Some conceptual tools for understanding the enemy of humanity.
Powers and Principalities.
The Hidden Hand.
The invisible enemy.
Janus: Two-Faced GateKeeper.
The many-headed Hydra.
Today's focus: Janus the Gatekeeper
Some conceptual tools for understanding the enemy of humanity.
Powers and Principalities.
The Hidden Hand.
The invisible enemy.
Janus: Two-Faced GateKeeper.
The many-headed Hydra.
Today's focus: Janus the Gatekeeper
Two-faced Janus. Gatekeeper.
Janus, in Roman religion, the animistic spirit of doorways (januae) and archways (jani).
Some scholars regard Janus as the god of all beginnings and believe that his association with doorways is derivative. He was invoked as the first of any gods in regular liturgies. The beginning of the day, month, and year, both calendrical and agricultural, were sacred to him. The month of January is named for him, and his festival took place on January 9, the Agonium.
Janus was represented by a double-faced head.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Roman-religion
Meaning of gatekeeper in English
Gatekeeper - definition
a person whose job is to open and close a gate and to prevent people entering without permission
someone who has the power to decide who gets particular resources and opportunities, and who does not
Example: The professors act as gatekeepers who determine which students are admitted into the competetive engineering program.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/gatekeeper
One that is in charge of passage through a gate.
One who monitors or oversees the actions of others.
One who controls access to something, such as information or services: publishers as gatekeepers.
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.
a person in charge of a gate, usu. to supervise the traffic or flow through it.
a person or thing that controls entrance or access: a gatekeeper for a busy executive.
a guardian; monitor: the gatekeepers of Western culture.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, 2010
https://www.thefreedictionary.com/gatekeeper
public-private partnership
noun [ C ] FINANCE, GOVERNMENT
UK US
( abbreviation PPP, P3)
an arrangement where a government and a profit-making company invest in and work on an activity together:
Example: A public private partnership will fund the school regeneration programme.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/public-private-partnership
Public-Private Partnership (PPP), partnership between an agency of the government and the private sector in the delivery of goods or services to the public. Areas of public policy in which public-private partnerships (PPPs) have been implemented include a wide range of social services, public transportation, and environmental and waste-disposal services.
Although PPPs are an ancient phenomenon, they were not studied seriously by scholars until the late 1980s, when they began to be adopted in public administration and management in both developed and developing countries. PPPs have been a topic of political controversy and scholarly debate, especially regarding the advantages and disadvantages of PPPs in comparison with traditional government-run services and the nature of the partnerships they bring about.
https://www.britannica.com/money/public-private-partnership
Corruption in plain sight.
Who gets funding?
Who gets grant money?
Which corporations are awarded public contracts and match funding?
Match Funding
Definition
Match funding is defined as when funding is paid in proportion to funding being paid from other sources. What this usually means for businesses, is that a grant will be paid on the condition that a certain amount of funding is also contributed, usually privately. For businesses who are pursuing projects that qualify for match funding, they will usually provide the โmatchโ themselves, where a public sector organisation or foundation provides the other funds. They are particularly useful where a project's success is aligned with the interests of the business conducting it as well as the funding organisation.
https://intuitix.co/what-is-match-funding-2/
Two-faced Monsters in Medicine (1/2): Doctor Jekyll & Mister Hyde
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, novella by Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson, published in 1886. The names of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, the two alter egos of the main character, have become shorthand for the exhibition of wildly contradictory behaviour, especially between private and public selves.
https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Strange-Case-of-Dr-Jekyll-and-Mr-Hyde
An obvious reference to Dissociative Identity Disorder (Multiple Personalities).
Deeper reading: an allegory for corruption and concealment of crimes by public authority figures. Excellent reputation; ugly secrets.
Those you trust the most.
Two-faced Monsters in Medicine (2/2): Bad Pharma
This is a very well-researched book by British physician Ben Goldacre about the deliberate concealment of medical trial data by the pharmaceutical industry. It was published in 2012 and the situation has only got worse since then. Dr. Goldacre sounded the alarm and medical authorities ignored the warnings and kept lining their own pockets at the expense of millions of people's health.
Evidence-based medicine is a great concept, but when all medical trial data is corrupted at its source, it is impossible for anyone to know just how dangerous pharmaceutical drugs really are.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3635613/
Ben Goldacre's book, Bad Pharma: how drug companies mislead doctors and harm patients, is the latest of several books and articles in recent years to level criticisms at the way the pharma industry and regulatory authorities operate; criticisms that need to be taken seriously, revealing faults that need to be corrected. It makes uncomfortable reading. Goldacre chooses his targets well and shoots at them with well-documented examples, some of them truly shocking, many of them uncovered only after persistent and tenacious probing of reluctant sources. These are tales of secrecy, dishonesty, bribery and corruption that make for a compelling read, couched in prose reminiscent of scandalous revelations in the tabloid press. To the question of style, we will โ as Goldacre himself so often says, to keep his readers hooked โ come back later.
The main target in the Goldacre cross-hairs is nondisclosure of data, particularly data from clinical trials. It is well recognized that negative or unfavourable clinical trials results are much less likely to be published than positive findings. The blame lies not only with the pharmaceutical companies, but also with journal editors, who judge that reports showing no significant benefit of a treatment compared with placebo do not deserve journal space. It proves difficult even for regulatory authorities and official advisory bodies, such as the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, to unearth unfavourable data from company-sponsored trials.
Janus the Gatekeeper: a Revolving Door (1/2)
FDA/CDC - Pfizer/Moderna Revolving Door Policy
It is very common in many industries for the public officials responsible for regulation to give rubberstamp approval to corporations and then immediately leave the public sector for 6 figure salary jobs with the same companies they regulated.
This is what corruption looks like.
"They essentially function as one organism."
Russell Brand - Moderna and FDA Revolving door investigation
https://rumble.com/v3ubepm-bombshell-moderna-and-fda-investigation-about-to-expose-all-of-them.html
(Video filed to embed, sorry. It's on Russell Brand's Rumble channel.)
Public corporation provides a legitimate front for the activities of a secret society, clandestine group or criminal mafia.
It's a classic model used throughout the ages.
A many-headed hydra.
Different faces, all connected at the root.
They are everywhere.
How many can you find?
Two-faced Janus in medicine.
How deep does it go?
Janus nano sheets?
[Their] obsession with symbolism will be their downfall.
Sceptre & key.
Protect your DNA.
>two face hints at the second month of the year.
>that would make february the third month of the year.
Interesting connection, Anon.
Janus is the Roman deity of beginnings and the source of our word January, the first month.
He is portrayed with two faces to represent looking backwards into the past and forwards into the future.
You are definitely onto something with the connection to time and specifically calendars.
Calendars as a means of control.
To control the beginning of something is to control how it unfolds over time.
The calendar controls the pace.
>Sceptre & key.
Shall we play a game?
Quest: connect the dots, find the key, unravel [their] sick plan to control our DNA.
This is not a game.
This is our future.
Protect your DNA.
God bless & Godspeed.