Arcturus bullturus

From Roman Balmakov, Epoch Times:

The CDC just announced a new COVID variant, Arcturus, which is spreading throughout the United States and carries with it some unusual symptoms—symptoms not seen with other variants. And strangely enough, the rise of this new variant coincides perfectly with the World Health Organization’s new plan to adopt the European Union’s digital vaccine passport setup. They’re using the EU’s vaccine passports as the framework for their own new global, digital health certificates.

Is it just my eyes, or is this new variant spreading right at the best time to assist WHO with their digital health certificates? What a coincidence!

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AIDS/Covid … father and son of depopulation

I read a brief essay by Miles Mathis this morning, and while short on specifics or links, he asserts that the Covid vaccines were intended to kill people, and in his mind, targeted to kill specific people. I never took the vaccine (I [seldom] masked and never locked down, and never once placed my feet on a floor sticker that said “Stand here”), but somehow I do not feel exempt. But I am feeling very healthy these days, my energy levels back to where they were before ankle surgery in October of 2022. Maybe I dodged a bullet. We will see.)

It was painfully obvious to me that the lockdowns, quarantines, and insults like masking and distancing were tactics to intimidate the herd. Shutting down public gatherings, preventing religious worship, having sporting events played before empty stadiums, were merely demonstrations of the raw power accumulated by the shadow governments behind the showplace ones. We have one-world government. It was de facto in place. It had all been done out of sight. We were not entering a new era. We were there already.

I lament the passing of Kerry Mullis in 2019, the man who won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his invention of the PCR process. It’s an amazing piece of work that can indeed match DNA sequences, very useful in research and law enforcement, but useless (in his own words) in diagnosis of disease. Mullis believed in viruses, which I do not, but said that PCR was “qualitative, not quantitative”, that is, detection of a single virus, as if, meant nothing. He was outspoken in his assertion that the detection of the AIDS virus, which he thought was real, meant nothing. I think it was for this reason that prior to Covid, he was somehow murdered. He was a loose canon. He would surely have spoken out against use of PCR in the “test test test” regime that was used to insinuate that there was a virus and that it was spreading.

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Out of the closet, into our faces

As a youth growing up in Billings, Montana, I knew nothing about counterculture of gays living among us. The idea of two men kissing (and more) was abhorrent to me (still is), though two women … well, another story. In retrospect I think a good friend from my youth was a repressed homosexual. In his family, such behavior would have led to shunning, maybe even violence from the Dad. I came to think that repressed homosexuals can be dangerous, as the pent-up rage often translates to violence, domestic and otherwise.

I knew a woman (through my then-wife’s workplace) who married a man who after the vows went completely asexual on her, leading to divorce for cause, in that he could not/would not perform. I knew of a man, son of a prominent businessman, who might be thought of as a flamer, openly gay and probably trying to embarrass his dad with (perceived) abhorrent behavior. In the 1960s and 70s, this was all par for the course, the way it was. It was tough to be LGBT.

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Held v Montana

At the end of this post where you see in bold “Youth Plaintiffs… ” is a brief synopsis of a lawsuit against the State of Montana alleging the following:

…greenhouse gas emissions [are] “already triggering a host of adverse consequences in Montana, including dangerously increasing temperatures, changing precipitation patterns, increasing droughts and extreme weather events, increasing the frequency and severity of wildfires, increasing glacial melt***, and causing numerous adverse health risks, especially to children …

If it were me, and be thankful it wasn’t, I would simply have put the burden of proof on Our Children’s Trust, the group behind this lawsuit and many others, all tossed out of court. All of the adverse consequences are nonexistent. Even melting glaciers***, while ongoing, has been going on since 1860 or so, the end of the Little Ice Age. If courts of law are a means of discovering truth, which I think only sometimes possible, then this case would be a no-brainer.

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Former Senator Barbara boxer lectures a priest and a philosopher on science

In this five minute video former California Senator Barbara Boxer attempts to take down Alex Epstein, author of The Moral Case for Fossil Fuels, and Father Robert Sirico, president of the Acton Institute, a conservative organization that brings religion and free enterprise together. I have never been an admirer of Boxer, and have never thought much of her intellect or judgment. Due to the tempo of these times, in my defense, I say that not because she is a woman. That is not my thrust. I say it because she comes off like a ditzy broad.

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I was once a counterfeiter, and the rise of the Reds

Stepping Stupid

I have a lot of little things to write about, and a few big things that take research. Guess what I am doing today? Anyway, our Chamonix traffic tickets reminded me of this.

Back in the 1970s I worked for an oil company in the downtown area of Billings, Montana. I parked a few blocks away in a non-metered area. While that was going on, the Billings Police Department announced a program called “STEP”, or Selective Traffic Enforcement Program. The great minds behind it thought that if they selected an area, in this case downtown Billings, and ticketed every offense they saw, no matter how small or insignificant, that people would behave better.

I am not kidding. They thought this was a good idea.

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Maudit piège à vitesse

Today we received notice from Chamonix, France authorities that we are being ticketed for two moving violations back in May, each in the same spot, one the day we arrived there and the other the day we left. One ticket is for 60 kmh in a 50, the other 63 in a fifty. Translated to mph, that is 37 mph in a 31, and 39 in a 31. The fine for each violation is 135, or about $147. Since we were driving our daughter’s car, we have to make sure that authorities know it was us and not her. At this point I have given her a photo of my driver’s license and told her if need be I can also do an affidavit that I was the driver. The laws in France are tough on moving violations, and I imagine it would affect her insurance as well.

Come to think of it, it will affect our insurance too, if word gets back and these days, you know it will.

When I saw the large fines versus the minor violation, my first thought was maudit piège à vitesse, or goddamned speed trap. (That is Google translate, so don’t blame me if it is inaccurate.) There is nothing we can do about it as we have to protect our daughter, and even though the offense was minor, that is not an argument in our defense. We are out $294.

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The Ludlow Massacre, April 20, 1914

April 20 is a popular day for fake events, such as the 1999 Columbine massacre, the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill, and the 1978 Korean Air jet being forced down in the Soviet Union. It is also Hitler’s (supposed) birthday. The Ludlow Massacre also happened that day.

First, the symbolic significance of that day?* The only thing I have ever suspected is a numeric connection. In a non-leap year, it is the 110th day of the year. Eleven is a heavily used number in freemasonry, along with eight and 33. That’s all I can do is suggest that, as many of the events attributed to that day are famously fake.

I read the Wikipedia piece on Ludlow last week,  and have been sitting on it to let it percolate. Much of it seems very odd. The official story, and what I have believed without evidence or research for years, was that the Ludlow victims were machine-gunned down by Rockefeller agents. According to my reading, two children, Joe Petrucci, age 4, Frank Snyder (11) died of a gunshot wounds. Five other adults were shot to death. The remaining 13 died of asphyxiation and/or fire. All but two (11) were children.

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Nuggets win, city is fired up!

I just learned in the past few weeks that the city of Denver has a basketball team. They are called the Nuggets. Last year I learned that Denver also has a hockey team, called the Avalanche.

At the gym a fellow told me that eleven people were shot in the subsequent downtown celebration after the Nuggets’ win last night. Now they are saying nine. I’ll take their word on it despite the suspicious numbers.

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A dog encounter

Last Saturday my wife and I, imagining that even in our seventies we are not frail, went on a five-mile thousand-foot hike, climbing Mt. Lagalt. It is but a mile drive for us to get to the trailhead, a wide and gracious uphill climb that at a certain point becomes a narrow and steep climb. It is not dangerous, but the last part, the ascent, is a bit of a challenge. You’ve probably no idea if you are younger, but at our age, the concept of a mile becomes longer than ever before. Each of us were runners in our younger years, and a mile meant nothing. In my best days, not even approaching the really good runners I realize, I was doing 7.5 minute five mile runs, and shorter runs on occasion at 6.5-minute miles. Those were the barriers that I never broke.

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