Interesting stuff. (I wonder if my sister is up to making eye drops for cats? I'll ask her.)
At the time of the Fukushima 'event' I thought to myself, 'This is odd. It goes against what I understood about nuclear reactor plants.' I'm not an expert although I had spent quite a bit of time, in my past, looking at and studying how they worked. As to Fukushima, I won't say that I didn't believe it or that I didn't not believe it. I was too busy at the time at the early stages of transitioning out of crippling co-dependency in a rather unorthodox way, as it turns out, to do either. I just had the thought/feeling, that the description of events didn't seem plausible.
The argument and evidence presented that 4/11 was Japan's 9/11 seems sound and has the tenor and 'feel' of veracity to me. Incredible, really, isn't it?
What comes to mind, out of the blue, is the movie 'Conspiracy Theory' because it argues about th man-made nature of earthquakes. Was that movie a form of predictive programming? Was it making a hidden public statement about the upcoming events as a warning to absolve the perpetrators of guilt, as I've read is a satanic practice to reduce (eliminate?) the burden to the soul of killing?
Yes, the encrypted warnings are how the blood sacrifice is deemed willing and therefore acceptable. There needs to be a fighting chance to figure it out and if that chance isn't taken, then at some level the victims have agreed and offered themselves.
You may want to watch it. It discusses very high tech and MK-ULTRA imprinting to created controled access to their Manchurian candidates in a subtle way. As well as creating earthquakes in the middle east as a kind of hint/teaser via satellite.
I'll look at the your Corbett Report Report. Gracias.
Hi Tereza, I'm going to choose just one topic to comment on and that's your eye drop rant. :) First of all, the eye drops on that list all look like garbage anyway. So, adios to them. Ayurveda has lots of do-it-yourself remedies for the eyes. Triphala eye wash, ghee, honey eye drops, etc. Here are a few links you can peruse. John was one of my Ayurveda teachers.
Barbara! So helpful. And I love that it includes one that's pre-made with lots of other great rose products. You may have noticed I'm on a rose kick if you watch the videos. My farmer's market has a new rose vendor and I'm hooked.
Yes, the ones recalled were garbage but the chilling effect seemed to have scared off my healthcare/ grocery from carrying anything. I don't know for sure if that's every store I frequent. I've been too busy mourning to do a complete scan.
The manuka honey looks very interesting. I once got these honey eye drops in Mexico that were said that they could even treat cataracts. They weren't for every day. I tried them once and they burned, but felt like they were doing something good. It seems logical that honey would be useful, since it seems to be for everything else.
Okay, now you're making me glad they have driven me to a new level of exploration! Thanks much. XOXO
I sometimes put a drop of honey in my eye after doing the Triphala eye wash. Yes, it stings like crazy but after 30 seconds they feel so good! I like Christopher’s Eys Drops too. You can get them on Amazon. I keep telling people to get books while we still can. Making a Triphala eye wash right now! Sweet dreams, Tereza! 💚
👏👏! I have a couple of good eye health stories that maybe I'll get around to write about one day! Your eyes must be super excited for the Rose and Honey! xoxo
And it's easy to read between the lines of their disclaimer--it's worked for thousands of years but the FDA says it's not safe so this is for informational use, aka pets, only:
Disclaimer: While Ayurveda has been employing this technique for thousands of years to address underlying imbalances in the eyes, modern sanitary practices and FDA guidelines strictly prohibit the use of non-sterile or home-sterilized solutions in daily eye care routines. Consult with your healthcare practitioner before beginning any eye care regimen that involves introduction of foreign material into the eye itself. Home-sterilized solutions cannot prevent the growth of harmful bacteria and are not a substitute for modern eye care products.
I hear you about books Barbara ... and am telling FB groups to make sure and download all digital books to local hard discs or SD memory. Expecting a false-flag 'terrorist' attack on the world-wide web, and the global predators offering a re-boot ... provided we accept a unique, one-ring-to-bind-them-all digital identity. For our 'safety'. Of course.
Good idea, Steve, although I much prefer real books to digital. There are so many home remedies that work wonders. I challenge myself to self-care every time some little blip happens with my health. Haven't been to a medical doctor in years. I think a walk in the woods (or any other preferred type of Nature) is more healing than most remedies. 🌲🌲🌲
Banzai to that! Raised in North Carolina, the only reason I went through a half dozen fishing boats in Japan was to escape the city. I now prefer car camping among the mountains and lakes of the Mt. Fuji area ... but once endless horizons on a midnight sea really sparked my imagination ... when not wrecking havoc on my joints. 😂
I had no prior understanding of disaster terrorism, but I am warming to the hypothesis. I discovered a DARPA program ordering the investigation of such tools of statecraft.
This makes me think back to the floods in China during 2020. The Three Gorges Dam was said to be under dangerous stress.
Why attack both sides?
Both sides are needed to engineer a global government.
Disaster terrorism is a great phrase. May I use that?
Interesting about the Three Gorges Dam. I did a lot of research after Hurricane Katrina and found that was intended to clear out multi-generational family homes that went back to the first free blacks. I don't know that the structural failure was deliberately triggered but it was certainly known to be a matter of time. The impediments to letting people go back, save structures, shelter, help became obvious after the waters receded. That was only the first step. I think Shock Doctrine was an intro to the concept but didn't go far enough. And disaster capitalism comes closer. But disaster terrorism is more accurate.
I've come to realize there are no two sides. There's a handful of people and all of us. Ukraine was set up to be a sacrifice zone. And despite appearances to the contrary, that's the intent for Israel now, sinking the US with it. Thanks for reading, Mathew!
With regard to earthquakes, remember that Nikola Tesla around 1898 is thought to have created more than one earthquake in Manhattan (and possibly The Tunguska Event in Siberia in 1908). Some say that it was to prevent Tesla's technology getting into the wrong hands that J P Morgan withdrew funding from him.
When Tesla died impoverished in 1943, Vannevar Bush sent in Donald Trump's Uncle John from MIT to collect, analyze and assess Tesla's equipment and documentation on behalf of the US government. Nothing has been heard of it since; but government scientists have had plenty of time over the eighty years that have passed to perfect the technology in their black/secret-budget projects.
I am a little floored by the “honesty for those who deserve it” part because it’s so powerful in its simplicity and because I recognize the mistake I’ve made for years and I have to sit with this for a moment. I can think of numerous instances where I should have said nothing and moved on. I have trouble lying so I thought radical honesty was the way to go. But your daughter has now shifted my paradigm too. Sheesh.
Oh, fellow mom, ain't it the truth? I'm choosing not to rethink my past decisions to be honest. Everything we've ever done has been the right thing, at the right time. If the moments that vindicate you haven't come around yet, it's because you haven't lived long enough. Everything you've said needed to be said.
But maybe, for me, I'm in a new phase where everyone who matters already knows what I think. I can wait for them to come to me.
Now I don't know how this will play out with the Israeli mom with 2 yr old twins in my aerial class. I've been very very tight-lipped, out of respect for the teacher. But a friend just mentioned that she really got on a soapbox in defense of Israel one day when I wasn't there. And she's pretty full of herself, so that's not hard to imagine. So I'm preparing in my mind for what I could say that's honest but won't make one of us have to quit the class. It's not that she deserves my honesty but the Palestinians do.
My intuition is shit. Cognitively I think everything I've done has been right but that's to counterbalance all the time I spend kicking myself, muttering, "Why did I have to say that?!!"
I wouldn't dream of it. You keep me able to hold my tongue to those who don't deserve my honesty, knowing that the smarter someone is, the more they appreciate what I'm saying.
Unbekoming wrote a beautiful fable about two lovers chained in Plato's Cave, one of whom valued Connection and decided to stay in the cave, and the other who valued Truth and decided to break her chains and explore other caves in search of the "real" reality.
I'm struggling mightily, because I value connection and truth equally. Seems like your daughter has hit the solution-nail squarely on its head. Would you please extend my gratitude to her? xox
Mary, I've been missing you! But like Tirion said, I assume you have a full, rich life and aren't hanging around a lamp post waiting for my next missive. I'm honored whenever you stop by.
What an interesting premise. Do you have a link? I don't know if you've seen my next one on What is Reality? but it would say Unbekoming's is a false dichotomy.
If we're individuals, then our shared perception is Reality. The only way it could be not reality is if we're OneMind. And the only way to find that out would be in connection with another.
For one to leave the other to go 'out there' would be to assume their superiority to the one who stayed. There is no there there.
But if they stayed, there are many games that might provide clues to whether the shadows were real: Close your eyes and describe what you see. Name a vegetable and write it down, and I'll do the same. And inbetween, games of scrabble just for fun.
But you and Tonika are taking this to an interpersonal level and I've got no theories there. I will certainly extend your gratitude to Cassandra!
I have a quick question for you, Tereza, in regard to superiority and my need for clarification:) If one has to defend a child, by taking the life of an attacker, does that make the defender think themself superior?
Easy answer, not at all. The zealots, who I suspect discovered the teachings of the Course 2000 yrs ago, were not pacifists. The founder Judas was the Sicariot, named for the sica or short dagger used to assassinate the priestly traitors during festivals, then melt back into the crowd. "If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out" should be "If the eyes of Rome in your midst betray thee, kill them."
The Romans engaged in torture, which I think is always wrong. To do harm is to inflict suffering but to do evil is to cause others to inflict suffering. To take a life of those inflicting torture is, not just not wrong, but to fail to do it may be considered cowardly. You are abetting the worst forms of suffering for your own protection. (Let me clarify here that I am a coward.)
It was 'Jesus' who took this theology of sovereignty and turned it into a slave code. "If [a Roman] slaps you, turn the other cheek." "If you want to be first, be the best among slaves." "If [a Roman] demands you to carry a heavy load, go the extra mile." Jesus never said to the Romans, don't torture and enslave other people.
Thank you for clarifying:) And I completely agree with what you presented, except for one thing. I do not view anyone speaking the truth, such as yourself, as a coward.
Also, I read where you were getting sick, so I sure hope you're feeling better today. My daughter, and her family, are all going through sicknesses, as well, as are so many others around us. After Covid, it seems people are definitely getting sick more often. None of us took the jabs, either.
Anyway, thank you for the reply and clarification:) Be well!!
On the question of honesty, I'd say that sharing a truth with someone that their consciousness is not ready or able to comprehend is not only a waste of time and energy but can actually do more harm than good. Maybe the difficult bit is knowing what the other person can handle? Perhaps easier with loved ones than with a new acquaintance at a cocktail party or a fellow traveller in the blogosphere?
Hi Tirion ... sorry to be a bit late in replying to some good threads in my own post (still playing catch-up from the holidays). But I thought I'd give a quick amen here from one Far Eastern tradition. I am not a Buddhist or ideologue of any kind, but something I remember reading many years ago by Suzuki Daisetsu on zen is that unlike a typical Sunday sermon, a student of zen would receive a 'truth' deemed appropriate by the teacher to fit the student's place on their journey.
In retrospect, that is a pretty blunt comparison because good Western priests/preachers/rabbi etc. tend to also serve in a role similar to psychiatric counselors, rather than typical history-caretakers of temples and shrines here in Japan.
So interesting, Steve. In sorting through old pamphlets at my mom's house, there were some written by a perceptive priest on "Are you overly scrupulous?" And reading it, it was what we'd now call OCD. But this was over 50 yrs ago, maybe even 70 yrs. Catholic priests, when they were good, were free marriage counselors, psychologists, therapists. No one has really filled that role, certainly not for free.
Just pushing dawn here, and am headed back to bed, hoping to catch some wild adventure in a vivid dream. Couldn't help but to check the mail and found this.
Yes, my memories of Western counterparts are now probably about 50 years old and from the rural South, so my cultural comparison may be out of date. In fact, looking at FB posts of a slightly younger cousin who became a southern Baptist preacher, I read more about his bass boat than the good word, much less personal counseling. But then again, FB might not be quite the right place for that. 😆
Oh, and though I am dancing with some of your partners here, I think I have yet to write a direct comment thanking you for mentioning my name. A little shocked and embarrassed, but just a little 😊. I just happen to be at a safe place at the right time. The Nodo peninsula where it happened is getting constantly hit with a string of strong aftershocks, snow, and accompanying below zero temperatures. Some people are trying to keep warm in greenhouses ... which are not entitled to receive govt. benefits because they are not "authorized" safety shelters ... and nearing 200 dead with almost as many missing.
As with many of your posts, so much to think about and speculate on. So much beyond me.
Back to bed for Bonzo here. Will read and chat soon.
steve
Hark! I hear the crows have started pecking at their veranda vittles. Happy dreams for my good deed of the day.
Hi Mary, and a Happy New Year to you. I hear you about the sidelining, especially now that the holiday rush is over and time to get down to serious housecleaning, and under one disaster after another, if not caused by nature, by sociopathic opportunists. I am as safe as I can hope for in this world gone insane, trying to identify with the little tidbits of a modest here and now when I can. Lots of sifting and reading to catch up with, but I hope to be chatting with you soon.
Hi Tereza, Thank you for this post. Still trying to piece together events in Japan. One aspect that leads me strongly suspect deep state attacks in the form of earthquakes/air crashes is the movement by the Central Bank of Japan policy makers.
October 31, 2023 they announced a policy to move interest rates higher.
On Tuesday, the central bank, the Bank of Japan, tried to thread the needle, announcing a policy that aims to nudge bond yields higher. The bank said it would use 1 percent as a starting point for yields on 10-year government bonds, instead of a cap, saying it expected inflation to go higher than it had previously believed.
The dollar immediately started declining versus the yen and gold rose. As soon as the earthquake hit new rates cuts were hinted at and the yen fell against the dollar immediately. Perhaps the message got accross.
Things are really getting critical for our slavemasters petrodollar federal reserve notes. I believe it's demise is inevitable but getting there will not be pretty.
Hi, Alison! Yes, I have a few episodes on geo-engineering the weather and weaponizing water. But earthquakes and tsunamis I hadn't delved into. Certainly if they can do it, we know they would.
Have you read this, from UNZ, today? Truth? What truth? And speaking of manufracturing history...
When examining all of this information, serious historians have no choice but to dismiss Jewish sources — from Maccabees to Josephus — as low-quality references at best and deceitful fiction at worst.
-Eric Stryker,,"Hanukkah": An Anti-Greek Blood Libel, Separating Fact From Fiction
I get the 'sharing honesty' with those deemed worthy of it. While I haven't thought of it that way specifically, I do make assessments all the time about whether it's 'worth' saying something, whether it can be received or not. Sometimes - surprising myself - I end up saying it even when I determined it won't be received as intended. Following some internal inclination. It's very context-specific, no general rule applies. (Though in general I do have a 'rule' about not-self-censoring, which is not the same thing as saying everything you think all the time.)
I have zero doubt that natural disasters are regularly induced and used as weapons to warn other countries, to get them back in line or jolt humans into fear. There is basically nothing 'they' wouldn't do to maintain control.
Thanks for the mention and link to my stack! Best Tereza.
I like that 'internal inclination' on whether to say something, even when you know it won't be received. I listen for that too. It's important to plant seeds, I think, that will get lodged in someone's consciousness, and may sprout later. But that's my rationalization after the fact.
What Cassandra, my youngest, was getting at was the heat, the defensiveness when I blurt something out that I already know no one wants to hear. I think she's suggesting I take that pre-judgment and emotion out of it by seeing my honest analysis as a gift.
And whatever I get back is a gift too. In that case of the NYE dinner, it was the recognition of "Oh that's what MSNBC is teaching young professionals, that it's the fault of my generation they can't buy houses." It's good to have a finger on the pulse of the MSM.
It's a subtle difference but it's taking away the resentment of self-censorship by turning it into a proactive choice and having the confidence of people behind me who do recognize the value of what I say. It doesn't solve the dilemma with my oldest daughter being worried about our relationship because I don't think cis-gendered is a necessary label. But it did change my lingering irritation towards someone I may never see again.
"taking away the resentment of self-censorship by turning it into a proactive choice and having the confidence of people behind me who do recognize the value of what I say."
I see what you mean. And that's a good distinction, especially since it freed up that lingering irritation.
That quote jumped out at me too ... mostly because I see that "resentment of self-censorship" as a strong ground for understanding Japanese group dynamics, and a culture of compliance so strong that a top-down "suggestion" is a euphemism for "demand".
One's identity here in Japan is more likely to be defined by clearly institutionalized, rule-driven in-groups and rigid hierarchies than by more loosely organized, empathy-driven communities. So I am guessing that there are fewer opportunities to take a pro-active choice regarding a strategic use of honesty.
Some key Japanese concepts addressing this culture include "tatai shakai" (hierarchical society), "jaku-niku kyoshoku" (dog-eat-dog world), "honne" vs "tatemai" (honest intentions vs. professed intentions), "omotenashi" vs. "omoiyari" (graceful, but transactional hospitality vs. compassionate empathy) and the highly valued skill of "kuki o yomu" (reading the room). The fact that these words have almost word-for-word English translations underscores the human nature all people have in common. But like an amoeba, Japanese culture stretches one "limb" to an extreme at the expense of others.
Great analogy of the amoeba! I wonder if it's not common human nature but common media psyops. At least the Japanese have names for them. We would just call 'hierarchical society' society. Or transactional hospitality a nice person.
Good point. Guessing much of culture has been reduced to common media psyops. Control the language, control the mind, shape the culture. Even without the need for mandates, Japan had a huge initial rush for mRNAs ... at the beginning. Many are beginning to catch on now, but you'd never know it from msm. Hmm ... before I close my eyes for the rest of the morning, wondering agan about possible connections between covert geo-engineered warfare and foreign policy. Sounds like something out of a 1950's sci-fi book ... way before 'predictive programing' was even a gleam in some sociopath's eye.
Fukushima had huge design flaws. Their backup generators were below sea level and couldn't run due to the flood (which is something they know happens there in a tsunami).
When those generators couldn't run, the cooling systems couldn't run and that lead to the disasters.
Cholera in Haiti is likely from dirty water supplies. That's the main reason for the smallpox epidemic of the past and current ebola/marburg outbreaks.
They blame it on another specific pathogen because it promotes the fear of germs and viruses while hiding the real causes, like pollution of water and food supplies.
Hi Tirion. Downloading it now. But when I read the blurb "Fukushima was the location of a covert nuclear weapons program" ... that rang a bell.
My dad was a Master Sgt. in the Green Beret, and though he didn't talk much about his work, before he died, he did mention that one of his jobs was teaching generals the tactical use of backpackable nuclear weapons back in the '60's, when the Soviets had their suitcase bomb equivalents. It would be naive to think that any corporate nation-state which has nuclear or bio-engineering capabilities to not have covert, weaponized programs for every overt peacetime use. What can be weaponized will be.
Yes, agreed. Even if Japan does not actually have a stockpile of its own nukes, I'm sure they have all the components and know-how ready in the wings, should the need arise. For the time being, Japan remains an occupied country, sovereign in name only.
Some researchers claim that the Soviet military suffered such huge casualties against the NAZIs because the NAZIs were lobbing tactical nukes at them and that some of the uranium for "Little Boy" dropped on Hiroshima came from the NAZIs. There is so much that we do not know!
Hi T. Yeah, those Nazi nukes are new to me ... but regarding Japan, I remember writing about this on Quora a few years ago, but the Wiki page was easier to find ... "... Japan is often said to be a "screwdriver's turn" away from possessing nuclear weapons, or to possess a "bomb in the basement".
Huh. While skimming down to that section, I saw Fukushima was mentioned. Looking forward to reading that document you linked.
And I just saw Riken mentioned. Sometime in the last week or so, I responded somewhere about the Riken-Obakata scandal. I think my memory was jiggled a bit because of John Campbell's recent interview with one of the authors of the latest "Death of Science" book. I bought a Kindle version. The title sounds a bit click-baity, but I am looking forward to giving it a critical read.
And will get back to our threads on my post. 😅. Did not mean to ghost you ... just flooded with New Years obligations, not to mention the ongoing flood of information.
Oh ... and somewhere here, I mentioned in comment to Tereza and Kathleen what I perceive as a difference between Japan and other cultures regarding "resentment of self-censorship". Would love to read your take on that.
Oh, I don't feel ghosted at all. Sometimes I don't go online for days and I assume (hope?!) that others have much more important things to do than lean on a lamp post at a corner of the blogosphere :)
By the way, in our chat about the quake(s), I remember you saying you were driving near Biwako, right? I keep a seaworthy SUP and fishing tackle in the back of my HiAce if you are ever up for that kind of thing. Used to have a 30 foot Yanmar (EX30) for fishing the Izu islands, but aging joints in pounding seas, and maintenance costs (that "boat is a hole in the water through which you pour money" thingy) convinced me to downsize.
I do not remember exactly what the political problem was at the time, but Japan apparently did not support the globalist agenda and some think the quake happened to teach them to be a bit moe cooperative in the future. That's all I recall about it for now.
I'm saying that if it was designed properly, the quake would damage it, yes, but there wouldn't be a huge radiation leak and the meltdown in a reactor.
Yes, and maybe it was precisely those design flaws which the attackers targeted? FWIW, Jim Stone claims there was no melt-down. He writes, "That the destruction of reactors 3 and 4 is so severe it could only have been accomplished with nuclear weapons."
Yeah, but if the tsunami was caused by a well placed explosion and not an earthquake, then it would not matter how well the reactor was designed or built.
Remember that the apparently extremely well built 9/11 towers came down despite their heft and I'm not even mentioning Bldg 7.
Here's your answer to the dry eye and cyclosporin question.: Apparently dry eyes can be caused by inflammation of the cells that produce tears. SInce they're inflamed, they do not work; they cannot produce tears.
Cyclosporin can reduce inflammation.
The idea is to use the cyclosporin to reduce the inflammation. Once the inflammation is reduced or gone, then then the tear producing cells can produce tears. Voila! No more dry eyes or at least not as dry.
As someone who has allergic conjunctivitis, my suggestion - as, indeed, with all maladies - would be to address the cause of the inflammation rather than the inflammation. Easier said than done perhaps but, given the fundamental role of inflammation in disease in general, worthwhile. The whole approach of treating symptoms instead of causes is one I am trying to adopt with my own health, going back to pre-Rockefeller medicine.
Yes it was homeopathic eye drops for seasonal allergies I was trying to buy at the time. But it's the principle of the thing. We're not allowed to take responsibility for our own health and buy what we want. And imagine all the producers now shut down, after decades without anyone having a problem. It's the tip of the iceberg and not unrelated to vaccines. They decide what we should put in our eyes, our lungs, our mouth, our blood.
The principle of the thing is that we're supposed to become dependent on them which is why the money crowd loves monopolies as well as monopsonies.
Sorry to toss in another consideration, but it's pretty easy to see that's what Prohibition was all about, and of course, under benevolent sounding pretexts.
"... would be to address the cause of the inflammation rather than the inflammation."
Bingo!
Or at least that's what I would do if I were treating it, but what do you and I know? ; ). Treating the symptom would be like buying new batteries for the car rather than repairing the alternator.
That would be me, and I hear what you're saying about inflammation, but any anti-inflammatory directly effects the immune function. When they've prescribed something as toxic as Ciclosporin, you would think they would only prescribe it for the short-term, which they didn't. My mom took it for several years, at least once per day, as far as I know. Something as simple as saline drops would have probably been more helpful, esp. from a longevity standpoint, since she directly died from something treating her dry eyes. I can certainly see why people would take it for organ transplants, however, but when it is being used, they are monitoring the patient often, via blood draws. Anyway, thank you for the info:)
Just wondering if you are living here in Japan (or China) and/or are kanji fluent. Although I live in Japan (over 40 years now), I must confess that my fluency is mostly restricted to conversational Japanese, and I rely on friends and DeepL for most kanji.
I haven't researched the others but definitely agree about Shinzo Abe. Cynthia Chung wrote about that very convincingly, which is to say with facts and logic.
Hola, Tereza.
Interesting stuff. (I wonder if my sister is up to making eye drops for cats? I'll ask her.)
At the time of the Fukushima 'event' I thought to myself, 'This is odd. It goes against what I understood about nuclear reactor plants.' I'm not an expert although I had spent quite a bit of time, in my past, looking at and studying how they worked. As to Fukushima, I won't say that I didn't believe it or that I didn't not believe it. I was too busy at the time at the early stages of transitioning out of crippling co-dependency in a rather unorthodox way, as it turns out, to do either. I just had the thought/feeling, that the description of events didn't seem plausible.
The argument and evidence presented that 4/11 was Japan's 9/11 seems sound and has the tenor and 'feel' of veracity to me. Incredible, really, isn't it?
What comes to mind, out of the blue, is the movie 'Conspiracy Theory' because it argues about th man-made nature of earthquakes. Was that movie a form of predictive programming? Was it making a hidden public statement about the upcoming events as a warning to absolve the perpetrators of guilt, as I've read is a satanic practice to reduce (eliminate?) the burden to the soul of killing?
That's interesting that you had that response to Fukushima. I only skimmed Jim Stone's paper but it seemed very detailed.
Is that the Mel Gibson Conspiracy Theory? I didn't see it but I was responding to Corbett responding to it in this one: https://thirdparadigm.substack.com/p/conspiracy-theorists.
Yes, the encrypted warnings are how the blood sacrifice is deemed willing and therefore acceptable. There needs to be a fighting chance to figure it out and if that chance isn't taken, then at some level the victims have agreed and offered themselves.
Yes, the Mel Gigson one.
You may want to watch it. It discusses very high tech and MK-ULTRA imprinting to created controled access to their Manchurian candidates in a subtle way. As well as creating earthquakes in the middle east as a kind of hint/teaser via satellite.
I'll look at the your Corbett Report Report. Gracias.
Hi Tereza, I'm going to choose just one topic to comment on and that's your eye drop rant. :) First of all, the eye drops on that list all look like garbage anyway. So, adios to them. Ayurveda has lots of do-it-yourself remedies for the eyes. Triphala eye wash, ghee, honey eye drops, etc. Here are a few links you can peruse. John was one of my Ayurveda teachers.
https://lifespa.com/ayurvedic-lifestyle/ayurvedic-dry-eye-care/
https://lifespa.com/ayurvedic-lifestyle/dinacharya-ritual/at-home-ayurvedic-eye-treatment-with-ghee-netra-tarpana/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GOAVnhXYFFo (I use a paper filter rather than cheesecloth)
And last, but not least, I love these eye drops: https://www.chandika.com/soma-netra-eyedrops-with-organic-rose/ XOXO
Barbara! So helpful. And I love that it includes one that's pre-made with lots of other great rose products. You may have noticed I'm on a rose kick if you watch the videos. My farmer's market has a new rose vendor and I'm hooked.
Yes, the ones recalled were garbage but the chilling effect seemed to have scared off my healthcare/ grocery from carrying anything. I don't know for sure if that's every store I frequent. I've been too busy mourning to do a complete scan.
The manuka honey looks very interesting. I once got these honey eye drops in Mexico that were said that they could even treat cataracts. They weren't for every day. I tried them once and they burned, but felt like they were doing something good. It seems logical that honey would be useful, since it seems to be for everything else.
Okay, now you're making me glad they have driven me to a new level of exploration! Thanks much. XOXO
I sometimes put a drop of honey in my eye after doing the Triphala eye wash. Yes, it stings like crazy but after 30 seconds they feel so good! I like Christopher’s Eys Drops too. You can get them on Amazon. I keep telling people to get books while we still can. Making a Triphala eye wash right now! Sweet dreams, Tereza! 💚
I've also now ordered the Manuka honey one. Yes, that sting feels good, paradoxically, especially when they're itchy from allergies.
👏👏! I have a couple of good eye health stories that maybe I'll get around to write about one day! Your eyes must be super excited for the Rose and Honey! xoxo
And it's easy to read between the lines of their disclaimer--it's worked for thousands of years but the FDA says it's not safe so this is for informational use, aka pets, only:
Disclaimer: While Ayurveda has been employing this technique for thousands of years to address underlying imbalances in the eyes, modern sanitary practices and FDA guidelines strictly prohibit the use of non-sterile or home-sterilized solutions in daily eye care routines. Consult with your healthcare practitioner before beginning any eye care regimen that involves introduction of foreign material into the eye itself. Home-sterilized solutions cannot prevent the growth of harmful bacteria and are not a substitute for modern eye care products.
Already ordered the rose ones and my eyes are experiencing anticipatory relief!
Their products are excellent! Kind of pricey but worth it and they do have sales periodically. 🥰
I hear you about books Barbara ... and am telling FB groups to make sure and download all digital books to local hard discs or SD memory. Expecting a false-flag 'terrorist' attack on the world-wide web, and the global predators offering a re-boot ... provided we accept a unique, one-ring-to-bind-them-all digital identity. For our 'safety'. Of course.
Good idea, Steve, although I much prefer real books to digital. There are so many home remedies that work wonders. I challenge myself to self-care every time some little blip happens with my health. Haven't been to a medical doctor in years. I think a walk in the woods (or any other preferred type of Nature) is more healing than most remedies. 🌲🌲🌲
Banzai to that! Raised in North Carolina, the only reason I went through a half dozen fishing boats in Japan was to escape the city. I now prefer car camping among the mountains and lakes of the Mt. Fuji area ... but once endless horizons on a midnight sea really sparked my imagination ... when not wrecking havoc on my joints. 😂
Someone suggested using castor oil as eye drops, too. Have you tried that?
Haven't tried but thanks. Now that I've got roses and honey on the way, castor oil doesn't have the same cachet but I bet it works ;-)
I do that sometimes, as well. Just one drop in each eye (or even daubing it on the eyelids) at bedtime. Very soothing, albeit sticky! :)
I had no prior understanding of disaster terrorism, but I am warming to the hypothesis. I discovered a DARPA program ordering the investigation of such tools of statecraft.
This makes me think back to the floods in China during 2020. The Three Gorges Dam was said to be under dangerous stress.
Why attack both sides?
Both sides are needed to engineer a global government.
Disaster terrorism is a great phrase. May I use that?
Interesting about the Three Gorges Dam. I did a lot of research after Hurricane Katrina and found that was intended to clear out multi-generational family homes that went back to the first free blacks. I don't know that the structural failure was deliberately triggered but it was certainly known to be a matter of time. The impediments to letting people go back, save structures, shelter, help became obvious after the waters receded. That was only the first step. I think Shock Doctrine was an intro to the concept but didn't go far enough. And disaster capitalism comes closer. But disaster terrorism is more accurate.
I've come to realize there are no two sides. There's a handful of people and all of us. Ukraine was set up to be a sacrifice zone. And despite appearances to the contrary, that's the intent for Israel now, sinking the US with it. Thanks for reading, Mathew!
Technically, disaster terrorism was already invented as a concept:
https://roundingtheearth.substack.com/p/disaster-terrorism-the-maui-edition
What is difficult to understand is the end goal of all this disaster terrorism is real.
"The Shock Doctrine" on steroids.
With regard to earthquakes, remember that Nikola Tesla around 1898 is thought to have created more than one earthquake in Manhattan (and possibly The Tunguska Event in Siberia in 1908). Some say that it was to prevent Tesla's technology getting into the wrong hands that J P Morgan withdrew funding from him.
When Tesla died impoverished in 1943, Vannevar Bush sent in Donald Trump's Uncle John from MIT to collect, analyze and assess Tesla's equipment and documentation on behalf of the US government. Nothing has been heard of it since; but government scientists have had plenty of time over the eighty years that have passed to perfect the technology in their black/secret-budget projects.
https://search.brave.com/search?q=tesla+earthquake+machine&source=web
I am a little floored by the “honesty for those who deserve it” part because it’s so powerful in its simplicity and because I recognize the mistake I’ve made for years and I have to sit with this for a moment. I can think of numerous instances where I should have said nothing and moved on. I have trouble lying so I thought radical honesty was the way to go. But your daughter has now shifted my paradigm too. Sheesh.
Oh, fellow mom, ain't it the truth? I'm choosing not to rethink my past decisions to be honest. Everything we've ever done has been the right thing, at the right time. If the moments that vindicate you haven't come around yet, it's because you haven't lived long enough. Everything you've said needed to be said.
But maybe, for me, I'm in a new phase where everyone who matters already knows what I think. I can wait for them to come to me.
Now I don't know how this will play out with the Israeli mom with 2 yr old twins in my aerial class. I've been very very tight-lipped, out of respect for the teacher. But a friend just mentioned that she really got on a soapbox in defense of Israel one day when I wasn't there. And she's pretty full of herself, so that's not hard to imagine. So I'm preparing in my mind for what I could say that's honest but won't make one of us have to quit the class. It's not that she deserves my honesty but the Palestinians do.
That’s a hard decision. I suppose you have built pretty good intuition and will follow your heart when the moment comes.
I am a bit impressed about aerial class- that shit is hard!
But also, thanks for saying that everything we’ve ever done has been the right thing. I needed that.
My intuition is shit. Cognitively I think everything I've done has been right but that's to counterbalance all the time I spend kicking myself, muttering, "Why did I have to say that?!!"
LOL, LOL, LOL. "My intuition is shit" sums up my relationship with the corporate nation-state of Japan and its institutions.
Please don’t ever sensor yourself around me. 😂 we’re gonna get along great!
I wouldn't dream of it. You keep me able to hold my tongue to those who don't deserve my honesty, knowing that the smarter someone is, the more they appreciate what I'm saying.
Unbekoming wrote a beautiful fable about two lovers chained in Plato's Cave, one of whom valued Connection and decided to stay in the cave, and the other who valued Truth and decided to break her chains and explore other caves in search of the "real" reality.
I'm struggling mightily, because I value connection and truth equally. Seems like your daughter has hit the solution-nail squarely on its head. Would you please extend my gratitude to her? xox
Mary, I've been missing you! But like Tirion said, I assume you have a full, rich life and aren't hanging around a lamp post waiting for my next missive. I'm honored whenever you stop by.
What an interesting premise. Do you have a link? I don't know if you've seen my next one on What is Reality? but it would say Unbekoming's is a false dichotomy.
If we're individuals, then our shared perception is Reality. The only way it could be not reality is if we're OneMind. And the only way to find that out would be in connection with another.
For one to leave the other to go 'out there' would be to assume their superiority to the one who stayed. There is no there there.
But if they stayed, there are many games that might provide clues to whether the shadows were real: Close your eyes and describe what you see. Name a vegetable and write it down, and I'll do the same. And inbetween, games of scrabble just for fun.
But you and Tonika are taking this to an interpersonal level and I've got no theories there. I will certainly extend your gratitude to Cassandra!
I have a quick question for you, Tereza, in regard to superiority and my need for clarification:) If one has to defend a child, by taking the life of an attacker, does that make the defender think themself superior?
Btw, thank you again for sharing my information:)
Easy answer, not at all. The zealots, who I suspect discovered the teachings of the Course 2000 yrs ago, were not pacifists. The founder Judas was the Sicariot, named for the sica or short dagger used to assassinate the priestly traitors during festivals, then melt back into the crowd. "If thine eye offend thee, pluck it out" should be "If the eyes of Rome in your midst betray thee, kill them."
The Romans engaged in torture, which I think is always wrong. To do harm is to inflict suffering but to do evil is to cause others to inflict suffering. To take a life of those inflicting torture is, not just not wrong, but to fail to do it may be considered cowardly. You are abetting the worst forms of suffering for your own protection. (Let me clarify here that I am a coward.)
It was 'Jesus' who took this theology of sovereignty and turned it into a slave code. "If [a Roman] slaps you, turn the other cheek." "If you want to be first, be the best among slaves." "If [a Roman] demands you to carry a heavy load, go the extra mile." Jesus never said to the Romans, don't torture and enslave other people.
Thank you for clarifying:) And I completely agree with what you presented, except for one thing. I do not view anyone speaking the truth, such as yourself, as a coward.
Also, I read where you were getting sick, so I sure hope you're feeling better today. My daughter, and her family, are all going through sicknesses, as well, as are so many others around us. After Covid, it seems people are definitely getting sick more often. None of us took the jabs, either.
Anyway, thank you for the reply and clarification:) Be well!!
On the question of honesty, I'd say that sharing a truth with someone that their consciousness is not ready or able to comprehend is not only a waste of time and energy but can actually do more harm than good. Maybe the difficult bit is knowing what the other person can handle? Perhaps easier with loved ones than with a new acquaintance at a cocktail party or a fellow traveller in the blogosphere?
Hi Tirion ... sorry to be a bit late in replying to some good threads in my own post (still playing catch-up from the holidays). But I thought I'd give a quick amen here from one Far Eastern tradition. I am not a Buddhist or ideologue of any kind, but something I remember reading many years ago by Suzuki Daisetsu on zen is that unlike a typical Sunday sermon, a student of zen would receive a 'truth' deemed appropriate by the teacher to fit the student's place on their journey.
In retrospect, that is a pretty blunt comparison because good Western priests/preachers/rabbi etc. tend to also serve in a role similar to psychiatric counselors, rather than typical history-caretakers of temples and shrines here in Japan.
So interesting, Steve. In sorting through old pamphlets at my mom's house, there were some written by a perceptive priest on "Are you overly scrupulous?" And reading it, it was what we'd now call OCD. But this was over 50 yrs ago, maybe even 70 yrs. Catholic priests, when they were good, were free marriage counselors, psychologists, therapists. No one has really filled that role, certainly not for free.
Hi Tereza.
Just pushing dawn here, and am headed back to bed, hoping to catch some wild adventure in a vivid dream. Couldn't help but to check the mail and found this.
Yes, my memories of Western counterparts are now probably about 50 years old and from the rural South, so my cultural comparison may be out of date. In fact, looking at FB posts of a slightly younger cousin who became a southern Baptist preacher, I read more about his bass boat than the good word, much less personal counseling. But then again, FB might not be quite the right place for that. 😆
Oh, and though I am dancing with some of your partners here, I think I have yet to write a direct comment thanking you for mentioning my name. A little shocked and embarrassed, but just a little 😊. I just happen to be at a safe place at the right time. The Nodo peninsula where it happened is getting constantly hit with a string of strong aftershocks, snow, and accompanying below zero temperatures. Some people are trying to keep warm in greenhouses ... which are not entitled to receive govt. benefits because they are not "authorized" safety shelters ... and nearing 200 dead with almost as many missing.
As with many of your posts, so much to think about and speculate on. So much beyond me.
Back to bed for Bonzo here. Will read and chat soon.
steve
Hark! I hear the crows have started pecking at their veranda vittles. Happy dreams for my good deed of the day.
Been sidelined for a bit and haven't been paying attention, so I'm glad to hear you're safe, Steve. Take care.
Hi Mary, and a Happy New Year to you. I hear you about the sidelining, especially now that the holiday rush is over and time to get down to serious housecleaning, and under one disaster after another, if not caused by nature, by sociopathic opportunists. I am as safe as I can hope for in this world gone insane, trying to identify with the little tidbits of a modest here and now when I can. Lots of sifting and reading to catch up with, but I hope to be chatting with you soon.
"...but can actually do more harm than good."
Yup.
Hi Tereza, Thank you for this post. Still trying to piece together events in Japan. One aspect that leads me strongly suspect deep state attacks in the form of earthquakes/air crashes is the movement by the Central Bank of Japan policy makers.
October 31, 2023 they announced a policy to move interest rates higher.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/31/business/bank-of-japan-statement-bonds.html
On Tuesday, the central bank, the Bank of Japan, tried to thread the needle, announcing a policy that aims to nudge bond yields higher. The bank said it would use 1 percent as a starting point for yields on 10-year government bonds, instead of a cap, saying it expected inflation to go higher than it had previously believed.
The dollar immediately started declining versus the yen and gold rose. As soon as the earthquake hit new rates cuts were hinted at and the yen fell against the dollar immediately. Perhaps the message got accross.
Things are really getting critical for our slavemasters petrodollar federal reserve notes. I believe it's demise is inevitable but getting there will not be pretty.
Oh excellent research, Specie. That makes a lot of sense.
They’ve been experimenting to control weather since WWII. There are many Air Force missions that have caused many “catastrophes.”
You don’t think they are spraying the skies for sh*ts & giggles.
Hi, Alison! Yes, I have a few episodes on geo-engineering the weather and weaponizing water. But earthquakes and tsunamis I hadn't delved into. Certainly if they can do it, we know they would.
"valuing your truth & manufacturing crises"
Have you read this, from UNZ, today? Truth? What truth? And speaking of manufracturing history...
When examining all of this information, serious historians have no choice but to dismiss Jewish sources — from Maccabees to Josephus — as low-quality references at best and deceitful fiction at worst.
-Eric Stryker,,"Hanukkah": An Anti-Greek Blood Libel, Separating Fact From Fiction
https://www.unz.com/estriker/hanukkah-an-anti-greek-blood-libel/
Oooh, right up my subversive Bible studies alley! Thanks Goeff!
Of course it is.
PS: You missed this, "manuf r acturing" : )
Haha! Thanks for pointing that out. And I noticed that the Unz article, which is AMAZING, was from Substack so I went direct and posted a response and note on it here: https://littoria.substack.com/p/hanukkah-an-anti-greek-blood-libel
Ya I noticed that as well but have not had the time to check it out. Gracias por la link!
I get the 'sharing honesty' with those deemed worthy of it. While I haven't thought of it that way specifically, I do make assessments all the time about whether it's 'worth' saying something, whether it can be received or not. Sometimes - surprising myself - I end up saying it even when I determined it won't be received as intended. Following some internal inclination. It's very context-specific, no general rule applies. (Though in general I do have a 'rule' about not-self-censoring, which is not the same thing as saying everything you think all the time.)
I have zero doubt that natural disasters are regularly induced and used as weapons to warn other countries, to get them back in line or jolt humans into fear. There is basically nothing 'they' wouldn't do to maintain control.
Thanks for the mention and link to my stack! Best Tereza.
I like that 'internal inclination' on whether to say something, even when you know it won't be received. I listen for that too. It's important to plant seeds, I think, that will get lodged in someone's consciousness, and may sprout later. But that's my rationalization after the fact.
What Cassandra, my youngest, was getting at was the heat, the defensiveness when I blurt something out that I already know no one wants to hear. I think she's suggesting I take that pre-judgment and emotion out of it by seeing my honest analysis as a gift.
And whatever I get back is a gift too. In that case of the NYE dinner, it was the recognition of "Oh that's what MSNBC is teaching young professionals, that it's the fault of my generation they can't buy houses." It's good to have a finger on the pulse of the MSM.
It's a subtle difference but it's taking away the resentment of self-censorship by turning it into a proactive choice and having the confidence of people behind me who do recognize the value of what I say. It doesn't solve the dilemma with my oldest daughter being worried about our relationship because I don't think cis-gendered is a necessary label. But it did change my lingering irritation towards someone I may never see again.
"taking away the resentment of self-censorship by turning it into a proactive choice and having the confidence of people behind me who do recognize the value of what I say."
I see what you mean. And that's a good distinction, especially since it freed up that lingering irritation.
Hi Kathleen and Tereza.
That quote jumped out at me too ... mostly because I see that "resentment of self-censorship" as a strong ground for understanding Japanese group dynamics, and a culture of compliance so strong that a top-down "suggestion" is a euphemism for "demand".
One's identity here in Japan is more likely to be defined by clearly institutionalized, rule-driven in-groups and rigid hierarchies than by more loosely organized, empathy-driven communities. So I am guessing that there are fewer opportunities to take a pro-active choice regarding a strategic use of honesty.
Some key Japanese concepts addressing this culture include "tatai shakai" (hierarchical society), "jaku-niku kyoshoku" (dog-eat-dog world), "honne" vs "tatemai" (honest intentions vs. professed intentions), "omotenashi" vs. "omoiyari" (graceful, but transactional hospitality vs. compassionate empathy) and the highly valued skill of "kuki o yomu" (reading the room). The fact that these words have almost word-for-word English translations underscores the human nature all people have in common. But like an amoeba, Japanese culture stretches one "limb" to an extreme at the expense of others.
Great analogy of the amoeba! I wonder if it's not common human nature but common media psyops. At least the Japanese have names for them. We would just call 'hierarchical society' society. Or transactional hospitality a nice person.
Good point. Guessing much of culture has been reduced to common media psyops. Control the language, control the mind, shape the culture. Even without the need for mandates, Japan had a huge initial rush for mRNAs ... at the beginning. Many are beginning to catch on now, but you'd never know it from msm. Hmm ... before I close my eyes for the rest of the morning, wondering agan about possible connections between covert geo-engineered warfare and foreign policy. Sounds like something out of a 1950's sci-fi book ... way before 'predictive programing' was even a gleam in some sociopath's eye.
Good night ... uh ... morning, Tereza.
Oh dear. To all of it. But said in an apocaloptimistic way.
Fukushima had huge design flaws. Their backup generators were below sea level and couldn't run due to the flood (which is something they know happens there in a tsunami).
When those generators couldn't run, the cooling systems couldn't run and that lead to the disasters.
Cholera in Haiti is likely from dirty water supplies. That's the main reason for the smallpox epidemic of the past and current ebola/marburg outbreaks.
They blame it on another specific pathogen because it promotes the fear of germs and viruses while hiding the real causes, like pollution of water and food supplies.
Jim Stone's report on Fukushima is fascinating and highly thought provoking. He claims that nothing about it was natural event:
https://archive.org/details/fukureport1b
Hi Tirion. Downloading it now. But when I read the blurb "Fukushima was the location of a covert nuclear weapons program" ... that rang a bell.
My dad was a Master Sgt. in the Green Beret, and though he didn't talk much about his work, before he died, he did mention that one of his jobs was teaching generals the tactical use of backpackable nuclear weapons back in the '60's, when the Soviets had their suitcase bomb equivalents. It would be naive to think that any corporate nation-state which has nuclear or bio-engineering capabilities to not have covert, weaponized programs for every overt peacetime use. What can be weaponized will be.
Yes, agreed. Even if Japan does not actually have a stockpile of its own nukes, I'm sure they have all the components and know-how ready in the wings, should the need arise. For the time being, Japan remains an occupied country, sovereign in name only.
Some researchers claim that the Soviet military suffered such huge casualties against the NAZIs because the NAZIs were lobbing tactical nukes at them and that some of the uranium for "Little Boy" dropped on Hiroshima came from the NAZIs. There is so much that we do not know!
Hi T. Yeah, those Nazi nukes are new to me ... but regarding Japan, I remember writing about this on Quora a few years ago, but the Wiki page was easier to find ... "... Japan is often said to be a "screwdriver's turn" away from possessing nuclear weapons, or to possess a "bomb in the basement".
Huh. While skimming down to that section, I saw Fukushima was mentioned. Looking forward to reading that document you linked.
And I just saw Riken mentioned. Sometime in the last week or so, I responded somewhere about the Riken-Obakata scandal. I think my memory was jiggled a bit because of John Campbell's recent interview with one of the authors of the latest "Death of Science" book. I bought a Kindle version. The title sounds a bit click-baity, but I am looking forward to giving it a critical read.
And will get back to our threads on my post. 😅. Did not mean to ghost you ... just flooded with New Years obligations, not to mention the ongoing flood of information.
Oh ... and somewhere here, I mentioned in comment to Tereza and Kathleen what I perceive as a difference between Japan and other cultures regarding "resentment of self-censorship". Would love to read your take on that.
So many intriguing possibilities, aren't there?!
Oh, I don't feel ghosted at all. Sometimes I don't go online for days and I assume (hope?!) that others have much more important things to do than lean on a lamp post at a corner of the blogosphere :)
LOL Thanks.
By the way, in our chat about the quake(s), I remember you saying you were driving near Biwako, right? I keep a seaworthy SUP and fishing tackle in the back of my HiAce if you are ever up for that kind of thing. Used to have a 30 foot Yanmar (EX30) for fishing the Izu islands, but aging joints in pounding seas, and maintenance costs (that "boat is a hole in the water through which you pour money" thingy) convinced me to downsize.
Thanks for that link.
How many times does this have to be stated before the message sinks in?
From the report.
"The quake was not what we were told.
In fact, the quake was a bold faced lie, packing a political agenda."
The real question is what caused the quake.
I do not remember exactly what the political problem was at the time, but Japan apparently did not support the globalist agenda and some think the quake happened to teach them to be a bit moe cooperative in the future. That's all I recall about it for now.
IIRC, there was a suggestion that Japan had been supplying nuclear technology to Iraq or Iran, which attracted the ire of Israel.
I'm saying that if it was designed properly, the quake would damage it, yes, but there wouldn't be a huge radiation leak and the meltdown in a reactor.
Yes, and maybe it was precisely those design flaws which the attackers targeted? FWIW, Jim Stone claims there was no melt-down. He writes, "That the destruction of reactors 3 and 4 is so severe it could only have been accomplished with nuclear weapons."
Yeah, but if the tsunami was caused by a well placed explosion and not an earthquake, then it would not matter how well the reactor was designed or built.
Remember that the apparently extremely well built 9/11 towers came down despite their heft and I'm not even mentioning Bldg 7.
Here's your answer to the dry eye and cyclosporin question.: Apparently dry eyes can be caused by inflammation of the cells that produce tears. SInce they're inflamed, they do not work; they cannot produce tears.
Cyclosporin can reduce inflammation.
The idea is to use the cyclosporin to reduce the inflammation. Once the inflammation is reduced or gone, then then the tear producing cells can produce tears. Voila! No more dry eyes or at least not as dry.
As someone who has allergic conjunctivitis, my suggestion - as, indeed, with all maladies - would be to address the cause of the inflammation rather than the inflammation. Easier said than done perhaps but, given the fundamental role of inflammation in disease in general, worthwhile. The whole approach of treating symptoms instead of causes is one I am trying to adopt with my own health, going back to pre-Rockefeller medicine.
https://web.archive.org/web/20190719204414/http://freedom-articles.toolsforfreedom.com:80/western-medicine-rockefeller-medicine/
Yes it was homeopathic eye drops for seasonal allergies I was trying to buy at the time. But it's the principle of the thing. We're not allowed to take responsibility for our own health and buy what we want. And imagine all the producers now shut down, after decades without anyone having a problem. It's the tip of the iceberg and not unrelated to vaccines. They decide what we should put in our eyes, our lungs, our mouth, our blood.
Yes,it is the principle of the thing.
The principle of the thing is that we're supposed to become dependent on them which is why the money crowd loves monopolies as well as monopsonies.
Sorry to toss in another consideration, but it's pretty easy to see that's what Prohibition was all about, and of course, under benevolent sounding pretexts.
"... would be to address the cause of the inflammation rather than the inflammation."
Bingo!
Or at least that's what I would do if I were treating it, but what do you and I know? ; ). Treating the symptom would be like buying new batteries for the car rather than repairing the alternator.
🙌🏻
Just to be clear here, I posted this only in response to someone asking why cyclosporine would be used in eyedrops.
That would be me, and I hear what you're saying about inflammation, but any anti-inflammatory directly effects the immune function. When they've prescribed something as toxic as Ciclosporin, you would think they would only prescribe it for the short-term, which they didn't. My mom took it for several years, at least once per day, as far as I know. Something as simple as saline drops would have probably been more helpful, esp. from a longevity standpoint, since she directly died from something treating her dry eyes. I can certainly see why people would take it for organ transplants, however, but when it is being used, they are monitoring the patient often, via blood draws. Anyway, thank you for the info:)
Unbelievable! So sorry for the loss of your mom. I bet big pharma pushed it and the docs had no idea.
Covid and info like that has convinced me that I'll just take what Mother Nature hands me. I cannot trust any so called "authority" any longer.
Hi Tim.
Just wondering if you are living here in Japan (or China) and/or are kanji fluent. Although I live in Japan (over 40 years now), I must confess that my fluency is mostly restricted to conversational Japanese, and I rely on friends and DeepL for most kanji.
Cheers!
Banzai! Looking forward to reading you.
Cheers Tim!
I haven't researched the others but definitely agree about Shinzo Abe. Cynthia Chung wrote about that very convincingly, which is to say with facts and logic.
A new rabbit hole for me ... but will check it out.
Happy to be a distraction. And now 'thanx for the memeries' keeps running through my head.