straw woo - Explorers' Guide to SciFi World
The initiation is upon woo....
The initiation is upon woo....
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Hello humans, hello humans. | |
It's that time of year again. | |
It's cold. | |
It's not that cold. | |
61 out here. | |
We're having storms. | |
It's uh start of the season for that. | |
So I don't keep this area heated. | |
And it gets a little cold at night. | |
We're moving into the we're moving out of the woo period and into the period of initiation. | |
So we live in a structured paradigm, controlled by the powers that be all of our lives, seeming to move in a direction into the future. | |
In a in a more or less orderly way. | |
Hiccups and bumps and that kind of thing. | |
But more or less always progressing this way. | |
And then we encounter a period such as we're in now, where there is a giant disconnect from the future as it had been envisioned, and we find ourselves wandering a bit and then coming over and starting to progress this way in a wholly new uh path, | |
uh still um nominally aimed towards the future, and at this point still under the control of the powers that be, but our paradigm is has run into a woo, one of those little rude uh roadwart things, one of those um bumps intended to slow you down. | |
Universe puts out the woo and the the structured paradigm of the powers that be encounters it and then wobbles and then tries to recover. | |
That's where we're at now, and it's trying to recover, only it's it hit the woo barrier, like the sound barrier. | |
Only this you can move really slow and you can still hit it. | |
And so our paradigm is a little bit shaky, and it's got some holes in it, and there's a few cracks, and things are coming apart at the seams, basically. | |
That's where we're at right now in mid-October. | |
I'll just put October 15 of 2021. | |
Okay, and so here we've hit the woo barrier. | |
The paradigm has sunk below the level of the of the woo, and it's being infiltrated by the woo throughout, and it's more or less sort of going to dissolve in the woo, right? | |
And so we're about to enter in in this process, this is initiation for humanity. | |
And a lot of humanity isn't going to be initiated. | |
A lot of humanity just um uh isn't gonna have it, won't go along with it, and they'll do everything they can to try and stay back in the old structured paradigm that they've lived in all of their lives. | |
You'll see this most frequently, I think, with people that were that are very old, right? | |
Uh, because it's just too hard to wrap your your head around and and you don't relate to any of the the stuff that's going on, you know, and it's all just too new and too jangly sort of thing, so you just won't want to go with it. | |
Uh but there's gonna be a whole lot of people that are like in the middle of the block, um, age-wise, that have a vested interest in the current paradigm, or the the past paradigm, which is now gone, right? | |
We've sunk, we've sunk into the woo, and the past paradigm is now gone, but they're they're still in here thinking that it does exist or could exist or could be resurrected. | |
And so they're attempting to do it because they have a vested interest in it. | |
Um so you see these people wrestling with the idea of clot shot, you know, maybe hundreds of thousands of people dead already, or my job, you know. | |
So that's that's one of those people that's that's still stuck in this paradigm, thinking that oh, it's it's an odds deal, you know. | |
I won't be the one that that's affected. | |
Not that you know, it's a depopulation agenda, the shots have no effectiveness against COVID. | |
None, zero. | |
In fact, they make you weaker against it. | |
So why the fuck take them, right? | |
And and yet they still wrestle with this. | |
Is my job worth risking my life on this shot? | |
And it's like, dude, let me get a revolver and and take and load all the chambers, take one bullet out, spin it, and hand it to you. | |
That's the odds you have. | |
You know, it's not like you're going to have one out of six chance of surviving of getting a badness of it. | |
It's you're gonna have one out of six chance of surviving it, if that. | |
So and I run into those people. | |
So anyway, so we're at this period of time when the woo is going to basically um just become our new operating environment. | |
Uh so we won't have a paradigm to live in. | |
We'll be living in the woo continuously, and as we do so, universe initiates us into the process of how to live in the Wu, and that's what we're going through right now. | |
And so it's it's complex, right? | |
And so initiation is a thing in humans. | |
Initiation is a uh a pathway chosen by the initiate, or forced on the initiate in some cases by circumstances of universe. | |
But thereafter, the rest of their life is altered. | |
Now we know that this is the case for all of the see, and that's the real key part, right? | |
So you know it's an initiation when you step out of that front door, and everything you thought that that your life was going to be, everything you thought your life could be, everything that you thought your life may or might be is gone, just totally gone, left behind in the in the door behind you, locked in that house that you left, and in that one step, it's gone forever. | |
All right, so that's the the burden, the promise, and the reward reward of initiation is that your old life is gone and there is something new ahead of you. | |
And so we know that humanity is there now because we're at the point of the woo having subsumed the paradigm. | |
Our old lives are gone forever. | |
They will never ever, ever be recovered. | |
They'll never be recovered even in a small fraction. | |
And as we go forward here into this future, look at how much churn we keep going through, destroying the past, destroying our old lives. | |
Uh, the structures and everything. | |
So we start off with the COVID plandemic. | |
We start off in the, you know, with the guys patenting it all and finally releasing it on us in 2020 and then doing their lockdowns and the and the the uh stealing of the vote by way of mail-in ballots and all of this kind of thing, and uh and all of the mask rules and all of the compliance rules obey, | |
obey, obey, all that kind of stuff out of nowhere, turning into just this huge fascist state, the social media getting on everybody's case in a serious way, and so that even if you were just a normie moving through the paradigm, all of a sudden you start getting running into issues of, you know, some of the people you'd followed were censored, this sort of thing. | |
So all of your your paradigm starts changing, and then we come on through 2020, the election, the devolution, the stepping um away of Trump, the reshuffling of all of the power politics on the planet, all of the um uh the churn Afghanistan, | |
can't talk about that anymore in the media, uh, you know, um Rogan bitch slapping, um uh uh Sanjay Gupta, uh, you know, metaphorically, and um, and all of this kind of stuff, just all this weird churning that you never ever thought you'd see anything like that ever. | |
And so, you know, and now how often do you ever look back to the idea of going backwards to that old life? | |
Very few people do, I think. | |
Uh, but it's because they're they're actually embraced and totally controlled by this initiation process that began just a couple of months back. | |
Now, truly it began in like 2019, that you because as the old is dying, you have that initiation process for the new to take us off into that new new uh pathway, and that's where we're at now. | |
So we're at uh straw woo, okay. | |
Um these are not like wedding ring things, you know, um anniversaries where you have a specific you know stone or something uh to commemorate a specific anniversary. | |
It doesn't work that way. | |
But as we go along, we encounter these predictable points. | |
The overwu, the appearance of the overwu was the appearance of this of actually being able to see the woo barrier that we were going to run into that brings us to this point here, which were there now. | |
Um we know we're in the woo, and we know that our lives are totally gone, and that we're being initiated because we're all doing different kinds of things now and having to live different ways entirely now. | |
So that's part of being initiated into a uh an art or a secret society or a tradition or any number of things. | |
The initiation process can be applied to schooling, for instance. | |
The initiation process is um inherently in designed in the uh basic training experience that the people in the United States military go through. | |
That's a really shocking compressed initiation experience. | |
We're going through something very similar to that. | |
We're having this trauma, uh the trauma to the United States, to the Constitutional Republic, to all of the people here, uh, the antiphon, all of that kind of stuff in the BLM and the riots and the destruction and the statues being torn down and the communism and all these kind of things are part of this initiation process. | |
The initiation process is designed for one purpose, that you shall move from your old comfort into this new unexplored, uncomfortable, continuously uncomfortable, disconcerting, um disorganizing, and um uh disparate because you don't know which way to go, there's no clear path, uh, new life. | |
And so this is initiation. | |
So this is the last of the woo in the sense that once you're initiated, once you start that process, you know the rest of your life is going to be different, so you don't go and look back at the old paradigm, you just launch into the woo and start swimming to go towards whatever it is within the Wu that's attracting you, | |
and to create a life in that new point of discovery, or that that new path of discovery, that new expedition of discovery that is the rest of your life as an initiate. | |
And so we're in the straw woo, right? | |
And so uh straw is interesting. | |
Straw is hay, but more broadly, uh straw is the stalks of various different kinds of grasses. | |
So you can apply the word straw to any number of things, and so we see that straw is really a key thing in many areas of the planet relative to humans where they don't have trees, for instance. | |
So, Egypt, they built giant straw boats that sailed them all the way to Australia and even further into the uh uh Melanesian islands and maybe even as far away as Fiji on double-hulled boats made out of bound reed straw covered with bitumen uh for a waterproof coating, and they would last for a long time. | |
And in fact, a particular Egyptian prince uh died in uh on Western Australia because he was bit twice by a an adder, and western Australia is just a brutal desert. | |
These guys were trying to, they'd crash landed on the coast, they were trying to survive, and this their prince got killed and they did what they could for him and then prepared his burial, and uh then went elsewhere and wrote about it on the walls of this cave. | |
So, as far as I know, no one has ever actually found the burial uh area of this particular prince. | |
And they they may still be hunting, but western Australia in this particular part of the the area uh the region there, they they you're gonna hunt a long time and happenstance will provide it if if you ever find it. | |
And you're probably gonna die in the process because it's just brutal there. | |
Anyway, though, uh so straw is is key to the initiation process. | |
The symbol of straw for the Egyptians was the symbol. | |
And if if you were looking down on it, the symbol was like this. | |
The symbol is three-dimensional, and it had, and basically what it is is a representation of two reed bundles. | |
And so you're looking down on it, and the mast is here, and the cross beam for the mast is right there. | |
So you get this weird sort of little face thing. | |
And if you look at it, sometimes you'll see it carved on a wall like this, and many people have actually mistaken it for a face, some kind of a weird little face. | |
But it's actually the an Egyptian word, it's a representation for the word straw taken from the boat. | |
You'll also see it written like this, where you'll see it like this. | |
This is the more frequently seen version of it. | |
And there's just a hint of the second hull there. | |
And so you're seeing it as though you're looking at it from the side. | |
And in the boat form, this would be a huge bundle of reeds like that, going like this, and up here would be the mast, and back here would be the cross braces on either side for the type of mast. | |
Now that they used a um uh a Yespread mast for very complex sail arrangement across these two hulls. | |
So this is just one hull you're seeing from the side. | |
But the point is that they use the word uh the idea, the image of a boat to convey the image of a straw, and later on you find that that image of straw conveys the image the uh understanding of initiation. | |
And we see within many secret societies a um a continuing passing from generation to generation the of this concept of straw, right? | |
Uh you'll see it sometimes in in many areas, you'll see it in areas of Europe where you get a uh you buy a new house and they bring you this gift of this very fancy wheat uh straw that's all tied up with a ribbon, depending on the time of year and so on, right? | |
But but so you see straw used this way all the time. | |
Um we even see that and so straw has multiple different meanings when you would see this for initiation. | |
And uh all right, so uh in some parts of Europe, um straw carries through and has multiple uses in human society. | |
We use straw for making boats if you were Egyptian, a reed kind of a straw. | |
You can use wheat straw for uh stuffing mattresses or insulin insulation, and uh so we see um uhtsy, the iceman uh that they found in like 1990. | |
Um he was in the hills in northern Italy, uh, where Italy joins Austria in the Tyrolean Alps, okay, and they there was a glacier that had melted, and they found this guy who had been murdered about 5,000 years back, who had been frozen and preserved as an ice mummy under this glacial mass that had melted finally in 1990. | |
And the interesting part about this is all the different ways that he used straw. | |
He used straw, they had straw for insulation in his shoes. | |
He had um he had marijuana in a pouch, but he also had dried, crushed um uh basically powdered um marijuana stems uh that were used as a fire starter. | |
And if you've ever done that, you can marijuana is really interesting because you crush the stems if they're dried, and there's no THC component in them to speak of, but you can get this just dry powder that instantly flames up. | |
Uh and so he had he had a pouch of that. | |
He had straw in his shoes as insulation, he had straw, bear in mind he's crossing the Alps. | |
He was apparently shot and in his left shoulder with an arrow and had been stabbed and stuff and had fought his way free, and then Later on got to this point in a valley and died just and he was lying on grass just as the snow started to fall. | |
So when they found him, there was like grass underneath him. | |
So it hadn't been glacial at the time that he died there. | |
And so this is why they peg it for like um, I think he was like 3,000, let's just say 3200 BC is when they think that he died there, right? | |
Um and he carried a lot of straw in in his gear. | |
He knew he was going to be crossing the uh cold area because he he had two layers of clothing with a layer of straw in between as insulation. | |
And this was not uh an uncommon thing for him because we see that his clothing was basically designed to accommodate a thick layer of straw in the bottom of the shoes and over the top of the feet, and a thick layer of straw uh was designed to be wrapped uh around and covered up on the outside of his uh of his body, not so much as armor for strikes or something, but as armor against the cold. | |
And um, he also had like quivers, uh uh arrows and uh copper axe. | |
So we know that he was at the time of the uh the great copper civilization in um in Europe in Italy, and that uh that one collapsed, they think in 1177 uh BC. | |
Just everybody just sort of shut down the whole copper mining civilization and went their ways. | |
Um that that's a weirdness there too. | |
Anyway, um so in Italy, uh, like today, so the Italians are being initial initiated, right? | |
Uh today is the 15th of October, and today's the first real day of initiation for the Italian populace because they have the face this green pass thing. | |
So today they're gonna theoretically enforce uh this green pass um uh vaccination segregation, right? | |
And so uh now we see that vast quantities of the Italians are saying, eh, do a bo. | |
And um uh not doing it. | |
They're striking in the ports in the tens of thousands, they're they're shutting down the uh the Italian social structure, the politicians are being devolved in Italy right now. | |
Okay, so the politicians are trying to live here as the people are devolving the social order around them because the truckers aren't going to truck, the the longshoremen aren't gonna longshore, you know, that kind of thing, right? | |
The cooks won't be cooking because nobody's gonna go there, so the whole social order is just gonna go, and um so much for the politicians, right? | |
And then the politicians at some point will go away, and then the social order will uh reconstitute itself. | |
In so doing, they will have gone through an initiation process. | |
They will have crossed a threshold. | |
That's where we're at right now. | |
Is this the threshold time? | |
And thresholds, once again, involve straw. | |
So in uh in Europe, there's all different kinds of well, I've lived all over the planet, but uh in Europe there's all different kinds of houses, but there's um this common understanding because of the nature of uh because of the way that houses have evolved there a lot longer than they have here. | |
You want to see an understanding of thresholds that doesn't really exist in the Western world. | |
A threshold used to be um a chunk of wood that was like this. | |
Your house is over here. | |
Here is our door, um, and here's the floor, right? | |
And so you come on in from the outside, you would step up over the threshold. | |
And this whole area in here was lined with straw. | |
And that was in lieu of carpeting and stuff, and that uh was the method for dealing with this uh the issues of being out in the field, walking in with mud, all of this kind of stuff for a long time. | |
Because usually you walk on the straw, it compacts down, it cleans your shoes, the mud and stuff fall in here. | |
It's easy to pick it up relatively and get it outside, so it's relatively easy to clean, and you got a dirt floor or something close to it anyway, uh, for most uh for most of thousands of years of human history. | |
And so the threshold was the chunk, right, that held the threshes. | |
It was the hold that held the threshold. | |
Uh The thresh being another word for straw. | |
And so here we are in a thresh a threshold crossing point. | |
And of course, look at the old traditions of carrying the wife across the threshold. | |
These were not inconsiderate actions. | |
It was not, as a lot of people understand, because thresholds were dangerous. | |
You didn't know how deep this drop was going to be or how much you're going to have to step up on a half-rotten straw or whatever, right? | |
It was not like today's little bump that gets you in onto a vinyl flooring or something or carpet or something, right? | |
So I lived in houses in Germany where the threshold was still there. | |
The old straw stuff had been replaced with real floor. | |
We lived in a place that had been built originally on marshes, on poles, and Just before we moved into it in like maybe it was 62. | |
They'd had to replace some of the original pilings that were, they think, 800 years old as trees and had been put into the marsh and more or less petrified over that period of time. | |
They go back a long ways in marsh living in the central and southern Germany area. | |
Now the marshes aren't there anymore, it's all built up into land and stuff, and so you find all these old poles in there that are the foundation for these now relatively big buildings. | |
I think this one was two or three stories even. | |
But it had a very big threshold and a real tiny door going through the main floor there. | |
And the threshold for, as a kid, I remember, you know, it was like, oh, you had to really step over it. | |
It was probably a good nine inches or so, and you'd step over onto the other floor. | |
And at the time, we thought it was really cool as a kid because the door was like sort of a submarine door, we thought. | |
It was wooden, it wasn't like the ratcheted kind. | |
or with pins, but we thought it was maybe for floods. | |
Maybe that's why it was. | |
Maybe the street that the house was on flooded and you had to have a big thing to keep them out. | |
We didn't know anything about it, right? | |
We didn't understand that originally all that piece had done was to hold all this straw in place at that time in this house because there was a wooden floor that was over this marsh held by all of these, you know, a foundation with all these piers sunk into the marsh, but the original wooden floor was fairly widely spaced, planking, and so the material would fall through the floor into the marsh down below. | |
But this was the idea of the threshold, okay? | |
And so the threshold was an interesting part of the initiation process because you would step over that threshold. | |
So the man carrying the bride across the threshold was initiating them both into married life, right? | |
And for the male, it it very often goes unnoticed. | |
The inherent and obscured or not looked at really responsibilities for that, right? | |
Because you're responsible. | |
You got to carry that woman, you've got to carry that burden into your new life, right? | |
So you are you are willingly taking on the support, etc. | |
etc. | |
as you do this process of uh initiating yourselves into this new state of existence. | |
So you know, so straw is important, guys, and thresholds are important, and we're in a threshold experience right now. | |
So we're gonna go through a period here. | |
Um from at the end of the month, so October 24 through 28, and it'll probably peak on the 28th. | |
So that's just release language. | |
Release language has a tendency to, when you graph it out, to look sort of that. | |
So it comes on up and then crashes, right? | |
So if it starts on the 24th, it would end up on the 28th here, and we go back to whatever that that uh resulting emotionally drained level is. | |
It may still be tons of churn turmoil and and churning. | |
And so, you know, maybe this is the day that they put uh Kamala Harris in is as El Dictator. | |
And that that you know might take a four-day build-up to that, and then everybody is just their emotions are just uh roiling like mad, and then it happened, you know, we've got a dictator, an unelected dictator, uh who couldn't even get her ass elected uh through a primary. | |
You know, she's hated by 98% of the populace or 97%, because I think 2.9% of the populace or 2.7% of the populace or something would actually vote for her. | |
But in any event, see, so that would be release language. | |
Um another aspect of release language like that with a peak on it would be uh this bizarre example that I presented to Jay Widener in a discussion with him yesterday, and it was just a weird example, but it gives you the idea of the flavor and and the uh idea of what's going to happen here. | |
But another example, totally bizarre, would be if for some reason Michael Obama, pretending who's now pretending to be Michelle Obama, were to be arrested, and in such a way as to expose that he's a man and that uh it was a giant fraud all of those years. | |
That would be another kind of a thing where the release emotion for all of the people, you know, we know about it, so it's no big deal for us, but it all of the regular people, it would just be this huge stomach cratering, you know, going through the bottom of the floor kind of a thing, right? | |
And you would have that um uh that release language, and you would have that impact, and you know right at that point that you're never going back. | |
Because what whatever we're going to experience here is the destruction of the past, it's the separation. | |
This is the point I believe, I think, from from doing my analyses, and that's what I've been doing these past few days, along with everybody's being sick and all different kinds of stuff going on. | |
Um, but uh so we're gonna go through a period of time here in these four days, I think, and this will be the point where we can actually say years from now, oh hey, we crossed over the threshold right here. | |
This was the point after which we were really goddamn fucking sure that uh the world had changed and we were in the initiation process. | |
And it's just sort of curious that the way that release language comes out, it kind of looks when it's grafted like a threshold, right? | |
Because on the other side of it, you drop down into a lower state of emotional uh tension, uh, but you're never going back. | |
You're never going to going to be able to look back at any of that. | |
Now, this is pertinent for all of us because whatever happens in this period of time, whether you know it's an arrest or whether we get Kamala Harris or whatever the fuck goes on there, um, from the viewpoint of the um populace, we've already crossed another threshold. | |
And so back here sometime, we crossed a 50% threshold because we're now at 56%. | |
And so at 56% of our population of USA pop thinks that it's highly likely that there was cheating in this current election in 2020, and that the current occupants of the White House cheated their way in. | |
All right, so 56% of the population. | |
Now it had been uh 51% in April. | |
Uh it had been like, you know, 42% in May, etc. | |
So we've been building on this pathway heading uh up here into October, but but somewhere back here in uh September or so we cross this 56% area. | |
Now, think of what this means. | |
And as again, as I was discussing this with um Jay Widener in the interview I did with him. | |
This means that we've we've in fourth generation warfare, in fourth generation warfare, you can go back and look at the um evolutionary war uh video I've done, and it talks about it and brings up this issue of the moral component. | |
Because now in fourth generation war, the moral component is supreme. | |
You can use it to use morality is strategically and tactically valuable and supremely valuable that way. | |
It's the it's the um tie tie, the supreme supreme. | |
Uh if you have the morality with you, then you have the population with you. | |
You have the populace on your side. | |
So now, uh, because of the way he handled it, because of the way that the SOC had engineered this whole thing, the the morale the moral authority has been removed from the Biden administration and now resides elsewhere. | |
Doesn't matter where it is, it's no longer with them. | |
And so we see this effect, as I was pointing out to Jay Widener, in the media. | |
And so we see our media casualty of CNN getting bitch slapped by uh Joe Rogan, uh, metaphorically through Sanjay Gupta, right, being the fall guy. | |
We see the media uh responding with uh Don Lemon um uh trying to uh chastise and uh and extract and recover Sanjay into their their area, right? | |
Into their cadre, uh, by getting Sanjay to say, oh yeah, yeah, Ibermecton really is a horse dewormer. | |
And you know, even though Joe Rogan had made him admit that yeah, CNN had lied about all this bullshit. | |
So we've had our media casualty, but the media casualty turned out not to be an individual, but rather to be the moral authority in the media. | |
It's now gone. | |
That's why they're fighting among each other, that's why they're trying to play these games, and and um uh Sanjay Gupta with uh Joe Rogan, that was our media casualty, and it affected broadly the mainstream media because he was their, he was CNN, that was the flagship, and within that flagship he was their medical officer. | |
So on his on their cruise ship, he was the medical officer. | |
There that person is only second to the captain, and that person can replace the captain at any time that person did deems that the doctor deems that the captain is unfit for command, that's it. | |
He hands it over to the second second in command. | |
Whether anybody wants it or not, they have to obey that doctor. | |
If the doctor says, you know, that guy's kind of batshit, uh, and we can't have him drive in our boat, right? | |
Uh he wants to go and see Paris, and Paris is not someplace we can dock this fucker. | |
So anyway, um, so that's the that's casually. | |
So the media can't have had their casualty by the third week in October, so I feel fairly sure we're gonna get this release language uh bump with this threshold crossing, and we'll go into this new period. | |
So we can actually probably say that insofar as our experience here, um, that the woo is is fading away now. | |
We're diving into it. | |
It's it's gonna be our background, not so much occupying us as we rushed headlong into it. | |
Because bear in mind, we were all uh a bunch of little people here, you know, um looking out our windows here as our paradigm was rushing into the woo. | |
And now we've we've we've been overwooed, and our paradigm is sunk in the woo and it's dissolving, and we're out here swimming in the woo making our new life, and the paradigm is, you know, whatever remnants we can get we're gonna take with us and craft into whatever we can make do with them, | |
but we're not counting on that old the smart people and the people understanding that they're moving into this initiation phase that we've crossed this threshold, are understanding that we're not going back the old ways, and you take what you can with you to to uh act as the capital for your new life, right? | |
Okay, so in our situation here, the mainstream media has had the moral authority removed from them. | |
We know this because basically 56%, we can let's just round it up and we can say that six out of every ten people that Don Lemo or uh uh Sanjay um uh crying gupta is the six out of ten people that they meet on the street, should they be brave enough to walk down the street, uh six out of ten people know that they're lying fuckers. | |
Don't believe them, know that they are part of the cheat, know that they Supported the steel, know that they were working on the steel for the election. | |
Six out of ten Americans. | |
How many foreigners? | |
So see, it's spreading. | |
We know it's spreading because the Germans are now saying, hey, wait a second, none of this shit adds up in our recent election. | |
So you got the Green Party and other parties in there bitching and moaning, they want audits. | |
So it's spreading. | |
Okay, so uh all of these places are now the whole thing is a quiver in the sense of the globalists being um under attack. | |
They're being initiated in the into the process of the art of war. | |
Uh and this is the war of the flea, and we're all the fleas, and and there's so many of us that we're just going to consume them. | |
We will just overwhelm them and and we've we basically win as we all wake up and understand we're in this initiation process. | |
So we have here 56%. | |
As of this last, as of the survey sometime back in September. | |
Who knows where it's at now? | |
Who knows where it will be in in a month's time? | |
Who knows where it will be in just a couple of weeks' time as we go through whatever the hell is going on here? | |
And who knows what that effect will be on this particular thing here. | |
So are there one people that are saying, hey, wait a second, you know, we can't have XYZ happen, you know, all this shit is bogus anyway. | |
So we see that it's all building up in this initiation. | |
And as I say, so the we're now swimming in the woo, and our initiation has begun. | |
We've crossed over the threshold, and so we're now grasping our straws, right? | |
Uh these are the straws that are going to keep us afloat in our woo because these are the straws that we bring with us as our markers for initiation. | |
And in fact, uh I know of at least one uh secret society where uh straw is the symbol, uh, is the uh emblem for somebody who has been or is being initiated. | |
So just like um pledge week in colleges and stuff, they give the the kids that are pledging to fraternities or sororities, they give them little things that indicate it. | |
I don't, you know, I don't know what they're using these days, but they used to use stickers and little badges and pins and stuff so that other people could basically harass the shit out of them, but identify them easily in order to harass the shit out of them. | |
Uh but this secret society uses um uh the emblem of the of crossed straws, wheat straws, that are tied with a little ribbon. | |
And it's real tiny, you'll see it on that on its paperwork, on the paperwork, uh, and it if it's on paperwork, it it's a past thing. | |
You have to understand how the initiation, how symbology works. | |
So if I receive a letter from someone uh that has this little symbol embossed or printed into the letter head, then I know they are a past initiate. | |
Okay, so they have been initiated because um because it's put on a document, it's put on a historical uh representation of time uh in the form of straw, paper, and it references a straw, and you know, there may be communication and so on. | |
But I can put these together. | |
If on the other hand I see a guy on the street, I meet the guy in street, we sit down, we have a uh cup of coffee or something, and I see that he's got a lapel pin of that same uh symbol, then I know he's in the process of being initiated, right? | |
So he's he's an initiate as he's going through it. | |
And so um so like I say, uh, the woo is deep, right? | |
You gotta learn to read all of this stuff. | |
But uh we're being initiated now. | |
Our uh grasping at straws is valid. | |
It is a natural response to where we are at, bear in mind if we were on boats, okay. | |
So uh tattoos on Polynesians came about because they were a seafaring people, and they had no permanent abode among all of these islands, they could be moved by weather at any given time, but they were very adroit at s at uh sailing, and whole tribes would would shift and move. | |
Now, when you do that, when you're that nomadic, you don't have a lot of stuff with you because weight is an issue going from point A to point B. And so They kept memories and mobile uh memorabilia on their bodies in the form of these tattoos. | |
Um that was one of the in the processes. | |
Also, it was a sign that you had been initiated into whatever level of status within the social order. | |
Um in the cases, in the case of uh early proas, uh, which is particular kind of boat that the Polynesians used to sail vast distances, uh, much of the structure was made of straw. | |
They actually had like some cases bamboo uh as structure, but mainly palm. | |
And so they would would weave palm um fronds and palm straws into these uh weatherproof structures that were put onto the proas. | |
Interesting, uh very interesting boats. | |
I I used one of them as an image once on one of the uh bare naked wealth reports, I think. | |
Uh anyway, the um so we we see straw there used as well. | |
And for them, uh straw was uh the grasping at straws um uh uh for the Polynesians as well as for the Egyptians, if your boat was sinking, you were grasping at straws to stay stay supported. | |
Okay, so it had a sense of of uh director to it. | |
Um there's a lot of stuff out there going on. | |
Um most of it is in the for me is in the category of this too shall pass. | |
Uh the uh point we're in now leads us from this threshold here to let's just say we're at I mean, something I think fairly dramatic is going to show up in at this period of time here, right? | |
So we'll have some drama and we'll get our um fellows here uh showing up. | |
Now the drama will involve some of the powers that be, uh it'll involve um the political structure, it'll involve the evolution of the political structure, it will be provided by universe to further this initiation process along. | |
Initiations are not necessarily pleasant. | |
Going through them is it's one of those things where I'm so glad that this is stopped. | |
I'm so glad I came out the other side of it, uh, you know, because during the process of the initiation, as I say, it's not pleasant. | |
Um anyway, so from October, we've got the really rough months of November and December. | |
And we're gonna have all of the supply crashing, we're gonna have the um uh the drama erupting, uh the soccer is going to be more visible, there's gonna be much more pushback on the part of the population because we'll go from six out of ten people to maybe seven out of ten, maybe eight out of ten people that will just any time they see the mainstream media, they'll just say liar, you know, war criminal, that kind of shit. | |
Because it'll come out, we're at war with the Chinese, it'll come out more that the Chinese did this deliberately on behalf of themselves as well as the globalists, and that they're directly responsible for the deaths of all of these people, and there will be many more people dying during this process as we get into the period of low vitamin D and get into our usual vitamin D insufficiency that usually produces flu season, | |
and this year, because of all the antibody-dependent enhancement stuff there, uh, will cause um a great many people to uh be very, very ill and hit the hospitals. | |
And the hospitals are going to be broken down by the communists and all of the stuff. | |
The CCP wants all this to occur, you see. | |
They want to invade, they want to take over, they want to kill uh 200 million at least uh United States people, uh, people in North America. | |
They want to get rid of Canadians too, because they want the the ability to grow food here and to export it to China to keep their population going. | |
They want to destroy uh the population in Australia because they want their energy, they want their coal. | |
Um, as we see they're building more coal plants and this sort of thing, right? | |
Now here's the hell of it. | |
Uh so it would have been maybe 1978, 79. | |
Um that was the last time that I had an opportunity to see these particular uh images and discuss this with my father. | |
But he had a, for a while, he had had a film, 35 millimeter film. | |
You had to have a 35 millimeter projector to show it. | |
And we saw it repeatedly over the course of the week that we had the loan of it, and that would have been in like 67, I think. | |
So in 1967, we watched this movie constantly over the course of a of a week. | |
And it was a very interesting film, and it had a little bit of text that went along with the movie. | |
My father had gotten it. | |
I won't go into the details there, but it was a film about Antarctica and the U.S. military mission in Antarctica. | |
And the pertinent point here is that there was there is a scene where you see a flat plain that has some pools of open water on it. | |
They don't look deep, they don't look like ponds or anything. | |
They look more like surface melt kind of water that just sits there and hasn't yet had a chance to evaporate. | |
Maybe they're a few inches deep. | |
I don't know. | |
They're not very deep, though, because people are walking through them. | |
The people have uh boots on, like like uh, you know, um mid-calf waiting boots, um uh military issue, the snap buckle kind. | |
Um, and in the background, you see this big conical mountain. | |
And from the perspective, you see the you're you're looking way in the background, there's the plain, and then off in the background, there's this big conical mountain, like that. | |
And from our perspective, we see a we're we're looking at a human up here in the foreground, and he's uh he's holding his microphone and he's talking to us as we're as the camera is panning this area. | |
And we see way back here, we see this little tiny thing there, and uh, and it's got a little bucket on it, and uh, and we see this little dump truck. | |
And these are disproportionately large relative to that image of a mountain. | |
We were seeing, so the what this guy ends up here telling us about this mountain is that this mountain is, and it's black, it's just black. | |
This mountain is composed of, and he holds up one of these things in his hand, of anthrocyte, extremely hard, hard coal, uh, and it and it's composed of nodules of this coal that's about the size of a small coconut, maybe, right? | |
Um maybe a pound to two pounds, three pounds of of coal, a big lump, and this whole thing there is just nothing but clean anthracite coal all piled up in this nice conical mountain. | |
Has no snow on it or anything, so that was a weirdness. | |
This all in Antarctica. | |
We expected seeing it. | |
I expected we'd see snow and dogs and sleds and all of that. | |
Nope, nope, just the military doing stuff. | |
And one of the things they were doing here, what this guy was saying, that this one mountain, and there were many of these things here, uh, they were they're actually harvesting coal, putting it in this truck and driving it off somewhere. | |
But um he said that this mountain of coal um was enough to uh heat all of North America for 200 years. | |
And this was this movie was made in the 50s, and we saw it like, and I don't know when it might have been made 1950, 1951, maybe it was even made 49. | |
I'm uncertain as the date of its of its creation. | |
There were a lot of movies that the military made from well from uh birds uh time from Operation High Jump time, 47-ish. | |
There were a lot of movies made by the military about Antarctica, and I'm not certain when this one was done. | |
I know that this had nothing to do with high jump, that this was way the hell over on the other side of Antarctica from when where New Schwabinland was and where high jump took place. | |
Uh so uh basically on the other side of the continent. | |
It could have been done at the same time for all I know, but I just have no way of knowing. | |
But but in essence, and I remember hearing that, this as a kid stuck with me. | |
Oh, well shit, we're never gonna have to worry about energy again. | |
We got 200 years worth of coal to heat um to power uh the United States. | |
Uh And you know, even with our population having doubled from that period of time, we would still be doing pretty damn good with all of this, all this coal down there. | |
But of course, we don't hear about any of this stuff. | |
We don't hear about any anything coming out of Antarctica. | |
You know, it's just that John Glenn gets sick and John Kerry goes down there to talk to the great bug or whoever, right? | |
So nobody knows what's going on there. | |
Anyway, though, we're gonna go into November and December. | |
In January, we get a bump, a positive emotional bump of some kind. | |
I don't know what it is, but it sets us a good tone for the rest of the year, but the rest of the year is going to be very bad as well. | |
Uh, primarily because of the built-in to the system already uh issues with this uh clot shot with the um the death. | |
Uh anyway, so um we're gonna be grasping at our straws, but we're gonna get through all of this. | |
Uh the straws can support us, and you can actually, you know, out in the middle of the ocean, your boat has had taken a terrible storm, but you gather all your weeds up and you're lashing them because she can still support you. | |
And you build a new kind of a raft and off you go. | |
So that's what we're gonna do, is we're gonna be off in a new life experience in this new age as a result of having crossed this particular threshold. | |
So maybe we could say that you know, whatever we're gonna go through here, society-wise, is going to be our uh true entry into the age of Aquarius because it's going to initiate the normies uh on moss, um, whether they like it or not. | |
It's not gonna be a very pleasant experience. | |
Normally those things are not. | |
So I would expect it to be something just really strange. | |
Uh, you know, very much like um I had no way of knowing that our building tension was going to be set off by Facebook going down, right? | |
Um, but that certainly uh filled the bill there. | |
Just as I had no way of knowing what our our media casualty was going to be, and it turned out to be Joe Rogan bitch slapping CNN back to um uh subservience. | |
Um but something's coming. | |
This this will set the tone, we'll go into uh November and December, and then in January we get uh it may come in late December, we get a positive bump. | |
Not to say there isn't going to be positive things happening in between then, but I'm just saying in a general sense, in a in a much more building positive building emotional sense, we'll be lifted up sometime in January, even though we're in the midst of the um of the initiation, the um getting into the winter with all of the illness and so on, there will be something that will be lifting us up a little bit in a positive way. | |
So uh it will pass, we'll get through this year and next year, and besides, look look at the shit they put us through already, and we've come through fine, or not fine, but we've come through. | |
Uh anyway, guys, um I've got a lot of stuff here. | |
We've got a lot of people that are ill, flu kind of stuff, idiots don't take their vitamins. | |
Um I gotta deal with a lot of this, so these uh videos are gonna be very few and far between, and we're actually getting out of the woo period, so we're gonna have to shift over into the initiation anyway. | |
And so this is probably getting close to the end of the woo, if not actually it. | |
Uh, we'll see how it works out. | |
Um guess that's it. | |
You know, like my Swedish friend says, be good. | |
You know, you got a couple of choices, and if you can, be good. | |
It always works out. | |
The you know, morality is strategically and tactically uh useful, and it is supreme in fourth generation warfare. |