threadreaderapp |23. Citizens were more tolerant and
even eager for top down direction and oversight and national leaders had
more latitude to impose order in the ways they saw fit.
24. In developed countries, this
heightened oversight took many forms, biometric IDs for all citizens,
for example, and tighter regulation of key industries whose stability
was deemed vital to national interests" END
25. Quite something isn't it.
Amazing what was outlined. I've provided the document link which is
worth reading. If you want to read just the lockstep section its pages
18-25.
Alternatively I have screen captured the relevant parts below.
26. Hopefully you're now linking RF, JH, BMGF & WEF for the last 20 months.
Now the banks. Don't forget the Fed is connected to the banks & the
likelihood of a digital currency being implemented will be through using
the covid digital pass & ultimately social credit score system
27. But where does RF fit in. In 2019 The Commons Project Foundation was founded.
Projects include CommonHealth, COVIDcheck & CommonPass. Basically Covid Apps backed by RF.
wrongkindofgreen | (wrong kind of green dollar-dollar-bill-y'all is just entirely too clever)
“The ruling class exists, it’s not a conspiracy theory.
They operate as a class, too. They share the same values, the same
sensibility and in Europe and North America they are white. They act in
accordance with their interests, which are very largely identical. The
failure to understand this is the single greatest problem and defect in
left discourse today.”
— John Steppling, Author, Playwright
“This report is crucial reading for anyone interested in creatively
considering the multiple, divergent ways in which our world could
evolve.”
— Judith Rodin, President of the Rockefeller Foundation
Storytelling. Dystopian scenarios. Not Huxley, Orwell, Bradbury or Brunner.
Scenario planning for corporate strategy was pioneered by Royal Dutch
Shell in the 1970s. [Further reading on scenario planning: The Art of the Long View]The
following excerpts are highlights from the May 2010 “Scenarios for the
Future of Technology & International Development” report produced by
The Rockefeller Foundation & Global Business Network. Not just the
more known “Lock Step” scenario, but all four scenarios.
Following “Event 201”
(Oct 18, 2019), we must concede that the ruling class has been gifted
with phenomenal and prophetic intuitions and insights. (They truly are
the chosen ones.) Thus it is worthwhile, even mandatory, to study their
scenario exercises and simulations.
“We believe that scenario planning has great potential
for use in philanthropy to identify unique interventions… scenario
planning allows us to achieve impact more effectively.” [p 4]
“The results of our first scenario planning exercise demonstrate a
provocative and engaging exploration of the role of technology and the
future of globalization.” [p 4]
“This report is crucial reading for anyone interested in creatively
considering the multiple, divergent ways in which our world could
evolve.” [p 4]
“*I offer a special thanks to Peter Schwartz, Andrew Blau, and the
entire team at Global Business Network, who have helped guide us through
this stimulating and energizing process.” [*Judith Rodin, President of
the Rockefeller Foundation] [p 4]
“*I hope this publication makes clear exactly why my colleagues and I
are so excited about the promise of using scenario planning to develop
robust strategies.” [*Judith Rodin, President of the Rockefeller
Foundation][p 5]
Peter Schwartz is an American futurist, innovator and co-founder of
the Global Business Network (GBN), a corporate strategy firm,
specializing in future-think & scenario planning. Founded in 1987,
GBN was “a membership organization comprising executives from many of
the world’s leading companies alongside individual members from
business, science, the arts, and academia.” The proprietary list of
GBN’s corporate members included “more than 100 of the world’s leading
companies, drawn from virtually every industry and continent.” Members
paid an annual subscription fee of $35,000. [Source]
Following an acquisition by Monitor in 2000, GBN then specialized in
scenario-based consulting and training. GBN ceased to be active
following the acquisition of the Monitor Group by Deloitte in 2013.
“Perhaps most importantly, scenarios give us a new,
shared language that deepens our conversations about the future and how
we can help to shape it.” [p 7]
“How can we best position ourselves not just to identify technologies
that improve the lives of poor communities but also to help scale and
spread those that emerge?” [p 8]
The Four Scenarios
“Once crossed, these axes create a matrix of four very different futures:
LOCK STEP – A world of tighter top-down government control and more
authoritarian eadership, with limited innovation and growing citizen
pushback
CLEVER TOGETHER – A world in which highly coordinated and successful
strategies emerge for addressing both urgent and entrenched worldwide
issues
HACK ATTACK – An economically unstable and shock-prone world in which
governments weaken, criminals thrive, and dangerous innovations emerge
SMART SCRAMBLE – An economically depressed world in which individuals
and communities develop localized, makeshift solutions to a growing set
of problems”
“Each scenario tells a story of how the world, and in
particular the developing world, might progress over the next 15 to 20
years,… Accompanying each scenario is a range of elements that aspire to
further illuminate life, technology, and philanthropy in that world.”
[p 17]
Scenario #1: LOCK STEP
“In 2012, the pandemic that the world had been
anticipating for years finally hit. Unlike 2009’s H1N1, this new
influenza strain — originating from wild geese — was extremely virulent
and deadly. Even the most pandemic-prepared nations were quickly
overwhelmed when the virus streaked around the world, infecting nearly
20 percent of the global population and killing 8 million in just seven
months, the majority of them healthy young adults. The pandemic also had
a deadly effect on economies: international mobility of both people and
goods screeched to a halt, debilitating industries like tourism and
breaking global supply chains. Even locally, normally bustling shops and
office buildings sat empty for months, devoid of both employees and
customers.” [p 18]
“The pandemic blanketed the planet — though
disproportionate numbers died in Africa, Southeast Asia, and Central
America, where the virus spread like wildfire in the absence of official
containment protocols. But even in developed countries, containment was
a challenge. The United States’s initial policy of “strongly
discouraging” citizens from flying proved deadly in its leniency, accelerating the spread of the virus not
just within the U.S. but across borders. However, a few countries did
fare better — China in particular. The Chinese government’s quick
imposition and enforcement of mandatory quarantine for all citizens, as
well as its instant and near-hermetic sealing off of all borders, saved
millions of lives, stopping the spread of the virus far earlier than in
other countries and enabling a swifter postpandemic
recovery. [p 18]
consentfactory | So, GloboCap has crossed the Rubicon. The final phase of its
transformation of society into a pathologized-totalitarian dystopia,
where mandatory genetic-therapy injections and digital compliance papers
are commonplace, is now officially underway.
Austria is just the tip of the New Normal spear. Prominent New-Normal fascists in Germany, like Der Führer of Bavaria, Markus Söder, and Minister of Propaganda Karl Lauterbach, are already calling for an allgemeine Impfpflicht
(i.e., “compulsory vaccination requirement”), which should not come as a
surprise to anyone. The Germans are not going sit idly by and let the
Austrians publicly out-fascist them, are they? They have a reputation to
uphold, after all! Italy will probably be next to join in, unless Lithuania or Australia beats them to the punch.
But, seriously, this is just the beginning of the Winter Siege
I wrote about recently. The plan seems to be to New-Normalize Europe
first — generally speaking, Europeans are more docile, respectful of all
authority, and not very well armed — and then use it as leverage to
force the new pathologized totalitarianism on the USA, and the UK, and
the rest of the world.
I do not believe this plan will succeed. Despite the most intensive
propaganda campaign in the history of propaganda campaigns, there remain
enough of us who steadfastly refuse to accept the “New Normal” as our
new reality.
wmcresearch | One may view the actions of the spike protein by reversing a well-worn saying:
“If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime.”
The Spike prefers:
“If you stop a cell from repairing itself, it just dies. If you teach
the host to stop repairing itself, you rob it of its lifetime.”
On May 31st of this year, researchers in Israel discovered
the Fountain of Youth. They observed that SIRT6 controls the rate of
healthy aging. If you increase this, the mice live for an average of
THIRTY PERCENT LONGER. So, imagine 130 being the new 100. SIXTY being
the new THIRTY! LITERALLY!
An interesting observation was also made by the team: “If we can
determine how to activate it in humans, we will be able to prolong life,
and this could have enormous health and economic implications."
Enormous implications, indeed. Clearly there are those who certainly
DO NOT want Seven Billion people living an extra thirty years…
So, what happens if you REMOVE SIRT6? You guessed it. Very, very bad things happen. Especially death.
Without SIRT6 your body is unable to repair the DNA damage that we
experience every day, and which is ENORMOUSLY increased in states of
disease, particularly so in the case of SARS-CoV-2.
THE ENDOTHELIAL SENESCENCE CONNECTION
It has been established that endothelial cells become senescent when
transfected with the Spike Protein. They have not determined WHY it
happens, just that it DOES HAPPEN and the effects it has. I now know why
it happens. The Spike Protein is epigenetically silencing SIRT6.
What does SIRT6 do, in addition to controlling DNA repair?
DNA Repair, Gene Expression, Telomeric Maintenance, Mitosis and
Meiosis, Stem Cell Pluripotency and Differentiation (how cells obtain
their specific functionality), Metablic Diseases (Diabetes, for
example), Cancer, Immune Regulation, Stress Response, Senescence and
Aging.
Everything COVID and Long COVID.
It has already been hypothesized that Sirtuins are implicated in
COVID. In a paper on COVID and related Sepsis it was determined that
Metformin may improve metabolic derangements, improve mitochondrial
function, and decrease cytokine production. NAD+ boosters such as
resveratrol, a naturally occurring polyphenol, found in red grapes and
blueberries, activate Sirtuin activity and attenuate the NF-ĸB activity,
improve endothelial function, and decrease microvascular inflammation.
SIRT1 is also implicated in COVID: COVID-19: NAD+ deficiency may
predispose the aged, obese and type2 diabetics to mortality through its
effect on SIRT1 activity
But, what are the possible long term implications? Organisms that are
deprived of their natural SIRT6 have very, very short lifespans. Mice,
for example, die within four weeks without SIRT6.
alexberenson |This chart may seem unbelievable or impossible, but it's correct, based on weekly data from the British government.
The brown line represents weekly deaths from all causes of vaccinated people aged 10-59, per 100,000 people.
The blue line represents weekly deaths from all causes of unvaccinated people per 100,000 in the same age range.
I have checked the underlying dataset myself and this graph is
correct. Vaccinated people under 60 are twice as likely to die as
unvaccinated people. And overall deaths in Britain are running well
above normal.
I don’t know how to explain this other than vaccine-caused mortality.
caitlinjohnstone | If
your opinion about a legal case would be different if the political
ideologies of those involved were reversed and all other facts and
evidence remained the same, then it’s probably best not to pretend your
position on the case has anything to do with facts or evidence.
People who defend US foreign policy are terrorist sympathizers.
Any
time you see the US empire picking on a smaller nation just search that
nation’s name plus “Belt and Road Initiative” and you’ll usually find a
connection.
To get
an idea of just how insane things are, there are people whose actual
job is to sell policymakers on the idea that dropping more bombs would
be a good thing, and those people are paid by actual bomb manufacturers.
To
get an even clearer idea of how crazy things are, attempts to stop
dropping bombs will be opposed on the grounds that it will hurt the jobs
of bomb manufacturers. Media pundits will actually come right out and
say this on nationwide TV broadcasts.
Civilization
looks the way it looks because powerful people mapped it out that way.
Then the storytellers of civilization come in and assure us that
civilization looks this way because of an accident of democracy and
rank-and-file commerce. But we never really had a hand in this.
And
this mapping continues. All the plans for capitalism, Covid policies,
climate change, green energy transitions etc are being planned out with
no real input from the general public. The importance of our opinions begins and ends with how far we can be pushed without revolting.
nbcnews | More than a dozen people stormed a Louis Vuitton store in a
Chicago suburb and were caught on surveillance footage grabbing bags and
wiping shelves clear, according to police.
The theft took place at the store located in the Oakbrook Center in Oak Brook, Illinois, on Wednesday around 3:30 p.m., police said.
The
footage shows the suspects, wearing masks and hooded sweatshirts, burst
into the store and spread out, filling their arms with bags and other
goods before dashing out.
Police said the 14 suspects all
escaped the scene in three separate vehicles waiting for them. As of
Friday, the Chicago Police Department recovered one of the three
vehicles allegedly used in the theft: a Dodge Charger reported stolen in
October out of Chicago, Oak Brook police said.
No injuries were reported and no weapons were displayed.
Oak Brook police said in an update Friday that the merchandise taken was worth an estimated $120,000.
"We
are still developing and working several leads to identify the
offenders involved in our incident," Oak Brook police said Friday.
reuters | Police
in California on Sunday were seeking about 80 suspects who they said
swarmed into a Bay Area Nordstrom department store in a coordinated
robbery, ransacking as much as they could carry and fleeing in cars they
had parked outside.
Three
people were arrested at the scene of the "organized theft" reported
shortly before 9 p.m. local time on Saturday in suburban Walnut Creek,
about 15 miles (25 km) east of Oakland, police said.
"The
remaining participants in this criminal mob fled from the area in cars
at high speeds," Walnut Creek police said in a statement on Sunday.
The
robbery followed another brazen mob-heist of high-end stores on Friday
night in San Francisco's Union Square, about 25 miles (40 km) to the
west.
Video
posted by a KNTV television reporter showed several people running out
of the store with merchandise and climbing into about 25 parked cars
that ringed the building and jammed traffic on the streets.
"It
was crazy for a second," said Brett Barrette, a manager of a restaurant
across the street, who told KPIX-TV that the thieves wore ski masks and
were armed with crow bars and weapons. "All the guests inside were
getting concerned."
Police
said the suspects assaulted two Nordstrom employees and pepper-sprayed
another. They said they are reviewing surveillance footage in an effort
to identify them.
@sameo416 | “How Covid-19 spreads: narratives, counter-narratives and social
dramas”. Some thoughts and highlight of one aspect, how what they
describe is more representative of religion than science
They distinguish between inside track and outside track that shape
policy narratives while the inside track are the literal insiders, SAG.
This sounds like Fleck’s esoteric and exoteric circles. In the Stanford
entry on Fleck is this prescient para, h/t @awsparling
“If the position of an elite is stronger than the position of the
masses, the elite isolates itself and demands obedience from the masses.
Such collectives develop dogmatic styles of thinking in which a test of
correctness is usually located in some distant past in a more or less mythical master or savior. Collective life acquires a ceremonial
character and access to the esoteric circle is well-guarded.
Conservatism reigns: there is no place for fundamentally new ideas, and
one can only better or worse realize the revealed principles.”
If that doesn’t sound familiar read some of .@AntibioticDoc
posts. The arrogance and hubris we’ve seen out of most of the public
health policy makers has exactly followed Fleck’s thought. ‘Demand
obedience’ indeed. This bit: “This is characteristic of most religious
collectives”
Droplet dogma is the mythical master by which allegiance to the esoteric
circle is assessed. Transgression from that master results in something
many religious traditions have practiced, shunning.
I’ve worked both engineering and church ministry. Huge red flag for me
when science slips into dogmatic practice and thought. Science, by
definition, is supposed to be open to new knowledge at any point.
Fortress Infection Control does not reflect that attribute.
The article talks about ‘rituals of purification’ that ‘reinforce the
official narrative’. This too is religion writ large. Liturgy and what
you do at the altar all reinforce the underlying doctrine of the faith.
The authors are spot on.
For public masking, it’s discussed and shut down but no evidence is
offered to support the anti-mask claims. This too is an aspect of
religion. Can debate the types of robes, colours, music, but if we get
to core dogma, like the divinity of Christ, there’s no room for debate.
In discussing why the flawed narratives persist, authors highlight why
people are unlikely to change their beliefs. Use of the word belief is
significant here as that’s what is being described. I don’t have beliefs
about the behaviour of electromagnetic radiation…
I hold understandings that are open for revision with further data.
Policymakers exhibit satisficing behaviour. Further reason is scientific
elitism. This includes the fetishization of the RCT as the only source
of reality. This enables a degree of symbolic violence.
Except its not symbolic. Epistemic violence is violence, worse than
blows in many ways. That is focused on ‘outside track’ voices, those
outside the esoteric and exoteric circles. The focus on maintaining
control consumes all energy that could go to real public protection
Final super line, “…the combination of policymakers’ cognitive biases
and satisficing behaviour, scientists’ desire to protect their
interests, and politicians’ alignment with individualist values and
populist sentiment proved perilous.”
authorea | This paper offers a critique of UK government policy based on mode of
transmission of SARS-CoV-2 (which in turn followed misleading advice
from the World Health Organisation) through the lens of policymaking as
narrative. Two flawed narratives—“Covid is droplet- not airborne-spread”
and “Covid is situationally airborne” (that is, airborne transmission
is unusual but may occur during aerosol-generating medical procedures
and severe indoor crowding)—quickly became dominant despite no evidence
to support them. Two important counter-narratives—“Covid is
unequivocally airborne” and “Everyone generates aerosols; everyone is
vulnerable”— were sidelined despite strong evidence to support them.
Tragic consequences of the flawed policy narrative unfolded as social
dramas. For example, droplet precautions became ritualised; care home
residents died in their thousands; public masking became a libertarian
lightning rod; and healthcare settings became occupational health
battlegrounds. In a discussion, we call for bold action to ensure that
the science of SARS-CoV-2 transmission is freed from the shackles of
historical errors, scientific vested interests, ideological manipulation
and policy satisficing.
Policymaking is a contact sport involving competing narratives (about
problems, how they arose, and how they will be resolved), institutions
(especially government and its bureaucratic machinery) and interests
(financial, political, ideological).1 2 Policy
may—ideally—“follow science” but a key question is whosescience and why? Science shapes policy narratives via an “inside
track” (e.g. official advisory committees) and to a lesser extent by an
“outside track” (e.g. less mainstream scientists, citizen
movements).3
Pandemic policymaking has been characterised not by clearly-identified
knowledge gaps which science obligingly fills but by toxic clashes
between competing scientific and moral narratives. Policymakers have
risked losing control of the “dramaturgy of political communication”
(page 784).
Getting the mode of transmission for a contagious disease right matters,
because preventive strategies follow (Table 1).5 Being
honest about scientific uncertainty also matters, because—among other
reasons—it is hard to back-track after declaring a policy
“evidence-based”.
Table 1: Droplet versus airborne transmission:
implications for
public health and healthcare worker
protection
theatlantic | Deep in the forests of Germany,
nestled neatly into the hollowed-out shells of acorns, live a smattering
of ants who have stumbled upon a fountain of youth. They are born
workers, but do not do much work. Their days are spent lollygagging
about the nest, where their siblings shower them with gifts of food.
They seem to elude the ravages of old age, retaining a durably
adolescent physique, their outer shells soft and their hue distinctively
tawny. Their scent, too, seems to shift, wafting out an alluring
perfume that endears them to others. While their sisters, who have
nearly identical genomes, perish within months of being born, these
death-defying insects live on for years and years and years.
They
are Temnothorax ants, and their elixirs of life are the tapeworms that
teem within their bellies—parasites that paradoxically prolong the life
of their host at a strange and terrible cost.
A few such life-lengthening partnerships have been documented between microbes and insects such as wasps, beetles, and mosquitoes.
But what these ants experience is more extreme than anything that’s
come before, says Susanne Foitzik, an entomologist at Johannes Gutenberg
University Mainz, in Germany, who studies the ants and their tapeworms.
Infected Temnothorax ants live at least three times longer than their
siblings, and perhaps much more, she and her colleagues report in a study published today in Royal Society Open Science.
No one is yet sure when the insects’ longevity tops out, but the answer
is probably in excess of a decade, approaching or even matching that of
ant queens, who can survive up to 20 years.
“Some
other parasites do extend life spans,” Shelley Adamo, a parasite expert
at Dalhousie University, in Nova Scotia, who was not involved in the
study, told me. “But not like this.”
Under
typical circumstances, Temnothorax ants live as most other ants do.
They reside in communities ruled by a single fertile queen attended by a
legion of workers whose professional lives take a predictable
trajectory. They first tend the queen’s eggs as nurses, then graduate
into foraging roles that take them outside the nest. Apart from the
whole freaky parasite thing, “they are pretty boring,” Foitzik told me.
Normalcy
goes out the door, however, when Temnothorax larvae ingest
tapeworm-egg-infested bird feces trucked in by foragers. The parasites
hatch and set up permanent residence in the young ants’ abdomens, where
they can access a steady stream of nutrients. In return, they offer
their host an unconventional renter’s fee: an extra-long life span that
Foitzik and her colleagues managed to record in real time.
consortiumnews |A few days after the Nov. 2 election, The New York Times published
a vehement editorial calling for the Democratic Party to adopt
“moderate” positions and avoid seeking “progressive policies at the
expense of bipartisan ideas.” It was a statement by the Times editorial
board, which the newspaper describes as “a group of opinion journalists
whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain
longstanding values.”
The editorial certainly reflected “longstanding values” — since the Times has recycled them for decades in its relentless attacks on the progressive wing of the Democratic Party.
The Times editorial board began its polemic by calling for the party to “return” to “moderate policies.”
Translation: Stick to corporate-friendly policies of the sort that we applauded during 16 years of the Clinton and Obama presidencies.
The board also said the election results:
“are
a sign that significant parts of the electorate are feeling leery of a
sharp leftward push in the party, including on priorities like Build
Back Better, which have some strong provisions and some discretionary
ones driving up the price tag.”
Translation: Although poll after poll shows that the Build Back Better agenda is popular with the broad public, especially increased taxation on wealthy and corporate elites to pay for it, we need to characterize the plan as part of “a sharp leftward push.”
And the board noted:
“the
concerns of more centrist Americans about a rush to spend taxpayer
money, a rush to grow the government, should not be dismissed.”
Translation: While we don’t object to the ongoing “rush to spend taxpayer money” on the military, and we did not editorialize against the bloated Pentagon budget,
we oppose efforts to “grow the government” too much for such purposes
as healthcare, childcare, education, housing and mitigating the climate
crisis.
“Mr.
Biden did not win the Democratic primary because he promised a
progressive revolution. There were plenty of other candidates doing
that. He captured the nomination—and the presidency—because he promised
an exhausted nation a return to sanity, decency and competence.”
Translation: No
need to fret about the anti-democratic power of great wealth and
corporate monopolies. We liked the status quo before the Trump
presidency, and that’s more or less what we want now.
“‘Nobody elected him to be F.D.R.,’ Representative Abigail Spanberger, a moderate Democrat from Virginia, told the Times after Tuesday’s drubbing.”
“Democrats should work to implement policies to help the American people.”
Translation: Democrats
should work to implement policies to help the American people but not
go overboard by helping them too much. We sometimes write editorials
bemoaning the vast income inequality in this country, but we don’t want
the government to do much to reduce it.
“Congress
should focus on what is possible, not what would be possible if Joe
Manchin, Kyrsten Sinema and — frankly — a host of lesser-known
Democratic moderates who haven’t had to vote on policies they might
oppose were not in office.”
Translation:
We editorialize about social justice, but we don’t want structural
changes and substantial new government policies that could bring it much
closer. We editorialize about the climate crisis, but not in favor of
government actions anywhere near commensurate with the crisis.
epochtimes | It is too often overlooked in all the discussions about the “transition” to a net-zero emissions economy that the most consequential transition is that from democratic capitalism to feudal serfdom.
This is the conclusion of American demographer and “blue-collar Democrat” Joel Kotkin, who has highlighted that the supposedly well-intentioned green policies being adopted across the West come at enormous expense to the working- and middle-classes.
As Kotkin wrote in ‘Spiked’ earlier this year, “extreme climate measures have driven the loss of traditional blue-collar jobs in manufacturing, construction and energy, while other environmental regulations have boosted housing prices.”
Kotkin’s thesis is that the West is on the road to serfdom. Rather than maintaining our capitalist societies where a large, asset-owning middle-class underpin a stable democratic system, we are becoming stratified feudal societies.
Home and small business ownership are declining, especially among the young and the less well-off, a group of technocratic elites are establishing themselves as permanent rulers in the apparatus of the administrative state, and corporate oligarchs are coming to dominate both the economy and broader society.
his transition has been occurring for some time, but it has been accelerated by the COVID-19-inspired lockdowns and the zeal with which Western governments have thoughtlessly adopted net-zero emissions targets.
Both play out as an aggressive form of reverse Robin Hood asset stripping, taking from the poor and giving to the rich.
Australia is now officially committed to a net-zero emissions by 2050 target.
But beyond the slogan “technology not taxes,” the Australian people do not know how the government plans on achieving its newfound ambition.
The UK Treasury, by contrast, recently released a Net-zero Review report (pdf) which provides some detail of how the UK government expects to reach net-zero.
The report includes a surprisingly honest admission from the bureaucracy: “The costs and benefits of the transition to a net-zero economy will ultimately pass through to households through a range of different channels.”
It includes a helpful chart that shows that, regardless of the specific policy or mechanism, the costs of net-zero will always fall on households, that is, everyday mums, dads, and workers.
This insight is evident to many but is too often obfuscated.
medium | “I’ve
seen the classified report,” Nelson told CNN’s Pamela Brown in an
interview shortly before the June 25th “Preliminary Report on UAP” came
out. “It says basically what we thought. We don’t know the answer to
what those Navy pilots saw.”
“Now,
they know that they saw something. They tracked it. They locked their
radar onto it. They followed it. It would suddenly move quickly from one
location to another. And what the report does tell us that is public is
that there have been over 140 of these sightings, So, naturally, what I
ask our scientists to do is to see if there’s any kind of explanation
from a scientific point of view and I’m awaiting their report.”
This
summer NASA press secretary Jackie McGuinness confirmed her new boss
Nelson had directed researchers to move forward with exploring any lines
of questioning around the topic as they see fit.
“There’s
not really a lot of data and scientists should be free to follow these
leads, and it shouldn’t be stigmatized,” McGuinness said, acknowledging
that UFO research can be negatively associated with unfounded conspiracy
theories. “This is a really interesting phenomenon and Americans are
clearly interested in it so if the scientists want to investigate, they
should.”
This
is great news for large numbers of scientists who have been frustrated
about attempts to get research started because of the stigma the topic
generates. The idea that NASA itself is willing to authorize, support
and coordinate such work is revolutionary.
What Questions Did He Ask Again?
Now
you read it in the earlier breakout quote in this article, but in one
of his responses Nelson asked a series of questions. Let’s give them a
little more breathing space as we wrap up here:
What, who is out there?
Who are we?
How did we get here?
How did we become as we are?
How did we develop?
How did we civilize?
It’s worth considering that these are not the first things a public official is likely to say when questioned about the June 25 Preliminary Assessement: Undentified Aerial Phenomena,
is it? On the other hand, we know he has had the Full Monty of the
classified briefing, and probably others. We also know that if Joe Biden
wants to know what the hell is going on, he’s apt to call up Bill
Nelson.
Still,
it sure sounds like Nelson seems to be saying something with a little
more complexity than the version of human development we get taught in
high school and college. He’s asking questions that make it seem like we
had help.
Why Is He Talking Like This?
It
seems the main reason is that he believes it. That, of course, would be
refreshing and illuminating and, from what I’ve read, seen and heard,
it appears to be the truth.
But
it may also be that his age has something to do with it. Nelson turned
79 this year. He was born in World War II, fought in Vietnam, had a
lifetime of experiences that many of us will never have. He knows in his
heart that something strange is going on now, and has been for the
entire time he’s been on this Earth.
He seems ready to play his part now by saying the quiet part out loud.
Keep
it coming, Bill. Turn your teams loose on this. Tell them they can
speak truth to power. Find out some answers. Confirm what you can and
offer the best theories and interpretations that can be made about the
explanations. We’ve all been waiting a long time, too.
medium |After
Congress was briefed on the classified portion of the Pentagon’s UAP
report in June, D.C. power player and scientist Robert McGwier
participated in a panel discussion on the Canadian UFO and paranormal
radio program Spaced Out Radio and said he’d heard from an acquaintance in the closed-door session.
The briefing, he said, included the National Security Council
and members of Congress — just how many of the latter, it wasn’t clear
from McGwier’s off-air remarks during one of the show’s breaks, which
are live-streamed on YouTube
while radio listeners hear commercials. This elite audience of
Washington power brokers was privy to information that has not been
publicly released.
“Seventy
pages and 14 videos,” he said. “They got to see the good stuff.” Later
in the program, he added a caveat: “I want to make very, very clear: I
heard no classified information whatsoever.”
McGwier, affectionately known as “Bob the Science Guy,” is an academic and active member of the ufology community.
An expert in radio technology with a Ph.D in applied mathematics from Brown University, he joined the Institute for Defense Analyses Center for Communications Research,
a non-profit think tank in Princeton, N.J. in 1986. When he was hired
in 2011 to head a research center at Virginia Tech, the school noted
that McGwier’s work with the U.S. government had earned him the
intelligence community’s “highest honor” in 2002. His job at Virginia
Tech, according to the school, was to “develop strategic research
relationships within the industry and government working in the national
security sector.”
Put another way, he has connections in Washington D.C. McGwier continued:
“I
know several people who were in the National Security Council meeting,”
he said. “The best comment I heard was, ‘What we had was 40 minutes of
science fiction movies. We were all gobsmacked.’
Which
is to say, 40 minutes of video of UAPs doing their thing out over the
ocean, running circles around U.S. Navy aircraft carriers and fighter
pilots, whatever it is they do out there. Not fiction, but actual reality.
Imagine
video, then, that gives you the palpable feeling of shit getting
unnervingly real, of the world shifting beneath your feet. It’s what the
American philosopher and physicist Thomas Kuhn called in his 1962 book TheStructure of Scientific Revolutions
a “paradigm shift,” or what philosophy and religious studies professor
Jeffrey Kripal calls “the flip.” Out with the old, in with the new — and
the woo.
Make no mistake: The videos we’ve already seen, acquired and published by the New York Times (and those reportedly leaked and subsequently dribbled out by ufologist and filmmaker Jeremy Corbell)
are extraordinary, game-changing documents. They are, at this point,
probably the most famous “authentic” UFO videos ever seen by the public.
Future books on the topic will probably feature images from these
videos the way UFO books published during the 1970s and ’80s included
the famous Trent photos from McMinnville.
CDC | This data visualization presents provisional counts for drug overdose
deaths based on a current flow of mortality data in the National Vital
Statistics System. Counts for the most recent final annual data are
provided for comparison. National provisional counts include deaths
occurring within the 50 states and the District of Columbia as of the
date specified and may not include all deaths that occurred during a
given time period. Provisional counts are often incomplete and causes of
death may be pending investigation (see Technical notes)
resulting in an underestimate relative to final counts. To address
this, methods were developed to adjust provisional counts for reporting
delays by generating a set of predicted provisional counts (see Technical notes).
The provisional data presented in this visualization include: (a) the
reported and predicted provisional counts of deaths due to drug
overdose occurring nationally and in each jurisdiction; (b) a U.S. map
of the percentage changes in provisional drug overdose deaths for the
current 12 month-ending period compared with the 12-month period ending
in the same month of the previous year, by jurisdiction; and (c) the
reported and predicted provisional counts of drug overdose deaths
involving specific drugs or drug classes occurring nationally and in
selected jurisdictions. The reported and predicted provisional counts
represent the numbers of deaths due to drug overdose occurring in the
12-month periods ending in the month indicated. These counts include all
seasons of the year and are insensitive to variations by seasonality.
Deaths are reported by the jurisdiction in which the death occurred.
Several data quality metrics, including the percent completeness in
overall death reporting, percentage of deaths with cause of death
pending further investigation, and the percentage of drug overdose
deaths with specific drugs or drug classes reported are included to aid
in interpretation of provisional data as these measures are related to
the accuracy of provisional counts (see Technical notes).
Reporting of the specific drugs and drug classes involved in drug
overdose deaths varies by jurisdiction, and comparisons of death rates
involving specific drugs across selected jurisdictions should not be
made (see Technical notes). Provisional data presented in this visualization will be updated on a monthly basis as additional records are received.
CNN | America's drug epidemic is the deadliest it has ever been, new federal data suggests.
More
than 100,000 people died of drug overdoses in the United States during
the 12-month period ending April 2021, according to provisional data
published Wednesday by the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
That's a new record high, with overdose deaths jumping 28.5% from the same period a year earlier and nearly doubling over the past five years.
Opioids
continue to be the driving cause of drug overdose deaths. Synthetic
opioids, primarily fentanyl, caused nearly two-thirds (64%) of all drug
overdose deaths in the 12-month period ending April 2021, up 49% from
the year before, the CDC's 's National Center for Health Statistics
found.
Drug overdose deaths rose nearly 30% in the past year, according to provisional data released by the National Center for Health Statistics. More than 100,000 people died from a drug overdose between April 2020 and April 2021, up from 78,000 the year before and nearly double the deaths five years ago.
The
Covid-19 pandemic and the rise in use of fentanyl have both been key
contributors to the rising overdose death toll, experts say.
The
latest provisional data on drug overdose deaths captures those
occurring in May 2020 through April 2021. Covid-19 killed about 509,000
people in that same timeframe, according to data from Johns Hopkins
University.
"What
we're seeing are the effects of these patterns of crisis and the
appearance of more dangerous drugs at much lower prices," Dr. Nora
Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, told CNN. "In a
crisis of this magnitude, those already taking drugs may take higher
amounts and those in recovery may relapse. It's a phenomenon we've seen
and perhaps could have predicted."
But
the rise of fentanyl, a stronger and faster-acting drug than natural
opiates, has made those effects even more deadly, she said.
Increasing
use of the synthetic drug caught the attention of experts before
Covid-19 hit, but the pandemic may have exacerbated the problem.
With
international travel limited, synthetics that are easier to manufacture
and more concentrated were likely more efficient to smuggle across
borders, Volkow said.
nashvillescene |On April 7, Tyler Smith graduated from a
10-week addiction treatment program in Athens, Tenn. His family traveled
from Knoxville for the occasion and felt optimistic that, this time,
his recovery might last. At 31 years old, he told his mother Danita
McCartney that he was ready to be done with the cycle that had shaped
his life for more than a decade.
Like
many teens, Tyler partied in high school, drinking beer and smoking
weed on occasion. But the beast got its claws in him toward the end of
his senior year, when a co-worker at a restaurant — a work environment
where drugs are often found about as easily as any other ingredient —
showed him how to crush an OxyContin and snort it. He spent the next 12
years in and out of the clutches of addiction. Danita would cling to
hope where she could find it. As a young boy, Tyler had always been
deathly afraid of needles — perhaps that would at least keep him from
shooting up. It didn’t.
But Danita says there were
wonderful seasons of sobriety. Tyler loved the Grateful Dead and the
mountains. Despite it being where he was introduced to hard drugs, the
restaurant industry had made him into an excellent cook, and he
delighted in taking over the kitchen at holidays to make a meal for the
whole family.
In between those seasons, Tyler
wandered, living for short stints in various places around the country.
When he struggled, he had the support of his family, and his mother says
he found great treatment through urban rescue missions similar to the
one where she works in Knoxville. He spent time in recovery programs in
Alabama, Indiana and Florida before moving to Nashville, where he
rekindled a relationship with a young woman he’d known in high school.
He found a job at a downtown restaurant — there, again, he found drugs.
In January of this year, he survived an overdose after his girlfriend
was able to revive him. That prompted his family to send him to the
program in Athens, where he stayed for more than two months.
After
he graduated from the program, Tyler returned to Nashville and got a
job at an irrigation company, deciding to stay away from the kitchens
where he’d been unable to resist substances. He talked on the phone with
his mother frequently, never failing to end a conversation by telling
her he loved her. But on the morning of Tuesday, April 14, Danita
received the phone call she’d been expecting for years but could never
prepare for. Tyler’s girlfriend had found him dead in the living room. A
toxicology report later revealed what was in his system: meth and
fentanyl, the latter a synthetic opioid that can be 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine and lethal in doses as small as 2 milligrams.
Tyler’s
death inducted his family into a growing, grieving community — those
who have lost loved ones to a raging epidemic of drug deaths, the
majority of which have been caused by fentanyl. It’s the other epidemic,
one that has been largely overshadowed by the global COVID-19 pandemic.
But in Nashville, it’s claimed almost as many lives. From March 20,
2020 — the day of the first confirmed COVID-19 death in Nashville — to
Oct. 16, 2021, the city reported 1,113 deaths from the virus. In that
same time period, 1,070 suspected drug deaths have occurred in
Nashville. That figure includes residents, non-residents and people
whose status is unknown. According to the Metro Public Health
Department, residents have accounted for around 70 percent of all drug
deaths in Davidson County this year.
The coronavirus pandemic has made us all terribly familiar with the
notion of the so-called curve. Fentanyl deaths are still rising, and
this curve is showing no signs of flattening.
technologyreview | In a
12-by-20-foot room at a skilled-nursing facility in Menlo Park,
California, researchers are testing the next evolution of the computer
interface inside the soft matter of Dennis DeGray’s motor cortex. DeGray
is paralyzed from the neck down. He was hurt in a freak fall in his
yard while taking out the trash and is, he says, “as laid up as a person
can be.” He steers his wheelchair by puffing into a tube.
But DeGray is a virtuoso at using his brain to control a computer mouse. For the last five years, he has been a participant in BrainGate,
a series of clinical trials in which surgeons have inserted silicon
probes the size of a baby aspirin into the brains of more than 20
paralyzed people. Using these brain-computer interfaces,
researchers can measure the firing of dozens of neurons as people think
of moving their arms and hands. And by sending these signals to a
computer, the scientists have enabled those with the implants to grasp
objects with robot arms and steer planes around in flight simulators.
DeGray
is the world’s fastest brain typist. He first established the mark four
years ago, using his brain signals to roam over a virtual keyboard with
a point-and-click cursor. Selecting letters on a screen, he reached a
rate of eight correct words in a minute. Then, right before the covid-19
pandemic began, he demolished his own record, using a new technique
where he imagined he was hand-writing letters on lined paper. With that
approach, he managed 18 words per minute.
One of the people
responsible for the studies with DeGray is Krishna Shenoy, a Stanford
University neuroscientist and electrical engineer who is among the
leaders of the BrainGate project. While other brain-interface
researchers grabbed the limelight with more spectacular demonstrations,
Shenoy’s group has stayed focused on creating a practical interface that
paralyzed patients can use for everyday computer interactions. “We had
to persevere in the early days, when people said Ah, it’s cooler to do a robotic arm—it makes a better movie,” says Shenoy. But “if you can click, then you can use Gmail, surf the Web, and play music.”
Shenoy
says he is developing the technology for people with “the worst
afflictions and the most need.” Those include patients who are utterly
locked in and unable to speak, like those in the end stage of ALS.
But
if the technology allows people like DeGray to link their brain
directly to a computer, why not extend it to others? In 2016, Elon Musk
started a company called Neuralink
that began developing a neural “sewing machine” to implant a new type of
threaded electrode. Musk said his goal was to establish a
high-throughput connection to human brains so that society could keep
pace with artificial intelligence.
nature | A human brain slice is placed in a microscope to visualize nerve fibres. Credit: Mareen Fischinger
Imagine looking at Earth from space and being
able to listen in on what individuals are saying to each other. That’s
about how challenging it is to understand how the brain works.
From
the organ’s wrinkled surface, zoom in a million-fold and you’ll see a
kaleidoscope of cells of different shapes and sizes, which branch off
and reach out to each other. Zoom in a further 100,000 times and you’ll
see the cells’ inner workings — the tiny structures in each one, the
points of contact between them and the long-distance connections between
brain areas.
Scientists have made maps such as these for the worm1 and fly2 brains, and for tiny parts of the mouse3 and human4
brains. But those charts are just the start. To truly understand how
the brain works, neuroscientists also need to know how each of the
roughly 1,000 types of cell thought to exist in the brain speak to each
other in their different electrical dialects. With that kind of
complete, finely contoured map, they could really begin to explain the
networks that drive how we think and behave.
Such maps are emerging, including in a series of papers published this week
that catalogue the cell types in the brain. Results are streaming in
from government efforts to understand and stem the increasing burden of
brain disorders in their ageing populations. These projects, launched
over the past decade, aim to systematically chart the brain’s
connections and catalogue its cell types and their physiological
properties.
It’s an onerous undertaking. “But knowing all the
brain cell types, how they connect with each other and how they
interact, will open up an entirely new set of therapies that we can’t
even imagine today,” says Josh Gordon, director of the US National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) in Bethesda, Maryland.
The
largest projects started in 2013, when the US government and the
European Commission launched ‘moonshot’ efforts to provide services to
researchers that will help to crack the mammalian brain’s code. They
each poured vast resources into large-scale systematic programmes with
different goals. The US effort — which is estimated to cost
US$6.6 billion up until 2027 — has focused on developing and applying
new mapping technologies in its BRAIN (Brain Research through Advancing
Innovative Neurotechnologies) Initiative (see ‘Big brain budgets’). The
European Commission and its partner organizations have spent
€607 million ($703 million) on the Human Brain Project (HBP), which is
aimed mainly at creating simulations of the brain’s circuitry and using
those models as a platform for experiments.
royalsocietyofbiology | Understanding how memories are formed and stored is one of the great
enigmas in neuroscience. After more than a century of research, detailed
knowledge of the mechanisms of memory formation remain elusive.
In the past decade, memory research has been advanced by the study of
neuronal engrams, or networks of neurons that are incorporated into a
memory. In particular brain regions associated with memory, a neuronal
engram is theorised to consist of a subset of neurons within that brain
region that is uniquely activated by a behaviour that leads to memory
formation.
For example, when mice are trained on a simple, initial behavioural
task, a certain subset of neurons within a specific brain region will
become activated. Genetic techniques can be used to ‘tag’ this network
of neurons.
If the mouse is then placed in a different behavioural or
environmental context, and the network of neurons from the initial
behavioural task is artificially activated, the mouse will display
behaviour that it learned in the initial task[1].
The initial behavioural task triggered the incorporation of a subset of
neurons into an engram, which encoded the memory for that task.
Given the vast number of neurons in the brain, the potential
combination of neurons that could make up separate memory engrams is
virtually limitless. So the question that is key to our understanding of
the mechanisms of memory formation is: what causes the incorporation of
one neuron, but not another, into memory engrams?
Research has demonstrated that certain proteins can ‘prime’ neurons for incorporation into an engram[2].
Neurons that naturally express more of these proteins are frequently
found in memory engrams for a behaviour. Artificially inducing more of
these substances to be expressed can encourage neurons to become part of
an engram.
One substance in particular that was found to be important for priming neurons for engram incorporation is known as Arc[3].
This protein is induced rapidly by neuronal activity and regulates
levels of receptors at synapses that are critical for synaptic function
and neuronal communication.
Mice that genetically lack Arc protein are unable to form memories
that last longer than the course of a behavioural training session
(known as long-term memories), although they can learn normally at
short-term time scales. Although these experimental findings suggest
that Arc is an important piece of the memory puzzle, the mechanisms that
regulate Arc at the cellular and molecular level remain unclear.
Recently, research I conducted in the laboratory of Dr Jason Shepherd at the University of Utah[4] revealed something very surprising: Arc structurally and functionally resembles a retrovirus such as HIV. This
is the first time a neuronal protein, much less one underlying a
process as crucial as memory formation, has been shown to have a viral
structure. Evolutionary analysis from our laboratory showed that
Arc protein is distantly related to a class of retrotransposons that
also gave rise to retroviruses such as HIV.
What are Fauci and the pedophobe pediatrician smoking? That pediatrician MUST NOT HAVE kids of his own. The neo-vaccinoids were
tested on only 2,268 youngsters aged 5 to 12:
The pediatrician: “Given how infectious Delta is and other variants, everyone’s eventually going to get vaccinated or COVID.”
NO. Since the neo-vaccinoids are not sterilizing, everyone is going to get COVID, neo-vaccinoided or not.
So Stop Lying...,
Children face much less risk from the virus and
face much higher risk from the neo-vaccinoids.
Fortunately many pediatricians
understand
this and are not pushing neo-vaccinoids, which begs the question, why is the
Slate framing the decision to do so in such a net positive when the
science is far from certain?
How many parents trusted the doctors who said, with
authority, that pain is the sixth vital sign, filled the miracle opioid
Rx they were given, and had their kids turn into opioid addicts?
Rejuvenation Pills
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means you s...
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
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He ...