Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 6:43 a.m. No.14524920   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4921 >>4932 >>5063

@00:33 the spotlights form "IX XI" = 9/11

 

WHO KILLED JOHN HENRY?

The story of John Henry, told mostly through ballads and work songs, traveled from coast to coast as the railroads drove west during the 19th Century. And in time, it has become timeless, spanning a century of generations with versions ranging from prisoners recorded at Mississippi's Parchman Farm in the late 1940s to present-day folk heroes.

 

From what we know, John Henry was born a slave in the 1840s or 1850s in North Carolina or Virginia. He grew to stand 6 feet tall, 200 pounds - a giant in that day. He had an immense appetite, and an even greater capacity for work. He carried a beautiful baritone voice, and was a favorite banjo player to all who knew him.

 

One among a legion of blacks just freed from the war, John Henry went to work rebuilding the Southern states whose territory had been ravaged by the Civil War. The period became known as the Reconstruction, a reunion of the nation under one government after the Confederacy lost the war. The war conferred equal civil and political rights on blacks, sending thousands upon thousands of men into the workforce, mostly in deplorable conditions and for poor wages.

 

As far as anyone can determine, John Henry was hired as a steel-driver for the C&O Railroad, a wealthy company that was extending its line from the Chesapeake Bay to the Ohio Valley. Steel drivers, also known as a hammer man, would spend their workdays driving holes into rock by hitting thick steel drills or spikes. The hammer man always had a partner, known as a shaker or turner, who would crouch close to the hole and rotate the drill after each blow.

 

The C&O's new line was moving along quickly, until Big Bend Mountain emerged to block its path. The mile-and-a-quarter-thick mountain was too vast to build around. So the men were told they had drive their drills through it, through its belly.

 

It took 1,000 men three years to finish. The work was treacherous. Visibility was negligible and the air inside the developing tunnel was thick with noxious black smoke and dust. Hundreds of men would lose their lives to Big Bend before it was over, their bodies piled into makeshift, sandy graves just steps outside the mountain. John Henry was one of them. As the story goes, John Henry was the strongest, fastest, most powerful man working on the rails. He used a 14-pound hammer to drill, some historians believe, 10 to 20 feet in a 12-hour day - the best of any man on the rails.

 

One day, a salesman came to camp, boasting that his steam-powered machine could outdrill any man. A race was set: man against machine. John Henry won, the legend says, driving 14 feet to the drill's nine. He died shortly after, some say from exhaustion, some say from a stroke.

 

So why would one man - one among a hundred years of other men and other stories - emerge as such a central figure in folklore and song? For this, we can only speculate.

 

https://www.ibiblio.org/john_henry/analysis.html

 

John Henry is us.

Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 6:43 a.m. No.14524921   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4932

>>14524920

Like Paul Bunyan, John Henry's life was about power - the individual, raw strength that no system could take from a man - and about weakness - the societal position in which he was thrust. To the thousands of railroad hands, he was an inspiration and an example, a man just like they who worked in a deplorable, unforgiving atmosphere but managed to make his mark.

 

But the song also reflects many faces, many lives. Some consider it a protest anthem, an attempt by the laborers to denounce - without facing punishment or dismissal by their superiors - the wretched conditions under which John Henry worked.

 

This old hammer killed John Henry

But it won't kill me, it won't kill me.

 

Another refrain perhaps allowed the men to imagine they could walk away from the tunnel. And of course they could have. The whites driving them were not their owners. But still, for many blacks, the railroad was an extension of the plantation. Whites were barking the orders; an army of blacks was doing the work. And, for the most part, they had no other option.

 

Take this hammer, and carry it to the captain,

Tell him I'm gone, tell him I'm gone.

Whatever John Henry meant or has come to mean, his legend has persevered. Perhaps that's because it reminds us of a time in history - the war and Reconstruction - that we know we ought not to forget. Or, perhaps it's that John Henry represents to us a man who stayed true, despite living in a time and place where, just like in Big Bend, the roads were blocked and the choices, limited.

 

In other words, like all good heroes, his story still applies.

Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 6:52 a.m. No.14524963   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>14524947

They actually made us listen to the VP Regulatory and an old hag from the FDA โ€“ who both tried to tell us to use different (longer, more complex) words to replace every day language.

These people are evil and are experts at pulling the wool

Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:43 a.m. No.14525173   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>5213

>>14525128

actually,

there is a pine derived oil that does work very well:

Helichrysum Gymnocephalum

 

Sold as an aromatherapy essential oil, it is an anti-viral and antiparasitic

Take ONE DROP in a carrier oil like cannabis oil or coconut

 

https://www.edensgarden.com/products/helichrysum-gymnocephalum-essential-oil

Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:46 a.m. No.14525193   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>14525155

>believe me you name it I have done it

Have you tried medicinal mushrooms?

>>14525161

>my skin is scarred really badly though

Near-infrared sauna will heal your scars, along with a detox like Parasmart and possibly ozone/oxygen insufflations

 

NIR sauna healed my broken ankle w/o surgery

It is a wound healer and regenerates collagen and bone.

 

sauna.space or DIY

Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:56 a.m. No.14525238   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>5258

>>14525223

Ozone therapy will kill everything bad inside you, while oxygenating your cells.

We do not get enough oxygen anymore. You cannot get it from just oxygenโ€“you need the third molecule in O3 to get increased oxygen to the blood.

 

When you see lung cancer patients on oxygen, it is only maintaining them, not helping them.

They should all be insufflating oxygen and or having autohemotherapy, but it is basically outlawed here. (you can get it done in Germany!)

Anonymous ID: c32aa6 Sept. 5, 2021, 7:59 a.m. No.14525245   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>14525241

>anons noticed weird bizzaro driving lately

all the fucking time.

people are under duress and being bombarded with frequencies, sickness and air pollution.

This never used to happen as often as it does now.

They are laughing.