Cancel culture is the seed of envy. Nothing to do with people really being upset at you for what you say. They’re deeply envious and this is a fast track to dismantling you. And the idiocy of it is they believe that if they take you down, they’ll be able to take your place.
~Leonarda Jonie
This quote nails cancel culture. Envy fuels history and underlies much of what happens in life. If you don’t really feel it yourself, you need to be hypervigilant because it is very common. ABN
Centuries-old codices from what is now Mexico hold a wealth of knowledge about the Aztecs in their native language, including details about the founding of their capital, their conquests and their fall to the Spanish, according to Mexico’s National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH).
The Mexican government recently bought three illustrated codices, known as the Codices of San Andrés Tetepilco, from a private family that had passed down the Aztec documents for generations, the Spanish newspaper El País reported.
The Aztecs ruled over a large area of Mexico during the 15th and 16th centuries. Their capital was at Tenochtitlán, in what is now Mexico City. Between 1519 and 1521, a Spanish force conquered the Aztecs and established Spanish rule over the area. Codices written in the Indigenous Nahuatl language and Spanish continued to be produced into the early 17th century.
One of the newly purchased codices describes the founding of Tenochtitlán around 1300 and the lords who ruled it in pre-Hispanic times, INAH representatives said in a translated statement. The codex also describes the Aztec conquest of the city of Tetepilco around 1440 and how that city’s ruler swore vassalage to the Aztecs. It even details the arrival of the Spanish in 1519 and their rule up to the year 1611, the statement said. The Spanish continued to rule Mexico until 1821.
Consider this a very serious warning both to the Medical Freedom Movement (MFM) and to the world in general.
This is the first article and will serve as a living summary of my writings about the Remote Viewing program that was pulled into military intelligence from the Stanford Research Institute (SRI), and eventually rebranded as the core piece of Project Stargate.
I might as well begin with my primary thesis:
Remote Viewing (RV) is a fiction that emerged from Scientology, piggybacking off the general fictions of paranormal powers seeded more broadly into public consciousness by Theosophy and Neo-Theosophy groups. These Theosophy groups were themselves formed by military intelligence—primarily the U.S. Office of Naval Intelligence. Ultimately, RV was a continuation of mind control programs such as MKULTRA. The appearance of RV as a study of paranormal phenomena is a cover for trauma-based mind control experimentation. Such mind control programs exist in service of a global cybernetic model essential to the plan of erecting a New World Order.
Put simply, RV is science fiction meant to fool people into immanentizing the eschaton. Many people have already been hurt in the process, but billions could suffer or die if the next few years go the wrong way.
This may be a lot for many people to swallow, but it makes a heck of a lot more sense than, “Interdimensional aliens are taking over the planet,” in my mind as I examine the evidence. Also, I’m willing to be wrong about any aspect of my thesis, but this is where I stand after decades of trying to understand why I was told as a child that I needed to train to be a remote viewer in the Neo-Theosophicalcult that I grew up in where I was told that it was necessary to defeat the commies at the end of the world.
What do you do when every organization has been infiltrated by a several million person global cult when the members of that cult are generally indistinguishable from other people?
Organized crime is Mexico’s fifth-largest employer, accounting for between 160,000 and 185,000 people and the only way to crack down on the problem is to prevent the recruitment of new members in a country where criminal groups enlist 350-370 people into their ranks every week. These are the conclusions of a study by the Complexity Science Hub Vienna, published Thursday in the journal Science. It is one of the most ambitious approaches to the difficult task of quantifying in numbers the power that criminal groups hold in Mexico.
The lead researcher on the study, former Mexico City police officer Rafael Prieto-Curiel, says the path is clear: “Neither through the courts nor through the prisons. The only way to reduce violence in Mexico is to cut off cartel recruitment.” The researchers combined data on murders, missing persons, incarcerations, and cartel interactions between 2012 and 2022 to reach this conclusion.
One of the most relevant findings from the study is that despite the imprisonment of thousands of members, the size of criminal organizations is larger than it was 10 years ago. Mexican authorities sentence around 6,000 cartel members to prison terms every year. However, Mexico’s cartels had 60,000 more members in 2022 than they did in 2012.
Stone tools stratified in alluvium and loess at Korolevo, western Ukraine, have been studied by several research groups1,2,3 since the discovery of the site in the 1970s. Although Korolevo’s importance to the European Palaeolithic is widely acknowledged, age constraints on the lowermost lithic artefacts have yet to be determined conclusively. Here, using two methods of burial dating with cosmogenic nuclides4,5, we report ages of 1.42 ± 0.10 million years and 1.42 ± 0.28 million years for the sedimentary unit that contains Mode-1-type lithic artefacts. Korolevo represents, to our knowledge, the earliest securely dated hominin presence in Europe, and bridges the spatial and temporal gap between the Caucasus (around 1.85–1.78 million years ago)6 and southwestern Europe (around 1.2–1.1 million years ago)7,8. Our findings advance the hypothesis that Europe was colonized from the east, and our analysis of habitat suitability9 suggests that early hominins exploited warm interglacial periods to disperse into higher latitudes and relatively continental sites—such as Korolevo—well before the Middle Pleistocene Transition.
I’m aware dating isn’t allowed in Islam, but I’ve been dating a Muslim guy for a year now. He’s talking about marriage and trying to convince me to convert. I just have to vent.
I wish islam was more open minded. Why would it ever be a good idea to follow a book word for word from thousands of years ago when people still believed the earth was flat? Why would people want to reject modernization?
I’m not religious myself but if I did accept a higher power he wouldn’t send people to hell for eating pork or not covering your hair. He wouldn’t make people gay and then expect them to deny themselves of any romance for their entire lives as a “test” It just seems so outdated and controlling and man made. My boyfriend although he calls himself Muslim he tells me he believe in evolution and is okay with me not wearing hijab, he has had premarital sex and occasionally smokes weed but says he has stopped. But when I try to convince him to have a more open mind when it comes to religion it’s like he reverts back to a close minded person.
I don’t mind my future kids being religious but I can’t have them learning that being gay is wrong and that my daughter has to cover her hair to protect herself from men… I don’t want them to be afraid of their loving god sending them to hell for simple things even my boyfriend has done.
I love him but sometimes the religion aspect is so frustrating. And I feel like when I question it too much he gets offended and I worry he starts thinking I’m not worth all this trouble.
Is anyone else here in a relationship with a Muslim? I hope I’m not alone.
I am posting this because I find religion and culture almost always interesting. Judge the comments at the link above as you like. Religion can be a strong form of culture, and as such extremely rigid, impenetrable, impossible to join in from outside. Each culture and religion has different gradations of this.
My experience with Buddhism is the religion is very mild toward non-Buddhists, even open and accepting, but when the religion is deeply imbued with a historical culture, problems may occur as Buddhists who are doubly-bound by culture and religion very often believe or act as if they believe that their culture and Buddhism are ‘the same’ or ‘one thing’.
In cases like that, you might encounter irreconcilable difficulties if you are from a different culture. For example, some old-school Buddhists might believe that you cannot possibly understand the Dharma if you do not speak their language, even when the Buddha said precisely the opposite. ABN
(1) As I initially said, confirmed not a false flag. Large number of Tajiks in Russia x sad Tajik propensity to sympathize with Islamic State = was always the most obvious explanation; not everything has to revolve around Ukraine. Islamic State has amusingly gone overboard insisting on its culpability amidst the wave of online conspiracy theories that it was Ukraine, FSB false flag, Mossad, CIA, etc.
(2) Initial skepticism aside, the suspects are almost certainly the correct ones. Amongst other things, the clothing matches. Don’t think FSB could have all set it up so quickly and competently.
(3) Nonetheless, cutting off their ears/electroshocking them and proudly posting it all on Telegram testifies to the progressive “Wagnerization” of Russian security services, which is an extremely negative development for Russians since any semblance of rule of law and due process in the RF has collapsed in the past two years. They were doing this before but now they post it as well, and within the RF’s pre-war borders, too.
(4) The main social reactions appear to be a wave of anti-immigrant hate crimes from the low IQ normies, and mocking Putin’s lackluster response from the more skeptical higher IQ ones (so much so that they just released a cringe video of what were supposedly Putin’s very intense schedule in the “minutes” after the terrorist attack which journalists just happened to be around to film).
Religious leaders in Boston have demanded ‘white churches’ give millions of dollars in reparations to the city’s black community.
The activist clergy also called on them to back a push for the City of Boston to pay $15 billion in reparations for its historical role in the slave trade.
The event at Resurrection Lutheran Church was organized by the Boston People’s Reparations Commission, which made the $15 billion demand.
One of the speakers was Reverend Kevin Peterson, who wants to rename Faneuil Hall marketplace due to Peter Faneuil, the wealthy merchant who built it, being a prominent slave trafficker in the 1700s.
‘We call sincerely and with a heart filled with faith and Christian love for our white churches to join us and not be silent around this issue of racism and slavery and commit to reparations,’ he said.