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American Theocracy: Politics Has Become Our National Religion

John & Nisha Whitehead

Politics has become our national religion. While those on the Left have feared a religious coup by evangelical Christians on the Right, the danger has come from an altogether different direction: our constitutional republic has given way to a theocracy structured around the worship of a political savior.

For all intents and purposes, politics has become America’s God.

Pay close attention to the political conventions for presidential candidates, and it becomes immediately evident that Americans have allowed themselves to be brainwashed into worshipping a political idol manufactured by the Deep State.

In a carefully choreographed scheme to strip the American citizenry of our power and our rights, “we the people” have become victims of the Deep State’s confidence game.

Every confidence game has six essential stages: 1) the foundation to lay the groundwork for the illusion; 2) the approach whereby the victim is contacted; 3) the build-up to make the victim feel like they’ve got a vested interest in the outcome; 4) the corroboration (aided by third-party conspirators) to legitimize that the scammers are, in fact, on the up-and-up; 5) the pay-off, in which the victim gets to experience some small early “wins”; and 6) the “hurrah”— a sudden manufactured crisis or change of events that creates a sense of urgency.

In this particular con game, every candidate dangled before us as some form of political savior—including Donald Trump and Kamala Harris—is part of a long-running, elaborate scam intended to persuade us that, despite all appearances to the contrary, we live in a constitutional republic.

In this way, the voters are the dupes, the candidates are the shills, and as usual, it’s the Deep State rigging the outcome.

Terrorist attacks, pandemics, economic uncertainty, national security threats, civil unrest: these are all manipulated crises that add to the sense of urgency and help us feel invested in the outcome of the various elections, but it doesn’t change much in the long term.

No matter who wins this election, we’ll all still be prisoners of the Deep State.

Indeed, the history of the United States is a testament to the old adage that liberty decreases as government (and government bureaucracy) grows. To put it another way, as government expands, liberty contracts.

When it comes to the power players that call the shots, there is no end to their voracious appetite for more: more money, more power, more control. Thus, since 9/11, the government’s answer to every problem has been more government and less freedom.

Yet despite what some may think, the Constitution is no magical incantation against government wrongdoing. Indeed, it’s only as effective as those who abide by it.

However, without courts willing to uphold the Constitution’s provisions when government officials disregard it and a citizenry knowledgeable enough to be outraged when those provisions are undermined, the Constitution provides little to no protection against SWAT team raids, domestic surveillance, police shootings of unarmed citizens, indefinite detentions, and the like.

Unfortunately, the courts and the police have meshed in their thinking to such an extent that anything goes when it’s done in the name of national security, crime fighting and terrorism.

Consequently, America no longer operates under a system of justice characterized by due process, an assumption of innocence, probable cause and clear prohibitions on government overreach and police abuse. Instead, our courts of justice have been transformed into courts of order, advocating for the government’s interests, rather than championing the rights of the citizenry, as enshrined in the Constitution.

The rule of law, the U.S. Constitution, once the map by which we navigated sometimes hostile government terrain, has been unceremoniously booted out of the runaway car that is the U.S. government by the Deep State.

What we are dealing with is a rogue government whose policies are dictated more by greed than need. Making matters worse, “we the people” have become so gullible, so easily distracted, and so out-of-touch that we have ignored the warning signs all around us in favor of political expediency in the form of electoral saviors.

Yet it’s not just Americans who have given themselves over to political gods, however.

Evangelical Christians, seduced by electoral promises of power and religious domination, have become yet another tool in the politician’s toolbox.

For instance, repeatedly conned into believing that Republican candidates from George W. Bush to Donald Trump will save the church, evangelical Christians have turned the ballot box into a referendum on morality. Yet in doing so, they have shown themselves to be as willing to support totalitarian tactics as those on the Left.

This was exactly what theologian Francis Schaeffer warned against: “We must not confuse the Kingdom of God with our country. To say it another way, ‘We should not wrap Christianity in our national flag.’”

Equating religion and politics, and allowing the ends to justify the means, only empowers tyrants and lays the groundwork for totalitarianism.

This way lies madness and the certain loss of our freedoms.

If you must vote, vote, but don’t make the mistake of consecrating the ballot box.

As I make clear in my book Battlefield America: The War on the American People and in its fictional counterpart The Erik Blair Diaries, it doesn’t matter what religion a particular candidate claims to subscribe to: all politicians answer to their own higher power, which is the Deep State.

Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead is founder and president of The Rutherford Institute. His book Battlefield America: The War on the American People (SelectBooks, 2015) is available online at www.amazon.com. Whitehead can be contacted at [email protected]. Nisha Whitehead is the Executive Director of The Rutherford Institute. Information about The Rutherford Institute is available at www.rutherford.org.

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vestama
vestama
Aug 15, 2024 5:21 PM

National Religion has always been church and state,
Covid showed this.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 16, 2024 5:00 AM
Reply to  vestama

Interesting all the same that USA Inc. shuttered all the churches instantly, mine were unavailable everywhere in California for physical attendance at Mass, and reception of the Eucharist, for many moons. Streamed! Only.

Whereas in France le boy Président, years after his youthful stint at Banque de Rothschild, had an even stricter curfew, 23.5 hours daily of house arrest, or some nonsense, with written notes from the doctor as the only alibi for being out or about.

But we read that Masses could still be heard in person? [He also made a vow that Cathēdrale de Notre Dame de Paris would open in 5 years, in the days after the fire. I wonder how much Coronapalooza slowed that. My erstwhile first parish…]

Contrasting chaoses then are a pertinent passe-temps. For future reference at least.

The devil is in the details, but “God is in the facts themselves.” (D. Bonhoeffer.)

Paul
Paul
Aug 15, 2024 11:51 AM

What can you do. People love the telly. And they love petty drama, which the telly feeds through news, politics, sports blah blah blah.

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 15, 2024 8:27 AM

Moneybox seems to be transmitted (if you believe in things like that) in a similar way to AIDS, sexually, and predominantly by gay men.

How is this relevant as a “pandemic” to the majority ?

Especially children.

May Hem
May Hem
Aug 15, 2024 6:11 AM

Meanwhile, in Africa…..here comes Monkeypox ….. soon to spread to the world …. emergency …. vaccines ….. experts …… the usual crap.
https://www.who.int/news/item/14-08-2024-who-director-general-declares-mpox-outbreak-a-public-health-emergency-of-international-concern

May Hem
May Hem
Aug 15, 2024 6:25 AM
Reply to  May Hem

Its spelled “Moneybox”. $$$$

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 15, 2024 7:46 AM
Reply to  May Hem

Here’s a prediction for you.

Starmer will pre-empt the WHOs pandemic treaty.

Expect full on fascism.

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 15, 2024 7:49 AM
Reply to  May Hem

I saw that news item and felt you could retransmit a news bulletin from spring 2020 and just dub “M-pox” for “covid”. And go through the same process in 4 years time with varying new scary disease names.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 8:11 PM
Reply to  May Hem

I believe in my government and I intend to wear any mask and take every jab they recommend me to take.
If you wanna make revolution and make riots on the streets, its up to you, not me! Its your choice!!

Johnny
Johnny
Aug 15, 2024 4:59 AM

Lookout! The WHO is going apeshit over Monkeypox.

mgeo
mgeo
Aug 15, 2024 5:30 AM
Reply to  Johnny

WHO documents seemed to show that the contracts for the “PCR test” were signed long before 2020. Similarly, the contracts for the monkeypox jabs may have been signed a couple of years ago, in which case some governments are going to buy it, if only to destroy it later as expired.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Aug 15, 2024 7:06 AM
Reply to  Johnny

A greedy pharma’s about…..’give us $20bn in profits and we’ll bung y’all $1bn in election contributions.’

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 8:18 PM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

Dont forget the $Billionaire Bankers send their request and schemes to their Pentagon and CIA/MI6 servants, and from here threats and orders flow to big pharma.
So yes, big pharma get richer but the generals get even richer and the bankers gets even even richer richer.

So what do you do when 70% of the population are 100% corrupted?

Penelope
Penelope
Aug 15, 2024 3:37 AM

The World Health Organization (WHO) has convened its emergency mpox (yes, they no longer call it Monkeypox) committee, citing a circulating “deadlier strain” of the supposed disease, announcing that it is time to declare a “global health emergency.”

Why don’t they just put up a big sign “I’m an F’ing Liar”?
If there is anything they could have done that would create greater doubt about their veracity, I don’t know what it could be.

p.s.
p.s.
Aug 15, 2024 1:49 AM
Howard
Howard
Aug 14, 2024 7:11 PM

The problem with American politics is not that the poor dear voters are being duped by the big bad government. The problem is that voters have come to equate politics with their number two obsession: Sports. (Number One being the military/police). Candidates are not viewed as saviors – they are viewed as Team Captains. It matters no more what the platforms are than what color the team jersey’s are.

“Rah rah rhee, kick ’em in the knee; rah rah rass, kick ’em in the other knee!” has morphed to “Rah rah rump, kick ’em in the Trump! Rah rah scare us, kick ’em in the Harris!” The only absolute in American politics is “Kill the Umpire” (i.e., the Constitution).

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 12:54 AM
Reply to  Howard

In Peter Mathiessen last interview, published in the Smithsonian around 2014, he reminisces about his young years in 1950s Paris when many of the American journals were flat out run by the C👁️A. I think he worked for Paris Review. He says he did entry level “Boy Scout stuff” for the Agency. A couple years later after hanging out on the Left Bank sidewalk cafés around Sorbonne and talking to the French who frequented them, he went back to his handlers and said “Sorry, but I can’t play for the Team anymore.” It’s ALL seen far too often here as “just” a game, which is the American way of trivializing the deepest human needs and loyalties. I despised the atmosphere deeper than deeply when I lived some years in 70s Paris, and worked briefly for Newsweek as a grunt. Colonel L. Fletcher Prouty wrote an extremely penetrating book about all of this already 50 years ago, “The Secret Team: the CIA and its Allies in Control of the United States and the World.” There’s a mouthful, eh? [Until fairly recently it was almost impossible to get a copy of that exposé either in book stores or online. I first found out about it thru the late Roy Truckman [RIP 1938- 4.20.2023] and his iconic listener funded show at KPFK.org in L.A. where he featured the Prouty book, also in audio interviews, for entire decades! [Roy and his co-host Elliot Mintz were the only Americans the Ayatollah gave access to interview the American hostages 1979!?] Prouty some may recall as Mr. X in Oliver Stone’s JFK, and he was JFK’s USAF liaison with the CIA, and inveterate lecturing debunker of the Warren Commission Report on the JFK Assassination. I get accosted by “grey men” from the Agency, just all the time,… Read more »

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 1:59 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

Spellcheck crime: its Roy Tuckman, not their googoo default Truckman

MaryLS
MaryLS
Aug 15, 2024 2:22 AM
Reply to  Howard

Is it the voters, or is it how the media has chosen to portray political contests?. I think many voters long for substance,but are thwarted by news sources that trivialize elections and turn them into a non-serious source of entertainment.

Howard
Howard
Aug 15, 2024 4:19 PM
Reply to  MaryLS

Nobody in America wants to be caught ignoring the Number One Imperative: does it Play in Peoria (i.e., will it pay off for us)? If the voters went crazy and only responded to a media blitz presenting elections as civic duties, the media would go along – until voters returned to American sanity.

Johnny
Johnny
Aug 15, 2024 2:33 AM
Reply to  Howard

‘Sport’?
An exclusive club of multi millionaires kicking, throwing or hitting a ball for corporate parasites, middle class maggots and wage slaves.

Raoullo
Raoullo
Aug 14, 2024 4:55 PM

Here we go again. Mr. Whitehead rightfully points out some of the fundamental flaws in American politics, he provides a lucid analysis of the Deep State’s gimmicks, the manufacturing of unending crisis, government overreach and lawlessness, the rise religious totalitarianism; he even acknowledges that “No matter who wins this election, we’ll all still be prisoners of the Deep State.” But then, the author concludes by telling folks to go and vote, if they must! Say what? If someone like John, who’s had a front row seat to the government’s harrowing criminality and utter disregard of the constitution; if someone like him don’t get it yet, how are we to ever reform the current political system? Voting is tantamount to playing Russian roulette with a revolver known to be fully loaded! The only real option is not to play. If the Deep State is in control regardless of who wins, what’s the purpose of the electoral game? The only purpose is to legitimize the ruling elite’s complete takeover of all the levers of power within society. It’s like signing on the dotted lines of a contract not yet written! When we vote, we don’t really choose this or that representative, this or that president; we, in fact, only give our approval to be ruled under that system; we consent to be robbed and abused, possibly tortured, and even executed, as the state sees fit. This problem has its roots at the very beginning of the American Republic with its unresolved tension between democratic ideals and the adherence to a set of fundamental legal framework. We have also observed similar problems in Europe. Democracies are very easily corrupted from without and eventually always collapse from within. I ask Mr. Whitehead: Who do you think has wagged the American dog since the assassination… Read more »

Ort
Ort
Aug 14, 2024 7:30 PM
Reply to  Raoullo

But then, the author concludes by telling folks to go and vote, if they must!
Say what?
____________________________________________

I realize that the parallel isn’t exact, but this persistent reformist “work within the system” recommendation always reminds me of the old joke cited by Woody Allen in “Annie Hall”:

—————————–

A man mentions to his psychiatrist that he has a brother at home who thinks he’s a chicken.

The psychiatrist suggests that the man bring his brother in for treatment.

The man replies, “Well, I would… but we need the eggs.”

—————————–

Mr. Whitehead needs the eggs. 🤪 🥚 🥚

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 8:23 PM
Reply to  Ort

Good one because its a true one ;-).

Big Al
Big Al
Aug 15, 2024 3:31 AM
Reply to  Raoullo

I’m pretty sure the Whitehead’s “get it”, and they aren’t telling people to go vote. That’s misleading. You forgot the part about “but don’t make the mistake of consecrating the ballot box.”, i.e., don’t vote thinking you’re voting for a political savior like so many still do. I’m sure they understand what everyone here says everyday.

suzaloop
suzaloop
Aug 14, 2024 4:02 PM
Vagabard
Vagabard
Aug 14, 2024 3:59 PM

A Deep State can be a good thing.

A nation without no Deep State would be a nation without people with any vested interests. A nation without a military. A nation without any top businessmen, A nation without a competent civil service. Without any high finance experts, without anyone with decent education. No advanced technical expertise to speak of.

Such a nation likely wouldn’t last long.

Or it would be relegated to the lower forms of Deep State, unfortunately visible in a number of countries. Its deep state would consist of narco-traders (Central/South America), resource-raiders (Africa) or FSB cronies (Russia)…

Failing that, the vacuum would be filled by its becoming an extension of another nation’s deep state eg Guinea (Columbia), Gaza/Lebanon/Afghanistan/… (Iran)

Better to have a preferred form of deep state than none at all  🤔 

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 9:43 PM
Reply to  Vagabard

Of course, a Deep State has always existed, Vagabard.

“The Art of War” by Sun Tsu 2500 years ago records indelibly its essential importance to any nation, “the strength of the Emperor is in his spies.” Or such words.

Unfortunately in the West, especially Nazism and it’s connections to USA Inc. power, the deep states, those deeper worldly states, have resorted to demonic elements to shore up wherever their power is most tenuous!

It is that very realm of abuse and bad influence that makes NATO appear as unacceptable and untebable in its stratagems.

It’s a real bad arrangement, and it has led to where we are today, it starkly appears. **

I don’t see other countries approaching in such an untenable way.

We all need to learn how to cast out those demons, and simply negotiate from a completely human perspective and prospect. A human position.

Else that Beast remains broken off its chain. More persons need to identify that very very core problem.

” £4£&$4$+my2¢™ ” ~~~~~~~~

**[William Blatty who wrote the Exorcist screenplay was a C👁️A agent, perp, & operative. That tells us a lot about this issue. At least for those who can parse this out, more. And more should.]

Vagabard
Vagabard
Aug 14, 2024 11:11 PM
Reply to  John Ervin

Generally agree. Demons need to be cast out. Much can be said on the survival of Nazis post WWII (and also in Germany btw, but that’s another story). But as you say yes, deep states do indeed way back…

For example… once was this guy named William McKinley. Some US president I believe. assassinated in 1901 by some kinda anarchist nut (Leon Czolgosz) opposed to all forms of government!?! Does anyone remember him these days? I don’t think so. Nevertheless, he did exist and he did what he did… and so did the assassin. But I digress.

And yes, long before this McKinley guy (and perhaps concomitant with this ‘Art of War’ treatise a la Sun Tzu) there was also the Praetorian Guard. the Deep State of ancient Imperial Rome (a republic from around 509BC to 27BC), and also the Oligarchs of Ancient Athens (around 500BC) from whence the concept of democracy was first cameth (cf Cleisthenes), to throw spanners into the eternal workeths of those formulating models of the worldeth without due moral reflection

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 1:18 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

Yes, much intrigue surrounds McKinley, with past as prologue. Did you know the same model Ivers-Johnson .22 gun that shot McKinley was recovered from Sirhan’s steely (hypnotic) grip during the Bobby Kennedy 1968 shooting? Same exact type, model.

Obviously, more Masonic message than stark coincidence, huh?

Are you British? [I know the bardic tradition was found in Columkille, or St. Columba. A favorite of mine, I lived awhile on Iona, UK Hebrides. Heir to the Irish throne, before he threw it all off to become its patron Saint, as with the astounding Patrick, and Brigid, the trifecta, or triumvirate of patronal blessings.]

I ask that, just because most fairly educated Americans would know those factoids about McKinley, but perhaps a dwindling number eh?

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 1:33 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

An interesting read is Allen Dulles book, some title like “The 76 Principles of Intelligence” if you’re not leery of handling a work by an historic maniac. Whew. He details some of the work by Queen Elizabeth I spies, such as Walsingham, and how they used 16th Century techniques to get decisive and pivotal info behind enemy lines. Very interesting. (Wait, my title above is a short work, the actual Dulles book is “The Craft of Intelligence.”)

I learn a lot of invaluable info in those off beat studies.

Before I studied Intel et al. I had no useful maps or guides for what goes on?

Once I began, the calamities of modern life came into focus and relief.

Like the connections between the Simpson murders and Sharon Tate 25 years before. Similar daggers.

Or the very surprising covert links between the JFK and John Lennon assassinations.

My cup runneth over after merely scratching the surfaces.

To coin a suggestible multi~metaphor.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 8:33 PM
Reply to  John Ervin

Fine, but is it possible to survive as human being to know this rotten sick world down under?
Is it possible to see the world also have a beauty side after reading Dulles, 33, and Sharon Tate?

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 16, 2024 5:15 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen

Absolutely. This world’s beauty is grand, but only passing. It will come to an end “soon enough” and make way for a greater. Much greater.

But anyone needs to internalize that into the bone. And no one can do that on his own, or alone.

It will only be an unimaginable gift?!

mgeo
mgeo
Aug 15, 2024 5:41 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

Only the hard way keeps oligarchy, totalitarianism and creeping overreach in check.
https://www.britannica.com/story/who-were-the-assassins

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 1:46 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

I came to grasp that is absolutely inevitable, and long before it became a feature of nation states in the last half millennium.

The question is, where are they taking us. In the USA Spookocracy it seems like the tail wagging the dog, an unworthy crime organization, like Doug Valentine’s recent time “The CIA as Organized Crime.”

When war crimes and all the others become the key feature, you get even Tim Weiner, an NYT establishment writer, penning the Pulitzer winning history of the Agency 20 years ago, “A Legacy of Ashes.” He suggests it’s unworthy of its charter.

Point of fact, it’s really not even an American Agency, they just live here. Or not.

It’s become an army of occupation. And not just here. Not good. Really not.

IN MY HUMBLE OPINION!

C👁️A😱🦨🤔😎😇

Vagabard
Vagabard
Aug 14, 2024 3:33 PM

The Deep State is built into the US Constitution.

If you legitimize “we the people” to kick out any overweening Government, then you simultaneously legitimize billionaire plutocrats (a subset of ‘the people’) to do the same.

If ordinary plebs with little-to-no resources are allowed to give regime change a go (and invariably fail), then ‘deep state’ robber barons with private armies and unlimited bribes at their disposal can do it far far better (and invariably succeed).

In that sense, courts upholding the US constitution wouldn’t be much use in promoting greater freedoms for the people

mgeo
mgeo
Aug 15, 2024 5:45 AM
Reply to  Vagabard

A vote for each dollar has replaced a vote for each citizen. -what St. Jeffrey Sachs said a couple of years ago, as I recall

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 8:42 PM
Reply to  Vagabard

You have completely misunderstood “we the plebs”.
We the plebs are just playing stupids, letting the rich oligarch Free masons doing all the hard dangerous work while resting with a beer and some guitar music. 1969 Freedom!
https://youtu.be/rynxqdNMry4

Edwige
Edwige
Aug 14, 2024 2:51 PM

Trump and Musk have an on-line chat interrupted by all sorts of tech faults… bit like Sunak’s election launch?

Trump makes a bizarre statement about being hacked by the Iranian government… bit like how RFK jr alienated potential support with his love-ins for Israel?

This is of course on top of Trump parading an uninjured ear when all he had to do was wear an effing plaster.

Is the election being thrown to Harris?… much like it was to Starmer. Has all this been about getting Harris the nomination with minimal time for her candidacy to be fully scrutinised? Is being the anti-Trump enough to sustain three months of campaigning with not enough people asking what she’s pro-?

Or maybe it’s just to create a “it’s neck-and-neck” narrative to keep the mugs engaged.

suzaloop
suzaloop
Aug 14, 2024 4:04 PM
Reply to  Edwige

A cyberattack on Mobile Guardian, a U.K.-based provider of educational device management software, has sparked outages at schools across the world and has left thousands of students unable to access their files. 
Mobile Guardian acknowledged the cyberattack in a statement on its website, saying it identified “unauthorized access to the iOS and ChromeOS devices enrolled to the Mobile Guardian platform.”

The company said the cyberattack “affected users globally,” including in North America, Europe and Singapore, and that the incident resulted in an unspecified portion of its userbase having their devices unenrolled from the platform and “wiped remotely.”
“Users are not currently able to log in to the Mobile Guardian Platform and students will experience restricted access on their devices,” the company said.

Pilgrim Shadow
Pilgrim Shadow
Aug 14, 2024 6:39 PM
Reply to  Edwige

Something definitely stinks.

Aethelred
Aethelred
Aug 20, 2024 7:06 PM
Reply to  Edwige

The campaign is fake. The feds who can convict a ham sandwich can also elect a ham sandwich, and will do so just to prove they can. It is now amply clear that there is no need for a competent president.

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 14, 2024 9:51 AM

Off topic but this is amazing. I just got this from X:

 We’ve temporarily limited some of your account features

George

@Makropulos19

What happened?

We have determined that this account violated the X Rules. Specifically, for:

   Violating our rules against violent speech.

   You may not share abusive content, harass someone, or encourage other people to do so.

As a result, we’ve temporarily limited some of your account features. While in this state, you can still browse X, but you’re limited to only sending Direct Messages to your followers –– no posts, reposts, follows, or likes. Learn more. Your account will be restored to full functionality in: 12 hours and 0 minutes.

You can start your countdown and continue to X once you:

   Delete the content that violates our Rules

       1 Post

If you think we’ve made a mistake, contact our support team. You can learn more about our range of enforcement options here.

The “offending” post was one that took a wry look at that fabled “transgender community”. Specifically, this guy decided he was a woman and tried to “drop hints” to his wife! Hints like making his voice “more feminine”! All I did was suggest he cut his dick off – which was what the whole compassionate trans treatment aims at anyway!

Here’s my actual tweet:

“I’m even working on making my voice more feminine”?

Love the “even”. How about you cut your dick off? That should settle the matter!

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 14, 2024 10:20 AM
Reply to  George Mc

I’m starting to think there is a multi-layered trap here. The one posting pasted clips of these trans nuts is one “Hazel Appleyard”. She presents as anti-trans but nevertheless posts copies of these absurd little trans “agony aunt” things which would not otherwise get such exposure. So I reckon “Hazel” is a cunning troll. (She’s a Zionist Islamophobe too incidentally!)

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 10:26 AM
Reply to  George Mc

Difficult to know what’s going on in Twitterworld.

Are the threats actually deterring “unwanted” tweets ?

Not from where I’m sitting, they’re not.

The opposite seems to be true and everyday there is a tirade of angry responses to the government’s excesses.

Where is all this going ?

I liked Musk’s reply to the EU bloke’s letter to him but I think the EU is correct in saying that Musk is doing a stress test.

I think the EU and British government are bluffing, though, and Musk knows it.

Draconian limiting of dissent would backfire and to ban X would surely make the internet more difficult to monitor as it would drive people to the dark web.

Interesting game of brinkmanship.

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 14, 2024 12:21 PM

It’s a fucking joke. And I’m starting to think it functions on different levels. I was provoked (deliberately?) into making a crude remark via the postings of one “Hazel Appleyard” who may be genuine in her anti-trans stance but then she links into this sub reddit site called “r/MtF” whose self-description runs thus:

A Safe Haven for Trans Feminine People

A subreddit devoted to transgender issues pertaining to male-to-female or trans feminine people. If you have an article you like, or a worry to talk about, or you just want to vent a bit about trans life, then we’re here!

“Safe Haven”. The now compulsory siege mentality. Anyway, this is the kind of crap you get there:

https://www.reddit.com/r/MtF/comments/1equz42/how_many_of_you_have_drip_fed_your_wives_hints/

Now the entity that wrote this is either a provocateur or a narcissistic psychopath. And I rose to the bait.

But it strikes me that this drivel would have almost zero audience if it weren’t for Hazel promoting it on X.

And I have also had a deep suspicion that the entire trans mindfuck (and bodyfuck) is (whatever else it is) fundamentally a distraction. Now granted that I may be too optimistic here but I reckon that the drivel spouted under this label has no hope of taking root in any permanent way. But it does whip the punters up – myself of course being one of them. 

Steven Augustine
Steven Augustine
Aug 14, 2024 12:40 PM
Reply to  George Mc

And I have also had a deep suspicion that the entire trans mindfuck (and bodyfuck) is (whatever else it is) fundamentally a distraction”

Well, Distraction + ZPG goals

Lupa
Lupa
Aug 19, 2024 4:38 AM

Great new book out on this topic.
Nope, definitely not a distraction.

Jennifer Bilek Transsexual Transgender Transhuman
https://www.the11thhourblog.com/

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 1:37 PM
Reply to  George Mc

There are a lot of these highly divisive ploys being played.

The problem they have, which I’m not convinced they understand, is that we hold a deeply rooted common value- a hatred of government control.

Well, I do, anyway.

mgeo
mgeo
Aug 15, 2024 5:52 AM

In the novel Brave New World, someone goes up to the speaker at the podium and whispers something. The speaker then reverses his spiel, and everyone in the audience takes it in stride. In Woke insanity, that is where we are heading.

Aethelred
Aethelred
Aug 20, 2024 7:12 PM

Musk is a MIC contractor. He is promoting his interests.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 14, 2024 9:56 PM
Reply to  George Mc

First I thought it was your bank account: “We have determined that your account violated the X Rules”, but it was not.
Some Internet Site had hurt George feelings and his Rights to spew his bs all over their private Internet home page.
Poor poor George, how will you ever survive in there here in this cruel merciless cyber space………………….LOL.

Imagine a couple of hours out there in the third dimension…..in the rain. https://youtu.be/B0asbGJbLKc

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 15, 2024 1:30 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen

So you equate the right to free speech with the “right to spew bullshit”? What’s next? Equate the right to a fair trial to “the right to get away with a crime”?

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 15, 2024 1:52 AM
Reply to  George Mc

And X is a “private Internet home page”?

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 4:20 AM
Reply to  George Mc

It is. On the level with Faecesbook, Twitter, whatsoever. They are ALL private social sites anyone can use or not use as they prefer.

But its not about you, I generally find your comments as having substance.
Its about the generally spoiled child attitude in social media I am hinting at. Its general. Its a majority and they are awful. We also call them sheeple.

Researcher
Researcher
Aug 16, 2024 4:59 PM
Reply to  George Mc

You don’t have free speech on that or any social media platform. You seem to forget what DARPA-net is; a spying apparatus to manipulate your mind, drain your bank account, while distracting you with baiting narratives about trans creatures (or other non-sense) who comprise less than 0.1% of the population. Those freaks aren’t relevant. You’re wasting your time and energy.

The “government” is literally stealing your money and labor hand over fist while making you fret over castration or censorship on their spying-distract platform.

The only way to win is to opt out.

Lupa
Lupa
Aug 19, 2024 4:27 AM
Reply to  George Mc

That Tweet seems fine to me. It’s accurate, it addresses the deception and mentions possible outcome that is sometimes seen under the circumstances. Twixt turns various words into “hate” bc they support “trans” agenda.

Edwige
Edwige
Aug 14, 2024 9:09 AM

America’s national religion remains religion – although the main one(s) deny that they are religions when it suits.

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 8:20 AM

You think you’ve got it bad in US !

In forty days, the new labour government has imprisoned people for tweets that wouldn’t have raised an eyebrow two months ago, shown blatant bias in its dealings with different “communities”, thrown another 11.6 Billion into the green hole, given amnesty to 70,000 illegal immigrants (and propose to carpet the countryside with rubbish houses to accommodate them), stolen pensioner”s heating allowance and are angling to rejoin the sinking hulk that is the EU.

In forty days !!

You’ve got to question why they’re doing it.

A stress test ?

Or are they really that stupid that they think we’ll go along with it ?

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Aug 14, 2024 10:59 AM

Most probably they are doing it because they can. They have been given their orders.

An unassailable parliamentary majority means even if some of their own backbenchers revolted it would not dent their majority. They can also claim to have the democratic mandate regardless of the number of the electorate that actually voted for them.

Besides, the public have memories like goldfish. If they are carpet bombed with new narratives plus distractions, then the regime’s actions of late will have been accepted and forgotten.

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 11:21 AM
Reply to  Rolling Rock

It will be interesting to see what happens with council tax.

If the 0.5% of house value thing comes to pass it would reduce mine by over 50%

Of course, the people with houses 1M + will be hit hard.

But a Labour government was never meant to pander to them, was it ?

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 11:24 AM

Sorry, my point was that it will buy back the traditional labour faithful who might be a “bit miffed” with all the shenanigans so far.

As you say, a pretty substantial bonus like that would go a long way to make a lot of people “forget”

orlando biscuitio
orlando biscuitio
Aug 15, 2024 2:02 AM

if we could step way back and look at “the world” right now, we’d see understand that all we are is simply some rather large organism eating itself. kind of like and auto-immune disorder is at work.

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 15, 2024 9:09 AM

It must be a strange feeling to look upon the earth from space and realise that all of the evil ever done and all of the beauty ever created happened there, right in front of you.

Demiurge
Demiurge
Aug 14, 2024 7:18 AM

That’s two comments in a row deleted here.
Making this the third?
The irony of such levels of censorship and totalitarianism on display on a piece by authors proclaiming to be on our side against the ‘deep state’.
What am I witnessing here?

Demiurge
Demiurge
Aug 14, 2024 6:46 AM

After a bit of clarification.
Is it no longer ok to mention directly the prominent american politician by name anymore, especially in regard to events a few weeks ago, or to state ones opinion upon such events? I have autism and I cannot help but notice filters.

If so, for whatever reason, is it ok to use work around’s in the sentence structure as we have to on Facebook when we want to say something we know will get filtered out or prevented from being posted etc.
With events likely to hot up, it’s a subject I would like to hear about and discuss, should it arrive.

The whole net seems to be up to the same thing, and freedom of expression is under attack in that regard, particularly that subject matter.
I cant be the only one to notice this?

Johnny
Johnny
Aug 14, 2024 8:07 AM
Reply to  Demiurge

Be patient D.
Off G censors bugger all.

Moriat
Moriat
Aug 14, 2024 6:34 AM

You forgot to mention RFK. Do you include him in with this confidence game? Why do you only mention Harris and Trump?

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Aug 14, 2024 6:04 AM

If politics is the USA’s national religion, then the USA is in sore need of radical firebrands of the Lutheran, Quaker etc form who denounce the corrupt Establishment church and set up their own organisations who actually bear true allegiance to their god.

You’ve got an era of utterly corrupt Popery in the USA right now.

mgeo
mgeo
Aug 15, 2024 6:02 AM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

Supply must conform to mass demand, or at least drummed up (propagandised) demand. Therefore, the sermons will remain evasive, and the exceptions cooked up will increase and get more bizarre.

NickM
NickM
Aug 14, 2024 5:36 AM

Watch three just men still standing upright in the Home of the Brave and the Land of the Free. Two of them — Ray McGovern and Scott Ritter — veteran Truthers from 2004 against Con-WMD and the U$A’s Coalition of the Killing in Iraq.

“Ray McGovern : Ritter’s Courage, Israel’s Moral Crisis” on Judge Napolitani’s “Defending Freedom” channel.

https://www.youtube.com/live/S7qyOE1AZqQ?si=zSCmVsIi9uUZcGRZ

Watch Explosive Revelation by Hungarian PM Orbán: Germany’s Green Girls regime connived with U$A to blow up Germany’s Nord Stream cheap gas pipeline; Scholz deliberately sabotaging the economy of his own country to promote import of expensive U$ liquid gas by ship”

Gladius
Gladius
Aug 14, 2024 10:57 AM
Reply to  Estimate

Leaving aside the revisionist policies in which the Mongoloid tribe from the Pannonian plain, led by Viktor Onan, challenges the Treaty of Trianon, Hungary stands out for its criminal pro-vaccine and pro-digital ID policies.
https://reclaimthenet.org/belgium-and-hungary-launch-controversial-digital-ids-vaccine-passport

Rolling Rock
Rolling Rock
Aug 14, 2024 1:13 PM
Reply to  Estimate

It is the same old dog-eared playbook. It still works a treat.

There is some contention as to whether Albert Pike, the 33rd degree Grand Master Mason ever said the following, although some commentators swear the source information was available a few years ago:

“Whenever people need a hero we shall supply him” 

Either way, it makes sense from their perspective and also dovetails with Lenin’s quote about controlling the opposition.

After all, why wouldn’t they?

NickM
NickM
Aug 14, 2024 5:04 PM
Reply to  Estimate

The EU$A which joined the Coalition of the Killing against Iraq. The EU$A which installed and arms Ukro-nazis. The Anglo-American Zionazi Capitalist EU$A which defends genocide in Palestine.

The EU$A has Orban in its crosshairs: Badge of honour.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 14, 2024 10:09 PM
Reply to  Estimate

If we see it from a point of a Global Emergency Test agreed in UN in 2006, as part of their stupid Global Government Plan.

Then we ask ourselves “If the black death or cholera or some decease should hit a large area of the planet, how should Authorities act”?

It is because the whole thing was artificial and planned in detail beforehand it become ridiculous and absurd also in Orban’s hands.

NickM
NickM
Aug 15, 2024 5:23 AM
Reply to  Erik Nielsen

The only reason for Con-19 being ridiculous is that the U$ Patent GMO bioweapon Covid-19 turned out to be no more lethal than the common cold. But that hasn’t stopped The U$ Dept of Defense is collecting Russian DNA for a new and more devilish GMO: Viruses that attack only Russians.

And what do you think Dr. Izzie Geno is working on in that Bioweapons Lab which reports directly to Prime Minister Nutty Yahoo?

No more U$ bio-weapons on Russia’s border!

No more U$ nukes East of Berlin!

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 8:58 PM
Reply to  NickM

Yes, but that is the nature of the militaire. Researching and collecting extremely dangerous hybrid weapons before “he enemy” do it.

Then some powerful politicians and big corps gets tempted to use these new invented tools out of power and money greed. Bad idea.

Penelope
Penelope
Aug 14, 2024 2:10 AM

I hate to say it, but I begin to think that the next step by TPTB is war in the middle east. The current “Iran is about to attack Israel” meme makes me nervous: whether true or not it provides a pretext– or there’s an expected attack by Israel against Lebanon.

Under the crisis of US acknowledged war participation, a great many unsavory extension of the Federal govt & its agencies can occur.can occur.

NickM
NickM
Aug 14, 2024 5:25 PM
Reply to  Penelope

< The current “Iran is about to attack Israel” meme makes me nervous – or there’s an expected attack by Israel against Lebanon. >

Don’t worry, dual Isra-merican citizen Nutty Yahoo has been singing Bombombom Iran for 20 years. Like the proverbial drunk waving his fists in the air and shouting “Let me at him! Don’t hold me back! Let me at him!”

But nobody is holding him back.

And don’t worry about Lebanon. Last time Israel tried invading Lebanon they lost 12,000 soldiers before Israel “Declared victory and retreated”.

In the next round Israel fought Hezb’Allah alone — and lost.

It’s not Israel who wants to fight on its own, it’s the Anglo Zionazi Capitalists who imagine they are protecting their oil interests in the ME. The same UKU$A which is currently supplying heavy weapons to genocidal Nutty Yahoo.

underground poet
underground poet
Aug 14, 2024 5:40 PM
Reply to  Penelope

Beware of electronic warfare of the financial type, they just might not be on your side.

Penelope
Penelope
Aug 14, 2024 1:23 AM

The media shows activists and quarreling heads in a vain attempt to inject some excitement and urgency into this election– but AFAIK–they’ve failed.
I have so far seen and heard exactly zero interest in this election– not even a single bumper sticker.

With respect, perhaps the Whiteheads are confusing what they see on the idiot box with real life.

Estimate
Estimate
Aug 14, 2024 7:23 AM
Reply to  Penelope

Have they failed..?
i.e this blog had 4 articles about the Trump shooting.
it is had none about kamala.
They have all followed suit.
everyone of them type of blogs is convinced due to the internet and mainly twitter that Trump is going to win.
I would place money on kamala due projected of a women in white house.
The politically side of internet (like X twitter) and now blogs is the idiot box.

susan mullen
susan mullen
Aug 14, 2024 9:34 AM
Reply to  Penelope

Penelope, it’s just now being learned that former Trump aide Kellyanne Conway has registered as a foreign agent for Ukraine at $50,000. a month reporting to Victor Pinchuk. Per 8/5/24 Politico. This is sickening. US taxpayers must be removed from the Pentagon. This can only happen by US breaking up into at least 3 separate countries. SW states could join Mexico, for example.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 9:03 PM
Reply to  susan mullen

Good idea. US need to be occupied internally to not spread the stupidity to the outside.

my ways are not theirs
my ways are not theirs
Aug 13, 2024 11:20 PM

for all the suppression of free speech that has long characterized US society, there does seem to be a CERTAIN degree of restraint, compared to the situation in many other countries, based on a tradition of respect for the First Amendment, don’t you think? or which are the best nations for people who hope to express divergent views?

Charlotte Ruse
Charlotte Ruse
Aug 13, 2024 11:00 PM

“No matter who wins this election, we’ll all still be prisoners of the Deep State.”

What else would you expect from a “criminocracy.” 😁

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 12:11 AM
Reply to  Charlotte Ruse

Spookocracy, since ,(at least) 1946. Probably 1776?

We are all POW’s of that Deep State.

So like they say in USA football, “You take what the ‘defense’ gives you.”

Only God knows what.

Thom 9
Thom 9
Aug 13, 2024 10:52 PM

Organized religion and politics are essentially the same thing, they both seek to control the population through dogma and fear.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 12:22 AM
Reply to  Thom 9

True, perhaps, as a superficial survey.

But to go deeper with organized religion, deeper truths can be found. More hidden, by necessity.

Not so, with politics, it’s all world. And more and more. A stark division.

The Apostle Paul spelled it out astutely in Romans, “Your lives are hidden in Christ with God.”

In politics, lies are hidden, to the “undoing” of many.

In the regions of grace, truths are
hidden, to the reforming of many And the saving of certain.

Rhys Jaggar
Rhys Jaggar
Aug 14, 2024 6:09 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

You’re very naive if you think that organised religion didn’t descend into the depths of grubby politics. The expression ‘The Catholic Church will do anything for money’ is a fair description of why that organisation became the richest organisation on earth a few centuries ago.

Churches are in on the electronic peepshow surveillance of citizens. There’s no argument about that, churches are infiltrated by security service drones and people who use low level emotional blackmail. People obsessed with status and using ‘the church’ as a vehicle for them to achieve it.

When you judge these nasty little people not on their religious gabbling but rather their everyday actions, you conclude very quickly that churches are no salvation, they are just another form of Establishment control.

No longer the ‘opium of the masses’, because the masses saw through the nonsense sixty years ago.

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 11:42 AM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

If you’ve visited the Vatican museum you can actually see all the loot on display.

It’s quite incredible.

“Spare a few quid to put a bit of new lead on the roof guv”

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 10:09 PM

True it’s quite a display, but the implications are too often misunderstood. Most of that is directed outward, and financial breakdowns exist.

This Pope has gone to great lengths to maintain a simple life.

Erik Nielsen
Erik Nielsen
Aug 15, 2024 9:12 PM
Reply to  John Ervin

The latest two Popes are ugly public examples of globalist snakes, two horn symbols and small choir boys.
But you could say that because the Catholic Church parasite so much on the real thing, the true religion, they have also un-doubtfully qualities presented from it.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 10:05 PM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

You present versus my comment quite a slew of things that are not at all “facts-in-evidence” in my own comment.

That presents problems for any truly sane discourse, at least on both sides.

All the same, or sane, I will try to spell out where all those problems “lie” if I can afford some time. [After all it’s almost the Vigil for the Feast of the Assumption, a primary one, as well as “le mi-creux d’août” as we Parigauds call it, and weather not to be trifled with, as I surely know.

Also, the Anniversary of Maximilian Kolbe, today, whose story is very relevant to all this.

But I sincerely hold to my first assessment that your arguments have a number of flaws, if you’ll allow me, and I’ll try to spell them out more at suitable length, later. If life permits!

Thanks for the interest in them.

mgeo
mgeo
Aug 15, 2024 6:18 AM
Reply to  Rhys Jaggar

In general, a religious association is another type of club (a) for most members, to get contacts for marketing, climb the social ladder or build facade (b) extract money. When one US “prophet” wanted a bigger private jet, he announced that he had been told this in a dream.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 2:47 AM
Reply to  Thom 9

Then there is this apercu by the penetrating analysis and mind of GKC:

Dogma is actually the only thing that cannot be separated from education. It is education. A teacher who is not dogmatic is simply a teacher who is not teaching.”

That, clearly, puts dogma in a completely different light. It is universal. To accuse some of dogma is not fair play without admitting each propagates an alternate dogma. Dogma then becomes what others do, but so very far from us.

It is, literally, the pot calling the kettle black, since dogma is universal, and to try to define dogma as something “they” or the rest of the world does, but never “us”, is simply TOO dogmatic.

Thom 9
Thom 9
Aug 15, 2024 4:50 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

@ John Ervin

Organized religion and politics are essentially the same thing, they both seek to control the population through dogma and fear.

I stand by my original comment and of course you are entitled to your opinion.

George Mc
George Mc
Aug 13, 2024 10:24 PM
Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
Aug 13, 2024 8:27 PM

!956 is the start of his-tory, so says simpsons 23 07, stonehenge

https://gorojanin-iz-b.livejournal.com/64046.html

sandy
sandy
Aug 13, 2024 5:06 PM

Politics is the art of prosecuting hidden agendas. It’s 61 years beyond obsolete. As long as people tolerate it’s practice and existence, humanity continues the spiral down to oblivion. The opposite of politics is openness, transparency and collective, egalitarian, consensus building.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 13, 2024 4:00 PM

Amerika is a Kult

Christine Thompson
Christine Thompson
Aug 13, 2024 4:23 PM
Reply to  John Ervin

Why do Americans (okay, maybe not all Americans, but a great number…) spell words with a K which should, by rights, be spelt with a C?????

It’s so ‘irritating’ to see (well, I could use a stronger word than merely ‘irritating’, but will keep it polite…).

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 13, 2024 6:59 PM

Seriously? We’re not allowed to say it that way even ironically? Because I did so to suggest its gothic foundations, heavy with Teutonic gene pools (I should know, Im more thsn half German) the WASPieR* ethos that gives us the hard C as a more germane K

*[as one preacher I know spelled it out WASP(R) as “White Anglo Saxon Protrstant and RICH, and you can’t ask for a worse combination than that, baby.”

Of course, he was preaching a mission in the inner city, and it’s easier to get away with that there?]

I used the K, as in German it is Mind KONTRÖLLE, whence came the MK of MKUltra, so they say, with Nazi origins in the death camps of Mengele. Imported to Langley, and deployed in the Sharon Tate and Bobby Kennedy murders.

And there is substantial evidence that the 3rd Reich Nazis turned to occult practices in their pursuits, so K suggests that cultic bent, also.

So that’s why I did, since you asked.

I know, for the sake of clarity, maybe I should have spelled it out this way:

“AmeriKkka ist ein KKKult.

K??

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 12:46 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

As a fact, I got the k directly as a lift, or loan, from Franz Kafka, as the title of his revealing novel “Amerika.”

With a name and psyche like Kafka, perhaps all the more reason to choose the German spelling for this nation.

WorKs for me, even without his reasons.

Ort
Ort
Aug 14, 2024 7:16 PM
Reply to  John Ervin

FWIW, as a pride-free Amerikan I adopted the “K” spelling years ago. 

At the time, it was for the relatively mundane purpose of distinguishing my native USA from the rest of the continental “Americas”. I was influenced by a drumbeat of comments from non-USA “Americans” justly complaining that the name, title, or label “America” had been hijacked by the USA as if “America” is exclusively synonymous with the USA.

It also is an indicator that this century’s dystopian, pathological Through the Looking-Glass “Amerika” is not the benevolent (and exceptional) “America” of civics class and pop culture– e.g., Irving Berlin’s idealistic, fantastic, God-blessed nation.

When I began to habitually use this spelling in 2005 or so– and there were others who independently used the “K” variation– it really grated on some people. We deviant, renegade, heretical apostates were usually excoriated by the conventional-minded; typically, we were scolded or mocked for being “childish” as well as misguided. 

Ironically, and amusingly, on one progressive-liberal blog the resident “Amerika”-bashing nanny turned out to be Canadian. This disclosure prompted the unrepentant bashed to reply, “Hey, what do you care? Aren’t you Kanadian?” This particular nanny abruptly disappeared, perhaps having suffered a disabling stroke from a surfeit of righteous indignation and high dudgeon.

Good riddance, we thought. You know what they say: if you can’t stand the heat, get out of the citchen!  🤨

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 2:59 AM
Reply to  Ort

This is what I found quite hysterical and side-splitting about the address by Pope Francis when he arrived the first time in the USA about ten years ago, and declaimed, “This land, America, the greatest land in the world” or some such words.

I had to read them twice, then cried laughing. He was playing the game both ways, flattering his hosts, while including the sly and no doubt unbeknownst pun, that America is the entire New World, from the frozen tip of northern Canada to the torrid tip of his homeland, Argentina.

I almost cried laughing, it was such a stealth touch, and diplomacy at its craftiest. Kindly, too, of course. Hilarious. All of the fun was in that he knew most everyone present wouldn’t catch the double meaning. But some would, and be delighted.

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Aug 14, 2024 1:21 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

I thought it was the other way around? Hitler taking his cues fro naziism from the American?

See this, for example:

When the Nazis set out to legally disenfranchise and discriminate against Jewish citizens, they weren’t just coming up with ideas out of thin air. They closely studied the laws of another country. According to James Q. Whitman, author of Hitler’s American Model, that country was the United States.

“America in the early 20th century was the leading racist jurisdiction in the world,” says Whitman, who is a professor at Yale Law School. “Nazi lawyers, as a result, were interested in, looked very closely at, [and] were ultimately influenced by American race law.”

comment image

https://www.history.com/news/how-the-nazis-were-inspired-by-jim-crow

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 7:11 AM
Reply to  Veri Tas

Know it. Believe it. Most Americans will not, even with all the facts on a big screen.

All the same, I think it was the really naztiest Nazis who brought a certain Gothic depravity and Germanic hyper -organizational skill to Langley that really sabotaged whatever remained that was benevolent in American intelligence networks.

It’s too involved to go into depth here, but it truly deserves a lot more study.

Let’s just say that Wall Street and multinational interests there, and those connected to German interests, brought out a lot of the worst traits in both countries.

Whether American or German, global Nazism has become the scourge of mankind, in some assessments, such as mine. It threatens to either take down or enslave everything and everyone.

Meanwhile, it takes our eye off that ball by blaming its own crimes on whatever other party is most convenient for it, and especially always on “commies”. That’s age old textbook Nazism.

Steven Augustine
Steven Augustine
Aug 14, 2024 11:15 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

All the same, I think it was the really naztiest Nazis who brought a certain Gothic depravity and Germanic hyper -organizational skill to Langley that really sabotaged whatever remained that was benevolent in American intelligence networks.”

However: let’s not forget the Dulles brothers, one of whom helped bankroll the Nazty Colour Revolution (when AH was running out of funds) and the other of whom founded the Bankers’ Intelligence Agency in ’46 or ’47. The Joimans had plenty of “talent,” sure, but the Anglo-American Axis had more centuries of experience in the organized atrocity game. To update it all: the Central American deathsquads, of the 1970s, trained by “our boys,” made most Nazty atrocities seem sheepish in comparison.

On the other hand, a look into the tradition of executing people by “Blowing from the Gun” teaches us that demonic levels of murderous cruelty are not peculiar to the modern or monopolized by the Anglo-American. The flaw is in a gene, I think. Some of us have it, many of us don’t. Guess which cohort rules the Earth.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 10:20 PM

Bingo!

My thesis and premise exactly.

The Bad Seed that has grown into a huge Wicked Weed. Worldwide.

~~~~~

And who says the Dulles Bros weren’t Nazis?

Dull, duller, Dulles…”. ~ Churchill
,

Steven Augustine
Steven Augustine
Aug 14, 2024 10:46 AM
Reply to  John Ervin

“AmeriKkka ist ein KKKult.”

“Amerika” is the archaic (late 1960s) spelling of the name of the Kakistocratic Kulture currently referred to as “Murrka”. “Amerikkka” is an early-1990s variation. Linguists await the coming Civil War, regarding inevitable variations, bearing in mind the probable bifurcation of the entity so named .

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 3:43 AM

I posted an article in 2006 called “Amerikkkan HELLth KKKare” unaware that it had been used before me, though that’s not surprising, the trope-to-be was begging for it. I went to a church in Haltom City, Texas, ’cause a good friend went there, though as a Catholic I wasn’t much convicted by it. But Pastor Bobby used the term “KKK” once or twice, and I got the idea there that that Klub wasn’t held to be a bad thing. Gave me a bit of the willies, especially when I gave a used car dealer on my home turf of Grapevine a health advice that he later said saved his life and from quintuple bypass surgery. He wanted to reward me by inviting me to join the local KKK !! I politely declined, and gave him a wide berth in sailing thereafter. Yours truly, he asked, who had started a boys’ club when I was ten and had invited the only two black boys in our preppy private school to join, much to his mother’s shock, as I really had no idea then that it was sort of unheard of. I had come from Newport Beach, CA., where I had not yet seen any black people in a social setting, and it just seemed like a friendly thing to do. It also flipped a lot of people out, and no doubt got me on a list for life. Among hundreds of others, I could start an art collection that will grow in value, all artful lists. Meanwhile, I had a lady (from the Agency, apparently, though they rarely announce it) tell me over the phone after a long conversation, “These are people who have been after you for a long time, and they’ll never give up.” I didn’t think of it… Read more »

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 4:04 AM

Thanks for the word kakistocratic. I had not seen that yet, or perhaps never identified it in the headlong rush, but it enters through the backdoor of my lexicon, on loan from Greece. Two K’s no less!

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
Aug 13, 2024 8:35 PM

def don’t look at Kaotic

Christine Thompson
Christine Thompson
Aug 14, 2024 12:42 AM

There’s a ‘h’ in the word ‘chaotic’…

NickM
NickM
Aug 14, 2024 5:51 AM

Because it derives from the Greek letter Chai not Kappa.

Cloverleaf
Cloverleaf
Aug 13, 2024 9:24 PM

Hello Khristine 😂.

Veri Tas
Veri Tas
Aug 14, 2024 1:08 AM

Why do they spell colour as color? I don’t mind.

Sonny Raye Hayes
Sonny Raye Hayes
Aug 14, 2024 7:32 AM

I believe that the practice of substituting Ks for Cs when referring to anything having to do with the United States of America began during or after the Nazi era when the Ks as a German consonant signified a Nazi-like parallel. It is irritating not just because of the jarring mispelling but also because it draws attention to totalitarianism here in the illusion called America.

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 10:59 PM

Dbl Bingo!

Christine Thompson
Christine Thompson
Aug 14, 2024 1:06 PM

Another ‘irritating’ (I use a far stronger word than that…) thing which Americans tend to do (all over the place in books written by Americans) is spell the word ‘kerb’ (ie, the edge of a pavement [sidewalk, for Americans]) as ‘curb’. The word ‘curb’ of course having a different meaning entirely.

Also the use of ‘EKG’ instead of the correct ‘ECG’ (‘cardiac’ being spelt with a ‘c’, and not a ‘k’).

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 14, 2024 11:03 PM

Go figure. HL Mencken & Joe Bageant both, so different in every way but contrarian, point out at length the national neglect of letters.

Howard
Howard
Aug 16, 2024 4:12 PM

As I’m sure you know, we Americans revel in acronyms – they’re practically our litany. But, as I’m sure you also know, it creates a number of paradoxes – chief among them the “EKG” and “ECG.” They are simply alternate acronyms for the same test. The EKG comes from the German term “elektrokardiogramm.” (We Americans also revel in fancy German terminology).

Howard
Howard
Aug 16, 2024 4:03 PM

I agree with you in principle. But it’s not an alphabetical issue. Many Americans use the “k” rather than the “c” in America to try and convey a fascist identification. It’s not necessary though: the US is so blatantly fascist that no clever spelling is needed to point it out.

What I do resent as an American is using the “k” when referring to Americans (Amerikans). Not everyone in America is a fascist.

Johnny
Johnny
Aug 13, 2024 12:22 PM

Forget the puppets.

Give us the names, addresses, phone numbers, emails and bank account details of the puppet masters, so we can wreak havoc.

Paul Watson
Paul Watson
Aug 13, 2024 2:39 PM
Reply to  Johnny

Amen

Edwige
Edwige
Aug 13, 2024 11:50 AM

Anyone remember Francis Fukuyama and ‘The End of History’? How’s that looking now? It went the same way as the dinosaurs (?) and the end-of-the-Cold-War peace dividend….

BTW I seem to remember that when political divisions heated up almost immediately ‘the End of History’ was being cited, this was explained away using Freud’s “the narcissism of minor difference”. Like every Freudian explanation, this turns out to have been manifest bs.

Evangelical Christianity is a massive psyop. Anything that’s rooted in the charisma of a leader can be changed suddenly and dramatically which makes it highly attractive to the controllers. Centuries of doctrine can be thrown out overnight by the charismatic leader’s new revelation. Unsurprisingly, this is where Christian Zionism has been implanted with all its crazies who want some sort of Armageddon in the Middle East.

As for the constitution, it’s typical of progressives to externalise the source of salvation as much as the origins of our problems. The constitution isn’t of much use without moral characters to operationalise it – as the last century should have made abundantly clear.

Martin Usher
Martin Usher
Aug 13, 2024 5:17 PM
Reply to  Edwige

Anyone who believed in that End of History hogwash is in serious denial about the nature of organizations. A relatively minor, but still important, example to draw from is the end of Prohibition. This might have been a cause for celebration but it was an utter disaster for the many people who’s livelihood depended on it so attention was immediately diverted to the next menace (weed, in this case). So with the end of the Cold War the professionals simply found some other threats and menaces. After all, Rule One of organizations is that its never going to work itself out of a job. The only way you’d wind one up is by incorporating it into a bigger, better (stronger, faster) organization.

Captain Birdheart
Captain Birdheart
Aug 13, 2024 9:04 PM
Reply to  Edwige

Dinosaurs (?)

Why the (?) ?

David McBain
David McBain
Aug 13, 2024 9:32 PM
Reply to  Edwige

It seems that fiction writers such as Orwell and Huxley have a more realistic grasp of reality.

NickM
NickM
Aug 14, 2024 6:02 AM
Reply to  David McBain

And Kafka whose Amerika is more like the U$A today than it was in his time.

But it’s still only the part of reality that a writer can grasp.

“I’m not like you” — Goethe, Faust’s reply from Reality.

Clutching at straws
Clutching at straws
Aug 14, 2024 8:25 AM
Reply to  David McBain

Fiction ?

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 4:01 AM

Surrealist novel poetry, not fiction.

“One day it will have to be officially admitted that what we have christened reality is an even greater illusion than the world of dreams.”

~ Salvador Dali

John Ervin
John Ervin
Aug 15, 2024 3:58 AM
Reply to  David McBain

Where Huxley and Orwell fall afoul of the completed reality, lies in their calculating from a baseline of human misrule, only, and not admitting, dishonestly, that the Creator has a hand, has a lot to do with what falls out. Of course, their dystopian tirades are meant to be cautionary, so hope is subtracted, maybe to scare us straight.

I heard a truth said in church years ago, like the refrain of some very holy song, “God does not allow an evil unless (s)He intends a greater good to come of it.”

I really see that in the Kennedy killings, which have fructified exponentially all the darkness that enveloped them. And other tragedies. As our precious Jerusalem Slim has pointed out, “Unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground, it remains a single grain.”

Of course, our human side so often does not see that. [We throw many a pity party. I know I’ve been dragged thataway at times.]

But He sees it, doesn’t He. Bonhoeffer wrote a letter from a Gestapo prison in Berlin, “God is in the facts themselves.”

~~~~~~~

“I’ve lived through some terrible things in my life, some of which actually happened.”

~ Mark Twain [“lapsed” Master Mason]

underground poet
underground poet
Aug 14, 2024 1:27 AM
Reply to  Edwige

The end comes once a year for

underground poet
underground poet
Aug 14, 2024 1:29 AM

Dont know what that was about, but to finish, the end comes once a year for some religions, and they religiously wait for it for a long time and act sometimes negatively too.

Penelope
Penelope
Aug 14, 2024 1:37 AM
Reply to  Edwige

Yes Edwige I remember Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History; the book by his mentor Alan Bloom was much better– the Closing of the American Mind. It correctly anticipated the closing of the mind contained in “You shall not judge anyone; you must accept everyone’s ‘lifestyle’. You may not even express a PREFERENCE of one over another.” But what TPTB say we must be agnostic about is much bigger than lifestyle, isn’t it?

illiterate goblin
illiterate goblin
Aug 13, 2024 9:54 AM

we also have some symbolic parallel programming w/ all the controversy surrounding MrBeast aka Jimmy DONALDson at the same time Donald Trump is being revealed as The Antichrist & Beast of Revelation. Two wildly popular figures w/ a secret dark side.
CJ @SynchroMorpheus

underground poet
underground poet
Aug 14, 2024 1:31 AM

The uninsured side of life, now that would be interesting.