THE SWAMP RUNS DEEP.
Sometimes you cannot tell people the truth.
You must show them.
Only then, at the precipice, will people find the will to change [to participate].
We, the People, have been betrayed for a very long time.
WILL YOU STAND?
FOR GOD AND COUNTRY.
FOR FREEDOM.
FOR HUMANITY.
WHERE WE GO ONE
WE GO ALL !!!
Q
Did X do something so non-users can't hear the embedded audio any more?
I saw a woman on Instagram yesterday talking about this. She's a small farmer and flower grower. She was damn beautiful. Ireland's fooked right now. They need more people rising up.
WE must do the same here, too. $1.9 Trillion is nothing to sneeze at, but those are amateur numbers compared to what our pols have squandered.
I just watched a video that is perhaps the starkest illustration of what this woman is talking about. The games we played as kids, that every kid knew, games that taught us things and shaped us in our characters, for life... .Those games have disappeared. Childhood is not like it used to be. Everything 'safe', but nothing to grow your heart or your spirit.
Thanks so much Frac for this nostalgia. And the window-to-the-past insights this video brings.
I was a Townsville and Mackay school kid in the eighties. Didn't have to wear shoes until high school. Literally bare foot for the first 7 years of schooling. Not because we were uncivilized but because we were in the tropics and we had freedom. All my official class photos every kid was barefoot. What a privileged upbringing we had back then.
Freedom.
My memories of those games:
Brandy was awesome. Adolescent adrenaline. Such a great game.
Elastics was for the girls lol.
Marbles was like high stakes Vegas gambling. With your own treasure.
British Bulldog and Red Rover merged it seemed in early 80s Townsville. "Bullrush" was called by someone, then there was a virtual rugby scum of kids crashing into each other. More adrenaline. Scary and so much fun. Big kids smashing the little ones. And I was one of the little ones haha. I remember when they banned it.
Skipping ropes were everywhere back then. Now they're nowhere.
Tiggy was played by everyone. The staple.
Handball was another staple. One chalk line or crack in the concrete determined sides of the court and we were all playing a miniature but still skilled version of tennis with our hands.
Then outside of school were countless hours of backyard cricket with our own rules depending on whos backyard we were playing in...
Memory lane ...
Watching that video really made me feel sorry for the youth of today. So much has been stolen from them. And us.
Watching that video really made me feel sorry for the youth of today. So much has been stolen from them
Yeah, me too. I don't know that I ever did marbles, but British bulldog and red rover were staples. Yeah, the girls did elastics (I never knew what it was called, just that they did it). Handball, yep. Tiggy, but I do recall the variations. One was where if you got tigged, you had to stand still, with your legs in an upside down V, feet apart. If someone still alive could crawl between your legs, you were freed and could run again.
Brandy, yep. With a tennis ball usually.
We also played one like handball but up against the wall, two players or four players.
This short doco totally hits the mark, emphasizing the very real, critical skills and experiences all these games gave to us. And, so much of that lore is now lost.
But, if we ever decide to lift the lid and give kids their freedom back, they'll come up with stuff again.
Something to work towards for us, I suppose.
Re: barefeet: my kids spent about a year at school in Vanuatu. There, everyone just wore thongs, if anything at all, and left them by the door and played barefeet at lunch time. So happy about that.
Now this sounds like the fighting Irish I am proudly descended from. I pray the Irish people in Ireland rediscover that fighting spirit before it's too late.
Make this video go viral. It will inspire millions of people if you do.
4641
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 09/09/2020 19:01:53 ID: 18740b 8kun/qresearch: 10581812
THE SWAMP RUNS DEEP. Sometimes you cannot tell people the truth. You must show them. Only then, at the precipice, will people find the will to change [to participate]. We, the People, have been betrayed for a very long time. WILL YOU STAND? FOR GOD AND COUNTRY. FOR FREEDOM. FOR HUMANITY. WHERE WE GO ONE WE GO ALL !!! Q
Powerfully uplifting news.
Did X do something so non-users can't hear the embedded audio any more?
I saw a woman on Instagram yesterday talking about this. She's a small farmer and flower grower. She was damn beautiful. Ireland's fooked right now. They need more people rising up.
WE must do the same here, too. $1.9 Trillion is nothing to sneeze at, but those are amateur numbers compared to what our pols have squandered.
She's not lying.
For Ausanons
I just watched a video that is perhaps the starkest illustration of what this woman is talking about. The games we played as kids, that every kid knew, games that taught us things and shaped us in our characters, for life... .Those games have disappeared. Childhood is not like it used to be. Everything 'safe', but nothing to grow your heart or your spirit.
12 Playground Games Aussie Kids Used to Play⦠That Disappeared Forever
Thanks so much Frac for this nostalgia. And the window-to-the-past insights this video brings.
I was a Townsville and Mackay school kid in the eighties. Didn't have to wear shoes until high school. Literally bare foot for the first 7 years of schooling. Not because we were uncivilized but because we were in the tropics and we had freedom. All my official class photos every kid was barefoot. What a privileged upbringing we had back then.
Freedom.
My memories of those games:
Brandy was awesome. Adolescent adrenaline. Such a great game.
Elastics was for the girls lol.
Marbles was like high stakes Vegas gambling. With your own treasure.
British Bulldog and Red Rover merged it seemed in early 80s Townsville. "Bullrush" was called by someone, then there was a virtual rugby scum of kids crashing into each other. More adrenaline. Scary and so much fun. Big kids smashing the little ones. And I was one of the little ones haha. I remember when they banned it.
Skipping ropes were everywhere back then. Now they're nowhere.
Tiggy was played by everyone. The staple.
Handball was another staple. One chalk line or crack in the concrete determined sides of the court and we were all playing a miniature but still skilled version of tennis with our hands.
Then outside of school were countless hours of backyard cricket with our own rules depending on whos backyard we were playing in...
Memory lane ...
Watching that video really made me feel sorry for the youth of today. So much has been stolen from them. And us.
Yeah, me too. I don't know that I ever did marbles, but British bulldog and red rover were staples. Yeah, the girls did elastics (I never knew what it was called, just that they did it). Handball, yep. Tiggy, but I do recall the variations. One was where if you got tigged, you had to stand still, with your legs in an upside down V, feet apart. If someone still alive could crawl between your legs, you were freed and could run again.
Brandy, yep. With a tennis ball usually.
We also played one like handball but up against the wall, two players or four players.
This short doco totally hits the mark, emphasizing the very real, critical skills and experiences all these games gave to us. And, so much of that lore is now lost.
But, if we ever decide to lift the lid and give kids their freedom back, they'll come up with stuff again.
Something to work towards for us, I suppose.
Re: barefeet: my kids spent about a year at school in Vanuatu. There, everyone just wore thongs, if anything at all, and left them by the door and played barefeet at lunch time. So happy about that.
All it takes is for all people to get on the same page.
The deep state thrives by divide and conquer.
Now this sounds like the fighting Irish I am proudly descended from. I pray the Irish people in Ireland rediscover that fighting spirit before it's too late.
Rome did not fall in a day. It collapsed when the local bridge went out and no one came to fix it.
How's the infrastructure at where you live? How much have you paid in taxes so far I'm your lifetime?
Apologies if already posted. I couldn't find it here.
First time Iām seeing it :)
Me, too!
Loving this Irish Patriot! āØāļøš
Re-postable. I reckon good posts should be posted three times in a 24-hour period, because not everyone is on at that same time.
God bless the Irish
Very nice
š¤©š¤©š¤©š¤©š¤© Way to rise up!
Ireland fought for how many centuries to gain her freedom, just for these weak kids to squander it away.....