22 Comments
User's avatar
GLK's avatar

Who wakes up in the morning with a sense of optimism these days?

You know? Like they depict in the pharmaceutical commercials. Twirling in meadows and “dancing on sunshine.”

“It’s time to feel good!”

Seems without the benefit of their sanctioned drugs we are scared, wretched Gollum’s perpetually looking for, The Precious.

We, of a certain age all marvel at the latitude we were afforded as kids growing up. Didn’t our parents care about us?

Nowadays kids sequestered in rooms glued to screens are safe from the cold cruel world.

And parents traumatized by the steady hollowing out of eyes and ears via endless horror stories are glad they are home. Safe in self-imposed house arrest.

Bottom line:

IN A SOCIETY WHERE EVERYONE IS AFRAID OF EVERYTHING ANYTHING CAN BE MADE ILLEGAL.

Especially freedom. Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness confined for the greater good.

Just take their drugs and you’ll be walking on sunshine in no time.

Trauma based mind control is everywhere. And, has been building for a long time.

Stay out of debt. Pay attention to your children. Cherish the sunrise. Don’t watch TV. Limit internet consumption. Don’t do drugs. Eat well. Hone discernment. Question everything. Assume nothing. Shove your smartphone in a drawer. Be happy.

Those things really piss off the puppet masters.

Expand full comment
John Day MD's avatar

We let our kids play by the creek unsupervised. We heard some stories later.

I grew up considerably more reckless, yet somehow survived.

Expand full comment
Rhys Jaggar's avatar

John - my late mother would probably be imprisoned for 'parental negligence' these days, for letting me play with my mates after school aged 8 or 9 without coming home first. She wouldn't bother coming out looking for me until about 5.30pm and then she would just drive around the local common (to see if we were playing football or cricket) and then start knocking on doors where my mates lived in houses by the common. She wasn't in the slightest worried, just wanted me home to eat tea with everyone else.

I hadn't even heard of child abuse aged 19 which presumably reflected the fact that I was never approached by an abuser in 18 years of growing up....

Expand full comment
John Day MD's avatar

Similar for me, though we moved a lot, military family, so specific locations kept changing.

Expand full comment
GLK's avatar

Parents hadn’t been as traumatized by mind control when we were young.

I had a female boss at CCF an intelligent person whom I tried to convince to no avail that kids are in no more danger today than they were when I grew up in the 60s and 70s.

The difference is we weren’t bombarded by media horror stories on a minute by minute basis like we are today. It has warped our perceptions.

We can see where this has led by the reaction to the Scamdemic.

The natural outcome being like I said, when everyone is afraid previously normal actions become defined as “reckless” opening the door to new rules of behavior that always disallows for individual freedom.

Except for our rulers.

Expand full comment
Brigadoon's avatar

The attack in Moscow has the signature of the trans-national Zionist cabal; a brazen false flag that captures headlines around the world, lots of violently murdered innocents, and a claimed attribution by one of the countless fake terror organizations run by the CIA/Mossad/Mi6 wetworks teams. Putin is complicit in all of these shenanigans, of course. But- it would be very interesting if he has a change of heart, given the circumstances-, the time is now to reveal the true enemy of all humanity to the world. Israel would be wiped off the map in a matter days, for starters.

Expand full comment
John Day MD's avatar

The "evil that lurks in the hearts of men" is everywhere, and spreads infectiously when evil is done to "rid the world of evil".

;-(

I'm not saying to be passive, but to seek Divine Guidance.

Expand full comment
Red's avatar

"Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men, the shadow knows!"

Expand full comment
Brigadoon's avatar

We all are, in our various ways. Some will act from a place of right action, some will become lost to seeking revenge and retribution. I have chosen my path. The great wheelworks are turning either way.

Expand full comment
Mary's avatar

Thank you again for your work to present these insights. I do not know how to be. The world is nothing like what I once thought it was.

Expand full comment
Indrek Sarapuu's avatar

While I love all of our seasons in the Near North, at the end of winter, I long for our short summers, and the greenery that comes with it.

Judging by the photo of your vegetable garden, I have to guess that you're in Virginia or further south...

We don't get that green until May.

Expand full comment
John Day MD's avatar

This garden is in the Texas coastal plains, climate zone 9a.

Expand full comment
Susan Siens's avatar

I don't know where you are, but our grass is growing ferociously in Maine in mid-April. An old habit in Maine was to hang wreaths for Christmas, then in the old Druid tradition take them down when the first green showed (usually around Easter).

Expand full comment
John Day MD's avatar

One garden is behind our rented (from Mom) Austin duplex, and the other is in the Texas coastal plains.

Expand full comment
Susan Siens's avatar

Sorry, John, I was replying to the Near North commenter! I know where your gardens are (didn't know you had two!). Now, if you were a New Englander, you'd be like my friend's 84-year-old father who kept two gardens, one for himself, one for his daughter. He told her one day his back hurt. When she asked him what he had been doing, he had painted all the ceilings in his house. I think, unfortunately, that such a man is a dying breed due to stuffing old people full of toxic meds. Old-time New Englanders were suspicious of doctors and food processed in factories.

Expand full comment
Indrek Sarapuu's avatar

Cottage country, Ontario.

Mild weather and sunshine means all the perennials are sprouting, and you can see the grass growing.

First cut next week!

Expand full comment
Susan Siens's avatar

Ah, so you are north of me. Have you been getting the rainstorms we have? I've got lots of crocus and scilla, and daffodils are sprouting everywhere. Soon the dooryard will be filled with sugar maple flowers all over everything.

Expand full comment
Indrek Sarapuu's avatar

At least 3" rain last week, and more to come later this week.

We have two 7' Elderberry bushes...

They are both in full early bloom.

They grow little "broccoli" (about 3/4"diameter), which then turn into...

Elderberries.

Expand full comment
Susan Siens's avatar

I think I have an elderberry bush, but the birds always get the berries. Ditto, the black walnut trees. And it sounds like you're getting the same rain we are. I live on the side of a hill and there's good drainage into wetlands on my side of the road. Have you been hearing peepers? When I came home the other night, I stopped at the bottom of the hill to listen to the DIN.

Expand full comment
Susan Siens's avatar

I'll get disapproval for this, but I watch game shows. I basically don't watch, just use TV as a radio. The EV stuff is almost hilarious in that you can always tell what is NOT selling by watching The Price Is Right. Giving away motorcycles, boats, and now EVs! A lot of people in Maine woke up during one of our many power outages, realizing that their EVs if they had them would be unusable.

Expand full comment
Red's avatar

​ "US Intelligence Says It Knew ISIS-K Was Planning Terror Attack On Moscow", says the teacher of her students.

Expand full comment
Michi Birk's avatar

🙏🏻🤍 Thank you for your insight 🌱 Love seeing pics of your garden

Expand full comment