“You use lockdowns to get people vaccinated.” ~ Dr. Fauci
Fauci admitted that lockdowns were used to condition and control the public—putting people in such a heightened state of desperation for freedom as to compel them to take the deadly experimental jabs.
Nikola Tesla, the visionary inventor and a mind a century ahead of his time, argued that much of our progress stemmed from men’s deep-seated desire to provide and impress, and he worried that forcing men and women into identical roles would stifle the ambition that powers innovation. Tesla saw the complementarity of the sexes, not their sameness. I believe he was on to something…
We need to stop demonizing male ambition.
Read more: https://t.co/qwKz0oOMag
All these tech bro's telling us how great the future is going to be while simultaneously building the control grid that will eventually enslave humanity is surreal.
People are just lapping it up.
Joe Rogan and Abigail Shrier nailed a truth that feels increasingly rare to say out loud.
In our safer, more comfortable era, the threshold for what counts as 'trauma' has dropped hard. Rogan put it simply: the 'worst thing that’s ever happened to you' is totally relative — a dented car can feel like the end of the world if that’s your biggest reference point.
Shrier took it further: throughout human history, people lost parents, siblings, homes, and jobs… yet most rebuilt, formed families, showed up for work, and kept living. Resilience was the norm.
Today we’re often telling kids that normal life struggles equal trauma they may never fully overcome.
This conversation made me pause. It seems like many of us have turned ordinary setbacks into major emotional events. Our comfort might be quietly training people to be more fragile than generations that faced far worse.
If we keep labeling everyday hardship as trauma, we risk raising people who lack the toughness that helped humanity survive real adversity for centuries.
Have we over-diagnosed trauma and under-taught resilience — or is modern life actually harder on the mind?
This is so rich coming from Jamie Dimon.
It's the sound of a man who rode the China gravy train to the end of the line, pocketed the loot, and is only now saying the "right things" because it led his country straight toward a cliff.
He and his fellow elites sold out America's industrial heartland, its workers, its security, and its future, all while making themselves and some commies very rich and powerful.
How many of you know about the "Sons and Daughters" program scandal?
From 2006 to 2013, JP Morgan created a special fast-track hiring program that gave cushy internships and full-time jobs to the unqualified kids and relatives of powerful CCP officials and state-owned company bosses. They're collectively known as the "princelings."
Bankers kept spreadsheets explicitly tracking which princeling hire led to which big deal. Hooking up the right connected kid suddenly brings you IPOs and investment banking business worth over $100 million in revenue in China.
America's biggest bank systematically sold out its hiring standards to suck up to the Chinese regime's elite, bribing them with prestigious Wall Street jobs for their spoiled kids in exchange for lucrative contracts. This is textbook corruption. The US government called it what it was - violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and JP Morgan had to pay a $264 million fine to settle the scandal.
For years, JP Morgan made billions in China. Dimon himself joked that JP Morgan would outlast the Communist Party. Now Xi has tightened capital controls, imposed more restrictions and retaliatory regulations, showed state favoritism toward SOEs, and the macroeconomic environment (slowing growth, property sector woes, etc.) has now changed so much that returns for US companies in China are diminishing while compliance and legal risks increase exponentially.
So the cynic in me says this isn't a real Come to Jesus moment; that fateful decision to court and do business in China wasn't a well-intentioned error in judgement to "democratize and bring freedom to China."
It was just greed. And now the taps have run dry and the bill is coming due for the rest of America.
Why would government pay humans to just exist while AI does all the work human slaves were doing?
They wouldn’t. Humans would be a debt to society. A liability. A burden they would eliminate.