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Aug. 12, 2022 - Clif High
29:15
clif high's Narradigm Investigations - ecology

the Mother WEFfers and your ecology https://knowledgeofhealth.com/what-if-cancer-was-already-cured/ https://purebulk.com/products/clif-highs-pure-sleep @clifhigh on truth social https://t.me/scifiworld0 on telegram

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Hello humans.
Hello, humans.
Yep, sounds working.
Okay.
Okay, so today's the 12th of August 2022.
We're going to talk about ecology and the greatest threat to the planet Earth and all of humanity.
Which of course we all know the ending of the story is the mother wefers and their associated giant octopus that controls all of the governance structures on the planet.
You know, United Nations, all of this stuff.
The central banks.
I'm not going to get into the details of who they're related and how they're related.
the mother weppers are in the rothschilds and the central banks are essentially all the same thing just under just looking at different groups within their overall structure with different names So the World Economic Forum is a convenient focal point for discussion about the octopus that controls the planet, because we have Dr. Evil there.
So if you don't know Dr. Evil, go go Google or search for Dr. Evil Klaus Schwab, that phrase.
Okay, so this is a discussion about the central banks and why they are the greatest threat, or the World Economic Forum, you know, whatever face of the central bank structure is the greatest threat to the ecology of our planet.
And that has to do with the with the degrading purchasing power of the dollar.
So they start out in 1913 and they create their dollar, and one dollar is actually has a purchasing power of approximately 99 cents because there's interest attached as soon as you've got it.
Now the interest, so this is so the interest on this flows through uh into the government because but they're actually taking that from you, the people.
So you get one dollar and you end up with 99 cents worth of purchasing power.
Now you don't actually see this connection, right?
Um, because of the way that the scheme works, where they loan the money to the government, the government hands it to you, the government assumes the debt, but they they indebt you to pay it off.
So you're the chattel, you're the cattle.
Uh that's why they call you a goi, uh, which means beast.
Um so what occurs is a disconnect in the mind of the user relative to the uh currency.
Uh and the uh shrinkage of it through this artificial tax called inflation.
And they've always had that tax, and usually it would run about 10%.
So they were taking a dime out of every dollar in purchasing value from you, and you just didn't notice because you were always dealing with the same uh species.
So you'd always get a dollar, and it wasn't like you would get a portion of a dollar and then a smaller portion so that you would notice, or it wasn't like you would see that they were changing the numbers up here so that this is you know now a million dollars because it now takes a million dollars to buy a uh Starbucks, right?
Something like that, uh Zimbabwe style, um, which we're all coming to.
That's why that all of this shit's happening now.
Uh so now we're in 2022, and we've come to the situation where our dollar being issued to us.
So you come on out, you get one dollar, and you have less than uh one cent.
So something less than one cent of purchasing value that you can use.
And if you go back and look at what you could buy in 1913 for a dollar uh Federal Reserve note, as opposed to uh today, you will be absolutely shocked.
So in 1913, you may be able to eat very, very, very, very well for two, three days on a dollar, uh, if you were judicious, right?
And this was a period of time up until uh 193, this was a coexistence between the Federal Reserve note, the actual um gold and silver dollars that were issued by the government.
And so there was a coexistence of those two.
1933, they they take away our ability to use gold, and then over the 1950s, they take away our ability to use silver by extracting it from them the money surreptitiously.
Uh, they told us they were going to do it, but they did it really slow, so nobody noticed.
Okay, so that's the setup.
Now we note some really interesting things that between 1933 and 19, I say, 58, all kinds of weird shit happens.
Uh, not only the space aliens and not only the um sudden rush at the 1956, 57, and 58 to get down to Antarctica and get something, whatever the fuck was going on down there, not only those kind of weirdnesses, but a more subtle weirdness came into existence.
So from 1933 to 1958, we come up with this idea of planned obsolescence.
Planned obsolescence.
The idea that you make products cheaper today than you did yesterday, and that they have less lifespan tomorrow than the ones that you produced the day before.
So that you're always making cheaper goods.
Up until we get to this point here in our in our story, the it was denigrated and it was reduced, but between 1913 and 1933, for that 20-year period of time, we had still had a cultural focus on uh craftsmanship, uh substantiability, um, long-lasting.
Uh so a tire you bought in 1933 for a vehicle was better than that same tire for the same weight of vehicle produced in 1913.
The tire in 1933 had more uh engineering into it, more science involved, it had a longer lifespan.
This was the case of all kinds of goods.
So uh early um construction of any kind of consumer device was much more crude and much more unstable and much more uh needing of uh extra effort in the 1913 than 1933, because we still had a slop over of actual value that we could put towards greater engineering, greater science, and so on that is not this immediate return.
Okay, so that's the issue.
So the central banks, the that so this is all done by the Federal Reserve Bank, right?
The the evil Fed.
The evil Fed here um engineers in this interest scam into the money, and it has these consequences.
The consequences include planned obsolescence, and we note that when planned obsolescence came out in the in the 50s, really emerged as a driving business model in the 50s, a driving corporate business model.
We get this uh we we get the shift from glass to plastic.
Why is that?
Because plastic is cheaper, it breaks down.
You can and it's lighter weight.
Uh when you have less purchasing power, and so say by the 1950s, we were uh at uh maybe we were at 60 cents out of every dollar you could actually uh buy something with, right?
Um so we'd lost like 40 percent of the value in the money by that time.
Uh so getting into plastic, it costs less to ship and handle plastic.
One of the things you'll note is that over time, if you were to go and track it, the purchasing power of the dollar relative to energy, relative to not electricity, but relative to energy in the form of oil uh or electricity off of hydro power, you could use that as well.
But uh energy off of oil, as the purchasing value of the dollar decreases, and the thus the nominal dollar amount needed for a barrel of oil rises, we get into this point where they're doing anything and everything they can,
the central bank, I mean, to incentivize through our government uh planned obsolescence and a conversion to um towards more inexpensive and less long-lasting items because of the energy involved.
And you can't get a uh you can't fiddle with energy.
So when the when the purchasing value of the dollar drops, um it you have to use a lot more of them for this one commodity above all others, and that's energy.
Uh let me note that the most famous uh person for uh energy in the in all of humanity is Nikola Tesla, and they tried to replace him with Einstein.
They tried to denigrate Tesla because Tesla wrote a little book, it's a great little book called something along the lines of um the effort to get more energy for humanity, something like that.
So it can't be more than 80 pages.
Uh really cool thinking.
Anyway, but they tried to replace him with Einstein, who is a plagiarist and a doofus and a and a fuzzy-headed thinker, and they were tried to replace the ether with um quantum mechanics in the 20s.
Now, in the 1920s, we had a we had a bunch of economic crises that caused uh the Bolshevik Revolution, caused the uh corruption of the German state uh as a result of the the Weimar hyperinflation and so on and so on, right?
So all of these crises were occurring because we'd lost that first 20 cents or so in the purchasing value, and it was becoming noticeable because prior to the 1920s, the value of a dollar or or the value of a purchase of energy stayed stable.
Then we started getting into the um the 1920s, and oil and and uh its purchasing price starts really jumping.
And we you can check me on this.
I think maybe it went from like 10 cents a gallon to rise very rapidly up to like 25 or 30 cents a gallon for uh crude oil.
And um that that's the ultimate measure is uh is like West Texas crude or something like this, right?
A steady, stable supply that you can track over time.
If you track it, you find that energy costs uh, while they fluctuate, they're really on this gradual uh rise relative to the failure of the dollar, and now we're at this peak.
So we're now at the peak of everything, the peak of bullshit, the peak of political chaos, the um uh the peak of inflation, the peak of hyperinflation, uh the peak of our current civilization based on this fiction, the the debt, the dollar, right?
The fern, the Federal Reserve note.
So uh this peak of stuff occurs as we are at uh the peak of no purchasing power left.
Um so it's the absolute bottom of the Federal Reserve note.
Uh terms of purchasing power, and in terms of how many of them are on the planet, it's the peak.
We've got so many trillions of dollars printed and and promised that we don't know how many we've got.
So right now we're getting into uh a discussion about the ecology of the central bank and how they've incentivized things like turning uh converting all products from glass to plastic.
Well, this has a terrible side effect on everything.
It's polluted all of our landfills with plastic that we're now gonna have to go and recover once we get beyond the death of the fern and get back to solid money.
We'll do that, we'll start cleaning up things because it'll be easy to recycle the plastic into oils.
Okay, and then we're gonna convert back to glass because glass has all these exceptional values.
One of the things we're going to discover is that you can't ship effectively, it's not good to ship food products and plastic.
That's why we've got microplastics in our gut and our lifespan is decreasing.
Well, that was good for the mother wefers, but we don't want them, they're gonna go away, so we need to make it good for humanity again and get back to uh more effective ways of dealing with things, but we can't do it now because we can't afford it.
Now we're gonna we're gonna cross down to a threshold here on purchasing value very quickly now that we've reached this particular uh threshold or or break point.
And so we'll go um Zimbabwe, Venezuela, you know, super hyperinflation uh is occurring now.
It's just temporarily abated as they're holding and doing everything they can for the midterms, these techno communists that are ruling everything uh through uh for the the mother weefers, okay.
Um without the techno communists, without the people that are technical, the mother wefers have nothing.
They can't do shit because they're so fucking stupid and and uh they have no real power, they don't own anything, they don't produce anything.
Anyway, so part of the planned obsolescence includes, as I was pointing out, energy is the key, is this shift over to green energy.
A lot of it is they we can't afford to pay for real energy extraction.
We can, because all we have to do is get back to sound money and throw away the debt instruments and get rid of the wafers in the central bank, and we're good.
We start over and and we're roaring, right?
And we will have learned our lesson this time.
Anyway, though, so we now have these mother wefers out there insisting that everybody go green with these giant fucking devices, these super huge windmills.
Now, let me note that those windmills will never ever generate enough energy to pay for the energy it took to create them.
The energy that it took to create them was 100% diesel driven.
Okay, it was diesel trucks, it was it was still steel mills, it was uh mining through diesel equipment and so on and so on.
If you add a it's called zero uh zero sum uh zero net sum accounting, okay.
And if you if you go through and you start at the very beginning and you add up all the energy costs of creating these giant fucking windmills, and then you look at how much energy they actually produce, uh you find that it's a loss.
Right from the get go, we never should have made any of the fuckers.
Wind is just too unreliable and it never generates, and these things are too unreliable, they're too unstable, especially when you scale them up this way.
And then we start looking at the cost of destroying the windmills in or and we can't recycle them.
That's the whole thing.
When they go bad, they burn the fuck up, they they put lithium out all over in the environment, they pollute the area they're in, they kill birds, and they don't generate energy.
Uh so uh, and they use vast quantities of energy just getting the fuckers set up.
Not eat not even their creation, but just the okay, so it is true that there are categories of windmills that have been placed that will never generate enough electricity to pay back the cost of placing them there, let alone building the fucker, right?
So the placement of a giant windmill offshore takes so much energy in the form of hauling the thing, boats, uh stability, the building of the base, all of that.
That the windmill will never ever ever last long enough to generate the energy that it took to put it there.
This is also true of most photovoltaics, most of the of the solar panels.
Because those panels will never generate enough peak energy to pay for their own creation or through their life cycle.
Uh, you know, because they use so much diesel to create them.
Uh they use so much diesel to extract the aluminum, all the ores and all the metals and stuff in them and so on, that they'll never ever ever make back as much energy as it took to create the fuckers.
And we can't get rid of them.
We can't can't do anything with them.
And California landfills right now are filling up with these things like mad.
And they pollute the ground in a very dangerous way.
So uh, so there to a certain extent, uh photovoltaic is as bad as nuclear waste.
Worst in one way because it's so spread out everywhere, so that you can dump these things in almost any landfill.
Whereas nuclear waste, you've got to have a permit to shove that stuff in a hole in the ground somewhere.
So, anyway, so you see that the it is the incentivizing, okay?
It was the reduction of the value of the purchasing power of the dollar that led the central bank to incentivize planned obsolescence through the governance control structures at the time through 1933 through 1958.
If you go and you look, you see the idea rises with uh management consultants, management design people.
This was the um flourishing of applying analysis to our corporate structures.
And so we get people like Peter Drucker.
Now, none of these individuals that worked through that period of time were necessarily bad individuals, but there were only very, very, very few people, like uh Lyndon LaRouche, who examined the concepts of what we were doing and why, who understood that planned obsolescence only existed because of the um uh the fern scam because of the Federal Reserve debt note scam.
Um that was driving us this way.
And here we are in 2022 at the ultimate end of it, when every fucking thing is crashing.
And so our generations here are very lucky because we get to throw this thing out and start over and build clean from there on.
And we can do it with some smarts because we now have the tools for analysis, the computers, and all of this kind of stuff, right?
And uh, and we're gonna have a much more better, uh much larger, educated, awake population that'll say, no, no, you know, you get your central bank the fuck out of my country.
That sort of thing, right?
Anyway, so um this whole thing, though, the ecology of it all, is also why the central bank, uh, the Federal Reserve, the uh Mother Weffers, the World Economic Forum, the UN, the global control um matrix that is all over humanity is our greatest ecological threat.
And it's a very immediate ecological threat because these fuckers think that the world's heating up, that we're going into climate change.
Well, climate is change.
We have weather day to day to day, and it changes, and when we lump it all together, we call that climate.
Dumb motherfuckers, dumb mother wefers.
Um, they're trying to to trick you, right?
They're trying to say this is XYZ and it's not.
That there is no um rising global temperatures.
In fact, we're going into a fucking ice age.
We know this.
The rivers are drying up, um, uh, we're getting the lakes drying up, we're getting the rivers drying up in Europe, and the and Lake Mead is drying up because of lack of rainfall.
Well, why is that?
Beyond the weather manipulation and all of that shit, beyond all of that, there are general trends that go along with solar minimums in which we have increased glaciation.
And glaciers form by vast quantities of rain being over that area where it gets real cold and it freezes.
That means that rain is not over your usual area.
Or that means in like Europe, the rain that that should be rain is coming down as snow and it's freezing up there and thus is not filling your your rivers.
And so there's this general trend that way, right?
This is part of our climate, which is change.
And we're going into an ice age.
And the mother wefers in charge of all of this shit are telling you that you're going into hot and balmy.
Uh no, it ain't happening.
And so we, and you cannot survive an ice age on windmills and photovoltaics.
You need to have her key fucking diesel engines outputting as much as you can and digging deep for as much diesel as you can get.
Um and this is part of the biosphere.
This is what the universe wants us to do.
Which we've gone into some of that in the in the past, and we're gonna have to go into it in a great deal as to how we actually fit in to the biosphere.
And how the mother wefers have, had you been thinking about Malthus, uh, who's a limit to growth guy, who is a pastor, not a scientist.
He's a pastor.
Vernotsky was not only a scientist, he was a historian of science.
Uh, and a real smart thinker.
Umthus was a um uh uh manipulated uh by his circumstances.
He's this English pastor fellow, and he was promoted by uh the wefers all the way through history because his uh uh growth limit model, which um uh is bogus.
It's absolutely non uh non-factual at any level.
Um, but it's promoted as though it's a good working theory.
Um is being used by the mother wefers to tell you guys we've got overpopulation, we can't provide the food, and we're destroying the earth and all this kind of stuff.
All of that is horseshit.
Absolute uh uh delusional horse shit that they're trying to get you to eat, along with the bugs.
Um these people are motherfucking uh evil, all right, and they're motherfucking stupid they are peak stupidity uh for their own purposes as well i mean they're just diluted uh we'll go into that in in probably great detail at some point okay so um the rivers are drying up the climate is in fact change it is weather changing we're going into an ice age uh just the other day on the on Monday the Pacific coastal current changed I watched
It changed with some vigor.
Instead of a north-to-south flow, it's now south-to-north.
And this is one of the signs that winter's approaching.
This is, let's see, that would have been the 8th.
So this is about 21 days earlier.
Okay, so this is 21 days earlier than two years ago.
So the general trend is for the current to change earlier in August.
And the issue is that when it changes, the current doesn't flow from north to south anymore.
I'm talking about the water current out here.
It flows from south to north.
This drags, so to speak, a reverse current of air across the top of it that heads north to south and brings all our weather in for the winter along the coast here, which then feeds most of the continent.
And so we're going to have an early and sharp move into winter, quite certain.
And it's probably going to be exceptionally wet.
We have very, very, very few days of sun out here this summer.
Anyway, so it's changed.
The Pacific current has changed.
And we're moving into winter again.
This winter is going to be really, really, really brutal.
And probably everybody except for the mother weffers and those who are still listening to them is going to really get a little bit of a heads up that, oh, yeah, you know, shit ain't right weather-wise.
And we're going to be experiencing a lot of different stuff.
And, oh, maybe it's an ice age and not global heating, right?
Global warming is what they used to call it.
Yeah.
Their language changes.
You know, in 1960, they said that I, sitting up here in Washington Coast, in the 1960s, they were telling us that it would be like California weather.
And I thought, damn, that's cool, right?
Or not cool.
That's warm.
That's nice.
We'll be able to grow oranges.
We'll have lemons.
Hell, avocado trees, this kind of stuff.
Now, it wouldn't be too good for California if all that warmth shifted up.
up north along the beach because California at that point would be a um basically like the uh Baja Peninsula you know it'd all be 100% dried out and uh you know iguanas running around that kind of things lizards and no humans could live there because it'd be just too fucking hot and so we'd haven't seen that.
Also in the 1960s, they told us that most of the low-lying coasts around the whole planet would be underwater.
And so we wouldn't have any waterfront property along on the ocean that would be safe.
And that big influxes of water would come up Louisiana and all these low-lying places on the southeast, and we'd have a 100% altered coastline.
Well, none of that shit's happened.
You know, like I say, these mother weppers are stupid.
We can go back and see what they said.
Anyway, so let's see where we're at.
Yeah, I've got to get moving here.
All right, so we're in this period of time when the peak of the loss of purchasing power is going to have its peak effect relative to our thinking about ecology.
All right?
Now what the Wu people need to do is to understand that it's Vernadsky's biosphere that describes where we're really at.
that also provides hints for what we need to be doing and we need to be providing a whole lot more fucking energy to humanity because it's gonna get really cold around here and we've got to do things differently just to survive to adapt rather not just to survive because we will survive and we're gonna adapt and and and thrive here and we're actually going to get rid of all these mother wefers.
Alright so in in the in the last couple of things here I've got to get moving um pure sleep if you need to sleep it'll also help you bulk up gives you the precursors that you need to have the maximum amount of human growth hormone in your body at night when you're sleep and that's the only time the human growth hormone uh is usable it manifests um anyway so uh just as a uh a final note,
uh yeah, obviously I'm aware of the uh raid on uh Trump.
This is the one of these weeks where decades of shit happen, and this was a giant turning point for the normies.
They're um uh getting all uh whipped up, they're finally starting to understand some of this shit, and it's gonna get a lot more uh intense at uh at a news level because we're reaching the peaks of these battles with the mother wefers as they go down.
Every single person that knows about the World Economic Forum and thinks of them as an evil organization is one more victory for the good guys, one more um person removed as a supporter of the mother weppers, and who's over on the side of the opposition, uh, which is humanity, right?
Anyway, so um uh that's basically it for this.
I think okay, so we've started the constitutional crises with the um uh raid on on uh Mar-Lago, and we're gonna get a couple of more here, uh, all of which are gonna be good relative to forcing this thing to a peak um situation at the right time.
So timing is critical, and it's all coming down in this last 90 days.
I think we're now what at maybe 89 days, 88 days until the um uh the midterms, and uh uh so the pressure needs to really be brought up, so you'll see a lot more stuff being exposed um as we go forward with the the end of the Fed, right?
Because that's what's happening.
Uh the humanity so we have a situation here uh when they uh people say it's the ultimate battle of good versus evil, it's a situation of humanity can survive, or the world economic forum can survive, the global planetary cons you know, uh control structure.
Not both.
So it's up to you guys.
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