Showing posts with label rumfeld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rumfeld. Show all posts

Thursday 8 December 2022

The Twitter Files







It's an unprecedentedly juicy and mouth-watering steak being served up on social media. The people who still trust the legacy media for most of their information are in for a world of pain. Like all pain, the longer the deferment, the more painful it is.

It's like a snowball gathering pace and the avalanche, while not with us quite yet, is in slow enough motion for the entire world to see a transparency at levels of global power-elite that most people don't even get close enough to wait their tables.

Most informed people will know the names of the people above, but Jack Poso might be new to you. Back in the day I used to give him a hard time because he's ex Naval Intelligence and didn't even know MOS/Neocons/Zios were the key actors of 9/11.

The irony is that ONI (Office of Naval Intelligence) lost 8 of their own at the Pentagon that day, and if I'm not mistaken were assigned to the room where the missing $2.3 Trillion was being investigated and which was taken out by high impact explosion. Literally killing that investigation stone dead, or as Bill Gates likes to wail at the wall "aaaah that'll be a dead end'.

Poso has been red pilled since those days, and it's been informative observing the necessary changes and checks to his speech he now makes.

Many will never know because it's through omissions, which the BBC are the world champions at, but not here.





Sunday 26 August 2012

Dark Side Of The Moon - A Mockumentary Disinformation Classic




UPDATE: My popular Youtube account with hundreds of hours of uploads was closed down earlier because of the above documentary. It is now embedded from Google Videos where I originally secured it. Many other users have uploaded it to Youtube, yet I was singled out immediately after writing my post below this notice.

This blog was also closed down.


I've since managed to rescue this blog by repeating an authorization action by SMS that by coincidence I only did last week to prevent unauthorized access on my Gmail account from Honduras. Google Kindly provide information like that when accounts are being compromised on different continents.


It's fair to assume that my post below has annoyed the living heck out of someone. I have my suspicions, but more importantly while we figure out why my post is a threat I'm going to appeal to Google as to why I'm being penalised for transferring a video from one Google platform to another. 

I don't hold Google accountable as there is no business that is not subject to outside pressure.

Update II: I've now used a Youtube upload. It isn't mine but its the same film I lost my account over. Such is life.


Dark Side of the Moon is a French documentary by director William Karel that originally aired on ARTE in 2002 with the title Opération Lune. The basic premise for the film is the theory that the television footage from the Apollo 11 Moon landing was faked and actually recorded in a studio by the CIA with help from director Stanley Kubrick


It features some surprising guest appearances unless one factors in that it's a CIA  sponsored "mockumentary" disinformation classic that muddies the waters beyond recognition and in a way that is very hard to explain. The give away is heavyweights brought in on a nudge and wink to cloak the story in the "ridicule curtain" most notably, chief lizard Donald Rumsfeld, Dr. Henry (Heinz) Kissinger, Alexander Haig and two decent humans Buzz Aldrin and Stanley Kubrick's widow, Christiane Kubrick. The former is obliged to and the latter is likely unaware that heart attacks can be arranged.


The tone of the documentary is heavy "ridicule curtain" most effectively lowered around the UFO question in the fifties when the CIA purchased The National Enquirer to successfully drive the subject out of polite company and into low income/education demographics. The doc/mockumentary begins with low key revelations of NASA working closely with Hollywood at the time of the Moon landings and is meant to be tonally ironic. However these have now been subsequently proven by Jay Weidner in his first class and excellently researched technical film documentary Kubrick's Odyssey.


Over the course of the tale, Karel facilitates the credibility of the ridicule curtain through by and large telling the truth with a preposterous honesty that the serious mind cannot entertain. He even postulates that not only did Kubrick help NASA fake the moon landings but that he was eventually killed by the CIA to cover up the truth (not accurate he was taken out for his film Eyes Wide Shut before it was finally released.)


The appearance of Rumsfeld and Dr. Kissinger who definitely know all the dirty laundry affairs of State are a touch of genius in terms of strategic communications planning. 


It's genius plausible deniability.


Every time the elite tiers need to kill a meme they wheel out the big guns. This one worked well though they never counted on Jay Weidners stubborn, persistent and scholarly approach to the subject that leaves the serious researcher in no doubt.


Friday 24 February 2012

If You See Something, Say Something





One day before 9/11 Donald Rumsfeld announced 2.3 Trillion Dollars were missing from the Pentagon Budget. A little diversion the next day helped to bury that piece of news so the timing of the announcement was convenient for the remaining coincidence theorists out there.

Many of us are anticipating a new diversion at some point that may be even bigger and better than 9/11 so it's important to keep your wits about you, and stop and think, before making your mind up about any globally important events. Many power elite groups are adepts at exploiting the R Complex fear trigger that kicks in naturally to protect humans in the wild but doesn't help very much in an information war. 

The playing cards in the visual above were produced for a harmless Illuminati board game long before 9/11. Universe speaks to us in synchronicities and symbols.

Remember kids: If you see something. Say something.

Tuesday 27 December 2011

Real Journalists Don't Ask Questions (Speak Up Or Forever Hold Your Tongue)






Between Jon Stewart & Stephen Colbert television interviews and criticism of the Bush/Rumsfeld war crimes era has been defended microscopically but honourably. My question is how much more of the Uniuted States is upside down if the comedians do the cultural watchdogs job while the journalists and news presenters do political theatre? 

There's a lot that is twisted, and until the difference between right and wrong is discerned corrrectly by enough people in the United States no amount of innovation, or wealth generation can put a plaster over the metastasizing tumour. 

Speak up or watch it go down. Your silence is the silence of fingers crossed, service to self delusion. You're all in it together.


Update: Clif says the same thing as me at the same time. It's time to speak up or forever hold your tongue.

Saturday 30 July 2011

Rumsfeld Dissembles The Lizard Question



Despite being Psychopath-in-Chief at the Pentagon, I think most people would put Cheney as chief candidate for shape shifting reptilian. It's still remarkable that not only does Rumsfeld fail repeatedly to deny the suggestion for a full fifteen minutes, but is also fully cognisant of what the reptilian issue is about. They may never have sued David Icke but it looks like they read his books.

Friday 29 July 2011

Aspartame - Sweet Misery


Did you know that Donald Rumsfeld personally steered FDA approval of Aspartame? The three neurotoxins that have most forcibly been pushed through food and drugs administration are fluoride, aspartame and xylitol. Even if you're unconcerned about a calcified pineal gland (third eye/higher self/healthy dream state)this documentary provides a lot of reasons worth considering for you diet soda drinkers or artificial sweetener users.


Update: I've not found any scientific evidence that Xylitol is a neurotoxin though I do find questionable google ranking for the sites that are at the top.

Wednesday 30 May 2007

Listen Discover Share

ScottMacleodLiddle

Hot off the press! CBS have purchased Last.fm. The makers of CSI and David Letterman have shelled out 280 million dollars for the London based music social networking site. I'm a big fan of Last.fm right back from when they were audioscrobbler which was a software addition that listened to what music I played on my computer and then made recommendations. Its become a lot more sophisticated since those days and the website has a bunch of features that are addictive.

My musical holy grail is to construct a radio station that plays random music that jumps from Classical to Intelligent Dance Music (IDM) a bit of Drum and Bass and some Jazz thrown in. I'm constantly feeding Last.fm music to get the balance right which keeps me occupied but there's some other stuff that I really like about this software and website that I want to share.

The killer app is thaty just listening to Last.fm allows me to listen to music that I like. The tastes I have described above are not an easy brief to meet and only Last.fm comes close to giving me that. I think its cool that I can give it a macro taste brief jumping from genre to genre or if I'm in the mood I can listen to early electronic pioneers or some other micro tagging channel. If I have to really concentrate and work hard only intelligent drum & bass works for me but there are a number of moods that Last.fm meets splendidly. The more I know it, the more demanding I get. Its nowhere near listening to a terrestrial frequency radio station where laissez faire listening slips in.

I have friends on Last.fm and I love to be able to find out a little more about them or discover new music if I'm in the mood. I also meet people who come and check me out, are connected to me or I discover completely new folk. Music is a really good indicator and while I can get on with all sorts, the 'taste-o-meter really lets me know if I connect on a deeper bobbing heads level. I have three DJ friends who keep me topped up on the freshest stuff possible. Each of them is a little different and its amazing how their personal radio stations have their own flavour despite us all having highly similar tastes. I have to point towards my chum DJ Stewart from Bangkok who plays electrofrequencies on Monday night at Bed Supperclub along with Saint Vincent. Both are the nicest of people and totally dedicated to their craft. It's not like they are on the other side of the world while I'm in London listening on Last.fm and sometimes I can tell if Stewart's going in a different musical direction like the retro action that seems to be going on recently. The other star is Audiossey from Germany who has a distinctive style that is beginning to approach my top 3 or 4 music DJ's and producers in the world. I met him through Last.fm. There's a few others too that I love including Sushigroove, Russell Davies, Zero Influencer and my latest classical music discovery Chalcemon.

Theres a bunch more too and I listen to them all when I feel that I need to get out of a rut and check out what other friends are into. I also think the recommendation radio station is great although I''m not sure if its based on what Last.fm recommends or if it factors in friends individual recommendations sent to me, which is another feature that I get lots of suggestions from. Either way theres also the 'loved' track function and the 'ban' track button too plus skip if a track seems to be going nowhere.

On top of all that there's a full array of social networking tools like music blogging, shoutouts, tagging, neighbourhood radio, loved tracks radio, history radio and more and this all applies also to other members of Last.fm on the network. I can even listen to friends specialist radio stations that they create. Then there's the widgets, the free downloads, the charts and music events based on my location. I could go on because the site in itself could probably keep me occupied a few hours a day just exploring, but I also like to keep an eye on a few of its competitors to see what's new but the thing I really like most about Last.fm is that it raises a philosphical question which is at the heart of marketing. It makes me ask myself when I know that I don't want to listen to stuff I know, and thus forces me to choose between if I want to listen to what I know I don't know, or if I prefer to listen to stuff I don't know I don't know. If this sounds familiar its another way of expressing Donald Rumsfeld's known unknowns and unknown unknowns which despite its obtuse Yogi Berra nature is in actual fact a stunning example of the business we're in. CBS have gotten this site for peanuts. Its easily worth more than myspace or Youtube in my opinion and I hope it stays that way. Thanks audioscrobbler/Last.fm for a few years of terrific music discovery and like all good radio for being a friend. And here's my latest playlist which is another function I've only just begun to play with.








And here's a hot presentation they did with more stats and facts.