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Theme: The Chickens Come Home to Roost

Ask Catherine will be posted on Friday here.

Interview: Food Series: Grassroots Activism with Judith McGeary

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129 Comments

  1. Catherine and John, All the people who died supposedly due to da coveed in hospitals and nursing homes in 2020 were killed by the treatment. (There’s no virus, remember? NOBODY died of da coveed.) Iatrogenic deaths, all of them. Remdesivir is a poison, similar type of drug as AZT that killed aids patients. Ventilators killed almost 90% of people put on them. Rancourt says that people in poverty in the US, often come down with bacterial pneumonia and in 2020, the hospitals were told to withhold antibiotics from these people resulting in their deaths. If people didn’t know it before the scamdemic, they know now that US Medical system is toxic to our health.

    1. During the scam I was in line at Staples behind a Funeral Home Director. Everyone in line knew because the Cashier told the shopper they were not allowed more than 2 bottles of sanitizers, etc. The shopper replied that they were exempt because they worked at Funeral Home. I asked if I could speak with them. They happily said, “Yes!” The shopper said, “You’re asking all the right questions and based on those questions you know exactly what was going on.” My questions were basically about demographics and cause of death. The FD confirmed it was basically the poor and elderly. My interpretation: they took out anyone ‘taxing’ the financials.

  2. Subscribers please note 🙂
    “ I was not popular with the faculty.”
    “I was not popular with my 5th grade teacher.”

  3. Does anyone know the framework for how fluoride is put into our drinking water? Is it county officials, state, private contracts?? Who should we pressure to get rid of this poison? ie. where to start.

  4. Darn it Catherine. Your audio is muffled, at least on my end. JT’s audio is great. I shall persevere 🙂

  5. I was reading this week’s “Hello” magazine and read the weirdest article about the Super Bowl. I’m Canadian and don’t watch the Super Bowl. Apparently, there was a Uber Eats commercial with Jennifer Aniston and David Schwimmer.

    Quote from the article: The ad, for Uber Eats, features a host of [Hollywood] stars forgetting significant life events.

    Forecasting in action. I wonder how much the actors got paid, or what promises/threats were proposed to them.

    1. Actors get pay good monies for these purposes all over, and they do not care of consequences, either because of their ignorance or lack of values. Most care about fame & money. I am not saying, for some it might be a matter of living and paying rent, but actors should be aware of the type of jobs they accept, although some may be already too compromised to back down.

    2. The strange thing about the whole food delivery service thing is that it is horribly unprofitable. If you look at Doordash’s financials, which owns 60% market share in the US, their net profit is consistently negative. Uber, as a whole, operates on razor-thin margins. I haven’t dug into their financials, but I would bet the Uber Eats part of their business is negative. I went to talk by the founder of one of the original ghost kitchen setups in London, and it was enlightening on how unprofitable the delivery services were and how much of their margin comes from the local restaurants who tend to lose money on any delivered orders.

      1. I was posting against the nefariously named “ghost kitchens” years ago. Who wants food cooked clandestinely by ghosts? It was a way to close all our beloved locally owned restaurants and when I saw the psychopath Uber founder as an investor that was a major tell. I am glad they haven’t succeeded thus far. It’s all subsidized by the international bankers to control the food in the digital slavery control grid as we know.
        https://www.cnbc.com/2024/02/17/how-ghost-kitchens-went-from-1-trillion-hype-to-a-struggling-business-model.html

        1. Ghost kitchen’s are not that nefarious. I have some direct knowledge of this because I have a business that utilizes one. It is simply a commercial kitchen without a retail storefront (which is enormously expensive for a new food business). These allow a lot of people with food product ideas to produce in a commercial kitchen without needing the extra overhead. This is a great thing for small food entrepreneurs. I would agree that any food service that relies on Uber or Doordash is likely going to get killed. But someone getting started, growing a catering business, selling at farmers markets, these are a vibrant part of the economy.

      2. WestWorld Season 3 features a fictional RICO app for on-demand scheduling of criminal tasks/jobs, https://westworld.fandom.com/wiki/RICO

        The technical infrastructure for such a fictional app would be similar to that needed by on-demand delivery services. It is known that driver-contractors often work for multiple competing services, e.g. Lyft and Uber, during the same shift, using multiple phones or apps.

        In the WestWorld S3 scenario, one can imagine an on-demand worker carrying apps for both legal and illegal tasks. For an entity running the backend infrastructure for RICO, legal services would provide “cover traffic” for workers on illegal services.

        At some point, there will be a remake of Le Femme Nikita where the famous hotel staff scenes will be replaced by on-demand workers.

  6. Important information especially in light of the Kennedy 1st Amendment win and Missouri v Biden ( now Murthy v Missouri) ) Supreme Court 1st Amendment case:

    Tucker spoke to former State Department officer Mike Benz,1 who is arguably the top US expert on the workings of the censorship state to go public about the scope and workings of the censorship regime. He also helpfully describes the trajectory that led the US blob to go from seeing the Internet as its friend, particularly for helping facilitate regime changes, to its enemy by allowing non-mainstream views like support of Brexit to drive events. He also describes some major initiatives, like trying to thwart criticism of mail-in ballots.

    https://twitter.com/TuckerCarlson/status/1758529993280205039?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1758529993280205039%7Ctwgr%5Ecf1f36b14d62a7d930b22fb8e344b22772b18ed3%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nakedcapitalism.com%2F2024%2F02%2Fmike-benz-former-state-department-head-of-cyber-portfolio-discusses-extent-and-mechanisms-of-censorship-with-tucker-carlson.html

    1. I had a friend send me this interview. If you really want to see that Trump has the support of the deep state in Washington, it is Benz coming out for Trump. That whole interview is what a limited hangout truly looks like. He drops all this info that he has all this stuff that he knows from his intelligence connections, etc. Robert Malone was doing a lot of this on Covid. Some of it is true, but the true things are those we all already know, like the voting system is broken and corrupt. It is exactly tuned to what you want to hear but imparts no real new information.

  7. Grocery & Produce Brand Policies on Apeel.
    Updated February 6th, 2024.
    https://myhealthforward.com/blogs/my-health-forward-blog/apeel

    The following list accurately reflects the disclosures and policies of growers and grocery retailers on selling produce treated with Apeel’s Edipeel and Organipeel food coatings. To date, Apeel has only been commercially applied on apples, cucumbers, avocados, asparagus, limes, lemons, grapefruits, mandarins, mangoes, and oranges. The majority of grocery store produce is not treated with Apeel but may contain natural or synthetic waxes.

    1. I can peel a cucumber but I can’t peel asparagus darn it. Quit eating asparagus a year ago.

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