All Episodes
Nov. 21, 2021 - Clif High
14:46
one point woo: nucleation and bonds - Explorers Guide to SciFi World

kick'em where it hurts - woo their 'nads

| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Okay, hello humans, hello humans.
Part two.
There's a point to this if you'll think about it.
A one point, ha ha ha.
Anyway, so nucleation, the point of nucleation that we observe as humans, pulling design patterns in from universe in through our senses, and then making formula out of them, and rules and laws and all that kind of stuff.
And understanding is that nucleation causes a carry forward effect.
It causes a spread out effect, which is carrying forward in time, right?
Because time is the essential sequential delimiter in our lives.
So we use, we extract these design patterns.
So for instance, we use nucleation in cloud seeding.
Is to basically create clouds through their particulate nucleation, not energetic nucleation.
So they basically come on up and they deposit a particle that's in a chemical state that causes the effect that would otherwise happen with cosmic radiation coming on in.
Anyway so we uh long before chemtrails, we do nucleation.
We've understood nucleation throughout all history of our species.
We've used nucleation, we use nucleation in a sense of uh finding one point and carrying it into the future with us, and we can you can even apply these terms to the location of fire and carrying a nucleus, a coal of fire, and uh um being able to carry the fire forward,
and then we discover how to create fire in a thing of the moment through various different mechanisms, and it's no longer necessary for us to uh put the energy, put our biological energy into carrying forward the the heat energy in the form of a coal to initiate another fire, right?
Um there are many things that we can't um easily or that there's reasons why you don't want to easily um jump over the process.
And so there's uh times when the carry forward is necessary and is a vital part of it all.
So in biology where we have yeast, um we can actually dry the yeast out into little flakes, and so that we preserve them and carry them forward and then reuse them to initiate a bread and so on, right?
Uh but uh you can also do uh as we do with sourdough, which is not using a yeast, using a natural yeast, and that is that you carry forward the sourdough culture as opposed to drying it out.
You can dry it out, but then you have to recreate the whole sourdough, it's got to go through this long uh process.
It's not instant yeast recreating in your bread.
But there are other characteristics other than the leavening that are desirable to carry forward, and so we can nucleate our bread in the in that we use this concept of taking a small amount of it and in some way carrying that forward to use in our next bread, carrying forward those characteristics.
And so we create uh bread mothers.
This is the bread mother for the bread I've got in the oven at the moment, and it's uh starting to really grow, and so I've got to get it back in the refrigerator, but because I don't usually let them grow out.
I usually put them in here uh right after the um uh uh forming of the gluten in the main mixing because they're gonna be in the refrigerator for potentially weeks.
This this uh mother is for uh regular old sandwich bread.
So that is a nucleus for the next loaf, carrying forward true some aspects of the leavening, but that's not the point.
The point is to carry forward the um the uh characteristics of the glutens that are already formed, uh slight sour tang as well, it's not really sourdough though, and uh the structure of the material itself, not the leavening, although it will in the next loaf provide some additional leavening.
But again, that's not the primary point.
Um the point is to carry forward the gluten bonds, to carry for the forward those bonds that have had time to age and strengthen and so on.
It makes the next loaf of bread that much better and um more resilient, more robust, and so on, right?
And as well as having greater flavor, it brings the flavonoids.
Many flavonoids take time to develop and so on.
Now, we as a social order, and this is the whole point of these two videos, oddly enough, not only to introduce all this idea of one point and all that kind of stuff, especially to the zoomers, but to introduce the idea of carrying forward bonds, okay, because our social order is constructed on the idea of bonds.
And this is where the current power structure is extremely vulnerable.
Every single one of our elected officials are ELs here for whatever state agency for whatever federal agency, all of these guys report back to some agency that is designated in an agency department, uh, many different kinds of agency is a particular legal word, but let's just say a subset of the of the government, right?
And so you could have local government, you can have uh, you know, this would include county as well, and then you have state and you have federal.
Okay, so all of these guys, all of the employees for each and every one of these entities, and including all of the sub-entities of each of these, are required to have a bond.
All right.
This bond is a carry-forward that preserves the structure of our government.
And so, but here is the tactical and strategic value of knowing this information.
That if you're pissed at any one of the employees, you can attack the employees, you can attack the laws and shit that they're that they're working on, but they control that entire structure.
But there's one area of this whole process they don't control, and that is the insurance companies.
Because their bonds are held by very few insurance companies.
Very, very, very few insurance companies hold all of the bonds for all of the employees for the local, for the county, for the state, for the federal government.
Okay, so these guys hold these bonds, the insurance companies, and they so you may have a local county official at a school board.
Maybe he's got to have a $20,000 bond.
Okay.
You know what that bond is for?
$20,000.
That $20,000 bond is held by them.
They pay a fee to the to uh the the government that they work for, the it would be the local in this case, pays a fee to the insurance company that those guys will uh uh obviously that will um to pay twenty thousand dollars on behalf of this fucker right here, should um things go bad in a lawsuit against this fucker here that you've got a got that you're pissed at, and he's on your school board, right?
And so this is school board fucker number one, and so school board fucker number one has got a $20,000 bond, but every single school board uh person has one of these.
Every single county commission, every single fire department guy, any elected official will have one of these surety bonds, one of these certainty bonds.
In Washington State, in my state, these bonds are controlled by a revised code of Washington 48 or 42 uh.08.
If you go look it up, it that whole section tells you all about these bonds, what they have to have, uh even how the payment has to go and all of this kind of stuff, right?
Also, how to claim against them, how to file a pro se lawsuit uh in the local jurisdiction against these people right here, not against the individuals per, not against the individuals as individuals, but as their role as an individual acting in that role, claiming malfeasance, and you claim it against their bond.
So you're claiming it against their insurance company, and their insurance company is in a real world of hurt.
The the practical reality of this is that when public employees are sued, these fuckers right here usually pony up attorney's fees to throw away those suits.
Those attorneys' fees they figure are part and parcel of their relationship with the insurance company, but there's always caps on them because most of the nuisance suits they get rid of in the insurance companies are not really hassled or the bonds are not uh subject to claim at that point.
Now, this $20,000 bond is a finite uh limit.
If that $20,000 goes away, they're screwed.
The that employee cannot work without this bond.
If that bond cannot be held uh valid, then the state law says that that person cannot be an employee of the state.
Cannot, will not, shall not, it won't happen.
And so they gotta just be kicked right out.
So the the county of the state or whatever.
This can be taken all the way up to the governor.
They will provide attorneys, the state most frequently will provide attorneys and attorney assistance to everybody down here.
But they will only be able to do it on a onesie twosie basis.
They will not be able to cover them in mass.
If you have a bunch of people suing all these lower level functionaries for malfeasance going directly against their bonds, primarily making a claim, a monetary claim against a bond in a court that's appropriate to the jurisdiction, appropriate to the government, so federal government, state, county government, and so on.
If you file a uh pro se um attack on their bonds that goes back to the insurance company, the insurance company is gonna get really uh anxious really quick.
They're gonna just start freaking out, especially if there's a lot of these things going against those bonds.
So school board fucker number one might have five or six parents pissed at him.
That would be five times uh a tax against his bond.
Any one of which can eliminate his bond because you get that twenty thousand dollars.
And here's the kicker there.
Say that you sued the fucker for a hundred thousand dollars, each of you, each of those five parents, right?
Hang on.
Each of those five parents are suing for a hundred thousand dollars.
The horror not for the insurance company is that the insurance company is bound by the language to continue in this relationship as long as there's a legal court case going, even after they have lost this twenty thousand dollar bond, told by a court to surrender the twenty thousand dollar bond from the insurance company to one of the parents, the first one that got there, right?
But that that doesn't end it because they've been sued for a hundred thousand, that means there's eighty thousand dollars that that school board fucker number one has to compensate directly.
So he's not covered anymore.
He's got a pony up $80,000 to parent number one.
And he's got four more other parents that are suing his ass for a hundred thousand dollars for the same shit he just lost on to parent number one.
And the insurance companies and their the actuaries are just puking their guts out.
Oh my god, there's a trend developing here.
We're gonna be wiped out in in uh three months, two days, and twenty-nine minutes.
The actuaries are like that.
So anyway, this is the whole point of this.
One point, right?
Attack the one point at which they're vulnerable.
Use your strategy and your tactics to get them where they live, which is this relationship back here.
You can't attack the laws that they can throw up in front of your face because they create that shit.
But they don't create this relationship.
And the there's only a very few, very few large insurance companies, and the large insurance companies are super stressed at the moment, super stressed.
Accident rates are way up, fatalities are way up, payouts are for 2021 are up outrageously, and the insurance companies are already in a world of hurt.
They're not gonna want people in my state to be going at these bonds by uh filing these pro se cases.
Also, real quick here, note something.
That if you file a pro se case, or you can file an attorney if you've got the dollars, go ahead and get an attorney and and I would recommend attorneys start advertising this service.
I'll I'll set you up on a on a suit against these bastards, you know, get you some money at the bonds.
Uh, but um the thing as a pro se the the the court system is designed and required to assist you in curing your case.
So if you get it wrong in the beginning, they help you fix it so that you can effectively sue.
So if you get your words wrong, don't worry about it.
They will admonish you, they'll they'll some of them might be harsh and fierce because they're really stressed and so on, but nonetheless, they have to help you get the words right for your suit.
And unless they tell you you can't, you can repeatedly sue even after you've lost, you can just change the wording and go at it another way.
So basically, these guys are fucked.
Okay, as long as you get at the the bond and attempt to claim money from them, and that's the way you want to get it, you know, your your uh compensation for damage, and you just have to, if you want to sue for a million dollars, you've just got to figure a way to substantiate that you've been damaged to a million dollars to that level.
And then they would have a shitload of uh world to hurt on a twenty thousand dollar bond and a million dollar judgment, and they would be out of business right away.
And that there would be a vacancy on that whatever seat, right?
And so this has been done, it's been tried in the United States.
Uh apparently some parents have had school boards, you know, kiss their feet as soon as this was brought to their attention.
They're just kissing their feet.
Say, we'll do anything you want.
Anything you want, sir, anything.
So, have at it.
Um, you know, try it on the governors that are pissing you off too.
They have bigger bonds, because you know, they're in a in a bigger point of um uh the nexus of of all of this, but it doesn't mean they're not vulnerable.
I've got to get in, uh take my mother back to the refrigerator, and uh check on the loaves I've got in there.
And so this was the end of part two, and there is a point to that.
Export Selection