All Posts (15449)
Douglas Blair/ December 22, 2020
It’s an open secret that the left dominates the media landscape. It’s impossible to go a day without some actor in the Hollywood Hills tweeting how conservatives are ruining the country, or a journalist penning a story on why all we need is more government.
In the past, these attacks were mostly relegated to adults. The shows kids consumed were politically agnostic, more aimed at entertaining than moralizing. However, the days of fun, imaginative children’s TV are over. Now shows must be sufficiently woke, and must condition children with the leftist philosophy du jour.
Take the once entertaining Cartoon Network. The channel was a quintessential part of my childhood. I can remember finishing school for the day and rushing to aftercare where the latest episode of “Pokémon” would air on Cartoon Network. It was nice, harmless fun for a kid growing up in the mid-90s.
Looking at Cartoon Network now, it’s almost unrecognizable. One of the new flagship programs for the channel is “Steven Universe.” The show follows Steven, a young boy who goes on adventures along with his magical, humanoid alien friends. “Steven Universe” has received praise from many LGBT organizations, and in the words of LGBT-focused magazine Them, is “the queerest cartoon on television.”
Read more>>> https://www.dailysignal.com/2020/12/22/cartoons-are-the-lefts-new-weapon-to-target-your-kids/
The Defender
“The greatest crisis that America faces today is the chronic disease epidemic in America’s children.” - Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Dane Wigington
GeoengineeringWatch.org
2020 is now behind us, but what is in front of us? We are being told that new and far more contagious strains of the pathogen are popping up, the latest in the UK and Africa. Fauci has just stated that these new strains are going to “rip through America”. Dr. Fauci always knows, right? The World Health Organization is now trying to make the case that only the big pharma injection can give us immunity from the virus. Physicians that challenge the official propaganda are being fired. If the CV-19 scenario doesn't work as planned, do the controllers have a plan B waiting for us all? In the meantime weather warfare continues unabated, “Winter Storm John” is the latest example in the US. This so called “winter storm” produced snow in South Texas at above freezing temperatures with moisture flowing directly from the record warm Gulf of Mexico. How can this happen? Chemical ice nucleation elements are being seeded into cloud moisture by the climate engineers, welcome to winter weather warfare. For these and other front line breaking reports tune in to the latest installment of Global Alert News.
https://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/geoengineering-watch-global-alert-news-january-2-2021-282/
If you are interested, this link offers approx 66 pages of Interviews under the search for Catherine Austin Fitts dating back to 2006 https://home.solari.com/?s=Catherine+Austin+fitts
ARLB041 FCC Reduces Proposed Amateur Radio Application Fee to $35
The FCC has agreed with ARRL and other commenters that its proposed
$50 fee for certain amateur radio applications was "too high to
account for the minimal staff involvement in these applications."
In a Report and Order (R&O), released on December 29, the FCC scaled
back to $35 the fee for a new license application, a special
temporary authority (STA) request, a rule waiver request, a license
renewal application, and a vanity call sign application. All fees
are per application. There will be no fee for administrative
updates, such as a change of mailing or email address.
The R&O can be found online in PDF format at,
https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/FCC-20-184A1.pdf .
This fall, ARRL filed comments in firm opposition to the FCC
proposal to impose a $50 fee on amateur radio license and
application fees and urged its members to follow suit.
As the FCC noted in its R&O, although some commenters supported the
proposed $50 fee as reasonable and fair, "ARRL and many individual
commenters argued that there was no cost-based justification for
application fees in the Amateur Radio Service." The fee proposal was
contained in a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in MD Docket
20-270, which was adopted to implement portions of the "Repack
Airwaves Yielding Better Access for Users of Modern Services Act" of
2018 - the so-called "Ray Baum's Act."
Information on Ray Baum's Act can be found online in PDF format at,
https://www.congress.gov/115/plaws/publ141/PLAW-115publ141.pdf .
"After reviewing the record, including the extensive comments filed
by amateur radio licensees and based on our revised analysis of the
cost of processing mostly automated processes discussed in our
methodology section, we adopt a $35 application fee, a lower
application fee than the Commission proposed in the NPRM for
personal licenses, in recognition of the fact that the application
process is mostly automated," the FCC said in the R&O. "We adopt the
proposal from the NPRM to assess no additional application fee for
minor modifications or administrative updates, which also are highly
automated."
The FCC said it received more than 197,000 personal license
applications in 2019, which includes not only ham radio license
applications but commercial radio operator licenses and General
Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) licenses.
The FCC turned away the arguments of some commenters that the FCC
should exempt amateur radio licensees. The FCC stated that it has no
authority to create an exemption "where none presently exists."
The FCC also disagreed with those who argued that amateur radio
licensees should be exempt from fees because of their public service
contribution during emergencies and disasters.
"[W]e are very much aware of these laudable and important services
amateur radio licensees provide to the American public," the FCC
said, but noted that specific exemptions provided under Section 8 of
the so-called "Ray Baum's Act" requiring the FCC to assess the fees
do not apply to amateur radio personal licenses. "Emergency
communications, for example, are voluntary and are not required by
our rules," the FCC noted. "As we have noted previously, '[w]hile
the value of the amateur service to the public as a voluntary
noncommercial communications service, particularly with respect to
providing emergency communications, is one of the underlying
principles of the amateur service, the amateur service is not an
emergency radio service.'"
The Act requires that the FCC switch from a Congressionally-mandated
fee structure to a cost-based system of assessment. The FCC proposed
application fees for a broad range of services that use the FCC's
Universal Licensing System (ULS), including the Amateur Radio
Service, which had been excluded previously. The 2018 statute
excludes the Amateur Service from annual regulatory fees, but not
from application fees.
"While the Ray Baum's Act amended Section 9 and retained the
regulatory fee exemption for amateur radio station licensees,
Congress did not include a comparable exemption among the amendments
it made to Section 8 of the Act," the FCC R&O explained.
The effective date of the fee schedule has not been established, but
it will be announced at least 30 days in advance. The FCC has
directed the Office of Managing Director, in consultation with
relevant offices and bureaus, to draft a notice for publication in
the Federal Register announcing when rule change(s) will become
effective, "once the relevant databases, guides, and internal
procedures have been updated."
NNNN
/EX
I ... Sovereign, free human and spiritual being
Standing as equal among the members of the Galactic Community
Request of my own free will, on behalf of the People of Terra
Assistance to the Galactic Federation of Worlds
To expel malevolent and invasive extraterrestrial forces out of this world, definitively.
To end their occupation and liberate the people of Terra from slavery.
That any previous agreement made with malevolent extraterrestrial forces in the past be rescind.
For by their own free will, the people of Terra are reclaiming back, now, their own planet!
The people of Terra are reclaiming their rights and their sovereignty!
The people of Terra make now agreement with the Galactic Federation of Worlds.
May this be set in the infinity of the stars and the eternity of time.
May peace and justice always prevail.

I know there are a few people here who used to be involved with Nancy and maybe some others who follow her zetatalk stuff or are just generally interested in aliens, so might find my experiences interesting. About a year and a half ago aliens injected themselves into my life in a huge way. I also now realize it was these same ones who have been directly involved in my life from the beginning, but they now engage me directly.
These aliens claim to be the Zetas, though it is of course impossible to say with any certainty or authority exactly who or what something like this actually is, or to say what their agenda ultimately truly is. So far they aren't very nice to me. At first I thought maybe they were just kind of frustrated with me for having not done enough awesome things with my life, which I thought was fair enough. They quickly went out of their way, however, to try to convince me that they weren't being justifiably-upset parent-like figures, but were in fact being deliberately mean to me, and that I shouldn't be okay with it.
This has gone on ever since, with them constantly trying to play weird mind games with me, saying and doing anything they can think of to try to get a rise out of me. They have repeatedly attempted to goad me into "fighting" them, "busting" their abhorrent behavior by telling people how they treat me, that sort of thing. For a while the whole thing felt like some weird sort of test, perhaps seeing if I would let anger and vindictiveness get the better of me and put personal bullshit ahead of the greater good or the greater "message" (of zetatalk for instance). It's been going on for long enough that at this point I rather expect them to just keep trolling me indefinitely, without any kind of resolution or evolution of this experience.
Eventually I asked Nancy if these are really the Zetas and why they treat me the way they do. She sent back a private zetatalk stating that I had asked to be mistreated in this life because I mistreated others in a past life. That explanation perfectly fits (in a twisted backwards sort of way) with the completely backwards nature of this whole experience. In fact, that's been a pervasive theme throughout all of this: a lot of stuff out of what I refer to as the hypothetical "Abuse 101 handbook" - all the weird mind games and backwards things an abuser says to you to try to justify their behavior and get you to continue to go along with it.
One such thing being to tell the abused that they brought this on themselves, the abuse is justified, and even that they in fact asked for it. Other examples (that are also recurrent themes in my interactions with these aliens) include "I abuse you for your own good" and "I abuse you because I love you." Going further down the list of favored tactics in the Abuse 101 handbook we also have gems like occasionally bestowing gifts upon you to keep you feeling conflicted and make you feel guilty about trying to stand up for yourself, along with pleas to just put up with the abuse a little while longer because it will all get better some day soon. (Hopefully for anyone experiencing abuse of any kind, it goes without saying that "some day" never comes.)
At this point, the intense shock and awe of interacting with aliens on a daily basis has mostly worn off, and I'm simply left to smirk at their attempts to troll me or draw me back into silly mind games. Beyond possibly being some strange test of character or fortitude, another aspect to that angle seems to be to test if I would blindly take them at their word that they are the Zetas, and then, when prompted to do so, run around trying to slander the Zetas as being psycho and abusive. My primary instinct with this experience has been to do my best to just ignore it, and resist any urge to engage with it too much or allow it to influence my decision making. Certainly I don't want to run around claiming to know stuff like a fool when I don't actually know what's really going on.
I also, however, have an incredibly strong affinity with openness, truth telling, honesty, being straightforward and forthcoming, standing up for what's right, standing up to what isn't right, and dealing with darkness by shining a light on it. I also feel strongly that a person has a sort of scientific / sociological obligation to document an experience as mind-blowing as continued daily interactions with aliens. Ultimately, I feel like perhaps the best way to approach my experience is to simply describe it as honestly, accurately, and objectively as possible, taking care to point out that it's impossible to really know anything with any certainty, especially when it comes to stuff like this.
For now, I just wanted to make a post confirming through my own experience that aliens are not only real, but they are here in a big way! Perhaps someone might find that interesting or useful.
https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/martin-crawford-grows-500-species-in-his-forest-garden/