Forwarded from Battleground
Jamie Andrews has been conducting lab experiments with colleagues, that show viruses can’t exist in any meaningful way.
This is a slideshow presentation, so it’s best to watch rather than listen.
https://www.jermwarfare.com/lab-experiments-show-the-sickness-within-virology/
This is a slideshow presentation, so it’s best to watch rather than listen.
https://www.jermwarfare.com/lab-experiments-show-the-sickness-within-virology/
Jerm Warfare
Jamies Andrews shows why viruses probably don't exist
Jamie Andrews and his colleagues have shown, in labs, that viruses probably don't exist, or if they do, they’re not what we believe them to be.
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Milo & Tim Pool GO DEEP On Inside Of TPUSA And Candace Owens With George Santos
https://youtube.com/live/OKUMz5PEIcw
https://youtube.com/live/OKUMz5PEIcw
YouTube
CNN SLAMMED For Claiming BLACK J6 Bomb Suspect IS A WHITE MAN w/ Milo & George Santos | Timcast IRL
Go to http://frontline21.com - download your free Field Guide and join thousands of men taking the 21-day challenge.
Last chance! Up to 50% off Beam’s Extended Cyber Sale: Visit https://shopbeam.com/TIMPOOL and use code TIMCAST at checkout. Don’t miss their…
Last chance! Up to 50% off Beam’s Extended Cyber Sale: Visit https://shopbeam.com/TIMPOOL and use code TIMCAST at checkout. Don’t miss their…
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Forwarded from Vox Day
It’s the BECAUSE That Gets You
Stop explaining yourself. I can’t stress this enough. If you don’t want to look like a moron on a regular basis, if you don’t want to force others to have to conclude you are stupid, for the love of all that is Good and Beautiful and True, stop explaining yourself, your reasons, your decisions, and […]
https://voxday.net/2025/12/06/its-the-because-that-gets-you/
Stop explaining yourself. I can’t stress this enough. If you don’t want to look like a moron on a regular basis, if you don’t want to force others to have to conclude you are stupid, for the love of all that is Good and Beautiful and True, stop explaining yourself, your reasons, your decisions, and […]
https://voxday.net/2025/12/06/its-the-because-that-gets-you/
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Forwarded from Disclose.tv
NEW - Berlin has enacted a new draconian police law granting authorities extensive surveillance powers, including the right to secretly enter homes and hack phones.
Read more: https://www.disclose.tv/id/5cdnfbi2s3/
@disclosetv
Read more: https://www.disclose.tv/id/5cdnfbi2s3/
@disclosetv
Disclose.tv
Berlin police can now hack phones and enter homes covertly under new surveillance law
Breaking news from around the world.
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Forwarded from Police frequency
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Good night to all! 😴
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Forwarded from /r/Mapporn
"Unlike Gagarin, Illyushin was apparently a highly skilled pilot with thousands of hours of flight experience. His failure is remarkable, juxtaposed as it is against Gagarin’s ‘success’ a mere 5 days later. Illyushin’s hardware and system failed. One of the Soviet’s most talented pilots crashed. Yet we are to believe that the peasant-amateur Gagarin, 5 days later, climbed into the same large cannon ball, went into orbital space and executed a perfect landing near his local air force base."
https://open.substack.com/pub/unstabbinated/p/the-apollo-fraud-yuri-gagarin-and?r=lp6h7
https://open.substack.com/pub/unstabbinated/p/the-apollo-fraud-yuri-gagarin-and?r=lp6h7
Substack
Yuri Gagarin's faked 1961 flight, the Russian space-con and the Apollo film program.
The Russians! When you need an enemy - real or imagined - they are always at hand. Without the Russians the Apollo film project & massive money laundering enterprise would never have occurred.
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Forwarded from The Aureus Press
In 1140, King Conrad III was laying siege to Weinberg, a city located in southwest Germany. Back then, Weinsberg was part of the Holy Roman Empire. Before ordering the final assault, Conrad decided to spare the lives of all the women in the city. He allowed them to leave with whatever they could carry on their shoulders.
The women left behind all their possessions and came out carrying their husbands. When Conrad saw this, all he could do was laugh and accept their clever subterfuge. Conrad remarked that a king should always keep his word.
Today, the women who saved their husbands' lives and the city are known as the "Treue Weiber von Weinsberg" (Loyal Wives of Weinberg). The castle ruins still exist and are known as Weibertreu ("wifely loyalty").
The women left behind all their possessions and came out carrying their husbands. When Conrad saw this, all he could do was laugh and accept their clever subterfuge. Conrad remarked that a king should always keep his word.
Today, the women who saved their husbands' lives and the city are known as the "Treue Weiber von Weinsberg" (Loyal Wives of Weinberg). The castle ruins still exist and are known as Weibertreu ("wifely loyalty").
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Forwarded from Vox Day
The Count to Zero
An honest review of childhood vaccinations will reduce the US vaccination schedule to zero. But the count to zero has to begin somewhere, and less is observably better than more, so this presidential order is a positive step forward: In January 2025, the United States recommended vaccinating all children for 18 diseases, including COVID-19, making […]
https://voxday.net/2025/12/07/the-count-to-zero/
An honest review of childhood vaccinations will reduce the US vaccination schedule to zero. But the count to zero has to begin somewhere, and less is observably better than more, so this presidential order is a positive step forward: In January 2025, the United States recommended vaccinating all children for 18 diseases, including COVID-19, making […]
https://voxday.net/2025/12/07/the-count-to-zero/
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"Over at Quest: Thoughts about God, Truth, and Beauty, an author named Kirk Durston has a fascinating article about J. D. Unwin and his book Sex and Culture. Written in 1934, this book presents the findings of Unwin’s study of 86 different cultures. He breaks the culture down by levels of society and by degrees of sexual freedom.
"The results?
"The highest level of society has only ever been maintained by cultures with premarital chastity and monogamy without easy divorce.
"Societies with sexual freedom collapse within three generations."
https://open.substack.com/pub/ljagilamplighterwright/p/sexual-freedom-destroys-society?r=lp6h7
"The results?
"The highest level of society has only ever been maintained by cultures with premarital chastity and monogamy without easy divorce.
"Societies with sexual freedom collapse within three generations."
https://open.substack.com/pub/ljagilamplighterwright/p/sexual-freedom-destroys-society?r=lp6h7
Substack
Sexual Freedom Destroys Society
Based on the study of 86 different cultures
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"I’m not saying a technocratic new world order isn’t rolling out—it clearly is—but we must acknowledge wins along the way.
"We must accept and celebrate when we win battles.
"We must leave behind what’s been defeated and stop desiring constant victimhood.
"We must stop being defeatist, looking for reasons to create repetitive and pointless battles.
"We must act like winners when we are winners."
https://www.jermwarfare.social/p/conspiratorial-thinking-is-also-a?r=lp6h7
www.jermwarfare.social
Conspiratorial thinking is also a postmodern trap
Have you noticed that it's always you who is the victim? Sounds eerily similar to critical theory which is postmodern nonsense.
"In the end, myths do not survive because a studio funds them or a corporation markets them. They survive because people choose to keep telling them. They survive because something in the story resonates across generations, across politics, across fashions, across the rise and fall of every empire and every corporate boardroom. The executives who try to command myths always discover the same bitter truth: you can merchandise a character, you can litigate a trademark, you can even bury a franchise for a decade — but you cannot control what a story means once the audience has taken it into themselves. A myth is not a product. A myth is a covenant between the storyteller and the world."
https://arkhaven.substack.com/p/can-you-own-a-myth#:~:text=In%20the%20end,and%20the%20world.
https://arkhaven.substack.com/p/can-you-own-a-myth#:~:text=In%20the%20end,and%20the%20world.
Substack
Can You Own a Myth?
In my review of Wicked For Good, I asked a question that I should have given more thought to and now I have.
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Forwarded from Disclose.tv
ICYMI - U.S. Catholic bishops officially ban transgender treatments in thousands of Catholic-run hospitals.
Read more: https://www.disclose.tv/id/hbbsd0pz2g/
@disclosetv
Read more: https://www.disclose.tv/id/hbbsd0pz2g/
@disclosetv
Disclose.tv
US Catholic bishops ban gender transition treatments in Catholic hospitals
Breaking news from around the world.
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Forwarded from Vault of Secrets - Unpopular History (LEGATVS LEGIONIS)
The Self‑Inflicted Decline of the Ancient Hellenes
Polybius (ca. 200–120 BCE) was a Hellenic historian who not only described Rome’s expansion but also analyzed the social causes behind the decline of the polis.
In his Histories he clearly distinguishes between events whose origins lie in obscurity - natural disasters 🌪, epidemics 🦠, climatic extremes 🌡 - and those whose causes are plain to see. Only in the former cases, Polybius argued, is it legitimate to invoke the gods or fate. Where human behavior is the cause, responsibility must be assigned to humans:
One example he describes with particular sharpness is the decline in births among the Hellenes of his time. Although no great wars raged and no plagues devastated the land, the cities emptied. Fields lay untilled, houses abandoned, the political strength of the poleis waned.
Polybius stressed that this affected almost all Hellenic states—especially the poleis of the Peloponnese such as Sparta, Corinth, and the Achaean League. Even Athens lost its political significance, though it still shone culturally. The cause, he insisted, was not divine wrath but a profound change in morals.
Men, he wrote, were “seduced by splendor, wealth, and idleness” 💰. They married late or not at all, and when they had children, they limited themselves to one or two—not out of necessity, but calculation. They wished to leave wealth to their heirs and raise them in luxury rather than rear many children. Yet this supposed prudence proved disastrous: if one of the few sons died through illness or war, the household was left without heirs. Like “scattered swarms of bees,” the cities gradually lost their vitality.
Polybius’ analysis is strikingly modern. He describes a demographic crisis as the result of consumerism and individualism. Not external enemies but inner priorities weakened society. For him it was clear: sacrifices, oracles, prayers would not help. The remedy lay in human hands—through a change of values or through laws that encouraged the preservation of children.
👥 In this way Polybius formulated an early theory of social responsibility: history is not the plaything of the gods but the result of human decisions. He urged recognition of causes and the taking of counter‑measures, rather than retreating into fatalism.
📣 His diagnosis was also a moral appeal. Decline came “swiftly and unnoticed” - not by a sudden blow, but through creeping habits. Luxury, convenience, and fixation on status led to a gradual erosion that only became visible once the cities were already depopulated.
Polybius’ words echoed far beyond his own time. Later Roman authors such as Sallust and Tacitus took up similar themes: the link between moral decay, falling birthrates, and political weakness. And in modern times his thought has often been revisited - that the strength of a community depends not only on armies or walls, but on the willingness of its citizens to take responsibility for the future.
📜 You can explore the original text here.
HISTORIA MUNDI 🤝 Vault of Secrets
Polybius (ca. 200–120 BCE) was a Hellenic historian who not only described Rome’s expansion but also analyzed the social causes behind the decline of the polis.
In his Histories he clearly distinguishes between events whose origins lie in obscurity - natural disasters 🌪, epidemics 🦠, climatic extremes 🌡 - and those whose causes are plain to see. Only in the former cases, Polybius argued, is it legitimate to invoke the gods or fate. Where human behavior is the cause, responsibility must be assigned to humans:
“In this field one need not ask the gods how we may be freed from such an evil; for every man in the world will tell you that it happens through the men themselves, when they change their aims—or, if that is not possible, through laws for the preservation of children 👶.”
One example he describes with particular sharpness is the decline in births among the Hellenes of his time. Although no great wars raged and no plagues devastated the land, the cities emptied. Fields lay untilled, houses abandoned, the political strength of the poleis waned.
Polybius stressed that this affected almost all Hellenic states—especially the poleis of the Peloponnese such as Sparta, Corinth, and the Achaean League. Even Athens lost its political significance, though it still shone culturally. The cause, he insisted, was not divine wrath but a profound change in morals.
Men, he wrote, were “seduced by splendor, wealth, and idleness” 💰. They married late or not at all, and when they had children, they limited themselves to one or two—not out of necessity, but calculation. They wished to leave wealth to their heirs and raise them in luxury rather than rear many children. Yet this supposed prudence proved disastrous: if one of the few sons died through illness or war, the household was left without heirs. Like “scattered swarms of bees,” the cities gradually lost their vitality.
Polybius’ analysis is strikingly modern. He describes a demographic crisis as the result of consumerism and individualism. Not external enemies but inner priorities weakened society. For him it was clear: sacrifices, oracles, prayers would not help. The remedy lay in human hands—through a change of values or through laws that encouraged the preservation of children.
👥 In this way Polybius formulated an early theory of social responsibility: history is not the plaything of the gods but the result of human decisions. He urged recognition of causes and the taking of counter‑measures, rather than retreating into fatalism.
📣 His diagnosis was also a moral appeal. Decline came “swiftly and unnoticed” - not by a sudden blow, but through creeping habits. Luxury, convenience, and fixation on status led to a gradual erosion that only became visible once the cities were already depopulated.
Polybius’ words echoed far beyond his own time. Later Roman authors such as Sallust and Tacitus took up similar themes: the link between moral decay, falling birthrates, and political weakness. And in modern times his thought has often been revisited - that the strength of a community depends not only on armies or walls, but on the willingness of its citizens to take responsibility for the future.
📜 You can explore the original text here.
HISTORIA MUNDI 🤝 Vault of Secrets
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