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Author | BIAD | Replies | 189 | |
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The 'Weirder' Side Of News!
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06-14-2023, 03:01 AM
(06-14-2023, 02:53 AM)Snarl Wrote:(06-14-2023, 02:49 AM)EndtheMadnessNow Wrote: . I wonder if any of their bloodlines survived? Just imagine how many vampire parasites are freely roaming around today. They've infiltrated every country gov't on the planet. On the flip-side those so-called vampires may have gone against the religious status quo of that era and were silenced, permanently.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell
On 8th June 2023, @"EndtheMadnessNow"#18 wrote in the Chat-box:
'We're living in the funniest, bizarre moments in history. Crazy shit going on out in them woods. BACKYARD RITUAL: When a woman set up a trail camera with her grandpa to capture wildlife, she never expected to capture what would fuel her nightmares. I dunno, maybe BIAD or Ninurta can esplain this one. lol. It was a strange story with a scantily-clad female and a male donning black wigs and appearing to be eating from a deer carcase. But in the world of entertainment, anything to get one's name circulating in the media will do and if it means a fake set-up of Feral Folk... well, that'll do yer'! (From the Fox News article) Quote:Scantily clad 'witches' caught munching on deer carcass in bizarre security cam footage Just another weird story that would face away before the next bout of media-porn, but then... 12th June 2023. The Cut: Quote:Is Megan Fox Hosting a Carcass-Eating Ritual or What?
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
06-14-2023, 06:56 PM
(06-14-2023, 12:20 PM)BIAD Wrote:Quote: When nuisance animals come up in the yard an AR-15 makes short work of 'em.
06-15-2023, 03:58 AM
Lot of batshit crazy roaming the world these days. Now, not only is this "Fox" woman batshit crazy, but she claims to be famous, too? Who in the hell is she?
And the guy in Tennessee - "Starbuck" I think he calls himself. Who in the hell names themselves after a character on a cheesy '70 sci-fi TV show? So, not only is he batshit crazy too, but also not very damned original! Those two sound like a match made on heaven to me! Maybe they'll invite me to the wedding... on second thought, don't. I don't suffer batshit crazy all that well, and that is almost a certain overdose of it! .
06-15-2023, 06:02 AM
They're opening portals to another dimension. They are the "gate keepers."
I mean, it sounds right to me. For real tho, that is weird no matter what they say. (06-15-2023, 03:58 AM)Ninurta Wrote: Lot of batshit crazy roaming the world these days. Now, not only is this "Fox" woman batshit crazy, but she claims to be famous, too? Who in the hell is she? Pertaining to the same moniker, here's a piece of an article that also enjoys the little word-game that Journalists often use. It may seem a coincidence and in many cases, it is. But with most stories designed to upset, annoy and generally aggravate the reader/listener, they often utilise 'trigger'-words to enhance their narratives. Quote:Starbucks ordered to pay $25m to ex-employee in racial discrimination caseBBC: The key to the above report was the word 'Rittenhouse'. not that a white person was discriminated against by a coffee company. I know this seems a little thin, but using certain words and phrases can amplify a story in the hopes it adds and often distracts, to the overall perception of what would naturally be purveyed. Just think about it for a moment, something happened in a coffee shop five years ago that has no relevance to anyone who wasn't involved in the incident. Yet here it is in a BBC article five years later only because it holds the tired racial aspect and the envy-trigger of the amount of money. Rittenhouse = Kyle Rittenhouse, a white male who was absolved of accusations that went against a particular favoured culture. But the recipe for this narrative requires certain undeniable ingredients and to hide such evocative terms, numbers via statistics is a fine way to show the reader/viewer that research was undertaken. The reality is that for some time now, the mainstream media have gotten to the stage where indicative low statistical concerns are blatantly displayed and the poor potency of these deficient numbers is ignored due to the MSM's need to push a certain narrative. The actual story may be obscure and only relevant to a small number of potential customers. But with a touch of word-smithing and the usual expressions of size (huge is a favourite), an account that favours an agenda can be inflated enough that it may convince a reader/listener that the story is important. Quote:More women on UK boards but number of female bosses flatlinesThe Guardian: Quote:Damning report finds one in ten schoolchildren 'want to change their gender or have already done so'Daily Mail: Quote:‘Review culture’ is on the rise, yet only one in ten feed back on health services.Health Watch: There's plenty of others, but in all of the 'news' stories, the MSM never state the obvious: NINE out of ten are not effected by this article, would normally have no interest in this article that doesn't concern them or any of the nine are even quoted after they'd been allegedly surveyed! The embedded process in many of the mainstream media is deliver 'bad' news, disheartening news... information that doesn't make the customer feel good. Anger demands the target of this type of manipulation to focus on the object that caused such annoyance and that means there's a chance a reader/viewer may stick around for more. This may equate to boosting sales and ratings. But 'good' news -what has been branded 'Man-Bites-Dog' stories were and are deliberately left to the end of a TV news report on television and may get a nod below the fold in the newspaper environment. You see, if you feel good about the world around you, may bugger-off and do something enjoyable before the commercials arrive or ask the paper-boy to not toss today's paper at your door or... even worse. Turn off the TV and internet and then go outside!! News hasn't been news for a long time... if ever!
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
I'll never eat an apple again.
Quote:Man arrested for 'trying to have sex with tree' after shocked sunseekers witness him 'kissing andThe Daily Mail:
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
06-16-2023, 09:33 AM
(06-16-2023, 08:52 AM)BIAD Wrote: I'll never eat an apple again.A guy can not even get a woody in today's world !! Try that crap in many parts of this world and a certain member would be consumed by some serious wood ants !
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong.
Silence those who disagree and you will never realize you are wrong. No one rules if no one obeys “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.” - Voltaire
06-16-2023, 11:44 AM
(This post was last modified: 06-16-2023, 05:13 PM by NightskyeB4Dawn.)
(06-15-2023, 03:58 AM)Ninurta Wrote: Lot of batshit crazy roaming the world these days. Now, not only is this "Fox" woman batshit crazy, but she claims to be famous, too? Who in the hell is she? And the reprobate minds are being released. If you didn't know who they were before, they can no longer hide.
06-16-2023, 12:10 PM
(06-16-2023, 09:33 AM)727Sky Wrote: A guy can not even get a woody in today's world !! I believe that's why this arboreal-amorous chap chose the often-chilly climes of England! Our ants tend to nibble at discarded fries and not venture into the banqueting of one's John Thomas!
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
06-16-2023, 05:44 PM
(06-15-2023, 09:00 AM)BIAD Wrote:Quote:Starbucks ordered to pay $25m to ex-employee in racial discrimination caseBBC: Very good point, BIAD. I believe this tactic is how the media casts spells using specific words & phrases throughout news stories. Then over time they are able to track 'n trace these words (or unique names) or phrases to monitor the effect of their spells. This I believe is one of the key reasons why the msm refused to let "Q" die, as many of those popular words/phrases were recited throughout news stories over & over. And like you mentioned a certain word/name/phrase can go back years and outta the blue that same word from an unrelated story pops-up that acts as a trigger. It can also be used as clandestine communication with other journalists. I believe in journalism this falls under the term "Evergreen" which is content that is not time-sensitive. Such content does not rely on current events, where an evergreen story can be prepared, then mothballed until it is needed to fill time on a slower news day or on a holiday, or a distraction. They probably maintain a database of trigger words/phrases (spells) to meet whatever opportunity, distraction, target. Once a spell is cast, it is tagged and they just monitor the current flow of traffic and spring another spell/hypnotic construct if/when the sheep steer off course or need another distraction. Also, as we have noticed they (the masters of word-smithing) are changing/re-defining the English language once again. Secret Spells of the English Language No idea if the Rittenhouse kid is a descendant, but whenever I see that name pop-up this is the first person that comes to my mind as one of the founding fathers, David Rittenhouse who was an important figure in 1769 as one of the first observers to record the actual arc associated with the atmosphere of Venus, in a form comporting with modern observations. A good friend of Ben Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, Rittenhouse was 'self-taught' in mathematics & astronomy, a clockmaker (constructed his first wooden clock at age 17), inventor, surveyor and made his own measurement instruments. He was the First director of the US Mint. Rittenhouse's work was so incredibly precise and well-documented that it was incorporated without modification into Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon's survey of the Pennsylvania–Maryland border...the Mason-Dixon line. In 1781 Rittenhouse became the first American to sight Uranus. Thomas Jefferson went on to say to his European counterparts that Mr. Rittenhouse is the finest mind that America has to offer, surpassing their scholars. "Tempus Fugit" is a Latin phrase, usually translated into English as "time flies". The phrase was coined by Rittenhouse and that is what he put as a stamp on all of his clocks. He is the person who finished the Mason-Dixon line because they did not have the 'time' to finish it and did minor corrections to their work. Mason & Dixon later came back to inspect the stone boundary line and said it was 100% correct. They were educated astronomers and surveyors and Rittenhouse was a self-taught guy. TV series Fiction/fantasy:: Quote:Rittenhouse is a mysterious organization with an as yet unknown, but apparently malicious intent. According to Garcia Flynn, the organization murdered his family and set him up to take the fall for the killings. ... The organization was founded in 1778 by American clockmaker and astronomer David Rittenhouse.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell
06-16-2023, 07:37 PM
(06-16-2023, 05:44 PM)EndtheMadnessNow Wrote: I believe this tactic is how the media casts spells using specific words & phrases throughout news stories. Then over time they are able to track 'n trace these words (or unique names) or phrases to monitor the effect of their spells. This I believe is one of the key reasons why the msm refused to let "Q" die, as many of those popular words/phrases were recited throughout news stories over & over. And like you mentioned a certain word/name/phrase can go back years and outta the blue that same word from an unrelated story pops-up that acts as a trigger. It can also be used as clandestine communication with other journalists... I tried to add to your opinion... but I believe you hit all the points. It is a working of incantations and it has enchanted the public for centuries, a substantial length of time that the system of news-reporting believes it is immovable. Quote:...I believe in journalism this falls under the term "Evergreen" which is content that is not time-sensitive. Such content does not rely on current events, where an evergreen story can be prepared, then mothballed until it is needed to fill time on a slower news day or on a holiday, or a distraction. They probably maintain a database of trigger words/phrases (spells) to meet whatever opportunity, distraction, target. Again, very true. The wording for such non-time-sensitive articles are presented to shroud this delay and any complaints are dealt with off-screen and off-paper. I've had it happen personally. The control is hard for many to believe and it would be objectively correct to assume it's all in the name of ratings and maintenance of the stranglehold Journalists have on information-purveyance. But the art of word-smithing and the regulation of 'facts' go hand-in-hand and cannot survive independently. It is real and there's a lot of work that goes into it to make sure it's kept from the eyes of those who still think what the media offers is important.
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
06-16-2023, 07:53 PM
(This post was last modified: 06-16-2023, 07:58 PM by BodhisattvaStyle.)
(06-16-2023, 05:44 PM)EndtheMadnessNow Wrote:You have hit some major points, and laid out some great insight in this post, EndTheMadnessNow. So much so, that I needed to jump in real quick and back your claim up. This is exactly what I have found in some of my hypnotism studies. One thing I'd like the reader to remember here, is these tactics ("spells as ETMN put it" ((and a correct word to use for it actually)) are not ad fancy or as complicated as one would think. Hollywood and all these forms of "entertainment" has given us a false imagery to what these "spells" would do to someone. Rhetoric is more powerful of a tool than we'd think. The masses speak in Rhetoric all day long, if you're paying attention to the repetitive words and phrases being used in public. I first noticed this when I was young. I'd watch the news and then hear other people talking about the news story I had watched. They will always use the exact! words the news would use. Their opinions of the news story would be whatever the news said about it, down to the exact phrasing of those feelings. I would hear this on repeat all day long. I would get different groups of people talking about the same news story. Every time I'd get the same exact words and phrases on whatever the news story was.(06-15-2023, 09:00 AM)BIAD Wrote:Quote:Starbucks ordered to pay $25m to ex-employee in racial discrimination caseBBC: Poof... "controlled minds." And yep, even to the point that even if a story is 5-10-15+ years old, when I certain news story is brought up you will get a physical reaction (a sad face, or frustration, or anger) from someone who watched the story. MK-Ultra+News=success in controlling the masses No? Turn off the news and don't turn it back on... bet you can't. I bet you're thinking, "but I have to know what's going on in the world." (Cough cough) Rhetoric... the spell works. Fyi it has gotten us all. We're all in the same boat. No one was "immune." So, I sit here just as fooled as er'body else. I've learned to break free tho. And it's, turn off the social media, news, tv, and everything else they use as tools to manipulate. Go outside and listen to nature. Go play! Find your spirit within. SOUL SEARCH! One Love, Rouge-Nation.
Feeling like you want to beat up people who have a different skin-colour than you?
How about that penchant you have for playing with tiki-torches, you know you can almost write your name with one if you move it fast enough...? Want to get rid of it? Then take a pill, take a pill and you will no longer want to vote for Donald Trump or shave your head. As The Mix website says, take 'Ecstasy's cooler sister' and let all that assumed animosity soak away. But don't worry, the BBC endorse this type of mood-changing pharmaceutical and regardless if there's a book to sell from one of their own, the story is for you. You... who only wants to be like them. (Brendon-Brandon...? Gimme a break!) Quote:How a dose of MDMA transformed a white supremacist BBC: Be warned, sickly magniloquence resides in the BBC link, but the bottom line is take the MDMA drug and you'll never have to pay fiscal or oral subscription to the Skinhead community again.
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
06-19-2023, 01:53 PM
(06-19-2023, 01:13 PM)BIAD Wrote: Feeling like you want to beat up people who have a different skin-colour than you? Growing up poor in the country, taught me the power of community working together. Growing up in a military home, near a military base, taught me that there are a lot of people that don't look like me on the outside, but are just like me on the inside. I truly wonder what makes us tick. We are social beings that do not understand our spiritual connection to our planet. We want to be liked and accepted by others, we want to be seen as the same, yet we also want to be special, different from, sometimes better than. If we ever truly understand us, maybe the rest will fall into place.
I think we need Bally's input on this one.
Quote:DINGO HORRORArchived Sun Article:
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.
(06-22-2023, 08:38 PM)BIAD Wrote: I think we need Bally's input on this one. Cheers for the thought. Err, are you talking about the Dingo or the sunbather. Perhaps @"Rodinus"#19 could comment about the french lady. i may make some old fella rude comments. I am no ways an expert on the animals but have been nipped on the back of the legs (several times) at nighttime in the desert (Central Aust) by a Dingo. Have come across them on occasions, even here on the coast where they seem to have grown in stature. (Mixed) On Fraser island where this latest nip took place, those types are, by all accounts, full blood dingoes and about the size of a medium dog. Other dingoes I have seen close up, again in the desert, were of different colours, often grey tones but I did see a pack of sandy colored ones in company with an aboriginal elder walking through the mulga in the Tanami. They seemed very attached to him and as he wandered the dogs (half dozen or so) formed like a circle around him checking out the surrounds. Having been the taste test of many dogs I hesitate to approach anyone with a pack of those animals. Like many creatures of the wild they become accustomed to humans, especially those who feed them and venture into camps seeking scraps etc. (or french bottoms). A wild, wary intelligent dog that will sus out the situation singularly on in a pack. Tests the waters so to say as appears in this case or in that famous matter at Ayers Rock. "A dingo took my baby". At that time I was skeptical but now I believe that could be the case. Recently a young lad was dragged underwater at Fraser by a Dingo and there has been many other cases there. A one time there was frequent howling in the hills at the back of the property here during May at night but no so the last 2 years. But apart from being nipped I've never had serious close encounters in the bush and disregard dingoes when I see the odd one. In Aus, to be tagged as a 'Dingo' generally means cowardly, thief or a hit and run assailant. True to the nature of this beasty. A fellow upriver from me has some full bloods in a breeding program. Small dogs. Not much more I could add mate. Back to cutting wood. Kind regards, Bally. (06-22-2023, 11:03 PM)Bally002 Wrote: Cheers for the thought. Err, are you talking about the Dingo or the sunbather. Perhaps @"Rodinus"#19 could comment about the french lady. i may make some old fella rude comments. Not many folks know it, but we also have wild dogs (not feral dogs, but actual wild dogs) here in the southeastern US. They are called "Carolina Dogs" and are also known as "Yalla Dawgs", "Yellow Dogs", "American Dingoes" and "Dixie Dingoes". Some have been domesticated as pets, but there are still wild populations around. They are the only dogs Indians domesticated before Europeans arrived here, and were. long ago, known as "Indian Dogs". They do look a lot like dingoes to me, and I've often wondered if the wandered here with the original Indians when they came from wherever they came from. As far as I know, their DNA has never been tested against Australian dingoes, but that might be an interesting study for someone to undertake. .
06-23-2023, 11:23 PM
Weird Real life from the LA Times funnies...
Quote:Damon Lawner, the founder of Snctm, has been banned from the high-end sex club after he publicly identified Hunter Biden as a former member. The claim about President Biden’s son was included in a Times profile of Lawner published Tuesday. I dunno with these types and guess it's all perfectly normal lifestyle when you got a limitless bank account.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell
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