measuring woo - Explorers' Guide to SciFi World
CCP bioweapon effort - biorhythms - Evergrande - release language - Celtic Cross
CCP bioweapon effort - biorhythms - Evergrande - release language - Celtic Cross
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Hello humans, hello humans. | |
Hello humans. | |
let's get some of this adjusted There we go. | |
Okay. | |
Not such a dark pit. | |
Well, okay. | |
Alright, come on, come on, come on. | |
It is a dark pit, as we can see through the window in the back. | |
We're in the midst of this rainstorm. | |
This is my hard rain hat. | |
have to get my rain gear on. | |
I have to get my reindeer on and go do tractor work and move some of this rock. | |
We're on a schedule that doesn't allow for these giant storms. | |
I'll do it as long as I can. | |
We've had like three inches of rain in the last 24 hours, so it's um it's a sort of a fierce one. | |
Supposed to go on and through to Tuesday with high winds. | |
So, you know, it's winter. | |
Um in October. | |
But I mean, we're getting like December ish kind of storms, November, December. | |
November's usually a rainy month here. | |
Rainy ist month. | |
Okay, so this is about measuring woo. | |
And um uh oh, we have a woo-up. | |
We have a woo up here. | |
I do that for the copyright issues, not that I'm ever claim it, but I don't want anybody to make money off of these things. | |
People try and put them up on uh YouTube. | |
This is the funny part, right? | |
People steal my bit shoot videos and put them up on YouTube only to find out YouTube doesn't want to monetize. | |
So it doesn't know good to do that. | |
Uh and they go to quite a bit of trouble. | |
Anyway, and also it gets you a uh basically uh demerit or a nasty mark next to your account if you do that because they um just because uh of these videos of who it is. | |
And they also don't like me in China and Russia, Russia I don't think has a problem with me. | |
Uh, but the Russia has a deep state issue just like here, and the Russia Russian um deep state does have a problem with me. | |
Uh as does the CCP with their people. | |
Anyway, so this is about measuring woo. | |
And we're gonna run through some things here. | |
Um that is all pertinent where we are right now, right? | |
And then we're also gonna, of course, have our little history lesson of weird shit. | |
Um so uh Steve Quayle, who is a uh alternative news guy, um, he's had a physical issue. | |
I don't, I think maybe last couple of days, this kind of thing. | |
I just saw a video today of him with an oxygen um uh thank machine on. | |
And so basically it looks like he's encountered the bioweapon, right? | |
And he's saying, uh he's saying explicitly that he was attacked by a bioweapon. | |
He's saying explicitly that he was attacked by a bioweapon that was specifically for him. | |
Um some other statements that are all out there in the woo. | |
And so we're gonna measure our woo here, right? | |
Because we use first principles thinking here, I do anyway, and so I have all of these principles that I run through in any kind of a situation where uh a decision needs to be made, and I cannot ascertain how deep the woo I'm in, and the unknown, right? | |
How much discovery is unknown to me, how much so in the woo, the woo is all this stuff that's unknown. | |
Everything that's ever been hidden from you, all the stuff is unknown, a lot of the stuff that uh you think you know should throw into the woo as well because it's built on presumptions that are unsound, okay? | |
And so in the woo, uh you it's always going to be discovery. | |
And so you have a rule that says, no matter what I think I know now about this situation, there yet remains stuff that is beyond my understanding about those things that are clearly understood by me or at least visibly apprehended by me. | |
And so basically you say to yourself, there's always some Unknown discovery yet to be made that can alter any of my perceptions about this situation. | |
It gives you a level of comfort because you're allowing for uh the woo to intrude in the um uh in the process of your thinking about all of this, okay. | |
And so this is how I approach these kind of situations. | |
This really gets a lot of the people in the UFO world and new age world and the woo-woo community, okay, that's a slightly different variant of the woo, um, gets them really pissed because I don't adhere to a um uh state of being uh uh that kind of an issue, right? | |
Uh so I don't adhere to uh the idea that there is constancy in the woo. | |
The only thing constant in the woo is the woo is not constant, right? | |
It is all change. | |
And so um, so here we go. | |
So Steve Quail uh states that he thinks that he's been attacked by a uh genome specific um bioweapon. | |
And from my understanding, he's not talking about a genome-specific to the level of uh Caucasian or you know a subclass of Caucasian. | |
He's talking about a genome specific at some level, it was a little unclear, uh, down to the level of his specific genome. | |
Now I understand that that lots of people uh think this is possible, and and this includes the CCP. | |
The CCP uh has used the PCR tests. | |
They they were uh working on these things, they were building the stash, the store of the PCR tests all throughout 2016 through 2019. | |
Okay, they were making them then. | |
No one was using those fuckers then. | |
They were used with uh laboratory settings, um, but these were the reloadable PCR tests, not the preloaded ones that the Chinese were making. | |
So a PCR test uh basically is this little thing, and it has all these little channels in it, and uh a little area down here that's known as the checksum. | |
And that validates the whole of the test. | |
But over in here is what's known as the repository. | |
Okay, that's where the sample is supposedly is supposed to be put in. | |
The repository is what all of this shit matches up against, and then the checksum matches up against. | |
So that's where you put your sample of whatever the hell you're trying to test for. | |
So if it you know, if you're trying to test for dog P, you would put dog P in the repository, and then your sample would be introduced up here in the test, and it's a it's a PCR. | |
This is a polymerase chain reaction. | |
And so the chain reaction is that the stuff goes down and back and down and back and down and back and down and back, all matching against this through a biochemical process due to the nature of this substrate upon which this thing is built and the layer of cells that are that are included in that. | |
And then the checksum is a is a miniature of that that must also repeat this process to a minor degree in order to validate it. | |
The two must come up to the same conclusion, and it's all done by basically color-coding everything, okay? | |
And so it's not that complicated to use, but they were making these things long before there was any need for them. | |
But they were not making the reloadable, the user-loadable kind. | |
They were making the preloaded kind, which is of no use, and they were making millions of them. | |
So they intended the PCR test to be used for a long time. | |
Now, as of December 1, the PCR test is no longer uh of any use, right? | |
But the I mean the CDC says you can't use them for diagnosing COVID after December 1 because of the huge amount of unreliability. | |
Anyway, so the PCR test um aspect aside, the CCP is collecting through the PCR test genomic samples because all this information is collated by the the people that process the actual test from your sample of the mucus out of your your sinus. | |
And uh that data is shipped back to the CCP. | |
And so the CCP has been collecting genomic data on on most of the Western world. | |
All right. | |
Uh Russia is very much an exception because they use a uh more of an antigen test. | |
The antigen test there is more common than the PCR test in Russia. | |
But there is still the PCR test there. | |
But this genomic information is going back to the CCP. | |
The CCP is thinking that they will develop the ultimate, they're going to be the dominant player on the planet for biological weapons. | |
These people are going to be so fucking good at this with their genomic shit that they're going to be able to dial up the test. | |
They're going to be able to get the test for Steve Quail out of their database and dial it up and run through a bunch of crisper shit, throw in some proteins and some other crap in there and glom it all up and throw it in a reactive vessel and put a lid on it, put some pressure on it, put some heat on it, and boom, a little while later, they've got a genomic specific disease just to kill Steve Quail. | |
That's the thinking. | |
Now I'm not saying Steve Quayle believes this, or that I'm just using him as an example because he stated that he felt he was an attacked individual, a targeted individual, and that it was done through a bioweapon. | |
Okay, and so uh, but many minutes. | |
So let's continue on with this idea with these guys, then we'll come back to Steve Quayle in a second. | |
So the CCP believes that they'll be able to do this. | |
Now they do not actually ever care, in my understanding, to get it dial it down to an individual person, right? | |
They just want to be able to wipe out this subset, to wipe out that subset by phenotype, okay, which is um which is a grouping, a subgrouping of genotypes. | |
So genotypes would be all your genes, but in the genotypes uh in all of your genes, certain ones share characteristics with other people, and that would be uh phenotype that ran through many different people in their genome. | |
Uh so a phenotype is a grouping, right? | |
So a phenotype could be like white skin, uh, you know, or or bad eyes, you know, that sort of thing, right? | |
Or or lack of minerals to get white hair, that sort of thing. | |
Those could be genotypical or phenotypical expressions that are common to more than one person and can be seen across the class of individuals. | |
And the CCP was thinking they could wipe out humans based on this. | |
Now, here's the thing. | |
Okay, so this is a little bit complic complicated. | |
But uh, all right, so we all know that humans have biorhythms. | |
And our biorhythms look sort of like this when they're presented to us, and one of them might be your physical and and one might be your emotional, you know, you're all trashed or whatever, and you know, uh, one might be your whether or not you're having a good hair day, that kind of thing, right? | |
Your physical attractiveness or whatever. | |
And so all of these little things make up your biorhythms. | |
And and altogether, that's basically you. | |
So all of these frequencies are abstraction, all of these concepts are abstractions of frequencies that are actually you. | |
Alright, so these vary constantly over time. | |
They're always fluctuating, constantly, constantly, constantly. | |
Well, your whole metabolism is constantly fluctuating as you go through through time. | |
Uh that is like from millisecond to millisecond to millisecond, whether you're breathing in, whether you're breathing out, whether you're growing a hair or losing a hair, whether you've got a sneeze or not, you know, whether you're putting moisture into your eyeballs, all of these different kinds of things are happening to your body at a fantastic rate, none of which is really affecting your mind at any any given time because your body has run through a subsystem and does all this shit for you. | |
But a part of this is your immune system, okay? | |
And so your your immune system has a biorhythm. | |
Your immune system has actually three biorhythms, okay? | |
So there's the natal or in or um innate level of immune protection. | |
There is adaptive. | |
And so sometimes they'll refer to the innate as a constant. | |
That's the one that uh includes all of the T cells and the Hutter killer cells and this sort of thing, right? | |
But the adaptive also does uh does include that. | |
Alright. | |
Then there's the at an even lower level, there is a what we can think of as a systemic. | |
Um we can just leave it at systemic. | |
All right, so the systemic one uh let's let's say it interst. | |
Yeah, inter. | |
Intersystemic. | |
So the adapt you have an adaptive immune system. | |
You have a constant innate immune system. | |
Alright. | |
Both of these are specific cells and specific functions within the system of those cells to fight infection and deal with infection once encountered. | |
And to deal also with irritants. | |
So the adaptive system includes the ability to deal with environmental things, right? | |
So now we can include in the environmental things dust, but also these days spikes being shed by people. | |
So that is now an immune system attacked attack vector that's going to impact you, but it's also in an environmental one. | |
Just so if you're not, if you if you don't have an inter-systemic weakness, the adaptive system will simply have to respond to this by increasing the mucus so that you have more mucus to just grab the stuff, glom it all up, and spit it out, right? | |
If you have an inter-systemic weakness, then the adaptive system is going to have to produce on its part reactive T cells and these kind of things because those spikes and sh and stuff are going to be getting through the mucus barrier that it is also producing. | |
And if it gets far enough, it will then hit the constant innate immune system where that's almost the That's the inner cellular and intercellular expression of all of your immune system part. | |
But for our purposes of discussion at the moment, the the one we're going to be concerned with here is your inner systemic. | |
And this goes back to these guys and also goes back to Steve Quayle. | |
Alright, so we think of our immune system as being like this, like this stable flat line, you know. | |
So you can and so this is a misunderstanding that I have to correct for people. | |
So I say that the target is 90 nanograms per milliliter of vitamin D for a super uh healthy effective system as being an optimal. | |
But you'll never ever ever you may reach that on a particular day because you poke your finger and get some blood that particular day at that particular moment that it can then register at 90. | |
But it's going to be like this, constantly going up and down because vitamin D is used in 3,000 body processes. | |
So you take that stuff in and it's using it up like mad. | |
So you'll never ever be able to achieve a state of being at 90 nanograms per milliliter. | |
It is just a target to try and get to and maintain. | |
And so you take blood tests throughout a year, and you find out you go from 63 where you're taking 8,000 units per day, up to you know uh 79 over the course of a couple of months by by increasing it up to 10,000 units a day, and you say, aha, then I know I need to maintain 10,000 units a day at this level, and if I uh start feeling a little saggy, I can take another blood work and see what my vitamin D level is, maybe it's dropped down. | |
Uh and so because the vitamin D level is gonna be like basically it's like this throughout the day, right? | |
And so your intersystemic immune system is not a constant. | |
And what you're and that 90 is trying to basically get you to hover around in this area in here. | |
And your vitamin D levels will spike up and then they'll get used up by the um need for it within the adaptive uh immune system. | |
So vitamin D is down here in the inner systemic, but because vitamin D controls the signaling mechanisms between the cells and also between the systems of cells. | |
I don't really want to go into that, okay? | |
But vitamin D uh operates as like the carrier wave. | |
It's like your radio waves for your phone call and at many different levels. | |
It tells the cells and systems of cells how to communicate with each other and what's going on within them. | |
And but it's also used at a biochemical level in one of these 3,000 or many of these 3,000 different processes to create and aid the um activities and the mechanisms of those activities within the other immune system responses. | |
So vitamin D is really key throughout this whole thing, but you'll never ever ever achieve the 90. | |
You just need to get to know how much you need to supplement through sunlight, through through some of these uh vitamin D lamps, or through other kinds of supplements uh in order to get yours up to a level where you have are are ch are shading towards optimal. | |
Though but you have to get up over 47. | |
Okay, that was the number I first identified was 47 nanograms. | |
Now I'm of the opinion that that okay, so we'll get into the CCP. | |
We'll go back to the CCP for a second. | |
Okay, so the CCP is of the opinion that they can dial in your genome and uh get a bunch of phenotypes and devise a weapon. | |
Now, when they say bioweapon, they're not talking about something vague and amorphous. | |
They are talking specifically a virus, a member of the class of viri, okay. | |
These are subgenomic or these are genomic in um material. | |
A virus is genomic material that has no none of the functions of a cell, and so it must use your cells to replicate and to uh reproduce itself and to uh get its own functions to create itself. | |
And so here is the thing. | |
So it is not possible. | |
It isn't if you go and you take the viral let me okay, back up. | |
If you go and take the current virology courses being offered by the medical universities here in the United States, as I have done last year, I took the one from Columbia University, you will discover at the very beginning of it a statement that is never a concept that is never refuted throughout the entire length of the course or any subsequent courses about virology. | |
And the and this is that in order to be, in order for a virus to attack you, your cells have to be receptive and permissive. | |
Receptive means basically to allow the virus to get on the surface of the cell and attach to it, and permissive means to then hijack the contents of the mitochondria and the transcription process to recreate more viruses and to basically explode the cell. | |
That's the irritation in the back of the throat when you get a virus, it actually attacks a cell and it hijacks it, and it uses the mechanism at the middle of the cell, the interior part of the cell, the mitochondria and the other organelles to create millions of parts of viruses, and then it explodes the cell as the viruses just keep replicating and replicating and replicating, and then on the outside of the cell, it tries to use this chemical process to put all these parts together into a virus. | |
Okay, that's why viruses become weak over time. | |
When this thing lases, when this thing splits open and all these millions of virus particles come on out, they're in little chunks of various different kinds, and the and there's a chemical process layer that's been wrapped around this, the whatever part of exposed uh exposed cell is available that attempts to put these things back into looking just like that. | |
And and it probably succeeds 0.04% of the time. | |
And that would be a very effective virus. | |
So it might produce uh, you know, 20 20 billion parts in order to create a half a million uh new viruses, and of those half a million, most of them would be defective because they wouldn't be properly put together. | |
So it's a very inefficient process, it just does it very rapidly and takes none of the and takes all of its energy from you. | |
That's why it's so so virulent. | |
But here's the thing. | |
In order for this to occur, there must be a receptive state. | |
Vitamin D at an adequate level shuts that off. | |
You don't have any any cells that are receptive. | |
So uh, or there's other things that shut that off. | |
And and vitamin D also controls the permissive aspect. | |
Uh so now the CCP is of the opinion that they can do this to anybody. | |
They're of the opinion, there a lot of the medical people and a lot of the academics are of the opinion that your immune system doesn't mean shit, that a virus that they can it's just the virus itself uh is 100% deadly, it's 100% uh contagious, etc. | |
And has no interest and in no interaction with your real immune system and your state of being. | |
So, I mean, that there's this is an inherent assumption in there. | |
The inherent assumption is that um if you're in any way that everyone is always susceptible to the same degree to any given viri. | |
So the CCP thinks that the coronavirus, the the COVID-19 was very, very, very deadly. | |
And it really shocked them that it was not, that people did not die at the rate that they needed to. | |
That's when they started, in my opinion, aerosolizing the spike proteins and spraying them out and stuff, right? | |
So now uh the CCP is wrong. | |
They're not going to be able to make a virus that will overcome the vitamin D issues here because all virai are receptive and permissive. | |
So Marburg, any of these others that are supposedly super lethal, are only super lethal because they kill people with low uh immune systems faster than other viruses would kill them. | |
And that's basically it. | |
They develop a viral load faster, but they're no more contagious against a healthy immune system than any others. | |
So bear in mind that anybody that's ever been inoculated against smallpox is exposed has been exposed to smallpox repeatedly throughout their life. | |
And and you A, you don't need a booster, and you only need one shot of it because it was actually a vaccine, you know, maybe even a skin vaccine. | |
Um that also shuts down the receptivity because you're the outer cells know what smallpox looks like and they push it away when it shows up, so they don't have to deal with it, right? | |
But they push it away through a vitamin D process. | |
Um anyway, so the CCP will fail at this. | |
They will not be able to create a super database of uh killer um biological weapons, right? | |
They won't be able to come up with anything that's more lethal than whatever we have right now, and all of that lethality, your body participates in that lethality. | |
All right, so your body at any given time is participating in that lethality. | |
So we can get away from the CCP for a second. | |
They're gonna fail at this, but it's because they're they're gonna fail because they have an inappropriate assumption, right? | |
They never measured their woo. | |
They didn't understand that what they did not understand. | |
Now there may indeed be microvitite, there may be life forms that are smaller than a bacteria or as small as a bacteria or as small as a virus that are more deadly than those, but we have yet to encounter them or invent them. | |
So this is a fear, this is a fear the CCP is operating on as though it is real, and I do not, it's my understanding that that is not the case. | |
That um it's uh that basically they they leave out the participation of your level of uh health relative to uh vitamin D and the structures and so on. | |
So anyway, so I'm not particularly scared of any of the shit that the uh they're gonna make as a bioweapon because I'm going to work on my immune system now that we're in bioweapon world, right? | |
So I'm not particularly scared of this. | |
Now here's something else. | |
The CCP is out collecting all this genomic data, right? | |
You have a genome. | |
Well, here's here's the the short of it, not the long and the short of it. | |
Here's the short of it. | |
This is a genome for a human. | |
Uh it's 50,000 uh genes. | |
And here's another genome. | |
And it's 40,000. | |
Now, there's something wrong with this picture, all right. | |
The human genome only has 40, 50,000 genes in it. | |
But the thought when we started off in the genome project, we were under the impression that one gene equaled one protein in the human body. | |
Well, that turns out to not be true, because we've got protein-wise, we've got 90,000 that we've discovered already, and the number grows every day. | |
Uh and so we don't have a gene making each of those proteins. | |
So genes are not connected to our body that way. | |
Turns out that genes are likely not in any way connected or not connected the way that the academics think to inheritance. | |
So you the your DNA for 23andMe and all these kind of things, well, there's an association, but it's not a direct association, and it may not indeed be direct enough to be able to prove more than familial level gatherings at best. | |
Alright. | |
So we know that we've only got 50,000 genes. | |
We can track them down, we've got them all isolated, we know what they are, we know what they look like, we can put out the sequence for them. | |
But in our and but we also know that it doesn't cover the 90,000 stuff here. | |
And so here's another life form, and it has 40,000 genes, which is almost as much as a human. | |
And what is that? | |
Okay, it's not uh chimpanzee, it's not a primate, all right. | |
It's uh fruit fly. | |
It's a fruit fly. | |
It has 40,000 genes. | |
So turns out, in my way of thinking, that we could that Crick and Watson were wrong. | |
The DNA does not show um what they say it shows, what they thought it showed. | |
And we have proof that that's the case now, right? | |
So the CCP collecting all this DNA is not going to necessarily yield them what they're after relative to their ability to put out a bioweapon. | |
It also puts the kibosh on the idea that we could have phenotypically selected bioweapons that in any way don't involve the participation of the weakened immune system. | |
So again, it's kind of like defeating the CCP, right? | |
Now, this goes back to Steve Quayle, because Steve Quayle is under the impression that there was some way a at some level a specific bioweapon that that nailed him and he got really sick, he had to go to the hospital, he had a lot of trauma, he went through the ER, he ended up on oxygen. | |
He had been um taking a bunch of crap, really, in my opinion. | |
I'll get into that in a second. | |
Um but here's the thing. | |
As he relays the story, his wife got ill first. | |
Okay, well, that pretty much puts the kibosh on the idea that there is, even if you allowed for the academic's traditional understanding of uh DNA, that puts the kibosh on that idea because she does not share his DNA enough to uh be able to take the same bioweapon that he did, right? | |
If it if it was specific to him. | |
And he's saying there's a lot of people that are dying of um respiratory ills, COVID, these kind of things. | |
We've seen Robert David Steele. | |
Uh yeah, there's people that say he didn't die. | |
I don't know one way or another. | |
It appears he did. | |
Um he had an underlying condition of asthma or bronchitis or something, some kind of breathing issue. | |
He was a heavy guy too. | |
Uh Steve Quayle's an old fart. | |
He's like me. | |
Um offense to Steve, I like him. | |
Uh I've, you know, listen to his stuff periodically through the years. | |
Um I don't think that there was a specific bioweapon that that got him, right? | |
I think this is a case of misappropriate mismeasuring the woo. | |
That this guy um was made ill, I'm not disputing any of that, or of course, or any of that, and it's too bad he's on oxygen and these sorts of things, but I think it was one of these issues where one of those 3,000 processes or more than one of those 3,000 processes have been affected by all the shit we're going through and all the shit he was taking. | |
So he'd just been through a prophylactic course of um HCQ. | |
That's what he says. | |
And then he was taking all this other stuff, including zinc and stuff, and he was also taking, had just been taking ivermectin when he went into the hospital. | |
Well, here's something, guy. | |
All uh all of these drugs, all these antiparasitical drugs, uh ivermectin and HCQ are draining to the system. | |
You should not take these fuckers back to back, or you can't take them prophylactically like um uh gulping this stuff without expecting for the body to become debilitated. | |
And if you're not really robust, you will feel a sag effect as you get all of the parasites and stuff kicked out of your system. | |
And every human is gonna have them, just like every animal's gonna have them Based on you know the length of time since your last antiparasitical treatment uh of whatever form. | |
That's why we drink things like coffee and these kind of things. | |
They have a tendency to keep out a lot of the uh casual parasites we're likely to encounter. | |
So we've got a lot of problems here, right? | |
So Steve, so Steve Quail, uh I he was taking uh HCQ, HCQ. | |
He was taking ivermectin, and he was taking zinc. | |
Zinc you gotta watch out for guys, you can take too much zinc. | |
If you're taking 50 or whatever uh zinc, zinc, I think I personally I believe that zinc should be taken at the rate of 50, 15, one five zinc uh to one of copper. | |
And you need a balance, you need to balance that. | |
And you don't take 30 to 2, you take you take one of these a day, all right, because you need a certain amount of copper and a certain amount of zinc. | |
And if you've got over that in the way of zinc, it's gonna cause your system to become degraded at some level, especially the more you take it and the longer you take it. | |
So here's the thing. | |
Uh being a vegetarian ages you quickly, because the bioavailability of nutrients and stuff are is very, very low relative to the proteins and so on. | |
The only thing very viable uh very bioavailable are the carbs. | |
And so vegetarianism will aid you rapidly. | |
It'll also aid you because you've got seed oils that will dry you, they'll cause sinus problems and so on. | |
Your diet can build up the components of seed oils and these things that are called lectins. | |
These are the actual poisons that the plants put into themselves to keep animals from munching on them, because it makes the animal sick, the animal doesn't eat that plant again, right? | |
And so the annual the one plant that gets eaten contributes for the whole species of plants in that little grove because the animals stay away from it, that sort of thing. | |
But um, but these these lectins will build up in us dummies that concentrate these things and then use them uh continuously over time, and these things will tend to build up and degrade our system. | |
So you can create sinus headaches over the for yourself as a long lifelong effect by uh concentrating too much on seed oils and having four or five years of them continuously, all of your cooking, everything done in in uh, you know, corn oil or or even olive oil, um, these kind of things. | |
Avocado oil is reasonably okay because it's the closest oil to a human fat we've got. | |
Uh but um over time it'll dry out your sinuses. | |
But the sinuses then get cracks in them, and you get perhaps sinus headaches. | |
Uh you'll sneeze maybe, but you'll always have a tendency to be slightly dry and these kind of things, right? | |
Um that can cause later in life, you get to the point where you are susceptible because your body is always attempting to repair the damage to the sinuses, which should be this nice wet, moist environment with these little hairs in there to trap all the nasty stuff and shove them down into mucus so you can sneeze it out. | |
Um, but uh but we uh can do things like jam our our system full of stuff uh and not give ourselves a repair time in between or understand that a repair time is necessary. | |
And so this is why you don't take like um antibiotics continuously. | |
Your body can't handle that. | |
It's uh an interprocessing of the antibiotic with the gut flora, and you need to rebuild the gut flora, the good stuff after the course of antibiotics theoretically have cleared off the bad stuff. | |
So, you know, all of this stuff matters in terms of how we do things and how we measure the depth of the woo. | |
So is Steve Quayle accurately measuring what had happened here and assigning you know intent and purpose to something that was really more of a random occurrence, because see here's the thing. | |
He's saying that he thought that people like um Steve Quayle or like uh Robert David Steele, he didn't mention them that I haven't seen enough of it to say that, but he did not in the part I heard mention Robert David Steele, but there have been a number of alternative people that have died, alternative news people that have died of respiratory issues, basically from you know what we're now calling COVID, right? | |
The bioweapon. | |
And uh, and so he's saying that they've been targeted. | |
And I don't know that that that's an appropriate statement. | |
Uh as a paranoid, who I really have to guard against that idea because it's um inherent in the in the nature of paranoid thinking. | |
And so I put up a barrier to it to to say, okay, is it really a stalker or Is it some guy who just happens to be driving behind me because there's no other alternative and we're going more or less in the same direction for a number of miles and he's going to turn off in a while. | |
You know, uh that sort of thing, right? | |
Uh so I don't see any proof that Steve got was individually uh targeted. | |
Um there's no there are indeed coincidence of uh people dying in the alternative media, but given the understanding in the alternative media uh community of the nature of the human body and the things that these people will do to themselves. | |
So Robert David Steele did, if he passed from the COVID, then he basically contributed to it by this huge amount of stress for five or six months. | |
I mean, like giant fucking stress, because every single day he was out on a bus driving around in different environment, and he didn't have the support in his um he didn't have the body support in a daily routine that was in any way stable. | |
So there was going to be a constant amount of stress that was going to creep in. | |
Travel used to be in uh travel, the word comes from travail, you know, uh something harsh and difficult. | |
All travel is difficult and harsh on you, and it stresses you out. | |
People frequently almost uh almost as a rule get ill in the process of traveling because they're encountering new uh microvitae, new organisms, new new potentialities for illness, but they're also degrading their environmental system internally in their body by not having the support system that they had in their regular um you know place of residence, right? | |
Even though if you're taking the vitamins with you and that kind of stuff, you're not gonna have the same level of of um uh foods, you're gonna have different stuff intruding in the food, you're gonna have the stress of moving back and forth, you're gonna have the local environmental pollution you're not used to, and it just adds on up. | |
Plus, you're gonna have the temporal degradation being drugged through time by if you're traveling through jets and these kind of deals, but even through traveling uh trains and stuff, being in different locales relative to time degrades your immune system, and it takes a while to adjust. | |
So this is part of the adaptive stuff. | |
So I use a measuring process that basically says for the woo that I'm in the flow all the time, the flow of the woo. | |
I'm not trying to assess a state of being, and I'm never trying to assess a constant. | |
So, in other words, um, if I if I was really paranoid and I thought I was um that that my enemy was over on the other side of this wall and that kind of stuff and was sneaking around and those sorts of things, then I would phrase it as being um I was at that moment being targeted, but I was not a state of being as a targeted individual, right? | |
And so, yeah, there are people that are out there pushing around lists that says that you know, Steve Quayle's on this list, and he's uh he's targeted by the deep state. | |
It's like, okay, fine, but we're all targeted by the deep state. | |
They want to kill 13 out of 14 people. | |
So it's that's a big fucking crowd we're in, right? | |
A big giant club, and we're all in there, basically. | |
Um so you know, we can take it personally if we want, but I I don't at that level. | |
Um, at the level that someone shows up and they're shooting at me and I got to shoot back, you know. | |
Well, okay, yeah, that's personal, but I'm gonna deal with it right then and there. | |
I'm not taking it as a um an overall personal attack by universe sorts of deal. | |
Okay, so the genomic grab from the CCP and all this you're gonna hear about all their claims to bioweapons and stuff, personally, I think is is really bogus if we approach it uh from our from an effective woo perspective of getting our our own biology to an optimum level, and then fuck it. | |
I can wade through a sea of COVID, and in fact, if the COVID is in the ocean, I would. | |
I would go out and swim in it and and I'd swim through the COVID and wouldn't have any effect at all because I have the immune system prepared to deal with the stresses of my environment and deal with these things. | |
And our innate immune system has gotten humans here for all of these hundreds of thousands, if not Millions of years. | |
And uh so you know it's pretty good shit. | |
Uh Steve Quayle, in my opinion, uh was suffering like all of us, the degradation that comes from the chemtrails, from these extra energies from space, from the uh lockdowns from the stress, from the news, from the blue light in the media, | |
uh, from the content in the media, all of these things contribute to a level of degradation, and then there that coincided with the uh an occurrence of coming in contact with an infective agent that caused this uh respiratory response, right? | |
And so uh now I believe also that his using HCQ and then the zinc, and you know, we don't know what form and so on, and then the ivermectin, I I'm thinking that that contributed to it because you know, even the if I'm gonna if I'm gonna take ivermectin as a prophylactic, I'm going to be aware that this is an antiparasitical, antifungal, antiviral, antibacterial um substance. | |
So I can ex uh expect it to flush stuff out of me. | |
And that process, that detox process, uh can be harsh. | |
And so I will be aware that you know, in that harshness it would make me weak temporarily, and so I'm gonna have to do things to support myself during that uh period of time. | |
And I'm not gonna take it personally if during that weakness um I actually you know became somewhat ill. | |
Now, I don't know Steve's circumstances, but and until we see evidence that individual people are d are being killed, and it all has this same sequence. | |
Um I'm gonna say, you know, basically bullshit. | |
It's not he's not targeted, and we're all exposed, whatever the hell they're spraying out in the chemtrails. | |
We're all exposed to the way that the food, the water and everything else has been degraded. | |
And so we all need to understand how our uh biological stuff works relative to the nature of um uh basically illness and uh and the bio and the bioweapons that we're gonna be exposed to because the Chinese are gonna still keep cranking this shit out, right? | |
And we can expect them to they want to, they've stated that they want to depopulate North America and and down into about Mexico City and take over this area uh for food production for uh Chinese population in in Asia. | |
And so there's no reason not to take them at their words that they'll keep doing this. | |
And so we need to respond to it, and I think we need to respond to it by um uh building ourselves up and this sort of thing, right? | |
Uh and understanding the nature, real an adult real understanding of the nature of illness and uh how this stuff works. | |
And also where the woo is, right? | |
So if you can't if your assumption at the time of the genome uh start uh genome project was that there were you were going to find one gene for each and every protein and you've got 90,000 proteins and 50,000 genes, you better start looking at your assumptions. | |
And you better not make any further assumptions on on what you think you're understanding about DNA because they're all likely bogus because you don't know what the depth of the woo is. | |
Alright, so now let's get into some other uh newsy kind of stuff here, all right. | |
Uh so the die-off is happening, it looks to be running a uh basically close to three times the amount of usual uh based on the amount of linguistics relative to uh funeral or coffin associated stuff out and about. | |
So, in other words, I can find a lot of discussion, a lot more discussion uh about getting caskets, finding caskets, all of this kind of stuff, anything associated with funerals than we than we did under any kind of metric, year over year, cumulative throughout the year over year comparisons, any way you want to look at it, there's just a lot more discussions of people uh dying off now. | |
And it's really risen since the vaccines have come in. | |
So it should start percolating up to the point where we recognize this fairly quick. | |
Or not, I mean, uh it'll it'll take us a while within the mainstream media as it's dying and as it's replaced for people to get the idea, but I I don't think it will be able to be uh denied as a concept uh for um too much longer, I would think. | |
I don't know, it's hard to hard to predict people at that level. | |
Uh but anyway, but it is coming out. | |
The linguistics are are changing. | |
Um part of this is that we now have uh more um religious exemptions being granted. | |
And a lot of them are being granted at the employer level, and you're just not hearing about it, because when people get the things granted, some of the people are being told, shh, don't talk about this. | |
That kind of a deal, right? | |
But it throughout the whole company it's been handed out. | |
So I'm hearing in some cases, one really good guy when they asked what his religious belief system was, he quoted the constitution to them. | |
And they said, sure, here you go. | |
No worries. | |
Anyway, so religious exemptions are being granted. | |
Okay, so now we're approaching the 24th through the 28th. | |
And so now here is the discussion about release language. | |
Okay, so we have the 23rd. | |
We'll just say 24th in the USA, because we're all going to be asleep when it happens anyway. | |
24th through the 28th, right? | |
And so the if you chart release language, it's all building tension, and but it's just a different kind of language that the tension builds in. | |
And then it usually runs like that, and then it swoops up to a peak, and then it comes down, right? | |
Sort of looks like a tooth, really. | |
And then it may come down only a little bit sometimes and just go off over here. | |
That part there is immaterial to the release part of it. | |
The release part of it here is difficult to get across to people. | |
But it's um, but you know, so basically, I would expect over this period of four days to get a similar, not necessarily okay, similar in nature, similar in linguistics, not necessarily focused on any given place the same, | |
not necessarily focused in any given arena the same, but in a similar nature, I would expect over this period of time to come up to something that has the same kind of release language, the same kind of emotional release that you would get from this experience as what we experienced with Afghanistan, | |
which is still you know a burning issue in the US, but we've now gone into uh building tension language from it, this smoldering building tension language when but when it first happened, the Afghanist Afghanistan uh debacle, that was all release language. | |
Everybody was just venting, and and so that's the kind of language we're gonna see across here. | |
Um, Evergrand, the bond, the Chinese bond, the CCP bond uh fiasco is percolating in the background, right? | |
And it's gonna impact banks, it's gonna all throughout the planet, it's gonna impact uh real estate all throughout the planet, um all different kinds of stuff. | |
Manufacturing, all of this stuff. | |
At the same time, the CCP has electricity issues in China, their factories are running sometimes only two days out of the week, and they've got real issues with working those two days, but they've got to because they're gonna face fines if they don't. | |
All different kinds of weird ass shit is happening in China relative to their situation at the moment, and on top of that, they've got this giant bond fiasco that is unloading right now. | |
And according to the calculations, it'll pop off for the US on the 23rd of October at midnight UTC time because that's the first that's when the first of the USA-denominated uh interest payments to Evergrand bonds are due. | |
All right, and so it wouldn't necessarily hit you the US that day, but it would hit on the 24th. | |
Uh there's gonna be some level of fallout to this. | |
But in my way of thinking, the Evergrande bond stuff is just like background noise to whatever's gonna happen. | |
That we already know ahead of this uh what this is, and it is unknown here. | |
It's an X, it's an unknown. | |
What is going to be the trigger for the release peak on this? | |
And building tension has a tendency to do just that. | |
Build up and then gradually wear off at some level, right? | |
But uh release language builds up and then crashes usually. | |
Um release language can build up and then crash. | |
It has this sharpness to it because it's usually triggered by an event. | |
And so if we looked at Afghanistan, it would be this kind of a thing where there would be some level of of tension building up about it some period ahead of the actual withdrawal, and then at the withdrawal, it's all released language from that point on. | |
It's all venting out this particular kind of language to get the motions out of the body. | |
And that's what we're going to be going through on the 28th. | |
You know, I don't think it'll be related to Afghanistan. | |
You know, it might very well be related to Taiwan. | |
Uh that sort of stuff wouldn't be surprised me at all. | |
Um, but it's I doubt that it's going to be the bond fiasco as it is now constituted. | |
It could be the bond fiasco taking down one or two or three um very large international banks, but they would have to collapse all of a sudden in order for it to be a release language and to affect enough people uh that it would qualify here. | |
So if we were going to have it be economic at that level, it would have to be like big giant bank failing, you know, like big giant bank that they wouldn't that somehow they wouldn't be able to refloat or reconstitute, | |
but even so, even so, um those kind of things usually produce more building tension than they you know, constantly you got building and release tension going on, language going on, uh not competing, but but uh fluctuating in them in between each other. | |
And so uh when I say release language, it's merely release language dominance. | |
It's not a hundred percent release language, although in a in the period of time of Afghanistan, it was hard to find building tension language as all that release language was coming out, it pretty much pushed away in the media anyway, all anything else for a while. | |
And so that was a uh probably the biggest dominance I've seen in in well since Vietnam since 9-11, right? | |
So it was at that level. | |
Now, I don't expect that level here, but I expect something well, it could be that level, it could be that that big. | |
Um but like I say, it won't be Afghanistan. | |
We've been through that, so it'll be something else, and it won't be Evergrand, it'll be something else because it wouldn't be an economic debacle at that level. | |
It's uh those are usually too slow to have that much release language uh show up. | |
You have release language, it usually starts in smaller groups, the bondholders, ultimately it percolates out to you know, maybe real estate or investors or insurance companies or something, but it takes a while. | |
So in Afghanistan kind of thing, it was like a whole country and then the whole world all in a short period of time. | |
Same thing with 9-11. | |
So it happens very rapidly. | |
And so that's the kind of thing here, but that's really all I've got is that you know, we're gonna have that period of time from the 24th through the 28th. | |
If we were going to have a financial crash at that level, um, and it be the release language, it would basically have to be um like an economic hit. | |
All right. | |
So we could have an economic hit. | |
So here is a situation in which Evergrand uh would fulfill the forecast emotional tension release uh flow in this period of time. | |
We could have the bonds default on the 20 late on the night of the 23rd, early in the day of the 24th, we could have giant market chaos for the next few days, and then on the 28th, we could have the CCP revalue gold. | |
They're also in if they revalue gold, by the way, they're instantly revaluing silver. | |
And there's nothing that they can do about that. | |
They don't care now because their economy is is hamstrung by stuff that is in silver is the least of their worries. | |
Okay, so they could do this. | |
This would this would fit because you could have a scenario where we would all wake up on the morning of the 28th and the event would occur, so say it occurred that late that night, and that we all learn about it in the morning of the 28th as the as the United States wakes up, we wake up to a world in which uh gold is valued by the Chinese at $10,000 an ounce. | |
That would be the minimum that they would do in order to get it up. | |
They'd I think they might even do it higher than that because they wouldn't do it half-measure, right? | |
They're not gonna creep up on it. | |
They don't own the system. | |
They don't control the world reserve currency. | |
They would be taking it over, they would be as assuming the world reserve currency control at that time that they revalued gold. | |
So they would do it in a big way, in my opinion. | |
And so they would, in my opinion, they would do it at least to the level of 10,000. | |
But that that gives you a shock value, right? | |
Five times. | |
So it means that your currency, the dollar, has been reduced by down to one-fifth of its purchasing power relative to the Chinese wan overnight. | |
Now that's going to cause a huge amount of release language. | |
That's gonna fucking freak everybody. | |
So that would work. | |
That could cause this. | |
But you know, it could also be the CCP attacking Taiwan, uh, that sort of thing, right? | |
Uh, because that would be an abrupt event that would also cause all the release language and then all the anxiety that follows all of the release language. | |
So that's that's where we're at at the moment here. | |
Um, so that's basically long enough. | |
Alright, so I was going to get into the history and the use of uh the Celtic Cross is a measuring tool. | |
Uh so I I'll just run through it really briefly. | |
I won't go into all the details, you can go and look those up. | |
There's plenty of sites that detail it. | |
Okay, so a Celtic cross, uh, you used to see these people wandering around, and it was noted because some of them are pre-bronze age, that the Celtic Cross is ancient, right? | |
And I'm not talking about it as a religious symbol, I'm talking about it as a measuring tool. | |
And so I've had these, I've got to make another one, which brought it up. | |
I've got to make another one because I can't find my old one, and I need to measure some stuff. | |
And so, what you do is you've got something you need to measure, it's a hill, you got a house up here, house, and uh you need to figure out how big that hill is because you've got to engineer something, right? | |
And so you're down here, you're the little human, and what you do is you figure out an approximate offset from the bottom of the hill for this house. | |
So you go up to the top of the house and you see if you can see the hill and so on, right? | |
And what you're gonna do is you're gonna reduce everything down to uh trigonometry and to um uh geometry, and basically reduce it down to right angles using a particular kind of a stick uh that from which we derive almost all of our measuring tools, and that this has been used back in antiquity, and this is the Celtic Cross. | |
Now I've I made them a particular way because I made them for both engineering as well as for navigation, all right? | |
And so you're a human, and you're down here, you've got your Celtic cross, it's got a human body, a couple of legs, a couple of arms, looks more like a turtle. | |
You're so you're a ninja turtle human. | |
Anyway, so you've got a Celtic cross here. | |
Celtic cross is like this kind of a critter, right? | |
So it's a circular thing, so it's a circular thing that has that is uh quartered by sticks that bisect each other, and they're usually joined here in the middle. | |
This is usually made out of wood, it's convenient to make it out of wood, you can cut it out of plywood, that sort of thing. | |
Now, in in most cases, this will be attached to a s to a stick as part of a base that'll have a sharp point on it that can't be degraded, so it can't be really lowered by wearing off the bottom of the stick. | |
And um, and the idea is that you want to make this thing so that this cross piece right here is that at your eye level. | |
So these these Celtic crosses are usually made to the man. | |
You usually make your own so that it it fits your body, and then you make all of the math on it very easy because you can just eliminate, you can tear out, tear out all of the factors here that get in the way of making a right angled decision out of this. | |
Now I'll get into some of this real quick. | |
This can be an inclinometer. | |
So the way I used to do it was I would I'd make this A solid chunk of wood here. | |
Then I would drill out and I would put a copper tube through the middle there. | |
Alright, the copper tube then. | |
So if you're looking at the Celtic cross and we're looking at it in section, I would have a crop a copper tube that would go through the middle of it this way, and you could use that as a contrary perpendicular sight to get a line of sight here to turn this into a surveying tool for vast areas of ground relatively easily. | |
So it becomes the either a stadia, so it becomes part of the basic surveying tools for land surveying at a horizontal level. | |
Now it also is an inclinometer. | |
Around that copper tube, I would fix my plum that would come on down and it would intersect my base here. | |
Hang on a second. | |
Ah shit, I screwed up. | |
Okay. | |
So anyway, and so my plum would come down here and it would come down and I would have my degree marks along here, right? | |
And it's really easy to lay out. | |
You get a protractor and compass and do all of this stuff, and you can put it, you know, little brads, any number of things you can use here to mark the degrees. | |
Now I also would do attached around that before the cord that held the um plum, uh so I would have a cord hanging down like this with a plumb bob on it, but before that there's this stick that goes from, | |
so I would have this little tiny thin stick that also was drilled out, and it floated around that um around the the copper piece of tube, like this, and was also a measuring unit like that, and you can spin this thing, right? | |
And so it became an inclinometer that you could, and actually on the final version, I may put two of those because you make one of them a stop. | |
So you can set a reference mark. | |
But these can be used, uh, and then also you put on these the numeric values of the sine and cosine values that you need to do quick measuring this way. | |
Alright, so and the way it works is that you you uh figure out your distance from here to your your um uh Celtic cross to the middle of it, and that gives you so we're doing a right angle thing here, right, to determine the hypotenuse, and so what we're gonna do is we're gonna determine the height of this house off of the beach, say, and so we would uh eliminate any of the fuzziness of the dunes and stuff by shoving our our Celtic cross into them, but then starting from a known reference point. | |
And so we're gonna make a right angle, and we know this distance, but we don't know that distance, we don't know that angle, and we don't know this distance, which is what we're trying to determine, right? | |
We want to know what that height is, so that maybe we can determine what our vision is, our distance and vision is to the um to the horizon. | |
And what we do is we work off of determining we you we take a measure and we determine what this distance is here. | |
So we go to the hill and we tape our way out to wherever the hell we got our stick stuck, and then we use this stick here with the inclinometer and this stick here, and we angle this bugger, such usually you angle it back. | |
You can do it either way, but it's easiest to look at it through this way, and you would angle this thing back until you got a clear line of sight up to that house, and then when that is is angled, you would read where this thing uh showed up, and that tells you what your sine and cosine value are for that particular angle, which gives you the ability to determine these two values here based on knowing this value. | |
So if you knew A, you could determine B and C, right? | |
It's usually the other way around. | |
I mean the hypotenuse is usually labeled C, I think. | |
Yeah, let's do that on right angles. | |
A plus B, C, so you know, because uh A squared plus B squared plus uh equals C squared, right? | |
And so we have our uh ability to measure here by a single person without needing anybody else, just doing it in line of sight. | |
It's not as um accurate as maybe as an altimeter, but altimeters can fluctuate because they're just measuring based on barometric pressure. | |
And if it's a small enough variant off of this, or you got a wonky storm going through, you're not going to get an accurate reading. | |
So this is another way. | |
So humans have been measuring the Wu since ancient times, right? | |
And so the Celtic Cross adopted by the church because the Celtic people were seafaring. | |
Alright. | |
So in uh throughout Northern Europe, we have these three groups. | |
The Celts from where we get Celtic, the Picts, who were mostly wiped out, and the Huns. | |
Okay, there were these three large groups at the time that we're talking about the origination or at least the transference of this technology from pre-Ice Age. | |
And the Celts were navigators. | |
They lived in Ireland, they lived in England, they lived on the coast of France, they lived in the Pharaoh Islands, they they sailed all over the place. | |
You use these things also as a sailing aid. | |
And say if you're smart, you put all your numerics here carved in on this and built into your your Celtic cross. | |
You don't have to sit there and do the calculations, right? | |
And it's an approximation. | |
It's good enough to get you to that port. | |
So you're sailing in, and you say, Oh, okay, I'm you know, half a mile south of that port. | |
I can see the you know the shape of the land that I recognize or the lights or something. | |
Alright, so it's good enough to get you within a variance to where you'll find the place you need to be. | |
And then a lot of these guys on their sticks for navigation would have all of the various different things that they need, so that the stick itself was also a calculator. | |
So you would uh, in the sense almost of a slide rule, it would give you the ability to do uh variation in math. | |
It didn't move or anything, but on each side of the stick because they were usually um hexagonal or octagonal. | |
They weren't you'd see some of them were round, but then usually if they were round, you knew that they weren't navigational aids, they were more probably surveying aids. | |
And you can also determine by the way if they don't have the inclinometer on there so much, if they don't have the set um rod for an inclinometer, then it probably was not used for road surveying uh for you know that level of engineering. | |
Uh the Romans used them, it was used pre-Romans, you see um uh used all throughout northern Europe, you see it all used, you see it used in um uh by the Egyptians, not so much by them. | |
They have a variant of it. | |
Um but anyway, so uh that then that actually is something else for somebody that's for people that supposedly engineered the uh pyramids, which I don't think that was the case. | |
I think the pyramids pre-date the ice age, but uh the Egyptians have very little in prehistoric um archaeological tools that would uh suggest that they were capable of doing that level of precision. | |
And so um we find much more in the way of archaeological tools for in Egypt for um uh chemistry than we do for engineering. | |
And so uh I won't get into it. | |
I won't get into it. | |
So I actually think that the the uh engineering of the um uh pharaohic uh societies were was not a native thing. | |
There's no so it might have been that these people were refugees, they moved there because there's no pre-existing uh archaeological record of them discovering and then making these tools and then making the next generation of tools, etc. | |
etc. | |
Right? | |
It just is all sort of full blown, and then it it doesn't really jive with what's there in the terrain. | |
Anyway, though, so this is another way to do the uh measuring of the Wu. | |
Uh you can use these for measuring a number of different things. | |
I won't go into the into the details of it now. | |
Of course, it's all basically based on trigonometry and uh right angles. | |
But they're interesting little devices, and uh it comes in handy. | |
I use them around here, okay. | |
So so I use them around here for determining the height of the trees. | |
And so I would measure from out here somewhere. | |
So I determine the height of the trees in order to determine where they're gonna land, and so I can walk that particular area to see you know what's gonna be impacted by these trees falling. | |
So I gotta know this tree is you know uh 150 feet uh high. | |
So I gotta see, oops, my house only, uh oh, maybe I better go get a guy with a truck and take off the thing in chunks as opposed to just falling it, right? | |
That sort of thing. | |
Um they use them around here for uh site surveying on timber property like I own. | |
So you can go through and you can just use these things because they're so rapid, because you don't really have to do the calculations, you just read where the um uh inclinometer puts it back. | |
So if I were gonna set this up, I could set it up so I could just do one quick motion if I were gonna be reading trees all day. | |
So I'd just take a tape and go out from the tree with my tape, know how many feet I was, lean it way the fuck back. | |
I wouldn't get very far from the tree, lean it way the fuck back, and I'd have it written down there. | |
If it if this thing rocks back this far, that tree is approximately 200 feet high. | |
That's all I really need to know. | |
Then I know the then I get the girth of it at the bottom, and then I can make my timber estimate, right? | |
On that based on the species. | |
And so for selective tree uh harvesting, these tools are just great because you can do it very rapidly, you can pre-set them up, so you don't even have to do any calcs or thinking about it. | |
And it's very can be very accurate, especially if you use them for a while. | |
So um uh well worth doing. | |
Uh so they can be repetitious that way. | |
And then for my particular purpose here, because we're in a tight lot and all of that, I don't want these trees falling and damaging things, but I don't necessarily want to go to the expense of having someone come out with a truck to take them down in sections if it's not necessary. | |
But this way I can determine, oh yeah, that's gonna you know beat the fuck out of something that's lying out right here, that sort of thing, right? | |
So uh so I I need to have one around. | |
I'm gonna do some engineering, we're gonna do a road build on the timber property I've got if if we recover enough to do that, you know, all of the things are in uh an uproar now because we're in World War IV, we're getting up to this very um the 24th through the 28th, we're getting up to this very emotional uh part of World War IV, and thereafter there's gonna be a major change. | |
So the whatever this is from the 24th through the 28th, it marks the division that will be set in the future for the past. | |
So they will divide us into two histories, you know, pre-whatever and then post whatever. | |
And so it will be a separator from the past. | |
That's that's the understanding of it at the moment. | |
Anyway, I've got um got to get moving on stuff here. | |
Um, and as I say, it's gonna if the ever grand failure is is it, it's gonna have to be spectacular on the 28th. | |
It's gonna have to take out some some really serious stuff. | |
Um, but you know, uh the reason that we measure the woo is to understand uh where we're making um or can contributing to our uh own karmic path, right? | |
So Steve, Quail may have contributed to his own karmic path by not measuring his the amount of unknown uh involved in dealing with ivermectin and HCQ. | |
They are not without their risk. | |
Ivermectin is reasonably uh safe, hugely safe, uh based on an on an absolute risk uh evaluation, HCQ is more risky than ivermectin. | |
But even though ivermectin is not particularly risky at all, it has consequences on the body. | |
And if you're an old fart, you have to recognize this kind of stuff before you go off and do things. | |
So, you know, it's do no harm. | |
So before you do any of this, examine research, those sorts of things, especially with like zinc. | |
If you're just taking zinc lozenges, those can degrade you because your body's not gonna handle it very well. | |
And so it makes you actually zinc can can participate in the degradation of the vitamin D. And people make um less or absorb less vitamin D or make less vitamin D, both in the winter, but also as you age. | |
And if you're otherwise ill or have any of these other conditions, so as somebody who's been through colon cancer, I make very uh smaller amount of vitamin D than other people, just because of the nature of the effect of that cancer on my body, and so I have to be aware of this. | |
So, you know, you gotta go into this with your eyes open and not do stupid shit. | |
And uh, and I'm not saying Steve Quayle is stupid. | |
I don't want to mean I'm not saying that at all. | |
Uh I think it's inappropriate of him to say he's a targeted individual, although I get his point that yeah, a lot of the older alternative medicine guys have died, right? | |
Um and also a lot of these alternative news guys, let's also acknowledge this, uh, are not fit, all right? | |
And COVID is as a disease, the spike protein, really is uh a sign of susceptibility is any form of obesity of is getting up there to where you have a body mass index that gets you into the pudgy category or higher. | |
Um And unfortunately, that is the case with a lot of these alternative news people. | |
Of course, they sit a lot, you know, they don't exercise, they're not motivated to get out and do it anyway. | |
So I think that contributes to it greatly. | |
And if the if they are indeed, as I now suspect, um escalating the amount of exposure that we're all getting to the spike proteins through all these different ways because they've got to, uh, because we're actually starting to you know get wise on this kind of stuff, then it can be expected that we will have a lot more people uh succumbing to it. | |
I I don't see any evidence at all that we've got uh people being targeted with bioweapons. | |
Um that's just it. | |
I measured the woo differently, is all. | |
And and yeah, you know, there's a lot of woo out there, and yes, everybody is being targeted by bioweapons, but not any of us individually, in my opinion, right? | |
So it's more of a bulk processing. | |
I think that's it. | |
Uh so uh good news on the religious exemptions, keep pushing it. | |
Um, you know, don't take no for an answer. | |
Uh sue the fuckers if they say no too often, you know, get fierce with them. | |
Uh it's it's time for that. | |
This war war is uh really escalating, and we're only a couple of days away from seeing if I'm correct about the fourth through the 28th, and we'll see how we do on that stuff. | |
Anyway, uh, you know, stay focused and and stay measuring. | |
We use first principles, so you know, if it doesn't make sense, back up. | |
Okay, so I don't understand this. | |
Maybe it better back up and and reexamine these assumptions and then try and make a decision, that sort of thing, right? | |
Uh, because the woo is deep and it's gonna get get deeper for a while. | |
Also, the storm is hitting here, it's gonna go until the next Tuesday. | |
We're likely to lose comms, uh, even if we don't lose power that frequently. | |
Um trying to build roads and get other stuff done as well. | |
So uh normally the storm would say, Oh, okay, you can make a video today because you don't have to, you're not gonna go out and do stuff, but I've got to get out and work on tractors and that sort of thing anyway. | |
Um anyway, so stay safe, guys, and uh, like our Swedes says, uh, be good. | |
And like I'm saying now, you know, measure the woo. |