Baby-formula = Stem Cells / Illicit Baby Organ Trade
Imagine there were a stock market for the Black Market...
How would you get the word out that an illicit commodity is going to come up short from now on, and investment prospects into the stock are about to take a hit?
Comms using an analogous product?
Suddenly Baby Formula is the hot topic shortage item?
Remember the toilet paper scare?
What does toilet paper do?
Cleans up shit.
Evidence = Scat (Like in the woods)
You use toilet paper to clean up evidence.
Are we seeing an "as above, so below" situation with this "shortage"?
Cheese is usually used for information that is being sent out as bait (think mouse trap).
To cut the cheese (fart) means you have spoken about the information to people who shouldn't hear it or don't want to hear it (don't talk about farts or poopoo humor at the dinner table / gossip).
Cream is thick milk (insider information that's time sensitive) which has more fat (substance/reward) to it.
Ice Cream ( I SCREAM) is used for comms concerning urgent messages that absolutely need to get out there (think Biden favorite Ice Cream flavor comms).
So, Cream Cheese is probably a combination of Cream and Cheese, which is information that is really really enticing, as bait, but does have some reward/fat to it.
Could cream cheese represent liquidity? The current context seems to have milk as money milked outta the system. Cream is the good stuff, as you say, so cream cheese would be good money, but it's also easy to spread around (like on a bagel).
Maybe it's regional? The articles seem to mention Philadelphia brand, and NY and NJ bagel shops and cheesecake.
Can you milk a cow over and over and over again? No, they'll run dry.
So, you let a cow go out to pasture and graze. Then, when they're nice and plump, you milk them.
Cows are informants.
You milk cows for time-sensitive information (milk).
If not acted upon quickly, it will spoil.
Work it a bit and it turns to cream.
What is the "cream of the crop"?
It's the best of a group.
So, cream is to milk as reliable and lucrative information is to time-sensitive information. It keeps a bit longer, but it spoils just the same.
Anything liquid flows. Information (water) flows, but it's cheap. Information that's thick and fatty (can make you rich) is milk.
Information that you curate and prepare for use in, say, a mouse trap is cheese.
Cream Cheese is thick and doesn't flow, but can spread.
What spreads? Rumors.
Cream Cheese, then, is bait that spreads only as far as you want it to. It doesn't fall through holes (like in a bagel) so you can be sure it won't spread farther than you intend.
For a real-life example...
Someone you work with seems like they are likely to steal if given the chance. You suspect they might have stolen from the store, but you aren't sure. You don't like them in general, so you craft a plan to get them caught stealing, along with other employees you question the loyalty of.
You tell the person that the cameras don't actually work on Fridays when Windows 10 updates because the computers auto-restart and the cameras need to be manually turned back on by IT, who typically don't work on Fridays.
Only you, the IT team, and now the other employee know this.
Wait a couple weeks. Ask staff members if the cameras were acting funky the last couple Fridays. If any mention they know the cameras don't work during a Windows update, you know that the one you confided in spread the info to the ones he might trust to not rat him out should he steal.
If a theft occurs on a Friday, conveniently during a Windows 10 update, you now have a list of people crafted ahead of time involving all those who could have committed the crime.
Do you see how the FBI might use such a scheme to set-up and entice groups they monitor into committing crimes they wouldn't have attempted had they not been leaked the info? It only goes so far, because they can't spread it without implicating themselves. It makes a neat and tidy round-up if you're in the FBI.
Yeah, I get it, and I really like the way you sort it all out in simple digestible language. But I still think in this case they're talking about money. The double mastectomy did it for me there (per my other comment below).
Cheese is not always about bait for a trap, but it's clearly something we all want. This book equates cheese to money. They created it for companies to hand out before huge layoffs. And perhaps to establish the comms that cheese is money.
Cheese is one type of money. Cheddar, once, being the most common of the phrase: "You got dat cheddah?" There are different types of cheese, which alludes to different types of bait. Cheddar is specifically money bait, but money is anything of immediate transactional worth. Even more particularly, it's talking about the "Government Cheese" which connects it to things like marked bills the FBI uses for stings and incentive plans through Welfare and the like. Either way, it's money used to entice someone.
Cabbage/Lettuce (or any leaf) is cash and/or cheques. Paper money. The type of leaf, given context, determines what specifically it's talking about. Mint, as in mint leaves, refer to freshly printed cash, because it has that distinct, fresh smell. Leaves are typically unmarked, unless there are recalls due to e-coli or the like.
Asteroids, full of precious metals, are slush funds. Tracking their movements gives an update on how close they are to burning up.
Comets are research groups. Fast-flying balls of ice(history/facts) that leave a trail. Research papers can be traded like a currency in order to push products, especially medical products.
Gold is actionable investments particularly involving an inventive work/strategies. Gold is revolutionary ideas and discoveries.
Silver is like Gold, but is innovation rather than invention. It's prospect and privilege with what is already established, essentially. "Born with a silver spoon in his mouth."
Eggs (Nest Eggs) are retirement funds -- combinations of silver and gold (egg white and egg yolk) that aren't valuable until the "hens come home to roost." Which is, when you retire. Retirement funds, like 401k's are built on stock trading and bonds.
Bucks are the most common in North America when referring to money. "Bucks" as a term originates from "Buck Skin" which was by-and-large the most liquid asset one could trade with during the early frontier years of the Northern Americas. Now, bucks refer to people-as-currency ventures, as far as I can tell. The ones where you have to look over your shoulder and not get caught out like a deer in headlights. Bucks are skittish, and deal with information of a sensitive nature. DOE a deer -- Department of Energy. EXPLOSIVE materials. Things that will cause many to live out Bambi's life when all their parents get taken down for money crimes. It's not always deer, though. Leathery money, in general, is a buckskin. Ultimately, a buck is someone's hide that is used as a form of currency. Patsies. You hiding behind someone else's skin. Controlling someone's actions is valuable in itself. Calling in favors has tangible worth at times.
Clams. Old, shiny money. Can be a reference to silver/gold-backed dollars way back when. It's fallen out of fashion, which supports this theory.
Dough is money you gotta knead. It takes time for it to rise, and then you gotta bake it. Dough is used to make bread. Bread is a salary, it's what the Breadwinner brings home. A steady paycheck. Dough is your cut of the goods, like from a jewel theft. You steal the jewels, but you gotta cut them down so they can't be traced. This takes time, like dough rising. It's better if it's baked all together. If you ask for your cut early, you ask for the dough, the raw jewelry. If you wait and let your fencer cut it all down first, you might get a good deal and get more out of it as straight bread, which keeps far longer. In other words, dough is anything you gotta moosh around a little before using as money. Not laundering, necessarily, just a little work.
Since I'm already this far along, I guess I'll make a Thinking in Symbols from this, if you don't mind. I'll add more if I can think of them, so don't count this as all of them.
Yes. Money is very important to [them] so lotsa different symbols for it, like eskimos have for snow. It's the crux of their world. Milk/cream/cheese is simply one such symbol, and probably only in certain context.
Just took a shower and had these thoughts. Sorry if they're redundant...
How do you harvest the cream? You skim it off the top of the milk, same way they skim their take off of our money.
Ever hear this? "I'm gonna beat you for your milk-money if you don't gimme..." That conflates the milk directly with the money.
We really need a nice picture book style reference with all these symbol defs. Something like Wikipedia where everyone can contribute, but with some sort of controls to prevent a hostile takeover. Until that happens, your Thinking in Symbols series is among the best, most accessible references we've got. Thanks.
I was thinking baby milk shortage is like a shortage of fresh born dollars to milk the system with. There was a double mastectomy mentioned in the Daily Mail article, which could be the fencing in of the FED and the Deutsche bank raid so no more printing fiat money (the baby milk).
Elon's drinking chocolate milk. Not the baby stuff, and colored so it's easy to recognize. Yum!
Well, it's because "baby formula" has been creating very adverse effects in infants. SO much so, there's lawsuits over it and is why it's being pulled from shelves.
More reasons: 15 things in "Baby Formula" that is toxic.
Yeh. So in expedience of child rearing, parents have chosen to once again trust a pharma corporation in having their childs best interests in mind, when ACTUALLY creating potentially life-long health issues they'll have to get grown up treatment over. Insidious.
599 bad breastfeeding is so expensive compared to formula....
Wait, what? Breastfeeding is practically free?
Well, it's too bad breastfeeding causes health problems.
Hold up. What? Breastfeeding reduces allergies and strengthens the immune system, plus the psychological effect is positive on mother and baby alike? Oh.
Not sure how old you are, but the formula has changed since it's introduction in 1905. It has become worse over the years to present, and not like it's original. Ergo, just because you and yours went without noticeable side effects, doesn't mean validity of its current formula under Lawsuits was the same one.
Ok π€·ββοΈ, not saying you weren't/didn't. Good for you.
You missed the entire point of the reply and original post though, which is the formula has changed from then to now. Just like vax schedules for newborns to 5yrs old; both have become quite toxic and, in some cases, lethal. Some genetic make-ups can handle it, some get destroyed by it. Read the articles if you need to and don't believe me, I don't care. Just making awareness that is IS a thing, despite what you personally didn't have to endure, others did.
We are, by every objective standard, healthy. Collectively our formula use spans over 30 years and we have not suffered ill effects. People like me are the majority. Jack in the Box killed kids and you're not screeching about Jack in the Box, are you? A couple kids get sick, yes. Is formula awful overall? NO! Many women in the third world use formula because a proper nutritious diet, which gives nutritious milk, is not affordable. Formula has all of the vitamins and minerals necessary for metabolic function, etc.
You scare moms and dads away from formula and they end up putting their babies on weird home made formulas that are deficient in iron.
Don't get me started on iron deficiency in infants.
You're a cook spouting opinions.
Cope harder. Formula works just fine for the families who decide to use it. There will be problems here and there but hey, there are women low in the B vitamins and their nursing children are therefore low in the B vitamins.
Go look into low B1 and SIDS.
Go look into low vitamin D in nursing mothers and rickets in breastfed infants.
I don't see you over here championing for healthier breastmilk, just anything but that WICKED EVIL FORMULA AJHHHHHHHH!!!!!!
I donβt believe for one minute the production levels are the same. Either Big Pharma, of which formula companies are an off shoot, have decreased production, stores have been told not to order it, or the formula is sitting in warehouse somewhere.
Comms?
Baby-formula = Stem Cells / Illicit Baby Organ Trade
Imagine there were a stock market for the Black Market...
How would you get the word out that an illicit commodity is going to come up short from now on, and investment prospects into the stock are about to take a hit?
Comms using an analogous product?
Suddenly Baby Formula is the hot topic shortage item?
Remember the toilet paper scare?
What does toilet paper do?
Cleans up shit.
Evidence = Scat (Like in the woods)
You use toilet paper to clean up evidence.
Are we seeing an "as above, so below" situation with this "shortage"?
Triple updoot and a star.
gold star
Good point...
So what was the cream cheese shortage about? It was all over the news here, and the stores had tons of it...
Cheese is usually used for information that is being sent out as bait (think mouse trap).
To cut the cheese (fart) means you have spoken about the information to people who shouldn't hear it or don't want to hear it (don't talk about farts or poopoo humor at the dinner table / gossip).
Cream is thick milk (insider information that's time sensitive) which has more fat (substance/reward) to it.
Ice Cream ( I SCREAM) is used for comms concerning urgent messages that absolutely need to get out there (think Biden favorite Ice Cream flavor comms).
So, Cream Cheese is probably a combination of Cream and Cheese, which is information that is really really enticing, as bait, but does have some reward/fat to it.
Wow. Thank you SleepyDude. So simple and yet it whooshed right past me.
You don't happen to have the link that defines many decode symbols, do you? It was a word press one, I think.
https://decodingsymbols.wordpress.com/2021/01/30/comms-list-short-placeholders/
I'm working on my own, too.
https://greatawakening.win/p/15HuoIsLg8/18--thinking-in-symbols-fear-the/
Thank you!!
Could cream cheese represent liquidity? The current context seems to have milk as money milked outta the system. Cream is the good stuff, as you say, so cream cheese would be good money, but it's also easy to spread around (like on a bagel).
Maybe it's regional? The articles seem to mention Philadelphia brand, and NY and NJ bagel shops and cheesecake.
EDIT: Darn it! Now I'm craving some cream cheese.
What do you do to get milk?
You have to milk a cow.
Can you milk a cow over and over and over again? No, they'll run dry.
So, you let a cow go out to pasture and graze. Then, when they're nice and plump, you milk them.
Cows are informants.
You milk cows for time-sensitive information (milk).
If not acted upon quickly, it will spoil.
Work it a bit and it turns to cream.
What is the "cream of the crop"?
It's the best of a group.
So, cream is to milk as reliable and lucrative information is to time-sensitive information. It keeps a bit longer, but it spoils just the same.
Anything liquid flows. Information (water) flows, but it's cheap. Information that's thick and fatty (can make you rich) is milk.
Information that you curate and prepare for use in, say, a mouse trap is cheese.
Cream Cheese is thick and doesn't flow, but can spread.
What spreads? Rumors.
Cream Cheese, then, is bait that spreads only as far as you want it to. It doesn't fall through holes (like in a bagel) so you can be sure it won't spread farther than you intend.
For a real-life example...
Someone you work with seems like they are likely to steal if given the chance. You suspect they might have stolen from the store, but you aren't sure. You don't like them in general, so you craft a plan to get them caught stealing, along with other employees you question the loyalty of.
You tell the person that the cameras don't actually work on Fridays when Windows 10 updates because the computers auto-restart and the cameras need to be manually turned back on by IT, who typically don't work on Fridays.
Only you, the IT team, and now the other employee know this.
Wait a couple weeks. Ask staff members if the cameras were acting funky the last couple Fridays. If any mention they know the cameras don't work during a Windows update, you know that the one you confided in spread the info to the ones he might trust to not rat him out should he steal.
If a theft occurs on a Friday, conveniently during a Windows 10 update, you now have a list of people crafted ahead of time involving all those who could have committed the crime.
Do you see how the FBI might use such a scheme to set-up and entice groups they monitor into committing crimes they wouldn't have attempted had they not been leaked the info? It only goes so far, because they can't spread it without implicating themselves. It makes a neat and tidy round-up if you're in the FBI.
Yeah, I get it, and I really like the way you sort it all out in simple digestible language. But I still think in this case they're talking about money. The double mastectomy did it for me there (per my other comment below).
Cheese is not always about bait for a trap, but it's clearly something we all want. This book equates cheese to money. They created it for companies to hand out before huge layoffs. And perhaps to establish the comms that cheese is money.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_Moved_My_Cheese%3F
I probably still have a copy.
There are lots of types of money, though.
Cheese is one type of money. Cheddar, once, being the most common of the phrase: "You got dat cheddah?" There are different types of cheese, which alludes to different types of bait. Cheddar is specifically money bait, but money is anything of immediate transactional worth. Even more particularly, it's talking about the "Government Cheese" which connects it to things like marked bills the FBI uses for stings and incentive plans through Welfare and the like. Either way, it's money used to entice someone.
Cabbage/Lettuce (or any leaf) is cash and/or cheques. Paper money. The type of leaf, given context, determines what specifically it's talking about. Mint, as in mint leaves, refer to freshly printed cash, because it has that distinct, fresh smell. Leaves are typically unmarked, unless there are recalls due to e-coli or the like.
Asteroids, full of precious metals, are slush funds. Tracking their movements gives an update on how close they are to burning up.
Comets are research groups. Fast-flying balls of ice(history/facts) that leave a trail. Research papers can be traded like a currency in order to push products, especially medical products.
Gold is actionable investments particularly involving an inventive work/strategies. Gold is revolutionary ideas and discoveries.
Silver is like Gold, but is innovation rather than invention. It's prospect and privilege with what is already established, essentially. "Born with a silver spoon in his mouth."
Eggs (Nest Eggs) are retirement funds -- combinations of silver and gold (egg white and egg yolk) that aren't valuable until the "hens come home to roost." Which is, when you retire. Retirement funds, like 401k's are built on stock trading and bonds.
Bucks are the most common in North America when referring to money. "Bucks" as a term originates from "Buck Skin" which was by-and-large the most liquid asset one could trade with during the early frontier years of the Northern Americas. Now, bucks refer to people-as-currency ventures, as far as I can tell. The ones where you have to look over your shoulder and not get caught out like a deer in headlights. Bucks are skittish, and deal with information of a sensitive nature. DOE a deer -- Department of Energy. EXPLOSIVE materials. Things that will cause many to live out Bambi's life when all their parents get taken down for money crimes. It's not always deer, though. Leathery money, in general, is a buckskin. Ultimately, a buck is someone's hide that is used as a form of currency. Patsies. You hiding behind someone else's skin. Controlling someone's actions is valuable in itself. Calling in favors has tangible worth at times.
Clams. Old, shiny money. Can be a reference to silver/gold-backed dollars way back when. It's fallen out of fashion, which supports this theory.
Dough is money you gotta knead. It takes time for it to rise, and then you gotta bake it. Dough is used to make bread. Bread is a salary, it's what the Breadwinner brings home. A steady paycheck. Dough is your cut of the goods, like from a jewel theft. You steal the jewels, but you gotta cut them down so they can't be traced. This takes time, like dough rising. It's better if it's baked all together. If you ask for your cut early, you ask for the dough, the raw jewelry. If you wait and let your fencer cut it all down first, you might get a good deal and get more out of it as straight bread, which keeps far longer. In other words, dough is anything you gotta moosh around a little before using as money. Not laundering, necessarily, just a little work.
https://www.opploans.com/oppu/articles/money-idioms/
https://www.dictionary.com/e/s/money/#buck
Since I'm already this far along, I guess I'll make a Thinking in Symbols from this, if you don't mind. I'll add more if I can think of them, so don't count this as all of them.
Yes. Money is very important to [them] so lotsa different symbols for it, like eskimos have for snow. It's the crux of their world. Milk/cream/cheese is simply one such symbol, and probably only in certain context.
Just took a shower and had these thoughts. Sorry if they're redundant...
How do you harvest the cream? You skim it off the top of the milk, same way they skim their take off of our money.
Ever hear this? "I'm gonna beat you for your milk-money if you don't gimme..." That conflates the milk directly with the money.
We really need a nice picture book style reference with all these symbol defs. Something like Wikipedia where everyone can contribute, but with some sort of controls to prevent a hostile takeover. Until that happens, your Thinking in Symbols series is among the best, most accessible references we've got. Thanks.
I was thinking baby milk shortage is like a shortage of fresh born dollars to milk the system with. There was a double mastectomy mentioned in the Daily Mail article, which could be the fencing in of the FED and the Deutsche bank raid so no more printing fiat money (the baby milk).
Elon's drinking chocolate milk. Not the baby stuff, and colored so it's easy to recognize. Yum!
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10793859/Parents-politicians-slam-Biden-failing-intervene-baby-formula-crisis.html
The Johnny Carson effect.
https://unrealfacts.com/johnny-carson-toilet-paper-shortage.
Well, it's because "baby formula" has been creating very adverse effects in infants. SO much so, there's lawsuits over it and is why it's being pulled from shelves.
Enfamil Lawsuit article 1
Enfamil Lawsuit arcticle 2
Why you should NOT use "baby formula" at all.
More reasons: 15 things in "Baby Formula" that is toxic.
Yeh. So in expedience of child rearing, parents have chosen to once again trust a pharma corporation in having their childs best interests in mind, when ACTUALLY creating potentially life-long health issues they'll have to get grown up treatment over. Insidious.
Knowing is half the battle, folks...
599 bad breastfeeding is so expensive compared to formula....
Wait, what? Breastfeeding is practically free?
Well, it's too bad breastfeeding causes health problems.
Hold up. What? Breastfeeding reduces allergies and strengthens the immune system, plus the psychological effect is positive on mother and baby alike? Oh.
Updoots for proper use of sarcasm used as a truth vehicle.π
Wow - that's a shocking eye-opener, thanks for posting.
I was raised on formula and my children have been, too. Everyone is fine and healthy.
...or are you/they? π€
Not sure how old you are, but the formula has changed since it's introduction in 1905. It has become worse over the years to present, and not like it's original. Ergo, just because you and yours went without noticeable side effects, doesn't mean validity of its current formula under Lawsuits was the same one.
I've been raising children on formula for over 10 years now and thus far everyone is fine.
My youngest was born a little more than 10 years ago and I still have babies on formula now.
I was born in the 80's and drank formula in the late 80's.
Ok π€·ββοΈ, not saying you weren't/didn't. Good for you.
You missed the entire point of the reply and original post though, which is the formula has changed from then to now. Just like vax schedules for newborns to 5yrs old; both have become quite toxic and, in some cases, lethal. Some genetic make-ups can handle it, some get destroyed by it. Read the articles if you need to and don't believe me, I don't care. Just making awareness that is IS a thing, despite what you personally didn't have to endure, others did.
I think you're overblowing an issue.
Am I? Let's not ignore who responded to my post to begin this dialog on your own personal opinions while simultaneously ignoring the core message.
Don't like this? Don't make it about you and understand the bigger picture next time.
Opinions?
We are, by every objective standard, healthy. Collectively our formula use spans over 30 years and we have not suffered ill effects. People like me are the majority. Jack in the Box killed kids and you're not screeching about Jack in the Box, are you? A couple kids get sick, yes. Is formula awful overall? NO! Many women in the third world use formula because a proper nutritious diet, which gives nutritious milk, is not affordable. Formula has all of the vitamins and minerals necessary for metabolic function, etc.
You scare moms and dads away from formula and they end up putting their babies on weird home made formulas that are deficient in iron.
Don't get me started on iron deficiency in infants.
You're a cook spouting opinions.
Cope harder. Formula works just fine for the families who decide to use it. There will be problems here and there but hey, there are women low in the B vitamins and their nursing children are therefore low in the B vitamins.
Go look into low B1 and SIDS.
Go look into low vitamin D in nursing mothers and rickets in breastfed infants.
I don't see you over here championing for healthier breastmilk, just anything but that WICKED EVIL FORMULA AJHHHHHHHH!!!!!!
You're very ignorant.
It's almost like an attack on the family or something
cough
I think baby formula is a modern thing
You think correctly.
The "Baby Boom" did not use pre-made baby formula.
We used canned milk and Karo --- later we added some cereal --- cut an X in the bottle nipple.
Yes. My mom couldn't produce breast milk and used canned milk, sometimes added powdered eggs or mashed potatoes.
Baby formula has been hard to get/expensive for a long time now.
But now it makes the news.....
IIRC isn't baby formula nutritionally nonexistent? Isn't it literally just milk and random stuff thrown in for taste?
Boobs
When this shortage was announced I thought it was oddly.... specific.
Why just baby formula and not other products? Seemed like a comm.
I donβt believe for one minute the production levels are the same. Either Big Pharma, of which formula companies are an off shoot, have decreased production, stores have been told not to order it, or the formula is sitting in warehouse somewhere.
Vaxxed breast milk is also suspect.
The struggle is real. Baby formula is sold out everywhere.
Yeah, kinda weird, isn't it?
Not just formula, but diapers, wipes, etc.