Sam Fisher (Data Drops) – Telegram
Sam Fisher (Data Drops)
1.12K subscribers
7.31K photos
4.95K videos
10.9K files
12.4K links
All the files that're in my file archive, it's like the library, but not! (you can keep these and there's no fines!)
Download Telegram
Forwarded from Off Grid 369
1👍1
Forwarded from Youtube | Instagram | TikTok | Downloader | Скачать видео
Why I don't Deep Dive man-made UFO research as much

🎬 720p • 7.71 MB
🎬 480p • 3.4 MB
🎬 360p • 3.62 MB
🎬 240p • 1.61 MB
🎬 144p • 1.23 MB
🎧 MP3 • 1.37 MB

🎞 Choose video format
Forwarded from 🇺🇦YoutubeDL - YouTube Download Bot
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Downloaded with: @YTsavebot
Forwarded from Youtube | Instagram | TikTok | Downloader | Скачать видео
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
⬇️ Downloaded in @youtubednbot
Prophet Moses' Tree 🌳
3
Forwarded from Health Nut News/Erin Elizabeth (Erin Elizabeth-HealthNutNews)
I made this collage last night, and all four are recent headline news articles from Fortune magazine, they were the one about intermittent fasting, good morning America, and most of them are all over headline news as a matter of fact. What are your thoughts? Lol.
🤬21
Forwarded from 4bidden WISDOM
Weapons Systems and Political Stability: A History
by Carroll Quigley
Forwarded from Carroll Quigley
4bidden WISDOM
Weapons_Systems_and_Political_Stability_by_Carroll_Quigley_z_lib.pdf
👆🏼

At the time of his death, Quigley was at work on a study which had occupied him for years and which might be called the sociology of weaponry; that is, the way in which the structure and development of civilizations are to a considerable extent a reflection of the weapons systems and military organization prevalent within a society. Drafts of this study, some two thousand pages in length, are in the papers left at Georgetown. His own feelings about this work are perhaps best conveyed by a comment made in delivering the initial Oscar Iden Lecture at the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University only a few weeks before his death:
Another thing which may serve to point out the instability of the power system of the state: the individual cannot be made the basic unit of society, as we have tried to do, or of the state, since the internalization of controls must be the preponderant influence in any stable society. . . .
Also related to the problem of internalized controls is the shift of weapons in our society. This is a profound problem. I have spent ten years working on it throughout all of history, and I hope eventually to produce a book if I can find a publisher. There will be endless analyses of Chinese history and Byzantine history and Russian history and everything else, and the book is about nine-tenths written, I'd say, in the last ten years. The shift of weapons in any civilization and, above all, in our civilization, from shock weapons to missile weapons, has a dominant influence on the ability to control individuals. . . .
In our society, individual behavior can no longer be controlled by any system of weaponry we have. In fact, we do not have enough people, even if we equip them with shock weapons, to control the behavior of that part of the population which does not have internalized controls. One reason for that, of course, is that the twenty percent who do not have internalized controls are concentrated in certain areas. I won't go into the subject of controls. It opens up the whole field of guerrilla resistance, terrorism, and everything else; these cannot be controlled by any system or organized structure of force that exists, at least on the basis of missile weaponry. And, as I said, it would take too many people on the basis of shock weaponry. We have now done what the Romans did when they started to commit suicide: we have shifted from an army of citizen soldiers to an army of mercenaries, and those mercenaries are being recruited in our society, as they were in Roman society, from the twenty percent of the population which does not have the internalized controls of the civilization.¹


The Evolution of Civilizations, p.424-5
Selective Bibliography by William Marina

Dr. Marina [was] Professor in Business, Communications, and History at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton. He [was] coauthor of American Statesmen on Slavery and the Negro (1971), author of Egalitarianism and Empire (1975), and associate editor of News of the Nation: A Newspaper History of the United States (1976).



¹ "Public Authority and the State in the Western Tradition," pp. 34-3
Forwarded from LOST BOOKS AND PDFS (Doug Johnson)
💣 $2.8 million bribe payment from Pfizer to FDA for their Bioweapon “approval”.

You’re not supposed to know that.

Look the other way.
Forwarded from National Geographic
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Fun for a baby elephant 🐘

National Geographic
😁1