ROI Woo - Explorers' Guide to SciFi World
ROI = education
ROI = education
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Hello humans, hello humans. | |
It's been a while. | |
Today is the 27th of January. | |
Chaos is still continuing around the planet. | |
And we're here for our Roywoo. | |
Okay, so we have many words that are all related. | |
And we have all of our languages in the European languages use letter substitution to transfer a word between the languages. | |
So we have R O Y L for Royal. | |
And these are the pissants and the miscreants that have been causing all the problems, the royals, right? | |
And if we look at this, we discover that AL is an appendage, a suffix, that can be put on a word, and it means of or of the. | |
So in this sense, we have Roy, which means king, and all, which means of the. | |
So something that's royal is a matter of the king or the property of the king, etc. | |
etc. | |
Right. | |
And so you could say, you know, um apocalyptical, right? | |
And it would be of the apocalypse, of the great revealing. | |
So if you attack an A L on it, it means of the. | |
And but we're not actually going to talk about, we're going to talk momentarily about kings, because you get other words here. | |
So you get Roy on the French, Roy, you get Rex, Latin, Italian, and so on, get reg, as in Reginald, as in regulations, all of the king. | |
So regulations are of the king, and uh the king is sitting on you with those regulations and those authorities, right? | |
Um different kinds of words going down into like Ron for names. | |
Um if you go into the and you go into the um the upper part of the Germanic uh Teutonic languages like Swedish and Danish and so on, uh then you can get like Rawl, okay, from which we get Ralph, and that F is the all version for there. | |
So you have of the king, right? | |
Out of Ralph. | |
So Ralph can uh Gramden in the honeymooners was the king of his castle. | |
And I don't know that they chose the name for that, but anyway, but but today, quickly, because I've got all kinds of stuff to do and to get back to work here, uh, we're gonna discuss particular kind of Roy. | |
And our Roy here that we want to discuss is not uh it is in a sense relating to the king as well, because we're gonna use the king's coinage to calculate it, but what we're dealing with is uh Roy Wu, okay, which is you the return on investment. | |
So we're after R O I. So return on investment. | |
And so we can, and here's the the concept. | |
Um human has so many, okay. | |
So all humans are composed of so many. | |
Uh this is like the tribal shamanic way of thinking it. | |
So all humans are so many. | |
All right, and so uh you as a human, you have you're composed of so many. | |
You have so many breaths, so many days, uh, so many meals, uh, so many peas, right? | |
You only got to urinate so many times in your life, and so you're composed, depending on how you want to think of it, and so in a shamanic way or a tribalistic way, um older people used to reply to younger people when they were asked in a tribe, they might be asked, How are you doing today, old fart? | |
And the old fart may say counting the days, right? | |
Meaning that they understand that they're in their uh end of days and they're counting to see how many of their so many they have left. | |
And so um when you start counting it on a daily level, you know you're getting down there. | |
And so this tells the young fellow everything he really wants to know, unless and and without getting into the gritty details of how they're actually feeling, you know, the aches, the pains, the dysfunctions, whatever, right? | |
And so you would say, you know, uh, how are your breaths these days? | |
You know, how are you breathing? | |
How are you sleeping? | |
Because you only have so many sleeps, right? | |
And so humans are composed of so many's. | |
Now, because we have only so many, so many's so many's um, not I know grammatically correct, uh, we need to consider our return on investment. | |
Because you're basically with your life, if you're going to do anything, you're gonna invest some of your breath, some of your days, some of your meals, some of your peas, uh some of your so minis in that whatever, right? | |
So if you're gonna invest your some of your so manies into an ideology, you have to decide how many of my so many's shall this ideology consume. | |
And you must do this so that you don't come to this brutal understanding at the end of your days that you've wasted your so manies on an ideology, as had happened to Mother Teresa, who in her dying days said that she'd wasted her so manies on the poor, that the poor will always be there, and her life was wasted uh doing all this stuff for the poor because she changed nothing, absolutely nothing, in no way altered karma or any of that. | |
So she recognized in her deathbed, far too late to do anything about it, that she wasted her so many's all right. | |
Thus, we come to this understanding, okay. | |
I'm limited resource, right? | |
I only have so many, so many breaths. | |
And thus, what am I to do with them? | |
How am I to use my breaths, my life? | |
How am I to invest my time? | |
Because it is consuming some of my so many's. | |
So when you say I'm going to invest my money and you go put it off in a 401k or some other vehicle for an investment, that doesn't involve your so many's, okay? | |
That's a basically an illusionary aspect of our reality that's um calculated on debt flow relative to the various currencies and and interest rates and so on. | |
If we didn't have an interest uh demanding currency, if we didn't have a debt note as opposed to actual currency, we wouldn't have interest and we wouldn't have floats and these kind of things the way we do now. | |
And investments of these sorts of of your assets, of your resources, would be done entirely differently and yield entirely different results. | |
Okay, you wouldn't get pitily little nothings relative to the growth of the hyperinflation. | |
So no matter how much money you're making on your uh investments, your 401ks, your stock market investments, anything like that, um, if it's not outpacing hyperinflation, you're losing your uh return on investment. | |
You have no return on investment, it's a negative return on investment. | |
Okay, you're the idea is that you invest your money and it returns more money to you. | |
A goofy idea. | |
Uh, if you invest your energy, you're putting your energy into something, uh, you will get an emotional response from that. | |
You'll it'll either be satisfying or unsatisfying, but whatever it is, that emotional response is in the now relative to investing that energy. | |
So if you're out there slugging away digging a ditch, you and your body doesn't like it, and so on, you're getting a response from that investment of your energy in digging that ditch. | |
Now, the return on the energy for digging that ditch might be really tremendous because maybe, hey, all of a sudden you got your your plumbing working and you can actually go and pee in the house, right? | |
So your so many peas are not as inconvenienced as they used to be, going out into the frigid cold to pee. | |
All right, so the idea is that you you should get a return. | |
You should get value from your investments of your energy, your breath, your so many's into any area of your life that you choose to invest these things. | |
And we we we understand this, right? | |
Um, as kids. | |
Uh Someone comes along and they say, ah, you want to go to, you're sitting there, it's a lazy day, maybe it's in late spring, early summer, um, and they say, hey, you want to go on down to the creek and you know, get frogs or you know, throw stones or whatever, and you say, Ah, no, you know, I just don't feel like it. | |
And so your body and your mind and your mental state is telling you that you won't get back value for investing in the so-minis in that activity. | |
And you say, nah, let's let's go do such and such, and you get this enthusiasm, you get a little bit of energy, um, because you're gonna get back something for those so manies that you're gonna go out and invest. | |
And so we in inculcate, we know our bodies tell us that there's this concept of return on our investment of our so manies. | |
Now, at a social level, we have this as well. | |
So we have only so many people, so much resources of any given kind to go and invest in any given kind of activity. | |
So as a social order, it pays us to do our uh to invest our our only so many and get the maximum amount of uh return on that so many investment, right? | |
Because it's coming from a collective. | |
And so we we have to have administrators, and this is where everything goes to hell, because because it's a collective, the administrators have to administer the investment of our collective so many's. | |
Okay, and so our collective social order are the so manies that everybody ponies up for this collective investment, could be roads, could be all different kinds of things, right? | |
And so here's where we get a cultural difference that is is quite telling. | |
Um it is true factually that Mesoamericans at or before uh we see the development uh in ancient uh Rome had wheeled vehicles. | |
Okay, so in ancient Mesoamerica, they had little they had wheeled chariots about or before the time the Romans had wheeled chariots. | |
But we don't see any evidence of wheeled chariot use here in the Americas, and that's quite true. | |
The wheeled chariots that they had were little kids' toys. | |
And they had all kinds of little wheeled vehicles as kids' toys. | |
But they the culture there did not ever translate the use of wheels from a child's toy to an adult's tool, as did the Romans, right? | |
Now, but bear in mind, the Romans had to use the royals, okay, their their leadership, to collect all of the so manies in order that they could, the whole society could build a giant network of roads that the privileged few could use for their chariot travel, right? | |
Now everybody could walk the roads, so there was a generalized benefit from the investment of the collective so manies in building these roads, but the royals they benefited much more because they get they had a had the ability to use the uh superior technology of chariots, | |
which gave them all different kinds of advantages, speed, the ability to get uh information back and forth quicker, the ability to travel with heavy armor of the time in your war, uh and not wear your army out lugging it, all different kinds of of technical superior advantages came along with the with the investment in Italy and throughout much of the ancient world of the collective so manies into road work, which we don't see in the Americas. | |
And and so here we have uh population from the upper reaches of uh the timber land uh timber line all the way down through into Mesoamerica that had wheeled toys for their children to play with, but they never used the wheeled conveyances For their daily life. | |
And so there were, yeah, if you were uh Native American and you had to move uh goods or something, you built a basically a device, a sled that was drugged behind a horse or a or a cow of some form or an ox, right? | |
Some kind of a beast of burden, drug this thing with the two sticks off the back and interwoven and sort of thing. | |
Uh people could ride on it, you can carry a lot of goods. | |
Wasn't it was not easy on the on the beast, and it wasn't easy on the people or goods that were riding on it. | |
But they could not have translated that, given the terrain and everything that we have here in this country into wheeled vehicles that are in general use because there was no ability uh for everybody to invest a collective so manies, or nor could they be convinced, into the kind of labor that would be necessary to build a road. | |
Okay, so we find that the collective return on investment for both the populace and the royals of putting all of their so manies into building roads worked for the people in Europe, but didn't work for a variety of reasons in the for the populace in uh North South America or Africa, right? | |
Or Asia to a great extent. | |
Uh roads in Asia were uh not set up to handle uh wheeled traffic in the main. | |
Um in investment at a social order of investing collective so manies, you want to, as an admin person, uh in charge of getting the best for that investment, because you get rewarded out of that investment, you want to get the maximum possible level. | |
And so we get a uh you want to have a formula where your uh return on investment equals the maximum possible number for the minimum possible number of investments. | |
So you want to get back more than you put in to some significant degree. | |
And so we find that we if we analyze things, even even using the Royals debt instrument, the US dollar or petrodollar, if we analyze things like our collective energy output uh or energy return on investment, we find a shocking thing here. | |
So we have uh diesel or or no, let's just say um uh let's go even further. | |
We'll just say uh crude, all right. | |
I'm not gonna separate them out, okay, and into the Galveston suite or the light crudes or any of that, we'll just take an average. | |
Crude oil uh provides a return on investment uh that runs about a hundred and eighty-five to one. | |
So for every dollar or or uh BTU or energy uh unit you uh whatever metric you want to use, whatever you put into crude oil, recovering crude oil, you get about 185 times the energy back. | |
So if we're talking, if we're just talking BTUs, which are British thermal units, which is an international standard for measuring things in laboratories, but you can also use non-country designated stuff like joules and so on, but those are just usually larger order of magnitude. | |
But a British thermal unit is the amount of energy it takes to raise um a milliliter of water uh one degree, okay. | |
And so um if we have if we're measuring BTUs in here, you get an 80 185 to one when you go to crude oil. | |
If you go to coal, and we're just looking for the the absolute base level there, uh coal is uh nominally thought to be between 75, we'll just say 75 to one, some 75 to one return on investment. | |
So both of these are really damn good, right? | |
Uh so if we're in the oil business, man, we're really cooking, we got a lot of a lot of return on investment there to play around with. | |
Um, not so much with coal, but we've still got a huge level there. | |
If we go to stuff like wind, okay, so uh windmills, they say that that, okay, so windmills you got to be careful of, all these um green energy things you have to be very careful of because they take a certain measurement for the windmills in this calculation, and then they Apply it throughout the whole day. | |
And you cannot do that because the windmill is not going to be necessarily turning for you the whole day or even at all that day, especially these big guys. | |
Okay. | |
So windmills, even the look the best windmill uh ratio you can get, the best return on an investment for a windmill for generating electricity are the little tiny critters you put on a sailboat. | |
Okay, because the motion of the sailboat and the activity of sailboat causes those things to turn far more and they turn at a lower motion, a lower speed of air and at a lower torque, but they still generate electricity far more often continuously than any other kind of windmill that we have, especially the big giant buggers, right? | |
But all windmills together, uh outside of the little so uh structural windmills for grid or mains energy, these things are calculated at seven to one, right? | |
Seven to one return on investment. | |
But that's spurious. | |
That's seven to one when they're turning. | |
But if they're not turning, they're not generating, so you don't get that investment. | |
If you were to take this number and you were to actually uh put it out there relative to the number of hours of operation that the windmills uh work on, it's actually a net negative because it's like uh zero point uh six uh two something uh to one. | |
Okay, so you're getting less energy out of these things than it cost you to make them uh even over their life, and because they just will not run enough uh before the breakdowns to really to warrant messing with them. | |
Windmills are a net negative um feature. | |
You have to really look at how they calculate this stuff in order to get into it. | |
So thus uh all of Tesla's stuff, all of the the Tesla cars, all of the ideas of the um uh all of their energy stuff relative to Tesla cars being able to be charged depend on uh crude oil or coal fire plants or nukes, right? | |
The nukes are really good for return on investment relative to energy gotten out of it, but they're abysmal for return on investment relative to the impact on the environment. | |
They are the worst on return on investment relative to the environment because we don't know how to get rid of the nuke waste. | |
Uh there's schemes and so on, yeah, yeah, I know all of that. | |
Anyway, so um uh we can get down here to basically any other form of green energy is less than windmills, and thus is a is a non-starter, right? | |
Uh, you're gonna have a huge level of investment that will never ever ever be repaid in tokamak construction that's for fusion. | |
Um cold fusion is different. | |
Um, tidal generation is different because you can make something and you know your tide rates are are gonna be uh at a known level day after day after day. | |
So you get if you made a windmill that you put into a floating um container that was affected by the tide, lash down so the tide would flood through it or something like that, a turbine, and you get something like that, then you get a windmill that's running all the time, basically, right? | |
And so you get a better um return than on regular windmills, but you're basically at that point talking about uh water production or hydrodynamic electricity production, and those can scale on up into the 35 and greater uh to one levels of return because of the fact that they're continuously running once they're installed. | |
And it's known technology, you don't have to invent a lot of stuff, etc. | |
But so basically you see that that crude oil and nukes and crude oil and coal and um hydropower really are the way for humans to go, and we shouldn't be messing around with all this stuff here. | |
So it begs the the question of why are we screwing with uh return on investment uh that is so piss poor, and why is this being driven around the whole planet? | |
Well, and it and it comes down to um uh Klaus Schwab's um World Economic Forum having captured a hundred and nine uh countries, governments, and controlling them. | |
And so thus taking their politicians out of real working for the people mode and putting them into working for Klaus Schwab, just driving these agendas uh regardless of the return on investment. | |
Okay. | |
Uh so I'll finish up with this real quick on the return on investment and then some housekeeping things. | |
Um The absolute best return on investment has been shown these last couple of years because those people that invested their own time that invested their so manies into researching and not taking the shot are alive, are going to live, are going to be pure bloods will be able to continue. | |
So that return on investment cannot be equaled. | |
And so understand that a return on investment for education, for educating yourself, not schooling, not paying someone to school you, but learning something, understanding something, you know, grasping it and living it, there is no greater return on investment for any given individual. | |
And collectively, because we've gone through these last two years of shit, we collectively are in a return on investment for our education. | |
And there is no greater level of return than what we're going to get as all of these people stop listening to their schooling, stop as Mark Twain says, I refuse to let my schooling interfere with my education. | |
And they will learn, they will educate themselves, even the slow learners, they'll get it, and then we will have a collective society return on investment that will be fantastic for the misery of these past two years that we've undergone. | |
So, in that sense, our energy, our so manies that have been put into these last two years, whether you were fighting it tooth and nail and researching it and clawing your way out through the lies and all of that shit, um, or you were just even sort of going along with it, | |
our in our uh so manies that have been put in collectively in these last two years are gonna yield a tremendous, cannot be overstated, cannot be equaled for I don't know how many lifetimes of humans. | |
It may not be able to be equaled for a thousand generations. | |
Think of that. | |
There's gonna be so much change as a result of what humanity's gone through for these last two years, and that change will occur in our lifetimes. | |
Even mine, even my short lifetime, where I'm I'm not yet counting my days, right? | |
I still know that my so many's are beyond my number to count. | |
Um but uh but even so we're gonna have so much change uh as a result of these last two years that it won't be able to be equaled, likely, for a thousand generations because of the sheer mass that what we're gonna throw off and the return on investment of this education that we're gonna get for our so many's uh having been put into this. | |
Now we didn't we didn't desire this, the royals, they the you know, the leaders, the Klaus Schwab group, all of those guys, they shoved us into this, right? | |
And so we're there, but because we're there and our so many's are involved. | |
Well, we got to get a got to get something from them, right? | |
Other than the pain and the agony and the shit we've had for these last two years. | |
So we will take education from it, and we will alter our behavior and we will alter the fucking planet. | |
And so we now see that the royal, the royal boy, uh Jay Trudeau, has fled, okay. | |
Uh he's he is uh apparently nowhere to be found, he's hiding in a bunker, he's he's jump shipped to Costa Rica, whatever. | |
There is, you know, a million and a quarter people going to Ottawa to hold the government uh accountable, to hold a siege of the government in Ottawa, and it's gonna, it's a Canadian revolution, right? | |
So the first American revolution happened in 1776, and then we fucked up all of us guys, and we let the communists get in and so on. | |
So we've got to have another revolution here in America, in the United States uh now. | |
But even before we get there, the Canadians are gonna start are starting in on theirs. | |
So Canada is changing now, okay? | |
So Canada's collective so minis are already returning a return on investment because Trudeau is shitting His pants wherever the hell he is, right? | |
They're coming for his ass. | |
And everything's changing. | |
And as a result of Canada, the so manies in Australia will change. | |
The so many's in England will change. | |
Everywhere as a result of what's going down in Canada now. | |
This is going to put all the royals in a boil as they understand that if they don't get their well, they're not able to get their shit. | |
It will not stop what's coming, right? | |
They can abdicate all it'll be is uh a matter of time before they're hunted down and um charged for their crimes because we've all put our so manies into us into this, they've got us all whipped up, so they've they've taken all the normies out of normie land and they're all over here with all of us paranoids and shit, | |
all of the woo people, and so there's a lot of us, and all these normies are starting to stomp around like they're woo people, and the next thing you know, they're gonna say, okay, I want that son of a bitch over there to pay for for what he's done. | |
And we'll start seeing that, as we're seeing in Canada, with the uh freedom fighters and the truckers going to siege Ottawa. | |
Uh hopefully it'll end peacefully, hopefully the government will collapse like a balloon with a bunch of holes in it, uh, filled with uh you know injections, and uh then it'll just start rolling along. | |
You know, once one popula does it, all the other populaces are gonna see it too, and they'll do it as well. | |
So um I'm doing that here in Washington State. | |
Okay, so this is sort of housekeeping. | |
Uh I'm doing that here in Washington State. | |
If you're a Washington State homie, uh you can follow me on Twitter uh until they kick me off, and then I'm also on Telegram, and I'm posting that information that I discover with open source intelligence tools on the various uh miscreants within our state government. | |
So I'm gonna post everything I can find about uh Jay Insley and all the other fucktards in our government that have got us here now, right? | |
And we'll start working our way down through all of the prosecutors, uh revealing their ties to uh George Soros, who tells them no, don't prosecute that, right? | |
Uh we want those people out there on the street causing these problems. | |
So keep them out there. | |
And so all of these kind of guys have um they have dereliction of duty charges that they can face, and we can get at their surety bonds and get them kicked out of government. | |
We can basically collapse our government here in Washington State by applying the laws uh that govern government that that um deliver to us our return on investment of getting here this far, we can use those laws against the bad guys and get them out. | |
They got put in one by one, we can take them out one by one. | |
Uh and that's what I'm doing uh in sort of in my uh spare time now. | |
I'm not able to really make videos much. | |
It's uh been like uh I think maybe seven or eight days since the last one. | |
I'm a caregiver, so a lot of cleanup, a lot of extra duties, and it's uh, and then there's also all kinds of um uh business stuff going on. | |
Uh, and then I'm fighting this giant war against the globalists and the bug, and we're about to fight the giant war against the uh central banks as they collapse and take the uh money system with them. | |
And during that process of collapsing, uh we're gonna get huge return on investments uh for the crypto world, which they are which the bad guys, the central banks are right now uh trying to control desperately because it points to their system being so lame and fucked up, right? | |
Because if you've got a return on investment on your on your crypto purchases that are outrageous because of their hyperinflation, well, there you go. | |
That's what's gonna happen. | |
And now one last note is that the Biden people are take trying to claim the the best ever economy, best recovery ever, and so on, and they're doing it off of hyperinflation. | |
Never mind that you know half the people are out of work voluntarily or not, never mind that there's everything closed down, all the middle class is decimated or is devastated. | |
Um never mind all of that. | |
They've got the best ever economy for a best ever president who's had the best ever more votes than any other other um fucker. | |
Anyway, so um good return on investment, the best possible return on investment for any human is simple. | |
It's easy to figure, absolutely easy to figure. | |
Education. | |
Every dollar you invest in your education will be returned to you many, many, many, many, many folds. | |
Okay, if you're given a chance to uh buy a book or a burger, get the book. | |
Go without the burger, right? | |
Um, that kind of thing, right? | |
Put your put your money into yourself. | |
Get the return on investment that kept you alive through all of this shit, that kept you questioning, uh, that kept you working, and uh and uh but you know, actively involve yourself in your education and boost your return on edge on your investment. | |
You've only got so many investments you can make. | |
So guard your so many skies. |