A wide variety of topics are discussed here, including many that some people would call conspiracies. Frens here have a lot of knowledge and some have been studying their favorite topics for years.
I wonder, could we get a plan going to spread the knowledge? If you have a topic or two that you have dived in to and would be willing to share your knowledge and research with frens here, please do! This is your opportunity to share what you've discovered.
We could call it, Professor Pepe Presents. You could share as much or as little as you'd like, but the more the better, imo. For instance, you could give a synopsis of the topic and your findings in one post. Or, if you have a lot to share, you could do a series of posts on that topic. There are dozens of possibilities.
To give these posts uniformity and make them immediately identifiable to others on the board, we could frame them in this way -- (example topics)
Professor Pepe Presents; MK Ultra
Professor Pepe Presents; Racine
Professor Pepe Presents; Project Bluebeam
Professor Pepe Presents; The Las Vegas Massacre
Professor Pepe Presents; The Moon Landing, Real or Not?
The topics don't all have to be 'conspiracy' related. For instance, do you have great knowledge of the Constitution? By all means, do Professor Pepe Presents; The US Constitution.
Or perhaps you have a solid handle on how the three branches of government work (or are supposed to) --- that could be a PPP lesson. Maybe you're really knowledgeable about US (or world) History or have studied any of the wars in depth. Maybe you can explain exactly what went on with Uranium One or know all the details about the Federal Reserve. ALL of that knowledge is valuable and would be great to share with frens.
There is so much to learn and people here have a wealth of knowledge. And yes, while it's best if people can do their own research, sometimes the demands of life and time constraints keep them from being able to. So if you can share what you know, perhaps that will give others a solid foundation from which they can then springboard off and continue with their own look-see.
Professor Pepe Presents: The Federal Reserve
Professor Pepe Presents: Devolution
Professor Pepe Presents; The Bill of Rights
Professor Pepe Presents; World War I
There are countless topics to explore and I sincerely hope some of you will share the wealth of your knowledge. This is your opportunity to become a teacher! If you're willing and able, please just jump right in. All I ask is that you start your title with Professor Pepe Presents so that we can immediately identify the thread as a sort of master class. And please -- don't assume that others know everything you know. Everybody is at a different stage and newbies are joining us every day. For instance, as much as I've seen people talk about MK Ultra and Project Bluebeam here, I have very little knowledge of either. Even info about how our politics works is valuable, as so many are just waking up and becoming interested. So don't be shy. Whatever you know is not known by someone else and will be valuable information for them.
I want to thank you in advance if you embrace this idea. And if there is little interest in this over night, I will probably post it again tomorrow to get more eyes on it.
Thanks, frens. May we all help each other learn and grow.
Mitochondrial medicine. The foremost expert on the mitochondria, Dr Doug Wallace (the one who discovered we inherit our mitochondrial DNA from only the maternal line), has stated that 85%-90%, or more, of chronic disease pathologies are due to defects in mitochondrial DNA and mitochondrial function, NOTHING to do with the nuclear DNA. This includes cancers. This means the most common and troubling disease states are the result of defects in an organism's energy flows, which is controlled mainly by certain environmental inputs.
Nuclear DNA has a bigger role in anatomy and structure, mitochondrial DNA is what's responsive to environmental conditions and regulating energy flow/production accordingly. Yet >90% of NIH funding goes to nuclear DNA research on disease reversal, which is why most everything is a big fail or at best results in drug-mediated symptom management. See the 50 year "War on Cancer" for one example.
And this is a deeper dive than many may think. Before dumping on allopathic medicine, functional medicine also needs to be taken to task since they fall into the same trap of "Take this for that" with manufactured supplements and other exogenous treatments. The mitochondrial doctor of the future when treating a patient will first get a chart on the patient based on their environmental conditions, and look first at what environments they put their body in, before addressing what they put into their body.
Interesting. What environments they put their body in. This is an important topic! Actually, I'm glad you brought it up because it reminds me of another related one that I was trying to remember. Anyway, would you be willing to do a Professor Pepe Presents; Mitochondrial Medicine? I'm sure it would be eye opening to just about everybody here and they'd appreciate learning what you know. Please consider it.