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Theme: The Official Story Bonfire

Ask Catherine will be posted on Friday here.

Interview: 3rd Quarter 2023 Wrap Up: The “AI Revolution”: The Final Coup d’Etat? with Whitney Webb

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124 Comments

  1. Here is a link to an article about the death of Michelle Rivasi, the MEP who was investigating the Pfizer and von der Leyen dossier:

    https://bbabo.net/en-GB/article/news/4474549-mep-who-was-investigating-the-pfizer-and-von-der

    The 3 countries which seem to be resisting the WHO are Croatia, Estonia and Slovakia. I think it would be interesting to see what these countries have in common or how they are different from all the other countries which comply. The ones that come to my mind are 1) they are all relatively young and small countries, 2) all 3 have had experience of living under Soviet or socialist tyranny and 3) although Estonia has a large group of ethnic Russians, they basically have a relatively homogeneous population. Are any of these factors relevant or significant?

    1. “In just 20 years, Estonia has become one of the most wired and technologically advanced countries in the world – a true digital society. With internet access declared a human right, some of the fastest broadband speeds in the world widely available all across the country, and digital public services embedded into the daily lives of individuals and organizations, the country is now commonly called “e-Estonia”.
      “In e-Estonia – a paperless digital and tech-savvy society – people file their taxes, bank (99.8% of bank transfers are performed online), sign documents, vote in elections and get a prescription over the internet – all fast and from the comfort of their own home or office, using a secure (the country is also in the top five in the global cybersecurity index) state-issued Estonian ID-card. No time is wasted with paper cheques and long lines at bureaucratic public institutions.”

      https://neweuropeaneconomy.com/fdi/digital-economy-estonia/

  2. Fox news clip in pdf (“Fox News caught faking report…”} was modifed to not show ‘terrorist’ putting his clothes back on.

  3. Started to write a check for a $40 bottle of Cabernet at our local winery yesterday, having exhausted my cash with earlier gift shopping. The very polite young lady started to freak out; “I don’t think we take those!” “Sure you do,” I said, smiling. She brought over another nice young lady, who claimed she’d never even written one, that no YOUNG person even knows how to: “They don’t teach us that in school!” “Well, I’m not a young person,” I replied sweetly. “May I speak to the manager?” “Is it a local check?” the manager asked, eying me over the register, while searching for the seldom used icon to tap on the screen. “I can see my house from here,” I responded (which was true…enough). While waiting, I went on to explain why it was important not to insist upon digital transactions, the CBDCs agenda, et al, and they each echoed concern: “Oh, I hope THEY don’t do that!” “Well, then, I suggest y’all learn how to write a check. Happy Holidays!” I’ve been gifting red pills all shopping season, lol.

  4. Love you and John’s work. You used to provide a snapshot of stories discussed in the video that allowed us to go right to that section in the video. Can you bring that back?

  5. Can’t take John’s irrational hatred of and bias against Israel anymore. Catherine is at least intellectually careful.

    1. December 7, 2023
      By Max Blumenthal·
      ‘If I must die, let it be a tale’: a tribute to Refaat Alareer
      “I am going to use that marker to throw it at the Israeli soldiers, even if that is the last thing that I do,” Refaat Alareer vowed in one of his final interviews.
      My friend Refaat Alareer was murdered by Israeli invaders in Shujaiya, east of Gaza City, on December 6. He is now among the more than 16,000 civilians killed by Israel in the besieged enclave since October 7.
      Our correspondence continued off-and-on for the past nine years. In our final exchange, on November 27, as the bombing grew closer to his home, he told me, “Everything is running out. Food. Water. Cooking gas. Israel is bombing all sources of life. Solar panels, water tanks and pipes. Not one bakery is functioning.”
      Refaat was an author and educator who taught English literature at Gaza’s Islamic University, which has been completely destroyed. “Israel wants us to be closed, isolated—to push us to the extreme,” he explained to me. “It doesn’t want us to be educated. It doesn’t want us to see ourselves as part of a universal struggle against oppression. They don’t want us to be educated or to be educators.”
      In one of his last public interviews, with Electronic Intifada, Refaat vowed that, if necessary, he would die by the same pen by which he lived: “I’m an academic.
      Probably the toughest thing I have at home is an Expo marker. But if the Israelis invade, if the paratroopers charge at us, going from door to door, to massacre us, I am going to use that marker to throw it at the Israeli soldiers, even if that is the last thing that I do.”
      Refaat was a model of the resistance which Israel and its patrons aim to destroy. I tell his story in the passages below, which are excerpted from my 2015 book, The 51 Day War: Life and Loathing in Greater Israel.”
      December
      https://thegrayzone.com/2023/12/07/tribute-refaat-alareer-teacher-murdered-israel/

  6. Speaking of Disney: I was at my local coffee shop this afternoon. You can buy Disney-themed Tarot cards. No joke. They had the Alice in Wonderland series and the Little Mermaid series.

    My first question was: who’s The Devil card? And then, if you use a Disney Tarot, what field would you even be tapping into? Creepy.

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