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You got me to read about Yuval as if he is human.

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Yes, I think he provides some important clues for how we're being fooled. He's so blunt about what the agenda is, sometimes I wonder if he's secretly trying to warn us. But as they say, keep your friends close and keep your enemies closer.

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Hello Jerome.

Yeah, I read 'Sapiens' and felt entertained and informed at the time ... but nothing that prepared me for him being a spokesman for the likes of Klaus — both philosophically arrogant and morally repugnant. If I get the time, I might read it again and look for clues to see if he has been a plant all along.

Cheers from Japan,

steve

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Apr 24, 2023·edited Apr 24, 2023Liked by Tereza Coraggio

Hi, I read Sapiens a few years ago and thought it was on point. I was surprised when I heard Whitney Webb misquote him saying that YNH thinks the non-WEF are rats- in his address to Davos 2020 that she quotes from- he is actually warning everyone, including the WEF (who will more spied on than anyone else) that if we don't control AI or data collection we will all be subject to the algorithm (which no one will really understand its decisions), there will be disruption, war and we, all humans will ALL end up like sewer rats.

I have since since hatchet jobs going round on the net where another interview is cut to make it appear that YNH is talking about jabs (by inserting images) when he's actually talking about biometric data! The phrase 'Chief Advisor to the WEF or Klaus Sqwuab' or whatever was added over the footage of the interview. I have never seen any evidence that he is anything more that an author pushing his books by speaking (and warning) at Davos.

I don't know who is doing these hatchet jobs to make us hate him. His book 'How to survive the 21st century' says meditation, reconnecting with community and friends, switching of the internet for extended periods is very helpful, which it is...

I think he is being vilified by the WEF who don't want us to hear the clear message.

Thank you Tereza for being one of the few people who actually listen to what he's saying.

🙏🏽

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Verrrry interesting. Yes, I've been saying that I think he's a truth double-agent who's using his WEF credentials to warn us about what's coming and how to avoid it. I'll use your info on an episode I'm planning on Defending Russell Brand, since his kiss on YNH's forehead is being used to discredit him.

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Yes please do, I look forward to it!

I still don't see that YNH has any WEF associations at all, other than he's spoken at Davos to push his book. He's only using what we all know about the algorithm to run a scenario with the stated intention of helping us avoid it.

Russell Brand is another one who otherwise seemingly sensible people keep trying to tell me is a mason. It's an absolute farce. I think the people who say it are jealous - he's so good looking, funny and now is revealing how intelligent and well read he is. For a fuss to be made because he's kissed an historian (that reminded me of "I kissed a girl and I liked it' by his ex-wife!) is an absolute joke isn't it?

Are we all loosing our marbles?

🐒

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Oh was that Katy's song? Maybe I'll have to think of a play with that. But my subtitle was going to be "we must remember this, a kiss is just a kiss ..."

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Oh yes I really like that. There's an 80s UK sitcom with Judi Dench called 'As time goes by', and that's the theme tune, we're watching the box set at the mo- so I have that song in my head.

Yes definitely Katy's song and reminds me of some good times kissing girls in the Downs club at the Royal Marsden x

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Tereza, thanks for being at the forefront of investigating this stuff. Tbh I don’t have the time or patience for those people (aka the globalists, the professional psychopaths, the Khazarian mafia, all of them). of course). I don’t know what their deal is or why they are the way they are towards us; but I know how they feel about humanity and it’s up to us now to expose it all and push back accordingly.

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It's easy to tell when someone is delusional.

They don't follow their own declared ideals.

It's like calling out a major religion for not following it's own tenets.

This is endemic with many popular philosophers and historians such as

Yuval Harari

Jordan Peterson

Etc

And most recently this gem:

https://nevermoremedia.substack.com/p/patriots-or-traitors-a-critical-look

Yuval lost me when he jumped into the convid narrative of fear, even though his popular book at the time, Sapiens, pretty much explained that we evolved and became stronger because of these germ threats.

In his case, I think he sold out to the groups that made him feel important, just like Jordan Peterson. It's childish that they can't acknowledge that. If they were honest with themselves, I would respect them more because it shows awareness of many factors.

Nope, instead they block out their own hipicrisy.

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Dec 28, 2022Liked by Tereza Coraggio

Harari's comments on Israel and Palestine not "talking together" enough and Israel being too strong to need to talk is representative of the globalist delusions on this conflict. Let's unpack this step-by-step:

- Israel is indeed militarily incomparably more powerful than the Palestinians.

- In spite of that, they have been to my knowledge the first nation in all of history to offer territories in exchange for peace.

- The historical norm is that it is the vanquished who have to give up any territorial ambition in order to gain peace, as they are the main party benefiting from the peace! (Harari has a nice split personality syndrome here as a historian - like many intellectuals before him, ideology trumps knowledge).

- Peace has been settled by force, always. Yes, might is right in the international arena, as opposed to the national one. It is only in modern "international law" that there is an attempt at imposing law in the international arena. And who gets to make sure the law is respected? The strongest party, the USA., who gets to invade any country that might be useful to their financial interests. Might is right. Sure, it's nice to talk, and diplomacy always has to prevail on warfare, but pretending that "justice" can be established in the international arena is hypocrisy and opens the door to the rise of a globalist world government.

- Last but not least, the endeavour to compare international relations to couple therapy is one of those confused stances one encounters nowadays. Psychologizing everything is typical of the "confusion of positions" of the dark age. It's cute, but a dead end.

As to Tereza's comments on Israel, they're so far off the mark I'm not sure where to begin. You're an inspiring lady and I have benefited a lot from your texts and videos but this is a disappointment.

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Thanks for the compliments, Marduk, and reading/ watching my texts and videos. I appreciate you taking the time to put your thoughts into the comments. I'm happy to read a thoughtful disagreement, by someone who's listened to what I have to say. Agreed that psychologizing nations as if they're people is a dead end!

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Hi Tereza.

Haven't looked at the videos yet, but I gave your commentary a first read and found myself nodding in agreement at just about everything. When you got to your disagreement with both Yuval and Esther about the end of fighting being peace ... I immediately remembered a great meme from a few years ago (looked it up but could not find a definitive attribution) ...

''The opposite of war is not peace. It is creativity.''

I'm a firm believer in that.

I read several names in your post who I follow, but at the moment, I'm still plodding through Lobaczewski's stilted prose for some gems regarding the dark side of human nature ... and I've become a big fan of Sasha Latypova. Her latest substack under 'Due Diligence and Art' is a worthwhile video-presentation / breakdown of the structure and processes of the fraud behind the corporate nation-state's medical fascism.

My stuff is still mostly buried in comments (such as to Gary Sharpe or Shasa's recent substack) but I was just informed my contract with public schools will not be extended next year, so I will have plenty of time for reading and writing in a few months ... possibly video journals.

Hard times, but good to see you keeping up the good fight.

Cheers from Japan,

steve

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Oooh, I love that quote Steve!

The reason you read names in my posts that you follow is that you're recommending them in your cross posts. I subscribed to Sasha because of you and this morning she crossposted one from Katherine Watt of Bailiwick News that's fascinating about the uber-committee coordinating all the Covid crimes: https://bailiwicknews.substack.com/p/public-health-emergency-medical-countermeasures.

I'm so sorry to hear about your job, Steve. I remember you suspecting that. I'm holding the hope that this is preparing you for something better and more satisfying. But I know you'll be missing your students.

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Hi Tereza!

Just now checking my mail ... following my morning routine of waking at 4:30 so that I have time to down 3 cups of coffee before heading to work at about 7.

I am honored you think highly enough of me to take a peek at who I've been trying to follow. But wow ... the list is growing way too long for me to keep up, and waaay beyond my domains of expertise.

Today is my last day for about a 3 week break, so among my big plans is to organize the substack posts I've been saving (like a pack-rat, all of them) into sub folders something along the lines of Medical-Technical / Survival-Thriving / Resistance / Big Picture-Philosophy ... and something that holds those writers who seem to cover all the bases.

I am not disciplined enough to do or dig through original research, but am pretty good at bouncing ideas between ideas, and connecting dots with my reading and experience of Japan under comments ... so I hope to start narrowing in on my strengths for a blog which will include some book reviews. This Lobaczewski book is full of head nodding insight, but the stilted style is really sucking the life out of me. I'd like to get some of those ideas (and others) out there in a form that is more accessible and closer to being of practical value. A lot of it is still pie-in-the-sky ideas of a Platonic 'should be' nature but without a good legal or practical scaffolding to build on.

As for work, yeah. I will miss the kids. I could identify a few with more potential than myself, but I was drawn to motivating those who rebelled against less than effective teachers and even more brutal system.

I don't have the chops to yet think about monetizing my own writing, and haven't even begun to play with the audio-video equipment I have at my disposal ... so it will be a race against time as to whether I can identify and appeal to a worthy market, or the wolf comes knocking at my door. Besides, at my age and with no family, what have I got to lose? That's what I admire about people like Katherine, Sasha, Tessa, Mathew, Toby, and so on. They started so young, and kept to the straight and narrow moral imperative for so long, and with so much discipline. I've always been a day late and a dollar short, so will have to dig deep into my past and my psyche to bring out the retroactive and the latent that might be laying within.

If I can pick up an occasional on-line student, that's better than nothing ... but I will miss the face to face group dynamics that institutions appear to be desperately trying to prevent. What is so frustrating is that this icing on the cake is being given to 'teachers' who are just in it for the money. These kids are poxies for the children I never had, the family I never made ... and the micromanaging bean-counters in charge know it. Empathy, curiosity, and creativity are an anathema to the narcissistic machiavellians who have gamed the system to take their turn playing king of the mountain.

Gotta go shower. Sorry for spending so much time talking about me, myself, and I ... next time, I hope to play with ideas, solutions, and tactics with you.

Power to you Teresa!

Hugs. 🥰 (and a nuzzle from my crows).

steve

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