THE RUIN OF KASCH
a story about the fall of the richest kingdom on earth, collected in marketplace of Khartoum by the 19'th century English explorer and ethnographer, Sir Richard Francis Burton.
25' 07"
THE RUIN OF KASCH
a story about the fall of the richest kingdom on earth, collected in marketplace of Khartoum by the 19'th century English explorer and ethnographer, Sir Richard Francis Burton.
25' 07"
smack a 'ho, no 'mo show.
DeeCee92
and Slam90 call signs up.
> circulated at CPAC
Who controls both sides to control the middle?
QR 1, research, surveillance and recreational aircraft on station far above the fecaform clouds of the reeking shillosphere, sends a message to anons worldwide:
STAY COMFY
it's screening. Only the most vulnerable, the lonely and confused elderly, people in crisis who have had serious accidents, life threatening illness like heart attacks and strokes or who have recently lost loved ones etc.
all can cause increased credulity and suggestibility
March 26, 2021.
TOKYO — For over 40 years, Japan’s leading purveyor of shadowy phenomena, Mu magazine, has peddled Bigfoot, U.F.O.s and the occult to a ravenous fan base. Alien civilizations and the biology of the Loch Ness Monster have been popular cover stories. A conspiracy theory doesn’t quite arrive in the country without a nod from the monthly publication.
Yet Mu, with almost 60,000 readers and devotees including a former prime minister, a celebrated anime director and J-Pop idols, held back from publishing the obvious feature on the era’s biggest conspiracy theory: QAnon.
That movement hit peak notoriety with the storming of the U.S. Capitol in January, and its baseless core narrative became widely familiar during the coronavirus pandemic. Its followers are convinced that a cabal of Satan-worshipping, child-molesting elites controls the world, unleashing Covid-19 and 5G technology as part of its plot. QAnon has found believers in more than 70 countries, from British mums against child trafficking to anti-lockdown marchers in Germany and even an Australian wellness guru.
But it flopped in Japan, a country that’s no stranger to conspiracy theories. Even as Western media has portrayed otherwise, there are hardly any Q followers among the Japanese and it has failed the test for the nation’s conspiracy connoisseurs. “It’s too naïve for our readership,” Takeharu Mikami, the editor of Mu since 2005, told the Asahi Shimbun newspaper last month.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/26/opinion/qanon-japan-janon.html
Nobel Prize winning Economist Paul Krugman writes:
Last week’s Democratic National Convention was mainly about decency — about portraying Joe Biden and his party as good people who will do their best to heal a nation afflicted by a pandemic and a depression. There were plenty of dire warnings about the threat of Trumpism; there was frank acknowledgment of the toll taken by disease and unemployment; but on the whole the message was surprisingly upbeat.
This week’s Republican National Convention, by contrast, however positive its official theme, is going to be QAnon all the way.
I don’t mean that there will be featured speeches claiming that Donald Trump is protecting us from an imaginary cabal of liberal pedophiles, although anything is possible. But it’s safe to predict that the next few days will be filled with QAnon-type warnings about terrible events that aren’t actually happening and evil conspiracies that don’t actually exist.
That has, after all, been Trump’s style since the very first day of his presidency.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/24/opinion/trump-qanon-convention.html
PASTELS AND PEDOPHILES
Inside the Mind of QAnon
By Mia Bloom and Sophie Moskalenko
A cult. A singularity. An amorphous blob. These are just a few ways researchers have described QAnon, the baseless conspiracy theory that has morphed into a movement so robust that two acolytes now hold seats in Congress and dozens — if not hundreds — more participated in the Jan. 6 insurrection. While frustrating for people in the business of using words to convey precise meaning, the fact that QAnon defies easy definition is exactly what makes it so powerful.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/29/books/review/mia-bloom-sophie-moskalenko-pastels-and-pedophiles.html
forge historical and discover it as 'proof'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donation_of_Constantine
chkd
>>14095511
>>14095511
>14095511
Credible seeming guy.
Sometimes people need an excuse to do the right thing.
New York Times
"Where the pedovores roam"
Mark Thompson, CEO of the pedovore protectin' New York Times is the former CEO of BBC - the British Broadcasting Corporation where the satanist pedophile Jimmy Savile worked for 30 + years, raping 10s of 000s of children, some of them in hospitals, others in the studios on premises owned by the BBC.
Thompson engineered the BBC Savile cover up then jumped ship to become CEO of the NY Times. Thompson continues to protect the satanist pedovore cultists who rape and sacrifice children.
https://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/keep-your-mouth-shut-hes-a-vip-jimmy-savile-report-reveals-culture-of-fear-at-bbc-34484838.html
https://deadline.com/2012/11/legal-letter-raises-questions-mark-thompson-learned-alleged-jimmy-savile-abuse-bbc-new-york-times-373020/
https://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/uk/jimmy-savile-raped-or-abused-64-victims-in-one-hospital-1.2119124
https://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/05/business/media/mark-thompson-and-bbc-missed-red-flags-in-savile-scandal.html
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/jimmy-savile/10512203/Former-BBC-boss-Mark-Thompson-lied-over-Savile-evidence-Nick-Pollard-claims.html
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/jimmy-savile-sex-abuse-newsnight-7736720