Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 3:57 p.m. No.10550079   🗄️.is đź”—kun

The Hidden Tyrannyis a short 24 page document attached as a PDF. You probably have seen much of the content however it is nice to see it in all in one place with connections.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 4:08 p.m. No.10550163   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0188

>>10550035

 

The data that CBP bought probably comes from cell towers. The only way to hide that is to turn off your phone and remove the battery, Or leave it at home.

 

I suspect that CBP is most interested in phones which travel to a border area outside of main corridors and manned crossings. They can see a line on a map. When multiple such lines have the same origin or end point, they have just identified a safe house.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 4:21 p.m. No.10550288   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10550219

Folks should take this as a sign that the Oz books are much deeper commentaries on the social order than just about money systems, and read them more carefully. Those who understand how comms work, will find that a lot of warnings were in the books.

The Wizard of Oz as a Monetary Allegory

 

https://blogs.stthom.edu/cameron/the-wizard-of-oz-as-a-monetary-allegory/

 

Since the Chicago journalist L. Frank Baum published his The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1900, the book has become one of the most beloved American tales of adventure. Millions of both children and adults have taken great pleasure in reading about Dorothy, a little girl living in the midst of the Kansas prairies with her aunt, who is “carried away” by a tornado to the Land of Oz, a magical place populated by the little Munchkins and a host of other wonderful characters. Anxious to find her way back home, Dorothy sets out to seek the advice of the Great Wizard of Oz who resides in the Emerald City. During her trip, Dorothy meets new companions, including the Scarecrow (who needs a brain), the Tin Man (who needs a heart), and the Cowardly Lion (who needs courage). She invites them to accompany her to visit the Great Wizard and ask him to fulfill their wishes. Following a long series of adventures, including a climactic battle with the Wicked Witch of the West, Dorothy finally “returns” home, finding herself awakened from her dream on her bed, to the relief and cheers of her family and friends.

 

For many years, the Wizard of Oz retained its status as purely a modern classic of the children literature. More recently, however, a number of authors have argued that the Wizard of Oz is not a children book at all, but rather a populist allegory about the US monetary debates of the last quarter of the 19th century. During this period, the successive Republican administrations, concerned about the potential inflationary effects of the excessive monetary expansion during the American civil war of the early 1860s, gradually returned the US monetary system to the gold standard. Under this system, banks could only print new dollar bills when purchasing gold, as opposed to earlier times when they could also print money by purchasing US government bonds. This return to gold, under the conditions of severe gold shortage, resulted in a tighter money supply and, hence, the economic depression of the late 19th century. To combat the depression, a number of Democrats began the free silver movement which favored giving banks the permission to also print money by purchasing silver, a metal found in abundance in the western American states. The free silver coinage, many Democrats asserted, would end the dearth of money and, thus, initiate the process of American economic recovery. Indeed, during the 1896 presidential election, the Democrats led by their nominee, William Jennings Bryan, called for an end to “crucifying mankind upon a cross of gold.”

 

Baum, a journalist at the time in Chicago, is supposed to have composed the Wizard of Oz as an allegory depicting these events. Thus, according to this interpretation, Dorothy (representing America and her honest values) wearing silver shoes (representing the free silver coinage) recruits the Scarecrow (representing the American farmer), the Tin Man (representing the American worker), and the Cowardly Lion (William Jennings Bryan), to accompany her on the yellow brick road (representing the gold standard) to the Emerald City (Washington, D.C.) to plead with the Great Wizard (the Democratic president Grover Cleveland) of Oz (an ounce of gold) for free silver coinage. In the process, Dorothy and her companions also battle the Wicked Witch of the West (William McKinley, the Republican presidential nominee in 1896). Unlike the Democrats, McKinley was against abandoning the gold standard in favor of a more expansionary bimetallist (gold and silver) system. As it turned out, however, the issue of the silver coinage became moot with the new gold discoveries in Alaska in the 1890s, which served to undermine the Democratic platform and, thus, to cost the Democrats the US presidency both in 1896 and 1900.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 4:23 p.m. No.10550320   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0332 >>0333

When It Comes to Nuclear Power, Could Smaller Be Better?

A handful of companies and governments are working to develop small-scale nuclear reactors that proponents say are safer, cheaper, and more compatible with renewables than traditional nuclear power. But critics contend the new technology doesn’t address concerns about safety and radioactive waste.

 

https://e360.yale.edu/features/when-it-comes-to-nuclear-power-could-smaller-be-better

 

Huge computer screens line a dark, windowless control room in Corvallis, Oregon, where engineers at the company NuScale Power hope to define the next wave of nuclear energy. Glowing icons fill the screens, representing the power output of 12 miniature nuclear reactors. Together, these small modular reactors would generate about the same amount of power as one of the conventional nuclear plants that currently dot the United States — producing enough electricity to power 540,000 homes. On the glowing screens, a palm tree indicates which of the dozen units is on “island mode,” allowing a single reactor to run disconnected from the grid in case of an emergency.

 

This control room is just a mock-up, and the reactors depicted on the computer screens do not, in fact, exist. Yet NuScale has invested more than $900 million in the development of small modular reactor (SMR) technology, which the company says represents the next generation of nuclear power plants. NuScale is working on a full-scale prototype and says it is on track to break ground on its first nuclear power plant — a 720-megawatt project for a utility in Idaho — within two years; the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has just completed the fourth phase of review of NuScale’s design, the first SMR certification the commission has reviewed. The company expect final approval by the end of 2020. The U.S. Department of Energy has already invested $317 million in the research and development of NuScale’s SMR project.

 

NuScale is not alone in developing miniature reactors. In Russia, the government has launched a floating 70-megawatt reactor in the Arctic Ocean. China announced plans in 2016 to build its own state-funded floating SMR design. Three Canadian provinces — Ontario, New Brunswick, and Saskatchewan — have signed a memorandum to look into the development and deployment of small modular reactors. And the Rolls-Royce Consortium in the United Kingdom is working on the development of a 440-megawatt SMR.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 4:25 p.m. No.10550332   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10550320

Normal System Operation

 

NuScale Power is creating a new kind of nuclear power plant, one that is smarter, cleaner, safer and cost competitive. The innovative concept incorporates all of the components for steam generation and heat exchange into a single integrated unit called the NuScale Power Module™ (NPM). The reactor operates using the principles of buoyancy driven natural circulation; hence, no pumps are needed to circulate water through the reactor.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 4:49 p.m. No.10550561   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0583 >>0602

>>10550443

I don't think he's a slide.

I think he is a professional clown psyop

Who is trying to get folks distracted into useless meming

When we have ALREADY achieved the meme goal of awareness.

Now we should be putting our effort into writing to support ABCU|8

This shill in the warroom is trying to get us all thinking like stupid teenage gamers

So that we do not write the kind of explanations of things that are now needed for newer Trump supporters

We have to teach them all how to dig,how to DISCERN right from almost rightand how to think critically.

Many of them will be looking for who to trust, and memers can take advantage of that.

We need to explain, TRUST NOBODY, think for yourself.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 4:57 p.m. No.10550631   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10550348

 

Risk of Three Gorges Dam breaking is increasing

And it is still raining

There is already disastrous flooding above and below the dam

If it breaks, if will do tremendous damage to the assets of the Cabal elite

And could kill 100s of millions.

Anonymous ID: 0d4cc8 Sept. 6, 2020, 5:10 p.m. No.10550765   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10550588

That is the same reason that people post Twitter polls on here asking Anons to go to Twitter and flip the poll.

 

Never do that!!!

The poll is set up with a confederate inside Twitter who records all the accounts who vote, either way, it does not matter, and then those accounts are run through the AI that suspends and deletes accounts.