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Feb. 23, 2024 - Clif High
01:01:25
Judgement...
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Hello humans!
Hello humans!
February 22nd, reasonably early in the morning, a little after 9.
Heading on another very, very, very long trip.
This one's a different purpose.
So maybe I'll do like three of these discussions.
Got to take my remaining dog in and get a rabies vaccine.
We've got to go to an inland vent vet here because the ones on the coast, yeah, good girl, you get them.
She likes barking at humans.
The ones on the coast won't buy me the simplest form of the vaccine, which is simply the dead rabies virus in denatured rabies virus, the dead virus, in distilled water.
And so these guys here, you know, they've got a corporate thing going and they can't buy outside of their system and they only buy those that have, they end up having thimerosol or some other form of mercury in them.
And I don't want to inject my dog with mercury.
I got the, you know, I'm pretty convinced because of the huge bloom that was, that I was like, you know, an unwilling member of, but I'm convinced it was the salt polio vaccine that gave me colon cancer and caused all kinds of problems, neurological, etc., etc.
And I had two doses of that because we had a dose here in school, and then we go to Europe, and there was no record of us having them, so they gave it to us again.
And so, you know, it really trashed my brother and myself.
We were both very ill after that second dose for some time.
And then there's also a statistically viable bloom of colon cancer in males, mostly white males.
And it's in a cohort that received the vaccine in a specific spread of years from 1958 until 64.
And if you had gotten these sugar cube vaccines then, and you were male, etc., etc., you had a very much increased likelihood of getting colon cancer.
It's just, you know, it's statistically, not too deniable that there was some connection there, that that particular cohort had real troubles.
A lot of people dying of it too.
I mean, a lot of my contemporaries passed in the same period of time as myself.
So when I died of colon cancer in 2018, that year I also learned of two friends of mine who were essentially the same age within a year or so of my age that also died.
One I knew died of colon cancer.
The other we never did find out what it was.
He'd just gone into the hospital and perished like three months later.
He was in Europe, so it was difficult to get information about it.
But there were a lot of us that died then.
Anyway, so I'm heading inland to get a, you know, the safest form of rabies vax that I can get for my dog.
We have, I mean, we just lost Boris.
They say it was for this leptospirosis.
I think they just picked that because they don't know for sure, but maybe it was.
Maybe they actually did do one of the blood tests.
I haven't been able to read the, have bring myself to read the doctor's notes yet.
It's still too harsh on me.
Anyway, so I got to get got to get the girl here inoculated against rabies because we do have rabies in our area.
You know, like maybe it was last year or the year before, there were two instances of rabid raccoons in the area.
And, you know, we're on the coast, there's all kinds of animals every fucking place.
So it, you know, I've got to do this.
And I just don't want to get her anything with thimerosal, so off we go.
Taking my supplements again.
You can do that for a long time in the morning if you're recovering from all of this.
Anyway, so I've got a bunch of things here.
There's been quite a bit of emotional brouhaha out there.
There was the Phil Godlski movie, Greatest Fraud on Earth, which is like, well, you know, it's giving him too much credit.
You know, there have been bigger frauds, you know, Bernie Madoff, these kind of guys, right?
So, you know, I don't necessarily agree with the title.
Nonetheless, though, they did a really good job on that movie.
And I guess Phil has said he's going to do his own movies and prove that that guy was wrong and probably end up suing the fuck out of everybody.
So anyway, so this is one of those things where, you know, this is another Corey Good, right?
Phil has poor judgment.
He may indeed also be stupid because he's out there promulgating the flat earth shit.
Or, you know, he could legitimately be convinced of the flat earth, you know.
But the earth ain't flat.
And there's a lot of reasons that we know that that is the case.
In any event, though, so they made a movie about Phil.
They show that Phil had groomed a 14-year-old girl when he was a baseball coach, I think.
I'm not 100% familiar with all of these details, but in any event, so he grooms this girl.
Then apparently there's text messages and this kind of thing showing that they had sex when she was 15.
And he's like 10 years older.
Okay, and so they arrest him.
And then there's a trial.
He convinces her not to cooperate with the prosecution.
And so he makes a plea deal where he just agrees to plead guilty to what was a misdemeanor at the time, which was corruption of a minor.
And now it's a full-on class three felony.
So he would have had to have registered as a sex offender and all this kind of stuff if he'd pled guilty to corruption of a minor these days.
Anyway, though, so Nick Alvir makes a movie about him.
And really, yes, he's a convicted or pled guilty pedophile, an admitted groomer of a kid.
He didn't admit to the sex, and that's what apparently he's going to try and prove didn't happen with his movie.
So he's got an issue, right?
He's got the same kind of butthead issue as Corey Good.
He's living a, he's LARPing.
So he's like living a world of lies.
Hang on a second here.
I've got to adjust a few things.
Living in a world of lies as a LARPer.
And he's a LARPer saying he's, you know, Q plus and that he's the handler for Trump and all of these people.
Like, okay, dude, you know, you're just so full of shit, it's just unreal.
But you got some people that are believing it, and then you scam them on all this gold stuff.
And then you get into this point where they write an article about you, and then you pull a Corey Good and you sue a newspaper.
And it's like, holy fucking shit.
You know, even Corey Goode was not so stupid as to sue a newspaper, right?
You have to understand that they've got, they're not going to lose.
They won't allow themselves to lose.
And they've got some really serious legal people and a history of defending their stuff.
So it's a no-win situation for Phil.
And then you have Discovery, right?
Where they get to actually find out what's factual.
And so they pulled out all of these text messages and stuff that supposedly were hidden and all of this kind of stuff.
And he said he didn't use text, that, you know, they were using Blackberries or some damn thing.
You know, but basically it's all yet more lies trying to cover up his previous lies.
And you get into that kind of a situation just as Corey Good did.
Now, Both Phil and Corey Good have a real problem, and that is that they have adopted a persona that is pretending to righteousness, and they feel they must protect that righteousness in order to protect the persona, right?
And so, if Corey Goode had never sued Gaia TV and myself and C.W. Chanter and JJ Widener and all of these people and his former business partners, if he'd never sued any of them, he probably could have kept his scam going on a lot longer.
But lawsuits are going to degrade your ability to do things because you're going to be involved with it, right?
And you're going to be spending money on it.
But it won't ever do what you want, which is the protection and the repair of that righteousness that's been attached to the persona.
So the righteousness that's attached to the persona they feel needs to be protected in order to protect the LARP they've got going.
So Corey Good said that he was a secret space program soldier or something like that in the secret military in our secret space force.
And he went, you know, he signed up and they snatched him at age six or something.
And then, again, I don't know all the details, right?
But they like snatched him at age six.
And they, you know, and he and he works for the secret space program for bunches of years.
And then they do this thing called 20 and back.
So they let you work for 20 years and then they put you back in time.
And so you go back and they somehow undo all the time that's hit your body and you start all over again and live those years all over again.
And so this is like a really goofy idea.
And there was just all kinds of holes in Corey Good's story.
It was all bullshit, right?
100% bullshit.
Made up with David Wilcock for Gaia TV.
Gaia TV was presenting it.
They made shitloads of money on it.
People believed it.
And that's Corey Good's problem.
He had followers that actually believed his horseshit because none of the people could fathom that someone could sit there and bold-faced lie week after week after week on TV.
You know, flat out, just stare at the camera and lie, lie, lie.
And so people didn't believe that, or they don't think that that's the way the world works.
It is indeed that way.
I mean, look at all the news reporters, right?
They know that shit ain't real.
They read it anyway.
But so Corey Good does this, and then he gets called out on it.
And that was my sin, right?
That I called him out on it on Twitter and just gave him a lot of shit for the lies he was popping out.
And then ultimately, he sues me.
And the suit was so badly, it was so badly written, I thought it was bogus.
They sent it to me electronic, and I just dismissed it.
Didn't do shit with it.
Didn't respond to it or anything because I thought it was a hoax.
It was just such a bad, bad, bad lawsuit.
And this is because of this woman who's the sister of Teresa Yaneros, who was one of these Corey's kids' cult members, was the lawyer.
And she just did not know what the fuck she was doing.
Anyway, and so they sued me.
Oh, you know, and I was real sick.
This was 2019.
I was recovering from having died from the colon cancer.
And initially, I just didn't feel like it was smart for me to take it on.
Okay.
One of the reasons that that was the case, that I felt that way, was this effect of the cancer surgery.
So I go there.
I've got, you know, it's my last day on the planet.
I'm shedding blood.
I'm 128 pounds.
Nobody could ever find anything.
I knew I was dying.
I knew there was something going on and the fucking doctors could never find anything.
Anyway, so I go there.
I've got into susception in the bowel and I'm shaking and stuff.
And my heart stops just as they take me into the surgery room.
And then they put me on all the gear.
And then I'm told later by the nurse, like after in that first day of recovery, that it took them 20 minutes to get me back up and running after the surgery.
So basically they were saying the woman, the nurse that was there was saying, you know, they sort of like missed the fact that I had died going on in and were just doing their shit.
And, you know, my body was dead because I was so weak I'd passed out anyway repeatedly just lying there.
But in any event though, so I had had anesthesia.
And anesthesia on a big surgery like that produces this phenomenon called anesthesia amnesia.
And so I'd forgotten vast quantities of stuff.
So I lost huge amounts of my German vocabulary, my Italian vocabulary.
The words are just gone.
I mean, they just weren't there anymore.
All kinds of memories were just no longer attached to me.
So it was kind of a weird situation.
And so I felt a little, my brain felt a little bit odd.
It was in the first few months.
It was like maybe, I don't know when they actually filed the suit on us.
Maybe it was like March 2019.
I got the suit delivered to the point where I actually understood they were serious.
And at that point, like I say, I knew I had had the amnesia.
I knew I was suffering some effects.
My brain wasn't right.
My body obviously wasn't right.
And so I didn't have a lot of energy.
And I was feeling down a little bit and so on.
You know, a little bit low energy and stuff.
I've got to keep the window open for the dog.
So it's just going to be a little noisy.
Anyway, and so I decided, ah, fuck it.
I'll just hire an attorney, right?
I didn't know if I was going to live, right?
I was just so exhausted from dying those last few years.
It was like, oh, fuck.
You know, I just don't have any oomph.
I just don't have anything in me.
So I hired an attorney.
That was a big mistake.
This is to defend me and to get me out.
Really, all I wanted was a motion to dismiss because I shouldn't have been in there.
He charged me with a bunch of shit in his lawsuit, including RICO, right?
Which is a criminal racketeering organization.
They're trying to make it out like we were a gang that was after the righteous secret space program guy who was risking his life and everything to tell us the truth.
And it's like, guys, you know, there's real logic here.
This is just like the shit with Kerry Cassidy and Mark Richards.
If Mark Richards seriously was actually in a secret space program, the state would not invest the money in keeping him alive.
If he were a danger to them, they would kill him.
They would not hoax up a fake criminal murder conviction with convicting these other individuals in order to just put him into prison.
If he had been in the military, he would not be in a civilian prison anyway.
If it was a secret space program and they wanted to punish him and stuff, they would put him in a military prison.
Or if there was a secret space program, they would imprison him off-planet.
So, you know, so none of the shit that Kerry is saying stands the test of reason.
Lots of the same thing was the case with Corey Good.
None of the shit that he was saying made any sense at all.
And what really, I think, really irritated me more than anything was he was promulgating this idea that he had been, that he was 60 years older than he'd actually appeared because he had done three of these 20 in backs.
And I object to these people saying that time works that way, that you can go back and forth in time.
And that's what I started bitching at him.
And then one thing led to another and I get involved in this lawsuit and I hire these attorneys.
They were like, they were okay.
But the next thing I know, when I'm paying attention and got to pay a bill here, it's like, holy fuck.
I hadn't been kicked out of the court case.
And it was, oh, maybe it's three months into it.
All of a sudden I find I've got three attorneys and I got a bill for $33,000.
And first off, I hired one attorney, not three.
I didn't need the other two working on it.
And I'm not a cash cow for somebody.
So I fired them all.
And they all freaked.
They just shit because I fired them all in a minute, told them, give me all the records.
You guys are shit canned.
Here's your money.
You know, get the fuck out of my life.
I'll do this on my own, which was really good for me.
It was a good fight.
It made me get really serious about getting my brain and body together and studying the law and doing all this kind of stuff.
And then, so I studied it a lot.
And then I thought, well, now wait a second.
There's a huge point of vulnerability here that, you know, I can game the whole system because I saw the way that this thing was going on with Corey adding more and more defendants.
Each defendant that was added added more attorneys, more paperwork, more procedures, more timelines of, you know, 15 days here for a response to this attorney's submission, another 15 days for your reply, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So, you know, so it was.
developing into a giant morass really fucking quick.
And I just didn't want any part of it, right?
I knew I didn't do any of this stuff I was being accused of, but that doesn't necessarily mean that you're not going to get convicted of some bogus shit, as we see with, you know, Corey Good or with Trump.
Trump got convicted of bogus shit in New York, right?
You can't trust these courts.
So I discovered a couple of things here, right?
Nowadays, I would do it with AI and it would have been a lot fucking easier.
But here's the deal.
In these court proceedings, you have to go into it.
So the first thing I did was to establish a baseline.
You know, what do I know about all of the court stuff?
Where are the motivations on all these people?
What are they doing?
And why do they act this way?
And one of the things I discovered was that judges do not want to ever make a ruling that can be appealed.
Okay.
Because then that nature of that ruling itself means that they themselves can be sued.
And so it's like, oh, they don't want to get anything that can be appealed because then there's the potential, the very likelihood, very probability, you know, it's very probable that it'll be overturned.
Because it's a, you got to understand the mindset of these judges.
So a judge panel that's being presented with some other judge's action to critique it, so to speak, and pronounce on it, the easiest thing for them to do is to overturn it and kick it out of their court and they don't have to fuck with it.
And they don't get tainted with it, no matter how goofy it is, because they're not sustaining it.
They just have to find a reason that it can be overturned.
All the judges know this, so they don't want anything going up to any panels for appeals and reviews.
And so I discover this, right?
And then I know that they don't want to do anything.
They don't ever want to make a ruling that gets them off into, quote, new territory.
And so I saw my options there.
So another thing about this is that these people work, the court system works on this 15-day time lag at the federal level.
So you submit a motion, they get it to me electronically.
I have 15 days to respond, right?
So your attorney gives me something.
Corey Good's attorney did something.
And the courts are really weirdly set up anyway.
But anyway, and then I have 15 days to respond to it.
And then, so that's my response.
And then she would have 15 days to reply to my response, right?
So basically, she submits something and then she figures she's got a month because it'll take me 15 days to respond.
And then she's got her 15 days.
So she's managing, this is Corey Good's attorney.
She was managing, suing all kinds of people.
Gaia, you know, Gaia TV had shitloads of attorneys out of New York.
I mean, like top dog, you know, $500 an hour kind of guys.
They weren't fucking around.
You know, she was suing Jay Widener.
He has attorneys.
You know, I'd finally gone pro se, fired my attorneys and was doing it myself.
So I actually removed some of her burden, but so she thought.
But anyway, so here I am, and I discovered this.
A, judges don't want to do anything that's new and precedent setting.
B, they live and die by procedure.
And so what I did was I discovered that Corey Good had this thing out there that he disclaimed.
He claimed it was not him.
Okay, this was the Light Warrior Legal Fund.
And he was saying it was being run by somebody else on his behalf, that he didn't start it and stuff.
Well, I could disprove that real easily with IP address chain and the whole thing, right?
So Corey Goode was running it.
And in there, that thing defamed me by lumping me in with child predators and stuff, right?
And so I thought, aha.
And so I did this.
I waited until a strategic moment and then I arranged things to make the procedures work in my favor, this 15-day time lag and the fact that these guys and their procedures, the court has to do these things one by one by one in the time and in the order in which they're presented.
If they take one extra day, they've got lawsuits on their hands suing them for violating their own procedures.
Maybe it's going to set a precedent.
Maybe it'll get put in review and yada, yada, yada.
So it's a big problem to not do things in a timely fashion, right?
All right, so.
So what I did was to put in a motion for injunctive relief.
Now, normally, I was a defendant.
I was being sued by butthead Corey Good.
And normally, usually, defendants don't even apply for injunctive relief.
It's usually the plaintiff applying for injunctive relief to get the defendants to stop doing something while the trial is going on.
Here I'd reversed it.
So I knew we were in new territory right away.
There are very few of these that have ever been granted, but it was possible.
And then I timed it so that I had a reply to one of her responses on my motion to dismiss.
And then I filed that.
And then I instantly filed my, after that response on my motion to dismiss, I filed my plea for injunctive relief, which I knew they weren't going to grant.
I knew they didn't even want to look at it.
Now, so there's two judges involved, right?
There's the judge judge, and then there's the administrative judge, the one who does all of the work and deals with the sort of like an intern judge and does all of the procedures and filings and does all the shit work, basically, all of the easy stuff.
And then the judge judge, who might be managing many, many, many cases with lots of these assistant judges.
But anyway, the judge judge makes the final rulings.
Now, the administrative judges can make all kinds of rulings, including motion to dismiss, which is what they did in my case.
They threw me out of that case, right?
Big shock to Corey Good.
And I knew that they were going to because when I submitted my motion for injunctive relief, my plea for injunctive relief to get them to shut down Corey Good's Light Warrior website that was defaming me.
I knew they wouldn't want to touch that with a 10-foot pole.
And guess what?
The judge, the main judge there, did not assign that particular document to his administrative judge.
He retained it because he knew that that administrative judge could not do anything with it.
It was not within her power to do that kind of thing.
And he had to deal with it.
He also knew it was coming up right after the very next thing after they dealt with my motion to dismiss would have been my plea for injunctive relief.
And so if they had denied my motion to dismiss, they would have had to have dealt with that motion for injunctive relief.
They would have had to have ruled on it.
It couldn't have been passed, couldn't have been glossed over, none of that.
They would have had to have made a ruling on it.
So I had him by the shorthairs, right?
I literally had that judge by the balls and I was squeezing him.
So anyway, so my motion to dismiss comes on up and hey, big shock.
The administrative judge kicks me out, agrees that, you know, some of this shit was quasi-factual, that I had indeed participated with these individuals, but it didn't rise to the level of RICO, and that yada, yada, yada, you're out of here.
And so it's like, okay, cool.
I won, right?
I gamed the system in a corrupt federal court and I was kicked out.
And that's, I achieved my goal.
And that was what I wanted.
Anyway, so here we have Phil Godlski going down Corey Good's butthead path, you know, out singing the butthead song and going down the path.
And Phil Godlovsky isn't going to, he's going to reap the same kind of results.
So Corey Good is still involved in this lawsuit.
So here we are in 2024 and he's still doing all these fucking lawsuits.
None of this shit's settled.
I'm the only one that got kicked out of any of it as far as I know.
I haven't paid any attention to it since they threw me out.
I said, no, we don't want to fuck with you.
You're just, you know, you're going to cause us problems.
And see, so I actually, even though my arguments were legit and I had a really, you have to do it.
Okay, procedure says you can't use more than this number of words.
It's got to be this, this format, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, and all the time stuff.
So I was tight on procedure because I'm a computer programmer, which is basically you pay attention to fucking details, right?
And so I did a good job on the procedure and everything, and I get kicked out of that.
Now, Phil and Corey are on that same path.
Corey's still involved with this.
If Phil actually gets a bunch of lawsuits going against Nick Ablier, Evier, whatever the hell his name is, Nick, and these other guys, he'll be involved with it, you know, five, six, seven, ten years from now.
There'll be all kinds of attorneys involved and huge amounts of money going out the door kind of thing.
And hang on.
Okay.
So anyway, and it won't work, right?
So the real problem for both of them is this.
They had an audience that was convinced they were legit.
They had, I said, because there were documents or something that caused these audiences to lose their faith in the cult.
And so in Corey Good's case, it was they, you know, he sued Gaia and then ultimately Gaia took all that shit off the TV.
And all of a sudden, his Corey Good's ability to grow his audience was gone, you know, because all those reruns were gone.
They weren't available anymore.
And then, and also, he was getting real pushback from everybody he had sued.
And it was like, man, you know, are you really that fucking stupid?
Are you as stupid?
Well, at the time, he was more stupid.
He was setting a precedent that, you know, Phil Godluski followed when he sued a newspaper.
It's like, holy shit, dude.
Anyway, so now we know that all of this stuff's out there about the receipts for Phil Godlski and stuff.
And Phil has actually gone through depositions.
Now, I didn't know about all of the gold scams and all the other shit, these, you know, light wave patches and this wellness company crap that Phil is promoting and all the millions of dollars that he made.
And we're talking like millions.
He claims to be worth $75 million.
Now, I can't think of the guy's name.
But anyway, so some people have said, well, he doesn't act like somebody who's got that kind of money, right?
Because if you've got a lot of money, you do act a particular way.
So maybe he is actually worth a shitload of money, though.
But of course, we know he is a liar and, you know, can't help it, probably compulsive, right?
And anyway, so he's claiming to be worth $75 million.
But also, there's real evidence that he bought a $7.5 million house in Maui, that he's part of the Maui land grab after the Lahaina fires.
You know, pretty cool house actually in Maui.
And it's like, well, shit, you know, that would solve my housing problems if I could just scam a few tens of millions of dollars off a few people and go buy a place in Hawaii, right?
Have to get a private plane to carry us over because you can't take a woofing dog into, you know, regular airplanes, right?
But, you know, outside of the fact that I'm scandalized, there's on that part of it, it's just truly amazing the amount of millions that he apparently has raked off and decided not to keep in the banks or whatever and went in and stashed it in property.
So we know, or what we don't know, maybe he bought a shitload of gold too.
Who knows?
But in any case, oh, those evil mail carriers.
Oh, they're just terrible.
Got to bark them up.
So we'll be doing this whenever she's got an opportunity to park at somebody she's going to.
So back to Phil.
Anyway, so Phil and Corey have this issue with their audience where they're trying to, with their cult, actually, where they're trying to maintain their cult leader status, even though they've now been shown to have feet of play and do bad things.
And their problem is that they don't quite recognize that you cannot restore that by a court case.
So I'm here to tell you that even if Phil Godlewski were to win all of his court cases, even if he were to win the court case against the newspaper, and even if he were to win all of his court cases against all these other people that are causing him a problem and calling him names, it's not going to restore anything.
The element of belief has been shattered.
So it just isn't going to do him any good.
He could maybe try to build a new cult.
And Corey tried that.
It didn't work.
He didn't have the, neither one of them so far have any kind of, quote, validation by a court saying they're legit, right?
And the court will never, ever, ever say you're legit.
The court would never ever say that Phil Doe is not a pedo, right?
They wouldn't say that.
They would just simply, you know, rule that there wasn't enough evidence to provide substantiative fact that he was a pedo, right?
So in other words, there's still always going to be that suggestion.
And they're going to sue, you know, or his issues too will be all of the grift, right?
All of that kind of stuff.
Now, I think that's going to affect both of them in a really harsh way if we ever get Department of Justice back again in the sense that these guys are both, you know, stealing millions of dollars and or not stealing, scamming millions of dollars.
And at some point there will be a legal reckoning with it, right?
They will have to deal with the situation.
Yeah.
So anyway, so Phil's got a problem.
It won't work, right?
And he's actually far better off, in my opinion, just as we know from the actual real life example of Corey Good.
They're far better off not suing because when it goes bad against them, when there's discovery, they've got to get up there and do some kind of really fancy dance in the discovery to say that all this stuff they've been claiming is a lie is fact.
Because if they don't, right, I mean, if they lie under oath for this, then there are criminal possibilities, right?
You can get perjury and you could get, and the courts get really pissed about that.
And then periodically they set an example on somebody and come down hard on them, send them to jail, that kind of thing, just to keep the whole system functioning.
So anyway, so they've got to do it a particular way.
So Corey danced around a lot of the stuff.
He was trying to claim that his story that he'd told Gaia was his intellectual property and he owned it.
And Gaia couldn't do stuff with it independent of him, in spite of the contract he'd signed that explicitly gave them those kind of rights.
Anyway, though, so it didn't work for Corey.
His cult falls away.
His money stream falls away.
And now he's got tons of debts attached to legal fees as well as like other kinds of stuff.
And he's going to face real issues here.
Another thing Corey did, which was not too smart, wasn't too swift in my opinion, was that he used the period of time for the lawsuit to monopolize the use of the money from this movie that they'd made.
He and a lot of people, David Wilcock and Jordan Sether and a couple of these people who were in this movie, right?
And so there was revenue from that, and he monopolized it as the controlling entity during the period of the lawsuit.
Well, his other partner sued him, and now he's going to have to do a reconciliation.
He's going to have to pay out all this money that he had been holding and monopolizing.
I don't know that he's got it.
You know, it's just a bad, stupid approach, right?
So I don't know how much money Phildo has, how much he's scammed, nor what kind of arrangements he's made with his money or the money that he had scammed, other than I know that he's purchased some houses and he was rather open and upfront about that.
Bought a $7.5 million place in Maui, other places in like Arizona or someplace.
Theoretically, I mean, he's claiming to have had to have purchased a house in Greece that was worth like $8 million.
So he's got quite the collection there.
Does it total up to 75?
Well, not that we're seeing there, but he very well may have millions of dollars not yet spent that you know or stashed somewhere.
We just don't know.
I don't know the nature and the extent of the scheme.
We know that he spent a lot of money buying views and that that really pumped him up there.
It's a judgment issue, right?
People see that, oh, he's got, you know, 700,000 followers or something.
And it's like, you know, he's claiming 18 million views on a video that on a live stream that's showing 40,000 people are watching, had watched it.
It's like, okay, guy, you know, you're lying about that.
And he's lying in a weird way saying he's got special software that allows him to see all of the views.
And it's like, oh, guys, you know, we're going to have to dispute on that, that such software exists, et cetera, et cetera.
And I doubt seriously that he's ever had millions of views on a live stream.
But anyway, so now his movie comes out.
He's got a real problem.
He's going to start suing people.
And he's going to demonstrate that his judgment is unsound because he's going to go and try and do this non-productive, it won't work, it can't work approach of trying to restore the righteousness to his LARPing persona and keep his, with the idea, I'm supposing, of keeping the LARP going.
Which again, it is not going to work.
Man, hang on.
I'm going to have to do something here.
There we go.
OK, cool.
This idiot was I'm on a major or semi-major state route freeway here.
And this guy had was going, he was ahead of me and going slow.
He'd pulled over and pulled over right in front of a logging truck with about 50,000 pounds of logs that was trying to come up a hill and had been accelerating and had to use the compression on the engine to decelerate.
That's what all that noise was.
Anyway, that one doesn't do it.
Okay.
Hang on, I'm trying to get some adjusted wind here for the dog.
Anyway, hope that isn't too noisy.
And if it is, hey, screw it.
Nothing I can do about it.
So Phil is like, he's like, Corey, they're not going to be able to recover his grift.
The people may or may not pick up on this over time, but it is demonstrating this lack of judgment, right?
So in my opinion, both Corey and Phil are poor thinkers because they didn't game out what they were attempting to do with the lawsuits, how it could possibly end, and the level of risks involved.
And of course, the more people you sue, the more lawyers you get.
And, you know, Phil is out there bragging, oh, well, I've got a big legal team and, you know, you can't fuck with me.
I just throw another lawyer at it.
It's like, dude, every time you get involved with another lawsuit and every time you add another lawyer in there, you're raising your level of risk, right?
not only economically, not only in the money, but in the possibility, the probability they're just going to go bad on you.
So anyway, you know, they're going down the butthead trail, hopping along just like a bunny.
And we'll see how it works out for him.
I don't know that Phil's going to actually ever sue anybody.
The issue there, too, is that say that he actually had all these stolen millions, right?
All this grifted millions stashed away and he's paying attorneys on it.
I'm certain he can find attorneys that will convince him that he'll be able to sue and win because it's in their interest to do so because all they want is the paycheck.
All they want is the work attempting to prove that they can do it.
And that's what they're doing.
They're attempting, right?
There's no guarantee just because they say they can sue and restore your reputation.
And in fact, even if you sue and won, who the fuck's going to pay attention to that, right?
Hang on.
So, you know, you need to get your, you need to analyze things and think about shit before you do it.
Otherwise, you end up in this big, big problem.
And once you get into these suits, you can't get out easily.
You can't, like, file a lawsuit against a bunch of people and then, you know, spend a bunch of money on attorneys and stuff and get so far and say, ah, I don't want to do it anymore.
You know, I'm done with it.
It just doesn't work that way.
You just don't get out that easy.
So we'll see how it plays out.
But it's very interesting that all these issues around judgment are coming on up, right?
And we find that there's the same lack of judgment in a particular group of individuals.
So there have been new people coming up into the, quote, truther movement in like last few months.
And we've had some developing emotional brouhaha around all of this.
So you've got, for instance, you've got Kerry Cassidy.
She actually said, in her opinion, Phil was definitely working with the white hats.
And then like, you know, maybe it was like a couple of weeks later, out comes a movie saying he's a pedo and a grifter and doesn't have any connection to any of these military people that he's claiming.
And, you know, he's putting on a, he's LARPing.
He's putting on an act here.
Not a very good one.
You know, he doesn't really know what he's doing, I don't think.
He's not an accomplished, you know, like trained con artist or anything.
He just fell into this and is sort of bumbling along, in my opinion.
But anyway, so Carrie Cassidy thought he was 100% legit and made that statement.
Then it comes out.
Now there's this leaked four minute or five minutes of a video with her, Carrie Cassidy, this guy, Jason Q, some woman named Janine, and this guy, Patriot Underground.
And Patriot Underground is quite clearly distressed.
Jason Q has all been out of shape that Carrie Cassidy doesn't want to discuss the, you know, Phil's pedophilic activity.
And Kerry Cassidy is doing a lame-ass version of saying, well, well, I have information and things are going to come out.
There's going to be some trouble and blah, blah, blah.
Well, you know, she's got to alibi her position now that she's said that he's legit.
And so here is another element of Carrie Cassidy's judgment, you know, just like with Mark Richards, that really isn't shit.
And so we've, you know, if you were to project that, you would project that, oh, perhaps she applies that same level of judgment and same level of skill in character analysis to all of her,
quote, whistleblowers, in which case, hey, they're all as legitimate as Mark Richards, you know, who is a convicted murderer that's been lying to her for, who's been lying to her for, you know, 12 interviews at least, and telling her all this horse shit that doesn't exist and is, you know, factually not possible.
So we get get, you know, so you have to apply this analysis of their judgment all over.
And so she's got to protect to some degree the idea that she has enough acumen in character analysis to be able to judge whether someone's lying to her.
And which quite clearly, in my view, she does not.
She's not able to do that.
And this is sort of where we're at with that.
Now, this is on top of all of this other, quote, infighting about all of this stuff.
Now, I get pissed about people being technically inaccurate.
And I think Carrie is just, you know, totally ignorant of AI, has no concept of the tech involved, no concept of what's going on there.
And she accepts the murderer Mark Richards telling her that AI can float through the air and an alien AI came and floated and descended on Earth and took us over and is managing us and that there's battles between AIs and there's alien AIs running around and all of this kind of shit.
With no technical qualification as to how any of that might be possible.
So anyway though, we also have the same kind of stuff going on with this woman, Jan Halper Hayes, who is a oh, that's right.
We got road work up here.
Anyway, so she's a psychiatrist or psychologist and she's done business shit and she says she's a conservative and she works with the she says she's on a task force with the Department of Defense and is working on this task force for Trump and the what everybody calls the white hats.
And okay, that's fine.
I would be I'm really shocked that the Department of Defense would hire that particular mind.
Okay.
I find her understanding to be extremely facile.
She basically has no grasp of any of the stuff going on, has no understanding of the particulars of any of the supports that are required for technical stuff, and has made a bunch of really stupid statements, right?
So she's tried to pimp.
All right, so first off, she associates with Charlie Ward.
And Charlie Ward is a self-admitted groomer for Jimmy Savile.
He's also a self-admitted money launderer.
And she thinks that this latter part, the money launderer part, she's made statements that, oh, well, you know, the good guys are using Charlie Ward's expertise to get our gold back and this kind of thing.
And it's like, well, wait a second.
What expertise did Charlie have?
He claims to have sat on an airplane with a big pile of cash.
And some of these airplanes also contained women and children that were being trafficked, but he never really gets into that.
But anyway, he claims to have sat on airplanes with big piles of cash while they flew to a country and then he deposited the cash in a bank.
And money laundering doesn't work that way, guys.
So anyway, so I think Charlie Ward is mainly a liar.
I think he's a LARPer as well.
And he's trying to scam everybody as a patriot and he's not and so on and so on, right?
So he's another one of these like Phil Godlski kind of guys.
It's a grift.
And here, supposedly a professional psychiatrist and or psychologist, I forget which one she is.
I think she's a psychiatrist.
And I think she actually mentored under Carl Rogers, who is the psychiatrist that engineered all the MK Ultra shit.
So, you know, not really good at pedophile for, or not really good pedigree for this, right?
So hanging out with somebody that grooms for pedophiles and is a grifter doesn't demonstrate that you've got really good acumen in character analysis, and which a psychiatrist or a psychologist, anybody in mental health, you really ought to be able to know that.
And then she claims, like I say, to be a conservative, which, okay, I don't know a whole lot of conservatives that have worked with Nancy Pelosi for 40 years.
I don't know a lot of conservatives that worked to bring the Democratic Convention to San Francisco and is proud of it and is proud of having worked with Nancy Pelosi.
Now, I couldn't be in the same room with Pelosi.
I would puke.
It'd be that distressing to me.
And then this woman also claims to be, you know, a longtime associate with Dianne Feinstein and all of this kind of stuff.
And it's like, okay, so basically Jan Halper Hayes, she's deep in the Elohim worship cult.
She's deep in the Uniparty.
And she's out there organizing rhinos internationally to vote for rhinos here in the U.S. So she's organizing expat Republicans for their overseas votes and stuff.
And so basically she's saying, I'm a proud member of the Uniparty.
And then also she spent all this time working with media, applying the tools and stuff that Carl Rogers had supposedly taught her, if indeed he was her mentor, and doing the MK Ultra shit on all of the dumb fucking generations that we're dealing with now.
And she's doing it through TV.
So none of these are like, in my opinion, in my judgment, none of these are accomplishments that speak to her being a patriot or speak to her being conservative.
In fact, just the opposite.
That she's part of the Uniparty and is, you know, part of the infiltrators and part of all the problems we've got here.
So, so like I say, I don't, you know, I'm not really, not really a big Jan, you know, Dr. Biz Shrink fan here.
She's an infiltrator and is likely, you know, a Decepticon, right?
Just coming in there to con people for shit.
And she said, we'll say all of the right things and then do none of the right things.
And so she doesn't distance herself from Charlie and keeps hanging out with him.
And she actually comes on up and tries to alibi her position by through a group kind of a thing where she gets on with this guy in a cowboy hat, Derek, and these other people and says, you know, yada, yada, yada.
All movements have infighting.
And just as the movement is becoming successful, there will be more infighting because of all of the new people involved.
And all the old people, you know, think their feet are being stepped on by the new people coming into the movement.
And, okay, so the cowboy hat dude, you know, Carrie Cassidy, I don't know that she's interviewed with Carrie, but the cowboy hat guy, Michael Jayco, and Patriot Underground and some of these other people are getting shit, not because they're new.
None of us, I don't give a shit that someone's new to this and they're talking about any of this crap.
I don't think anybody, any of the old farts in the in this Woo business give a shit.
I mean, we don't care.
You know, in fact, it even makes it easier.
I don't have to talk about it.
Really, what everybody's objecting, or what the objections are, is the horseshit that's being introduced, right?
The fact that they're using these, you know, the regular tactics of telling you, you know, 78% fact and then giving you the rest, it's bullshit.
And so that's how the bullshit intrudes on the naradigm, on the discussion by coming in, you know, with the factual stuff that you're supposed to hear.
So anyway, so Jan Halper Hayes tried to pimp the QFS.
Even though she says, well, I'm not an expert about it, and then goes on to try and pimp this shit.
And if you're not an expert about it, you know, you don't have the judgment to keep your mouth shut about something that you don't have any knowledge of, but you feel you must pimp.
It's like, wait a second, there's some other agenda.
There's some kind of other motivation going on here.
And so I'm feuding with her.
I actually think she's stupid, okay, like a low intelligence person.
And she has all these claims to having trained thousands and thousands and thousands of executives.
Well, I can re-characterize that for you and say that her career was spent training midwits.
It was spent training middle management, okay?
And those people are not known for being great thinkers.
And so she didn't do, wasn't out there doing great service, you know, clearing the mind of like Elon Musk or something, right?
She was working with all these mid-level people, all of these corporate guys and so on in the mid-level management kind of stuff.
In any event, so really, so much for her judgment.
You know, her judgment is very suspect, in my opinion.
My judgment is that her judgment sucks.
She associates with people that are let's just say, have criminal associations around them, right?
So, Charlie Ward, you can say that quite factually, he admits to bringing underage women or underage females to Top of the Pops, to Jimmy Savile.
And so, and he admits that, you know, he knew they were going to be hit on and they would have to have sex with Jimmy Savile in order to get on the top of the pop show.
You know, criminal activity, right?
Peter Philipp.
And we have her associating.
Thinks Charlie Ward's a good guy.
Thinks Charlie Ward's view counts are legit.
She probably thinks Phil Godluski is legit, just like Carrie Cassidy.
Although Carrie Cassidy may now be coming to some other opinion about that.
I'm going to stop here in a little bit at this State Route P-Palace and get out and let the dog get out.
We'll get some air and some walking time here.
Then I'll pick up on another one of these.
In any event, though, so people that are going to be sued if he actually ever gets around to doing it, people that are going to get sued by Phil Godlooski have a new tool they can use.
Because I was just thinking about it here.
If I had to do a lawsuit now against a butthead like Corey Good, I would use AI.
I would first go through and get transcripts of everything they had said, just have it, you know, pull up a video and have it generate transcripts, right?
Take the transcripts, save it off as a file, as a just regular old text file.
And then later, I would collect all of these fuckers, all of their words, and all of these TV shows, and then I would run them through the AI and with some particular queries to have them reformat all of that stuff and present it to me in a particular way for the evidence I need in the lawsuit.
So, you know, everything that Phil Godluski has ever said in any video can be dumped into a text file and then analyzed repeatedly different ways with AI.
And boy, I bet you're going to find some interesting stuff there.
So God.
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