them later on, trying to cut across the whole nation in a grid fashion. | |
| Yes, there were political necessities for that with the railroad to have the United States be a continent nation, but it didn't at the time of the electricity. | |
| That kind of thinking didn't intrude at all. | |
| And in fact, we ended up having to go to a great deal of trouble to go back and recover all of those people that were left in all these, and a lot of people left in river valleys and stuff that were not electrified. | |
| Not that electricity is that good for humans. | |
| It's another aspect of civilization that doesn't make a lot of sense for us to be around it. | |
| Electromagnetic fields are monkeying with our brains. | |
| They're making us all wonky. | |
| They're causing degradation in our body. | |
| Arguably, they cause a lot of the cancer with the various frequencies. | |
| And the more we develop these things, the faster the frequencies are that we're dealing with, which can't be good. | |
| So EMF versus humans, humans are not doing well. | |
| And so certain aspects of civilization, again, electricity we need, we certainly can use it and so on, but the way we've gone about building it seems a little unhuman-like, and that we would have taken other different approaches. | |
| Now, when all of this was going on with the electrification of the U.S. and then later the world, we were just starting to get into the financial system. | |
| We were transiting out of the economies that had existed up to the end of the British Empire, and then we went into financial systems with central banks. | |
| And since then, now, central bank, yet again, central authority, central control. | |
| And these are not in our interest natively. | |
| We have to be sold or coerced into them. | |
| Ergo, I'm saying that that's anti-human, that those systems are imposed on us, and they're not necessarily even of a natively human origination. | |
| And so there's a bug in my woo here, right? | |
| Because we just do not operate that way. | |
| Like, okay, so real, real extreme. | |
| There's a TV show, I don't watch it, but I know it exists, Naked Afraid in Groups. | |
| And they take groups of people that are naked and afraid, and they plop them down into environments. | |
| And then everybody else that watches the show gets the thrill of watching these people try and survive in these environments when they're naked and afraid. | |
| And I think they give them things, right? | |
| I think they give them tools of some kind or something. | |
| But anyway, so they're not 100% naked, but I'm pretty sure they're afraid a lot of the time. | |
| But in any event, so what do we see there? | |
| When you stick these naked and afraid groups off in some, you know, tropical jungle in Africa, what's the very first thing they do? | |
| Of course, they set up a central bank. | |
| So that's my point, guys. | |
| We don't operate that way. | |
| That's not something that we should be doing. | |
| And that these things are coming undone. | |
| Fascism and communism are being exposed. | |
| The large group vibrations, right? | |
| So we could say that all of Germany vibrated at a specific vibration for Nazism, or all of China vibrates at a specific vibration for the CCP under their control. | |
| I actually think that that is an aspect of what's going on, and that the bug does not like the disruption. | |
| That's why it doesn't like the fringe. | |
| That's why it doesn't like distribution, doesn't like anything outside of its control. | |
| So it has to control music. | |
| It has to control films, everything. | |
| And in the 50s, we saw that effort breaking down because it continually must break down just by the nature of what humans do, which is I'm going to do something that's different from somebody else. | |
| And the bug doesn't like that. | |
| It wants us all in this line. | |
| And it wants us doing bug-like things, bug ways, right? | |
| So it wants us all to take the max. | |
| It wants to kill us, right? | |
| It wants to kill off humanity. | |
| It needs to reduce humanity in a huge way. | |
| And so it gives us the circumstances and it has us do all these things to ourselves. | |
| We're sort of putting ourselves into the concentration camp and turning on the gas. | |
| And even more than that, we're striking a match. | |
| And worried about explosive gas in this case. | |
| So the HiveMind is having us do things that are really stupid. | |
| And we see this being returned to us in examples every day now. | |
| So there's the Indian Army, right? | |
| In India, the Army has been out vaccinating all of its people. | |
| And we know that, oh, geez, the vax causes thrombosis and microblood clotting, blah, blah, blah. | |
| What's a good thing to do when you've just given all your guys this vax and they're just starting to get that shit going? | |
| Well, let's go on a five-kilometer run. | |
| Now, bear in mind, five kilometers is not much, a little over three miles. | |
| And I do that every day with my old dog, and we don't run it, but nonetheless, we do it every day. | |
| But these were young people and five of them in this one company keeled over. | |
| Heart attacks. | |
| And that's what this vaccine stuff is doing. | |
| So would humans operating in their normal human organic mode even consider any chain, any part of the chain that where we are at now. | |
| I would say no, that to a certain extent, I think we're actually at the point where we're organic humans versus the bug-controlled. | |
| And it's really breaking out into the open. | |
| And this is going to be very devastating to all of us over these next few weeks as we get into it. | |
| I think that the spark's going to be set in Australia. | |
| I think it'll happen on Tuesday, the 31st. | |
| I think they actually will have a big turnout. | |
| I don't know how it's going to go, but the Australians have a good idea, which is to no longer negotiate, to just surround and subsume the rulers and just point out that we are the mass and you can't do it. | |
| And so it may come to that here in the United States. | |
| And so the idea is that there are so many people around here that we would just send out the call that if you're close to this particular house, come on over and just stand around. | |
| Bring a cup of coffee. | |
| There's not going to be violence. | |
| You're just going to stand there. | |
| We're not going to chant. | |
| We're not going to shout. | |
| We're just going to stand there. | |
| And we'll stand there for maybe three hours. | |
| Maybe we'll piss on the lawn. | |
| Who knows, right? | |
| Just for need. | |
| But we're going to stand there. | |
| And we'll stand around the house of the mayor. | |
| We'll stand around the house of the governor. | |
| We'll stand around the legislatures, right? | |
| We'll stand around and we'll occupy all of the public buildings. | |
| And so we'll just get thousands of people that'll go into, like here in Washington State, we would get thousands of people that would just go down to state offices. | |
| The thousands of people would go to the local TV stations in downtown Seattle. | |
| They'd go to the TV stations in Tacoma. | |
| They'd go and occupy radio stations. | |
| They would go and sit, just go and occupy and stand in government buildings. | |
| And now in Australia, they've got it set up. | |
| They want these people to rescind all of the orders and to cancel parliament and to undo all of this stuff as of noon. | |
| So they're going to stand there from 9 until noon. | |
| And this is on the 31st. | |
| And at noon, shit had better be done by then because the police won't be allowed to come in and protect them. | |
| The military isn't going to be allowed to come in and protect them, this kind of thing. | |
| The bad guys, I mean, they're not going to be allowed to protect the powers that be. | |
| Now, in that vein, that's something that was really interesting because in World War II in Germany, or in France, the French resistance, and this happened in other countries as well throughout Europe, I know it in Czechoslovakia and Hungary, that the resistance in all of these countries, they would go to the wives of the policemen. | |
| And they would, so somebody knows somebody, right? | |
| So I'd go to my brother-in-law and I'd say to him, hey, you know, I want you to go and talk to so-and-so and have him tell his wife to go and talk to Floyd's wife. | |
| Floyd's the cop. | |
| He's a local cop, right? | |
| And so they'd get two or three or four wives and they'd just go pay a call on Floyd's wife. | |
| Doesn't matter if Floyd's there or not. | |
| And what they're going to do is just go socialize with Floyd's wife. | |
| Spend a couple of hours with her. | |
| And over the course of those couple of hours, let her know that she and her family might be really distressed if poor Floyd went out and did his job next Tuesday. | |
| Because his job is a policeman and he's going to be told to go and put down these protests. | |
| And basically, you're not threatening anybody. | |
| You're just laying out the fact of it is that we've all got to live together after all this shit is over. | |
| There's millions of us. | |
| There ain't millions of police. | |
| And those policemen are also in military, are also vulnerable through their families. | |
| They don't want to go to work if their family is at risk. | |
| Now, in World War II, in some of these particular operations I'm aware of, where the resistance was being active, it wasn't like protests. | |
| They were out destroying trains and shit. | |
| So it's a different situation, right? | |
| But in World War II, they would sit down and they would have the women visit the wives on the day of the operation. | |
| And so the cop would have to think, fuck, if I go to work, are they going to kill my wife and family? | |
| You know, that kind of thing, right? | |
| Because they are vulnerable. | |
| And we were talking war, you know, the Germans were shooting people on a daily basis in Holland and France and so on, executing civilians for resisting the bugs' occupation through the German state through Nazism. | |
| And I'm not in favor of anybody going out and doing any kind of violence. | |
| There will be violence. | |
| We're going to have to try and coordinate and mediate our responses to that violence and alley that violence, you know, take as much pressure off there as we possibly can ahead of time. | |
| That's why I suggest social visits, right? | |
| You got a day in Australia, or two days, to go and pay some social calls and just, you know, let them know the lay of the land, that shit's going to go down. | |
| And see, at this point, it doesn't matter in Australia. | |
| It's not like it's a secret from the powers that be that the shit's going down on Tuesday the 31st. | |
| Now, the real question is, who is going to support the powers that be if you're getting personal visits to your house the day before and the day before that, right? | |
| People just showing up saying, hey, Floyd, glad to see you're taking the day off on Tuesday. | |
| Would hate to see you miss the, you know, and whatever, right? | |
| Or, you know, hey, Floyd, be sure you're working on your car Monday, you know. | |
| Or, you know, they come out Tuesday morning and the wheel's gone off the cars, that kind of thing, right? | |
| So you can control the situation and not escalate, and we can get beyond this, this part of it. | |
| And then most of humanity is just going to stop right here, right? | |
| Once the elite's gone and all of that, we've got a lot of rebuilding to do, got a lot of figuring out to do as to who we are and what we are. | |
| But there will be a few of us, like myself, we'll go on to hunt down the rest of the bug, because I'm also convinced that there's people in the military that know that, you know, the bug's behind it all. | |
| So I'm sorry, guys. | |
| It's just that, you know, it just seems very odd to me that humans would behave this way in an organic fashion if there was not some outside force doing it, right? | |
| So if you were, I would think, if you were Jewish, and I'm not Jewish, so I don't know, right? | |
| So I cannot know what it would be like that. | |
| But one would, I would think that the Jewish state of Israel would be the last country to accept vaccinations. | |
| And yet here they are, 80% vaccinated. | |
| In my opinion, everybody that has had the vaccine needs to take a D-dimer test at least every six months. | |
| And also, in my opinion, the Jewish state of Israel probably won't exist in seven to ten years, that those 80% of the people now vaccinated will be dead, and the young people that are still alive will be infertile. | |
| So they'll be sterile. | |
| So there won't be any new replacement people for the Jewish state there. | |
| And so having gone through the experience with Germany, what would possess them to do such as mass vaccination other than this, you know, bug out there in the woo? | |
| Just didn't make any sense to me. | |
| Anyway, so it's going to be rough for a few months. | |
| I've got to get onto things. | |
| Here's where we're at, really. | |
| Okay, so I'm out in a terrible environment. | |
| Everything rusts like hell because of all the salt water and salt in the air. | |
| My tractor literally sits there and rusts and bits and pieces fall off on it as I'm using it. | |
| And it's broken down at the moment. | |
| And I had to get some parts to fix it. | |
| Parts don't exist. | |
| To get the parts, since the tractor came from overseas and there's the COVID and all of this kind of shit, I'm told that, well, if the part exists on a shelf somewhere, we might be able to get it in eight or ten weeks. | |
| And if not, we'll have to special order it, and that'll take eight to nine months. | |
| It's like, holy crud. | |
| Okay, so this is the new world. | |
| So we're actually back in like the 1940s or early 1950s, where if something broke down, you had to fix it because there was no ready replacement for it. | |
| You couldn't easily replace it. | |
| And so I suspect, as all the old Alta reports had said, that we were going to get to a point where repair shops would pop up all over the country as people that were good at tinkering and fixing things set up shops tinkering and fixing stuff that can't be replaced. | |
| You know, everything from electronics to tools. | |
| So just a thought, if you're into the tools, get tools that can plug into the wall because the battery packs are going to be irreplaceable fairly soon. | |
| Running out of lithium and of a certain purity, there's going to be war with China, which is going to disrupt all of the supply sources for them, et cetera, et cetera. | |
| So anyway, as our world changes here, I'm having to adapt. | |
| So I've got to take chunks out of my tractor and rebuild the thing at the point where it's broken. | |
| Whereas even in two years back, I would simply buy a new part. | |
| It would be cheap enough, and I would just drop it in place and take the old one and take it to the landfill. | |
| Or, you know, it wouldn't be to recycle it, basically. | |
| But that's not the world anymore. | |
| The world is that we have to repair and repair and repair and repair. | |
| So basically, we're all now Cuba, and whatever vehicles you've got now are the vehicles you're going to be driving for the next 25 or 30 years. | |
| So you need to learn to take care of them. | |
| It's not going to be quite that bad, but for some period of time in an indeterminate number of years, it will be at that bad or continually getting worse before we start getting out of it because we don't have factories in this country that are making things. | |
| And when we do build factories, we're going to have to prioritize what we build because we won't have the resources to like, you know, build a new plant for chocolate. | |
| And so that's another thing. | |
| You know, if you're addicted to chocolate, if you're addicted to coffee and all of this kind of stuff, you better find a local source because we're not going to have global shipping and those sorts of things. | |
| As we go to war with all of these guys, all of the stuff that, all of the structure that basically went to support the effort of the bug, which supports all of these guys, all of that's breaking down right now. | |
| And it's going to get a lot worse. | |
| And we're all going to start where we are all right now experiencing that. | |
| So as I say, the war is going to break out. | |
| I think it'll break out here in a big way in the United States. | |
| I think the spark for the war is going to be in potential to be in Australia. | |
| It may come on Tuesday. | |
| Even if the spark goes really big in Australia on Tuesday, it doesn't mean the United States is going to catch fire and spark off on its war at this point. | |
| We still have a couple of more months to go, in my opinion, before we reach an emotional point to where we can have the complete outbreak. | |
| I hope that we don't have to go those two months. | |
| I suspect that we're going to have to really push it because we've been beat down and invaded and occupied for so long, it's going to take really extreme case of exposure to bring it all out. | |
| But we're about to hit that exposure as we get into the economic collapse or in the financial system collapse. | |
| It's not the economic collapse. | |
| The economy is not going to collapse, but the financial system that the powers that be used to control us is collapsing. | |
| So big stock market collapse? | |
| Probably. | |
| It's not meaningful to me in any event, but because the stock market and everything is so manipulated. | |
| So yeah, it'll be, it may be a giant crackup boom. | |
| It may double in four days' time or something with super hyperinflation. | |
| But basically, it's going to crap out on us, and we're going to have a collapse of the financial system, a breakdown of banking interrelations, all of these different kinds of things will occur. | |
| And this will put a lot more pressure on the populace to wake up and see the powers that be that are sucking the blood out of them. | |
| And at that point, then it'll go really quick here in the USA. | |
| And hopefully, then we'll start organizing and we can also start having some good stuff happen around the rest of the world. | |
| Although we will be in the midst of the war for a number of years, and this winter is going to be very nasty relative to lots of people getting sick and dying because of the spiked protein that's in them and the waning vitamin D from sunlight. | |
| That's a long time, guys. | |
| This is going to take forever to upload. | |
| A couple of things, though, just to close out here before I do this, is that I'm entering a busy time. | |
| I've got to repair my tractor. | |
| We've got to do physical movement of matter here. | |
| It's going to take days and days and days. | |
| So the videos are going to have a tendency to shrink in terms of how frequent I can get at them. | |
| I've got a couple of interviews scheduled, but other than that, I'm just not accepting any because I've got this busy time. | |
| Plus, we're getting into the time of the war breaking out, and there's all different other kinds of shit going on as well. | |
| So there is that. | |
| And I can't really do things like rumble. | |
| I can't duplicate and get all of these things up there. | |
| I've actually had uploads to Rumble take a day and a half before I canceled them. | |
| So just tied up the machine for a day and a half trying to do an upload. | |
| You know, it's because it's just so busy out here with so many tourists. | |
| But we're about to get into the month of September. | |
| It's the month of preparedness. | |
| Get yourself prepared. | |
| I am. | |
| It's cold already out here. | |
| And we're running the heat at night, this kind of thing. | |
| So August was our turning month for getting us into fall here in the Northwest. | |
| And it's going to start moving in. | |
| It's going to be a very cold and brutal winter. | |
| Everybody needs to do what they can now to prepare and protect themselves against all of the emergencies that are going to be coming our way, everything political, social, all of this sort of shit over this next few months. | |
| It's going to be a pretty rough couple of months here in the USA. | |
| And one last thing is good luck to all the Australians. | |
| And I hope that the ANZAC stand up and put the bastards down and show us how to do it. | |
| It'd be great. |