I don't comment on anything I haven't studied at length. Even those things that I have studied and proven to myself to be true are always held loosely in case new information comes along. And--even when I think I know something, it doesn't mean I am qualified to lecture on that topic.
#terraintheory #germtheoryisdead
GM Rex I see a sea slug splayed out on its belly. His fox face is looking directly at me at the bottom, center of the image.
#metaphysics
I have the book What Really Makes You Ill?, why everything you thought you knew about disease is wrong by Dawn Lester and David Parker. On the section regarding malaria they diligently go through all the official fact sheets and studies regarding the cause and it is all contradictory. The conclusion is that the cause of malaria is still a theory. Using a pesticide like DDT to exterminate 100% of female mosquitoes is impossible anyway. When you read the whole section in the book, you realize the whole thing needs to be studied from scratch by independent scientists. The science is not only settled, it is being blocked from validation.
#supressedtechnology
#selfmastery #herosjourney
#Rockefeller #FlexnerReport
This is a Francesca Woodman photo. I love her work. She died young.
#fridayfunnies
#fridayfunnies
"Trail of Tears, in U.S. history, the forced relocation during the 1830s of Eastern Woodlands Indians of the Southeast region of the United States (including Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole, among other nations) to Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River. Estimates based on tribal and military records suggest that approximately 100,000 indigenous people were forced from their homes during that period, which is sometimes known as the removal era, and that some 15,000 died during the journey west. The term Trail of Tears invokes the collective suffering those people experienced, although it is most commonly used in reference to the removal experiences of the Southeast Indians generally and the Cherokee nation specifically. The physical trail consisted of several overland routes and one main water route and, by passage of the Omnibus Public Lands Management Act in 2009, stretched some 5,045 miles (about 8,120 km) across portions of nine states (Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Tennessee)."
#fridayfunnies
#history
#zen #selfmastery #amorfati
I mean UN Agenda 2030 that was put in place by the Globalists
#WEF #Agenda2023
