dojo->Dinner with Trump
DAMN DUDE! Yes, a bit clickbaity.
DAMN DUDE! Yes, a bit clickbaity.
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Hello humans. | |
Hello humans. | |
Okay. | |
Click. | |
There we go. | |
Okay, hello humans. | |
Hang on a second. | |
It's cold. | |
It's early in the morning. | |
It's the first day of spring. | |
March 21st. | |
For us. | |
The Russians set spring and start that on the first of March. | |
Which anymore, I think maybe we'd better set spring at the first of April. | |
Anyway, it's very much winter here. | |
And so we're going to have a little discussion here. | |
And so let me set it up for you. | |
The title doesn't really describe what we need to discuss, but you wouldn't look at it if I said, hey, there's some really nasty disgusting things we need to talk about. | |
But here's here's the setup. | |
So I'm gonna go into town here. | |
I'm gonna have uh uh meet a guy for a few minutes, we're gonna discuss some business, have maybe have a sandwich, cup of coffee, that kind of thing. | |
It's uh early um late in the afternoon, early evening, that that kind of a thing, right? | |
Um it's a nice pleasant day, and so I'm gonna meet him at this restaurant so that we can do our business. | |
Say it's about our our road, he's gonna work on our road. | |
Um anyway, and so I I go to the restaurant, I pull up, I I get out of the car, I walk on inside, and it's like um holy fuck, there you are sitting over there having dinner with um uh Mr. and Mrs. Trump. | |
And I like, well, wait a second. | |
And so, you know, it's like you're standing right in the door, and you just you you your brain just does not process this, right? | |
And so um, but it's like okay, there you are, dude. | |
You're sitting down, you're having dinner with them. | |
Apparently you've just just gotten there, you know, the waiter is taking orders and all kinds of stuff's happening and that kind of stuff, and there's appetizers and such, but haven't settled into the main dinner yet. | |
It's like okay, and so I scoot on over to the side and I see my guy over there, and he's all whoa, this is kind of weird. | |
And then I look over in the corner and there, there shit, there's uh there's Putin, you know, doing some talking with some people sitting down. | |
It's like, okay, this one hell of a restaurant in my little town. | |
Anyway, uh so but it's sort of it's sort of all makes sense. | |
It's all gonna gotta flow here. | |
Um I sit down, we we do our ordering, I'm gonna have the broccoli and beef, um, and a big slice of bread on the side. | |
There they do good bread here, and uh it's like okay, this is good, I got my coffee, and uh, you know, because I decided to have an early dinner as opposed to uh to a late lunch. | |
Uh anyway, though, so we're sitting there and everything's going fine and just about to get into the coffee, and then bump, bump, and you hear this noise. | |
Next thing you know, the whole place is just flooded. | |
Come on, come on, the moisture in the air. | |
Uh flooded uh with ninjas. | |
Ninjas just pouring out of every fucking place. | |
It's like, what the hell? | |
And uh, but you're sitting there, and uh the ninjas are going after Trump. | |
Okay, and so next thing you know, you know, Trump grabs Mrs. Trump by the hands and starts swinging her in a big circle, and her feet are going tunt and the heads of all the ninjas, ninjas are flying right and left, and you see it's a big damn everybody's kung fu fighting thing, right? | |
And uh, so I'm sitting there, you know, not my fight, ninjas ain't attacking me, and then the next thing I know, there's a ninja flying at me. | |
Okay, and it's like, well, okay, he's coming at me, and so I'm gonna have to deal with him, right? | |
And then you in in the process of dealing with that ninja, you look over and you see that uh uh Putin's over there judo chopping like uh right and left and the ninjas are flying back and forth, and it's like okay, you know, this is just getting really weird here, right? | |
And you're over there doing your best with that steak knife on those ninjas, and you know You got a couple of them pegged to the table, but uh there's a lot of these fuckers. | |
And so um it becomes a situation that when it all calms down and we're all left standing, and there's just like, you know, uh kill Bill kinda ninja bodies just in parts everywhere, right? | |
Just disgusting mess. | |
You don't want to clean up. | |
And these waiters are over there saying, okay, you guys had better leave some damn big tips. | |
Uh and you know, you're sure that Trump's gonna do that. | |
He's got he's got a little change in his pocket, right? | |
And that's what we're actually here to discuss, is the little change in his pocket. | |
Not actually having dinner with Trump, and yes, it was a little clickbaity, but you have to understand exactly what's going on and get the nuances of what's happening here, right? | |
So we're all there. | |
The the ninjas are are dead or dying, or those that are able to have limped off, you know, we kick some serious ninja, but um Putin's over in the corner, you know, Trump's standing by the table, uh, Mrs. Trump is finishing off a couple of the guys that aren't getting out of the building fast enough. | |
And and the cops come. | |
Okay, and so the cops say, All right, what have you people been up to? | |
Meaning all of us guys standing around, right? | |
And then uh you have to start explaining yourself. | |
Now, at that point, it becomes obvious if you describe what it occurred to you and everybody else in this restaurant that there was an attack, uh vicious attack on a single individual within that that um uh setting, | |
and that yes, you participated in the response to that attack, but no, you did not pre-plan, you had no uh intention of being involved, uh you had no um allegiances, you were not paid to be there, you weren't in any way a uh I mean you were having dinner, you personally were having dinner with Trump, so of course you're gonna defend him, right? | |
I mean, you're sitting there with him, right? | |
Uh that kind of thing, right? | |
So, but but us, the rest of us that are just scattered around Putin and all these other guys and myself standing around saying, basically, what the hell just went down, uh, they may accuse us of complicity of uh conspiracy, right? | |
And it's not true. | |
It's very much like the January 6th thing. | |
Bunch of old boomers just wandering in saying, hey, look, you know, the doors are open, let's go see. | |
And truly, when it comes down to a court, they will find, when it actually comes down to a court, you will find that you can go through maritime law, black's law, all of these things, and an open door is an invitation. | |
All right, so we won't go into that. | |
That's not our point here. | |
But anyway, so we're back at the restaurant. | |
And uh we're being accused of a January 6th style uh conspiracy. | |
And you say, Well, wait a second, fucker. | |
Yeah, of course I'm gonna be responding because these guys are coming at me. | |
I don't, you know, uh that they may have attacked someone else first, that someone else may have been a target, and that I'm defending myself from the same set of enemy, um, you know, does not in any way make me a an official accomplice to this individual because we've had no prior connection. | |
There's been no direction on either of our part to the other as to how to do things, no coordination. | |
We do not qualify as an association under the RICO laws. | |
Whereas all of those ninjas do, because they planned all of that, they all got together in a big huddle and planned it, and then they timed it all, and they all got around on the restaurant, those up on the roof, and those coming down the chimney, and those hiding in the uh the soup pots, all of these different kinds of things. | |
They work that shit out ahead of time, and they're doing it all for a single central person and a goal, okay? | |
None of which is true of us. | |
This is happenstance. | |
This is a natural human reaction that the enemy of of my enemy is my friend, right? | |
So if I'm being attacked by ninjas, whether or not they intend to attack me is immaterial. | |
In the moment, if I'm being attacked by them, and I'm battling those guys, and Trump's also over there battling those guys, then he sure as fuck is my friend, as I am his friend, right? | |
Even though I didn't necessarily coordinate any of this shit with him, just like you. | |
And so that's our story, and we're sticking to it because it's factual. | |
And this is what we're gonna have to present to the judge. | |
Now, the judge in this case is gonna be the court of public opinion. | |
And of course, we're talking about in one letter layer of metaphor. | |
We're talking about the Ukraine situation, right? | |
Trump and Putin are not working together. | |
Putin happened to be attacked by the same set of ninjas that had been attacking Trump. | |
These ninjas are the um uh evil army that works for the evil enemy. | |
The evil enemy here is, as we all know, the Kazarian mafia that owns all the central banks. | |
And curiously, we're here to talk about the elements of dinner, okay. | |
So I was having uh broccoli and uh like Korean fried uh steak, right? | |
And so and Trump was having noodles and something else. | |
I didn't quite see before the table went explosive and dishes are flying, and you know, it's uh giant food fight with knives and shit slashing in between and bullets flying around. | |
Uh so uh, you know, you can be forgiven for missing a few details. | |
All right, so we we're at this point now where we've got the court of public opinion saying, hmm, no, I don't think that no matter what the ninjas are saying, I don't think Putin and and Trump planned that. | |
They just happen to be at the same restaurant at the same time, right? | |
Um they were attacked by the same set of ninjas. | |
Uh the ninjas happened to, they were there to attack Trump, and then happened to see another one of their enemies, which was Putin, so they directed some of their other guys to go over there. | |
All of which is coordinated, all of which is a uh actual conspiracy, uh coordinated by these central bank fuckers, some of which live here in our country, right? | |
We know this. | |
Uh now that we know this, they're exposed, we'll tell other people, everybody'll it will get really pissed at them, and then they'll we'll do stuff and they'll all go away. | |
So we'll win simply because there's so many of us, and we'll just grind them down, right? | |
Um anyway, so uh we're there having dinner, and we're attacked by the central bank. | |
Uh as Trump has been attacked by the central bank. | |
Now, I get a lot of email, and a lot of the email is are people expressing concerns about, okay. | |
So, what's gonna happen? | |
How does this all go down when we've defeated all the the evil ninjas, the the uh quote uh warriors for the for the bad guys, and um and and then we go and we deal with the bad guys, then what's gonna happen? | |
What is after that, right? | |
Because all of our lives, everybody has lived under the the slavery of the central bank on this planet. | |
Uh the central banks have conquered all the countries almost. | |
And uh in my life, you know, so all of the battles we've seen here, Korea, Vietnam, it's all been to establish central bank um uh control over those countries. | |
Uh all of the central banks are owned by the Rothschilds. | |
The Rothschilds are uh Kazarian in their roots. | |
They've wrapped the Jewish religion around them and claimed Jewish racehood in order that they might protect themselves by saying that we're Jewish and you you're being an anti-Semitic uh person attacking us, and they're not Jewish. | |
Uh they're not Semite, they're not descended from the House of Shem, and they don't descend from the House of Judah. | |
Um they may practice the religion but uh of Judaism, but they concentrate on this area that is um rather disturbing, which is uh separating the Torah from the Talmud and the Zohar and concentrating on the Zohar's interpretation of the Talmud, which gives you a really weird bent on things. | |
And they see themselves, the the Khazarians see themselves various different layers of um uh delusion and illusion and so on, but they see themselves as the dominant race on the planet, uh the smartest and so on and so on, which is not true. | |
Um they're very manipulative and they uh uh have no qualms about destruction. | |
So they're the ones that urge the uh Taliban to destroy the old statues of uh Buddha, this kind of thing, right? | |
Um These guys are very manipulative, they're about the whole planet, and we're all fighting this ninja battle, and this whole thing goes back for literally centuries, centuries, actual centuries. | |
So and they suppress history, right? | |
And so if you look into history, uh electric vehicles uh were we started trying to invent them in 1830s. | |
We were successful in 1835 with a um uh a train. | |
We had an electric train car then, and all of this electric uh vehicle um development from the 1830s up through the 1900s was successful, it was um uh exactly what was needed. | |
Uh we had a very nice clean uh approach to things, and it was deliberately derailed by the central bank uh in 19 before 1911 as part of the central bank coming into existence here in the in the United States in the form of the Federal Reserve, they had to derail all of these different kinds of inventions and cause all of this disruption of history. | |
I can't get into that now as to the whys, because there's so much uh there's so much evil to look at that it will take us a long time to do so. | |
But there's so much stuff that we need to know now that we need to concentrate on some interesting aspects of this. | |
The what now, right? | |
So the central bank dies. | |
We're postulating here. | |
Sometimes, say in uh 2022, we get to the point where and it keels over. | |
And then um uh it gasped out its last breath sometime in early 2023. | |
So we can take as our marker 2023 for the beginning of the post uh central bank period, okay. | |
So this is the period of the USA freedom. | |
Because this is um this is our third central bank that's gonna gasp out and die here, all right? | |
Because they've they've taken us over twice before. | |
Andrew Jackson was the most recent one before this one, and he killed the United States second central bank. | |
I think they even called it that the second bank of the United States. | |
Anyway, these guys are evil because what they do is they do this little bit of magic, they even call it Babylonian money magic, that's their own term for it, uh, where they take and they uh through murder, mayhem, extortion, and bribery, they get the local officials to grant them a license, an exclusive license to create legal tender. | |
This tender is a debt note. | |
They charge the local officials, the society, an interest on doing this. | |
And so forever, and since you are forced to use these instruments to settle all your debts public and private, you are forced to be a slave by them having murdered or blackmailed or in otherwise coerced your public officials to granting them this license to steal, an actual license to steal. | |
And they set out and they agree to steal only two percent of your life, okay, but they're stealing two percent of everybody else's life. | |
And they they call this uh this theft inflation. | |
And they are going to uh control the inflation, they say, and keep it at 2%, because that's what they agree to do, and in turn, they you know in uh also for this license, they agree to keep everybody employed to keep enough of the legal tender circulating under appropriate circumstances that everybody gets employed. | |
Now bear in mind that they control the legal tender. | |
So if they and it is all flow, it's all flow through the system, okay. | |
So as they flow it, and this is their whole point, as all of our effort, all of our effort and labor and capital, the that that stuff, the the, you know, uh so you make the effort to make a you have an idea, | |
you make the effort to make a steel saw, you take that steel saw out, and you use your labor to fall over that giant tree, and that giant tree becomes your capital because you haul that giant tree uh and a bunch of you and uh your friends chop it up into wood and it can be made up of lumber and it can be made into a house. | |
Okay, so this is basically how things grow uh organically through the social order. | |
Now, what the central bank has done, let's put them up here is the Kazarian Mafia. | |
This is the central bank as well. | |
Okay, it's not quite the same as a deep state. | |
We'll get into that later. | |
What they've done is they've convinced everybody to allow them to produce this legal tender that has to has to monetize all of your effort. | |
And they get to rake off 2% of all of the flow going through this nozzle that they've created. | |
Okay. | |
And so they become wealthy, they become incredibly wealthy because there's so many millions of us. | |
And we're you're born into this system, so you can't object. | |
You don't know. | |
By the time you understand what's going on, you're trapped in it. | |
And we're here now. | |
So it's like that fight in the restaurant, right? | |
You're sitting there having your noodles and you know, got a nice little bowl of squash there, and they're bringing over some dumplings and bam, bam, bam, everything's going on. | |
Next thing you know, and and you're just born into that moment. | |
And you're in a fight, and you don't know why, who, what, how it's happening, all of this, you're just receiving blows and all this stuff's going on, and this is life. | |
Okay, so uh the Kazarian Mafia, the central bank, they're dying now. | |
Because usually what happens is before we catch on to what's going on here, because you know, all of this, they flood the place with with ninjas, kill a bunch of us, and then walk off, and there's not enough of us left around, and we call these things world wars and stuff, and those are planned. | |
There's not enough of us to know what happened, to be able to tell a coherent story and keep it from generation to generation and so on. | |
And that's their plan. | |
They alter history continuously. | |
These are the name stealers, by the way, the Khazarian Mafia. | |
You'll hear me call them that as well. | |
Okay, so they take their uh their approach to these things in terms of stealing all of this, and and they've built it into this system, and they love systems. | |
So the Kazarian Mafia, they're not really um, they're very, very, very clever, and their minds and the way that they do things, especially as they concentrate through the Talmud, it reinforces certain kind of mindsets. | |
Um, and uh, and also the fact that the the Rothschilds, okay, so the Rothschilds by a family name owns our central bank, okay, owns the Federal Reserve. | |
They own all of the central banks. | |
These people are inbreeders, they deliberately marry uh first cousins and second cousins in order to concentrate wealth through generations. | |
This also has a tendency to concentrate uh certain genotype and phenotype characteristics. | |
And these people are very, very good at complex uh deep maze-like thinking, but it's not very clear thinking. | |
So they've thought very deeply about inflation and how to work all of this. | |
You get all these weird ass theories they come up with, modern monetary theory, all of this kind of stuff. | |
And in the end, though, the mechanics of the universe, of all of us acting in our own self-interest that we call an economy, is going to overwhelm them because their math was basically fucked up from the beginning. | |
Because if you take two percent out of every dollar you create, and then I have to to get you to create another dollar in order to pay off that two percent interest that's left over from the first dollar that I I borrowed from you under this weird ass arrangement that I had no say in, | |
then over time what happens is even if you held that at 2%, and we've been in this a long time, even if you held that at 2%, the purchasing value of the money degrades because they give you a dollar, but really it's only 98 cents worth of purchasing power. | |
Then they give you that next dollar, which is itself only 98 cents worth of purchasing power, but you also have to take two cents out of that next dollar in order to pay off the two cents of interest in the first dollar. | |
And so it it gradually degrades all of the money over time in terms of the purchasing power. | |
And then they keep printing more and more and more of it, which adds the quote inflation, which is the actual um uh controlled, it's not artificial, it's designed. | |
So the only product that these people have, the Kazarian Mafia, the central bank, is inflation. | |
Their only product is um a license to steal from you uh a set amount. | |
Now we know that that's never been held, and we in the in the in my life, in my life in the in the 1970s, they reckoned that inflation was approaching 20%, and they set uh their interest rates to control it. | |
Now, interest rates from the central bank are kind of like the throttle, the the valve on a hose, right? | |
And so they throttle it back and stuff. | |
So it's entirely under their control. | |
So the depressions of the of 1914, of 1920, of 19 uh 28 through the 1930s, all of these depressions, and then in the 1940s, and then in the 1950s, uh huge terrible depression in 1957 through 58 as part of the geophysical year. | |
All of these depressions are engineered. | |
They just crank them down on the on the valve when they want this to happen. | |
Because we're living in this artificial system that they have imposed on our economy. | |
Bear in mind our economy has nothing to do with inflation, it has nothing to do with um uh the currency or any of that. | |
If we were trading in eggs, if so, if eggs were our currency, and everybody just had eggs and we traded eggs uh for all our goods, and so a car cost X number of eggs and so on and so on, then there wouldn't be any inflation unless you got more chickens to produce more eggs, right? | |
So there would be this this uh natural product. | |
In this system, all they do is invent it, turn up the spigot in terms of digits in a in a computer, and instantly we've got vast quantities more inflation. | |
And it is not not beyond their control now. | |
And also, or yeah, it is not within their control to be able to actually control inflation because of the demand part of the equation that they don't control, so they don't control 100% of the consumerism, although they wouldn't want to, and their last attempt here to control it was to kill off a bunch of us so that they could start the whole system all over again. | |
They decided to kill us all off with needles this time to try that because they couldn't get a nuclear war going because you were having uh dinner with the obstacle, which is Trump. | |
And so maybe he was telling you about that before the ninjas interrupted, you know, as to how he got them to not have this nuclear war and what's going down. | |
Uh you'll have to get get back to me about that. | |
Anyway, though, so um here we are. | |
We don't know what our inflation rate is because they're lying all the time, continuously. | |
It's in their interest to lie, and they never tell us anything close to the truth. | |
We never get to allow to audit the Central Reserve or the Federal Reserve, we don't get uh allowed to audit our own fucking gold reserves, and so there's all of these kind of things, questions unanswered. | |
We're gonna come into this period of secrets revealed as the the Cazarian mafia is removed, where they're being removed in the big battle in Ukraine because the ninjas that attacked uh Putin underestimated him in his judo chopping. | |
And so um uh and is over the shoulder throws, those are wicked. | |
Um, so all of this is happening, and we're gonna come into this period of time when it is a question of okay, then what? | |
So what happens then, right? | |
Well, here's what happens. | |
We eliminate this the central bank, we also instantly eliminate this uh forever slavery to the debt that is artificially created by them having murdered politicians and and you know, raped their wives and destroyed their children's lives and all of this in order to convince those that remained alive to sign them into this lucrative deal, because that's how the Cazarian Mafia works, right? | |
Okay, so what we're left with thereafter is our effort, our labor, and our capital, all of which go to producing rewards for us, value for us, right? | |
We just won't have a Federal Reserve note to trade in to represent these items. | |
What we will have is whatever currency we come up with after that. | |
Now we have at the moment, we have gold, we have silver, we have like Bitcoin and stuff, all of those guys, okay, and then we even have things like land, fuel, um, all different kinds of stuff. | |
That's what they call in kind trades, okay. | |
That's the first form of money. | |
You know, I grow some wheat and I trade you some wheat for you know a couple of steaks, right? | |
That sort of thing, because you're gonna feed the wheat to your cows. | |
All right, so that sort of thing, right? | |
So now, in it's helpful to look at things historically. | |
And so we can see right now that if you go and you charge up a particular kind of a Tesla car, you can get 310 miles uh range on that car on a full charge. | |
But from a 1904 uh aluminum-bodied electric car, which had been developed since 1830s up to 1940s, or 1904, and it was using a lead acid battery, so no corrosive uh lithium, no hyper costs or any of that. | |
Now that that thing from 1904 would get you 615 miles on a fully charged on a 50% charge because you never dropped your battery below 50%, so you wouldn't damage it. | |
So that was a 50% charge. | |
So, you know, so we haven't made great strides, right? | |
Tesla is not the end-all be-all. | |
It's just a really slick uh more crude implementation of an electric vehicle. | |
If you looked at the electric vehicles, they had in the 1800s, they had higher torque on lower um electrical draw that we can produce now, even with the kind of motors we're building. | |
But they had a disadvantage in that we didn't have the infrastructure that was built for the gas cars. | |
So uh so they their top speeds were reduced because we didn't have pneumatics, we didn't have really good tires and this kind of thing, right? | |
So they were basically trying to do all of this stuff with wagon parts. | |
And in fact, the first uh electric vehicle, this train, was called an electric wagon. | |
Um, so I I get diverted. | |
History is really cool. | |
All right, so here we are. | |
Uh we're leaving the the this one last era of the of the third central bank here in the United States over this, I think next year. | |
I think it'll die this year and and completely gasp out next year, and we can start 2023 as the peg for our post-central bank era. | |
Now it always takes seven years for societies to rebuild after the central bank comes on in and basically harvests them and rape them. | |
The reason that we had this occur, Andrew Jackson kicked out the central bank out of the United States, but it still existed in Prussia. | |
It still existed in Ukraine. | |
That's its sense that's its uh source. | |
Okay, so now we've got a situation where they really pissed Putin off. | |
All right, the central bank uh existing out of the Kazarian Mafia, which is the Ukrainian Mafia, came over and took over all of Western civilization and then turned its attention back to Russia because they're really pissed at Russia because of this old historical thing going back about 1200 fucking years. | |
Um anyway, and so they they turned their attention to Russia, they got they the all they sent all these ninjas over into the corner of the restaurant to try and attack Putin, and Putin's been ready for him, and he's just kicking ass, okay. | |
And um, and it's all sort of busting out now, and and it's not planned. | |
This is just the natural spontaneous uh way that life works, and in fact, programmers do things like neural net programming and try and take advantage of just such natural interactions. | |
Uh and it and it because nature does it best, and that's just how this is all happening. | |
That the the Kazarian Mafia's central bank is dying now. | |
They don't have the cover of having killed us all off with shots. | |
They don't have the cover of the nuclear wars. | |
They they're as much as they're trying to gen all this up, right? | |
So they are uh really um going to perish this time. | |
It will take us a long time to get this to occur. | |
Like multiple years. | |
So while in the seven-year period of time, while we're rebuilding our social order, as the dollar has died this coming uh year, or the Federal Reserve note, not the dollar, uh we'll be cleaning up the Cazarian Mafia and digging out all this stuff, secrets revealed, all this sort of thing for years and years and years, for decades. | |
Uh it'll be really cool in many regards, it'll be horrific to go through, but it it will be very cleansing to the humanity and so on, it'll change our perspective on things, all of all good stuff. | |
Okay, so it's basically we've got to clean up all the body parts, and in doing so in the restaurant, we're gonna make it all nice and everything, and so it'll take us a while, but it'll be good when we're done. | |
Now, uh as we go through forward, we'll get here to the point where the dollar dies. | |
Now bear in mind that every depression, every recession has been engineered by the central bank just by throttling on the flow of the debt instruments they create. | |
Nothing to stop them. | |
There's no organic reason that we should ever have a depression. | |
Um in those periods of time when we had a gold-backed currency here in the United States, we had less than 1% inflation over the aggregate of all of those uh years. | |
Um we had three central banks counting the uh Federal Reserve that we're under now. | |
So even though we've had a multiple hundred year history as a country, we've not had a multiple hundred-year history without a central bank. | |
So in those hundred years or so that we had no central bank here in the United States, we had no inflation to speak of. | |
The only inflation that ever occurred was when we had a new gold strike. | |
1845, uh, you know, the uh California gold strike in Alaska, that kind of thing. | |
That inflated the economy, and we had a boom, but it was never followed by a depression, because there was no withdrawing of the money once it was put into circulation. | |
It just circulated more and encouraged more growth, that is to say, more gold going through the s the system, right? | |
Uh so different than when the central banks control the flow and they actually shut down. | |
Now their whole point is to shut down and throttle off the debt because you still the instruments, because you still owe them the debt, and they throttle off the business activity knowing it's gonna shut you down, so they come and then they claim the debt and take your property and take all of the effort, labor in the form of capital that you've built up. | |
All right, so now that understood, we're coming into a period of time where we won't be using the ferns. | |
We won't be using the Federal Reserve notes, uh, debt instruments will use some form for some period of time. | |
Might be months, uh, might be weeks, I don't know. | |
It might be very, very, very brief, okay. | |
Um it depends on how uh pression uh uh our self-organizing collective is relative to what is needed in that transition. | |
And I think they're very prescient. | |
So I'm not gonna uh second guess as to how long this might be. | |
It could be a long time just because of the nature of getting things to happen with hundreds of millions of fucking people. | |
It just takes a while, right? | |
Uh just look at how long it takes for people to sign up on truce social. | |
That's because you gotta do that shit right in order not to have the crap going on that you got with Twitter, etc. | |
Um, everybody's gotta be validated, etc. | |
So on, you know. | |
So uh when everybody actually votes and they don't just dump in all the valids, it takes a while, you know. | |
Um anyway, so uh we're gonna go through in solid money, sound money forms that will arise on their own, and then at some point we will have a new dollar. | |
When we have this dollar, I'm of the opinion that what will occur is that we'll go back to like 1912 prices. | |
And there's reasons for this that I won't go into at the moment. | |
Okay, but uh, well, okay, let's do it uh just a little bit. | |
Um if you had to go to the store and buy eggs with gold, so buying a dozen eggs with gold, you would you'd get a they they you have to give them a little tiny piece of of gold because an ounce of gold, let's say an ounce of gold was two thousand dollars. | |
It's it's somewhere up in that range. | |
I don't follow the metals on that level. | |
It's it's probably less than that, maybe it's more. | |
I don't know. | |
Like I say, I don't follow. | |
Last time I heard it was like in 1900 range, so I'm just estimating it's about two thousand. | |
But so say you had to take your ounce uh and slice it up to buy eggs. | |
Well, you'd be slicing off pretty damn small e at f uh say even local eggs here at $4 a dozen, but say you weren't buying the premium eggs, I don't even know if they exist at $10 a dozen, right? | |
Maybe you're in New York City and it costs ten dollars a dozen to get the premium uh high beta carotene eggs, you know, uh natural range eggs and stuff, uh maybe it costs ten dollars. | |
Well, ten dollars out of there in terms of an ounce, that's a small little chunk of that gold, okay. | |
So uh if we were to consider that uh that ounce of gold is two thousand ferns, Federal Reserve notes, central bank uh horseshit money, but when they actually print dollars, they go back to 1912 and that uh period of time, then we could just put a decimal point there and say that that ounce is a 20 dollar gold piece. | |
Okay. | |
And so it becomes relatively easy at that point to start revaluing what's gonna go on. | |
So it if if we then institute uh a dollar that is pegged by Congress, it's so many grains of silver, or so many grains of gold, which would I would think would be a better choice because we've got more gold, and silver is gonna be uh subject to industrial demand as opposed to gold being mostly um monetary demand. | |
Uh But if we did that and we said that that uh an ounce of gold was worth 20 US dollars, not ferns, they're still worth 2,000 ferns or more than that, might be worth 20,000 ferns for all I know at that point. | |
Um because the fern is dying and they're printing these things out like I'm mad, they're just digitizing every damn thing they can to try and stay alive and stay out of jail because once all this stops, we all look at them and say, hey fucker, what's going on here? | |
Bear in mind that in the past it has been brutal, brutal on the central banks when when people recognize what's going on, and it leads to pogroms where people mistake Jews for the owners of the central banks, and it's just like everybody gets killed because you're just so pissed at all the central banks and all the shit they've done for hundreds of years. | |
Bear in mind the same people that created the central bank also created Freemasons and controlled Freemasons. | |
They control all of the secret societies, created all the secret societies, even those that are in China. | |
Uh they controlled all the revolutions, they controlled the Bolshevik Revolution, they controlled Mao's revolution, Vietnam, Korea, all of this shit. | |
It's all we can all lay it at their feet, right? | |
So people get really pissed at them. | |
Anyway, so we'll go back to this. | |
Now, if we get to this standard here, then prices are basically going to drop back to 1912. | |
At which point, a dozen eggs costs you 12 cents. | |
Um gallon of milk is 14. | |
Um steak is 13 cents a pound. | |
Okay, so and then it's stable, like at those kind of levels for a long time. | |
And so we get this reverse effect, this flip effect, when we when we get these guys out of the picture. | |
And then we get a truly remarkable situation. | |
And that is we get these always, we get these innovation booms, okay. | |
Bear in mind, in the 1800s and 1830s, when uh we were starting to develop electric cars, and we developed the first electric carriage, the electric coach there, uh, that was successful, which was this little train. | |
Um, we didn't have central banks. | |
We we every single time we be we get into these innovation booms. | |
Okay, so imagine what we can do now, uh, because we have so much more knowledge. | |
Okay, so um, in the period of time that the central banks are eliminated, we get stable prices that persist for dozens and dozens and dozens of years at that level of stability. | |
No price fluctuation to speak of because the costs don't vary, right? | |
And so we might get uh let's just pick a hypothetical, say we drop down to instead of saying we go back to the 1912s, let's just say we went back to 1970s prices. | |
There's reason to suggest that as well. | |
Then we'd be looking at like uh 80 cents a gallon for diesel fuel and a slight variation for uh gas on either side of that. | |
Also bear in mind, when the central banks go away, we don't need the taxation at the level of the state tax, not the federal government. | |
We don't I'm not talking income tax, I'm talking about state taxes on things like gasoline and and all of this kind of shit. | |
Because the state is also under the burden of the central bank here in the form of depreciating purchasing power and rising interest rates continuously. | |
So the central bank is ripping off the state and ripping us off individually, but it compounds our individual misery because they're ripping off the state as well. | |
So instantly, when the central bank goes away, all this goofy ass tax shit at the state, county, etc. | |
goes away. | |
We have to re-engineer our entire tax base in order to support government. | |
So see, we're in for some serious work here over these seven years of rebuilding our social order. | |
But we won't have that continual drain and drag that we have now in the form of the central bank through these weird taxes and all of that. | |
And yes, I do expect the IRS to disappear. | |
Their only point is to support the rape of the populace through ferns. | |
If we don't have ferns, we don't need the IRS. | |
There's other ways that government can manage money, and it's actually much more effective for the government to deal with money, uh uh intake on money in the form of tariffs than any form of taxation. | |
Tariffs on goods, okay. | |
Um, and not for moralistic purposes, but but for other purposes, and I won't go into that now. | |
Uh so this is where we're at now. | |
We will be going forward without the central banks, Without their uh raping us through the parasitism of the vampire on your throat, sucking all of your life out. | |
We're gonna s retain our own la uh effort or of thinking and so on, our labor and our capital, and we will grow in these seven years after the death of the bank will be very, very, very cool. | |
Now, we're in this period of time uh in 2023, uh up through 2023 that will be the active death of all of this, okay. | |
So, in my way of thinking, we're in the detox period that we're gonna detox from some of the shit from the central bank so that we can get up and start getting healthy again. | |
Now, it's not gonna be an easy couple of years. | |
It could be fascinating, but it's gonna be tough. | |
So you have to understand that predictions aside, we can be certain it's gonna be worse before it gets better. | |
And so you you, in my opinion, uh you should plan on things getting worse before it gets better, but it won't be worse in the form of like a giant depression and stuff. | |
As soon as the central bank dies, we can then start getting on to things very, very, very rapidly. | |
Uh it'll be shocking how rapid things will go from that point forward, okay. | |
Uh, but getting to that point, it's going to be difficult because we've got to go through the death of this business right here, and it will affect all of us through the destruction of this whole system. | |
So, the way, in my opinion, to deal with this during this period of time is to get your effort, your labor, and your capital out of the debt system and into something else that may do you some good, right? | |
And you want to start with the stuff at the bottom that does you good on a daily basis. | |
So buy an extra gallon of milk, you know, buy extra meat, buy extra whatever the hell that you need on a daily basis. | |
Uh put away a little bit extra money for the electricity, it's gonna cost you more. | |
Put away a little bit more extra money for the fuel, it's gonna cost you more. | |
This will continue for some period of time. | |
It and at least I think until we get to the end of 2023, uh, and by then I think you'll see some stability and will be rising out of things in a very um uh good way. | |
Now it's gonna be chaotic, it's gonna be exciting, it's gonna be um uh scary, frightening, etc. | |
But it need not be personally frightening if you are actively altering your life to take advantage of where we're going. | |
Okay, so plan on these things occurring, take advantage by finding opportunity, finding value in things. | |
I personally get old books and try and discover value that's been left behind, like these uh battery systems that powered these guys to that level when we're only getting uh these kind of uh mileage out of the same kind of batteries. | |
That's why I do the Boskowitz, okay? | |
It's an ancient book, but I'm recovering value out of people that thought about the ether, and I'm doing it in the form of magnetics. | |
And I've I've made some really interesting discoveries, and I've got a couple of patents on these things. | |
Uh so uh you can recover value, you can do things to to keep yourself occupied to grow, you know, you use the mental effort to use and then your labor to grow capital, and you go forward in this period of time uh based on things like recovering value. | |
So, like my friend um uh Joe. | |
Uh Joe and Jean-Claude uh are like treasure hunters, okay? | |
So but they're they educate themselves. | |
Joe's uh learned to fly a helicopter so he can go and scout large areas. | |
Also, I think he kind of kind of likes it. | |
But anyway, um uh so uh you know he's one of those guys he probably likes roller coasters too. | |
Anyway, though, so um they're educating themselves and they're through and so through the effort of thinking they and their labor, they're gonna produce capital, even if they don't actually find treasure, they are they're getting rewards for the um value that they're adding to universe through their efforts now in this treasure hunt. | |
But they are also in their in their way trying to recover value that's been left behind and and discarded as we went forward because these guys were uh fucking with history and denying us true knowledge about who we are, where we are, what's been going on, all this kind of stuff, right? | |
Uh that's basically it. | |
So this is uh that period of time of the USA freedom. | |
It's like the revolutionary war was not a uh um particularly stable economic period. | |
We're in one of those things now because we're in a revolutionary war. | |
The people are rising, they are revolting against the Kazarian mafia planet wide. | |
Humanity is revolting. | |
The central banks, this time, we will crush them, and we're we're already, Putin's already eliminating their stronghold in uh Kazaria. | |
And so the last time when Andrew Jackson got rid of the bank, he had not the capacity to go back and kill the route. | |
But they understood then that they needed to poison that route, but there was nothing they could do about it under the circumstances. | |
So we've had these hundreds of years of misery because we didn't have the ability the last time that we got rid of the second bank here to do much more than just tend to our own affairs. | |
And but this time it's it's gonna be uh radically different. | |
And so I look forward to all of these, all this shit that's gonna be going down because it's leading us through to a period of time where we're gonna have sound money. | |
And I I really want to see what uh the United States is like, what America is like, what the world is like when we've got sound money and we don't have uh vampirism uh on all of humanity. | |
I think that's about it. | |
Okay, so now um. | |
Yeah, I think that's it. | |
There's all different kinds of stuff we can go into. | |
It's gonna be very exciting, uh, but uh we've all got uh shit to do, right? | |
We've got stuff to do. | |
Um because we're at that point. | |
So I expect that uh maybe we'll get back to 1912 prices to where uh you'll be able to buy a house with an acre of land for 3,500 US dollars. | |
Now that might still turn out to be you know seven million ferns. | |
I don't know. | |
Uh but if you're not in the fern system and you're in the dollar system, well, hey, you know, that's that's just what's gonna happen. | |
So as the ferns die, they're gonna pump more and more of them, so you can expect that the number of ferns relative to any of this stuff here is gonna rise. | |
That's so hyperinflation is here, guys. | |
They're gonna try and keep it contained to about 10% per month, and that's how bad it's gonna get. | |
Uh so to to guard yourself, come up with some new form of through your effort, labor and capital, new form of ferns if you're stuck in the fern system. | |
So get another income stream if you can somehow. | |
Um, and if you every single fern you get that you don't actually have to spend right then, start at the bottom. | |
You know, you need uh you need food, fuel, uh this kind of thing, and work your way up, right? | |
Uh so if you got extra ones, put them into Bitcoin because you can buy some individual satoshis and build yourself a bitcoin. | |
The wallets are free, you can download them to your device, you keep all of this shit to yourself, blah blah blah. | |
Go see uh Joe and Jean Claude's stuff at Beyond Mystic in terms of how to do cryptos if you're unfamiliar, and you know, uh work at it. | |
You're gonna have to do stuff because it's um that time now. | |
Um, yeah, time for all of us to get to work. | |
Okay, alright. | |
Stay woo, people. | |
Uh it's gonna be really exciting and it's gonna be very frightening. |