What are they spraying from the skies? - Gareth Icke TonightWhat are they spraying from the skies? - Gareth Icke Tonight
|
Time
Text
15-minute cities, you know, the conspiracy theory turned reality.
They're being lauded by all the mainstream bobbleheads as a great idea.
Much like with the Covid tyranny, the pivot from, they'll never do that, you dangerous tinfoil nutter, to, I don't really see a problem with it, is quite a sight to behold.
The sales pitch with the 15-minute city is that you'll have access to everything within 15 minutes of your home.
That sounds nice and convenient, doesn't it?
But it's just the pitch, and it's not the desired result.
The goal is to eventually deny you access to everything beyond 15 minutes, all in the name of climate change, of course.
The fact that small businesses are being impacted by the measures, that's not an accident either.
It's the desired outcome.
Destroy independent livelihoods and make the people dependent on the state.
Too far-fetched?
One word.
Lockdowns.
Suddenly the pitch doesn't sound so great, especially for someone like myself who regularly escapes the madness of crowds to enjoy the great British countryside.
Covid rules denied people the right to travel, they destroyed the aviation industry and indeed the holiday industry in general.
Net zero madness is meant to be the final nail in that coffin.
People are being priced out of travelling by low emission zones, congestion charges.
The rules are for us, not for them though.
That's why the likes of London Mayor Sadiq Khan and US President Joe Biden can drive around in diesel guzzling 4x4 convoys while you're on eBay bidding on roller skates.
And so suddenly we're left with a world that Bill Hicks described in the early 90s.
A world where we sit in our homes watching American Gladiators while pizzas are fired through the letterbox by armored delivery vans.
Only now they'd be tossing Bud Light cans through the window while Dylan Mulvaney explains how we'll never truly understand the complexities of their period pain journey.
The cashless Wi-Fi engulfed dystopian smart city of complete surveillance and control is our future.
If the Trojan horse of climate change remains unopposed.
Once again, the word no becomes the most important word in our vocabulary.
As a history teacher, head of history, basically, you know, I mentioned that, obviously, because we concentrate on British history, that there's not a great deal of things that would come under that umbrella.
So, you know, if we're talking about the Normans, we're not talking about a big, diverse culture, ethnically diverse culture, for example.
But I said, you know, we do the usual things like the civil rights movement, The Windrush generation, we talk about slavery under the auspices of the British Empire, the African slave trade.
I said, but you know, we always look at it.
We always debate these issues.
We don't politicize or give, you know, one side an opinionated, you know, just an opinion.
We always debate it.
So, for example, if we're teaching the British Empire, we talk about the pros and cons of empire, the good that came from it, the bad that came from it.
And at that point, you know, this young teacher, newly qualified, only been there about five minutes, said, oh, it's very interesting that you say the good of British Empire.
What do you mean by that?
You know, at which point I then said, well, you know, the pros of British Dumbo would be things like education system, public health, hospitals, infrastructure, the ending of slavery, at which point she looked aghast and, you know, didn't have any response to that, basically.
And then a couple of days after that, I got an email from one of the senior leaders saying that
the history department had been somewhat aggressive.
One of the things I noticed when I was there, the first time around, back in the 80s, was
we had to be very careful as English students in Moscow.
You couldn't have open conversations about politics in the street.
And that's exactly the same today.
I was shown around by Natalia and I said to her, I said, look, I took her aside and said, look, what can we talk about in the street?
And she said, we can talk about the weather and how beautiful it is, but any political discussions we must have back in the hotel room or in the conference hall.
Putin was in charge of the KGB.
He's not a fluffy bunny.
I mean, this guy was an absolute tyrant, and he still is.
Russia is, or Moscow certainly, 5G is everywhere.
Surveillance is everywhere.
When I used to go on the metro, Russian metro is amazing.
It's beautiful.
Built in the sort of 20s, 30s, and You have to go through an x-ray machine.
All your bags have to go through an x-ray machine just to get onto the Metro.
So they are living with that level of fear.
And mask wearing, vaccine taking, all exactly the same agenda that we've had in the West.
There's no difference between that.
What happened is I provided them copies of prescriptions from the doctor.
The doctor had boasted that he was dealing with 150 premiership football players, Tour de France cyclists, world-class boxers and UK anti-doping done nothing to investigate that.
The response we got in an email was that they have undertaken a short investigation and
these prescriptions, this doctor's name, all the information that went with it was
little to no help to UK.
The irony is at the same time UK Antidoping were the antidoping agency that were in Russia
and the UK Antidoping were funded by the Digital Culture Media and Sport Committee who obviously
as you know very well were quite vocal with your dad's work.
In fact, they were saying he should be in prison.
So, You know there's a bit of a contradiction there and there's questions to be asked as to really what is going on here.
You know why would UK anti-doping not want to investigate doping on our shores that involves a British doctor doping what he said was 150 premiership football players while they're in Russia saying that Russia are the bad guys and Russia are running a state-funded doping program.
And I think it's also important to realise that that doctor has since been investigated by the General Medical Council and been struck off, as has one of British Cycling's own doctors that was taking delivery of testosterone, Viagra, birth control pills, anti-acne pills at the Belladrome, which is the headquarters of British Cycling.
Numbers are kind of skewed because there is a 1-3% that victims of trafficking ever get out of those situations or find help.
So that means that 97% of victims typically aren't getting the services or getting out of the life.
So I don't believe that we have exact numbers on what this looks like, but I can give you numbers from sources that have put those out.
So anywhere from 24.7 million to up to 40 million that we're talking internationally.
And that is a combination of...
Yeah.
That's a combination of labor and sex trafficking.
Those numbers are combined numbers.
And so it's the second largest legal activity.
So when we talk about legal activity, we're talking about other intersectionalities between other organized crimes.
So when you have guns and you have drugs, You're typically those organized fronts are going to have human trafficking because you can sell a person over and over again, and you can make a lot of money and have very little overhead.
Whereas you have a drug, you have to buy that drug continually to distribute it.
Guns as well.
That is why human trafficking is growing.
A, if there's a demand and there's ability to make money, this is not going to stop.
And so we really, I will always say, we really have to address the demand side, the people who are facilitating or needing this or wanting this business.
The buyers, because if we have more buyers and we're seeing with COVID that increase of pornography, increase of sexual activity and 246% increase online that happened just from COVID.
And so now this is a new way for traffickers to facilitate this.
And even during COVID, they were offering free online access to pornography.
And so then that begins that grooming cycle for the demand side.
You know, you want more.
You're always fantasizing for more.
And so it's so accessible to our kids right now, that pornography piece.
So we're creating these dynamics within our communities that are saying that this is okay.
And it almost devalues human life.
Now when the lockdown files containing thousands of WhatsApp messages to and from the former Health Secretary Matt Hancock were leaked to the Daily Telegraph, it had a distinct whiff of a limited hangout.
I vocalised that at the time.
It felt somewhat staged.
Now it laid the blame at Hancock's door but stopped short of the real depths to which the UK government sank.
Releasing the fact that he said he wanted to scare the pants off the public was revealing enough to placate a few angry anti-lockdowners and caused a few narcissists from the other side of the fence to jump across as they felt the narrative slipping away from them.
But it's just the tip of the iceberg.
No one will face criminal charges like they would if the lockdown files revealed state-sponsored murder.
Which is why they would never have been allowed to.
The journalist behind the leak, Isabel Okenshott, tweeted this week to the crazies that wang on about Madazzalam that she would never believe the government would euthanise the elderly.
Now, of course, whether Isabel believes it or not is not actually of any relevance to anything.
It doesn't stop it being true.
It's of no great surprise that the journalist used in the limited hangout is now upholding the walls of the limited hangout.
But it is interesting that she refuses to accept the government and Matt Hancock are guilty of such a crime, and even says there's nothing about Madazzalam in the WhatsApp messages.
She uses that as some kind of proof.
But she previously tweeted that there was a month-long gap in the WhatsApp messages, even commenting that it was very suspicious and asking, what did he not want me to see?