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Rocketeer 2 points ago +2 / -0

I know. She's not fully awake (she also seems to buy into Carl Jung, for example), but she's relatively awake for someone in Hollywood and seems to be gradually becoming increasingly aware of the destructive agendas being pushed by the elites.

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Rocketeer 1 point ago +1 / -0

A YouTuber named David Stewart who I frequently watch has pointed out that the idea of marriage is "too risky" because of how some marriages turn out badly or end in divorce isn't logical, because it treats it as a matter of random chance rather than acknowledging that it's a matter of cause and effect.

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Rocketeer 1 point ago +1 / -0

How did someone get their Ring videos? Was this illegal?

His wife released it due to their ongoing divorce proceedings.

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Rocketeer 9 points ago +9 / -0

Judging by the wording, I'm pretty sure that the comment by the second person using pizza emojis is by a person creeped out by the photo and hinting at Pizzagate as a result, and the first one probably is as well. Anyone can post comments on an Instagram photo; it's not just her friends.

1
Rocketeer 1 point ago +1 / -0

An alleged Epstein victim claimed that Epstein and Maxwell name-dropped Cate Blanchett as being one of the people that they knew.

To be fair, I don't know how trustworthy she is (she seems like she has Stockholm Syndrome), and not everyone that Epstein and Maxwell rubbed shoulders with was intimately connected with them or knew everything about them (President Trump apparently took a while to catch on, after which point he had Epstein kicked out of Mar-a-Lago).

They were exceptional at painting their world as exciting and glamorous, name-dropping all the big shots—Bruce Willis, Ashton Kutcher, Cate Blanchett, Bill Clinton, Kevin Spacey. And they had all the photos to prove it. This was the early 2000s before social media, before celebrities were as accessible as they are now. They made you want to be a part of that world… but there was a trade-off. Sometimes you had to do things you didn’t want to do.

https://jessicareedkraus.substack.com/p/a-victims-perspective

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Rocketeer 4 points ago +4 / -0

"You must understand, the leading Bolsheviks who took over Russia were not Russians. They hated Russians. They hated Christians. Driven by ethnic hatred they tortured and slaughtered millions of Russians without a shred of human remorse. It cannot be overstated. Bolshevism committed the greatest human slaughter of all time. The fact that most of the world is ignorant and uncaring about this enormous crime is proof that the global media is in the hands of the perpetrators"

That quote has never been sourced back to anything that Solzhenitsyn is documented to have written. In chapter 15 of "200 Years Together", he criticized attempts to absolve Russians of all blame for the October Revolution and put all of the blame solely on Jews. In fact, the "you must understand..." quote reads an awful lot like someone paraphrased some of his words from the portion of chapter 15 quoted below and twisted the meaning into something contrary to what he intended:

"This theme—the Jews alongside the Bolsheviks—is not new, far from it. How many pages already written on the subject! The one who wants to demonstrate that the revolution was “anything but Russian”, “foreign by nature”, invokes Jewish surnames and pseudonyms, thus claiming to exonerate the Russians from all responsibility in the revolution of seventeen. As for the Jewish authors, those who denied the Jews’ share in the revolution as well as those who have always recognised it, all agree that these Jews were not Jews by spirit, they were renegades.

We also agree on that. We must judge people for their spirit. Yes, they were renegades.

But the Russian leaders of the Bolshevik Party were also not Russians by the spirit; they were very anti‐Russian, and certainly anti‐Orthodox. With them, the great Russian culture, reduced to a doctrine and to political calculations, was distorted.

The question should be asked in another way, namely: how many scattered renegades should be brought together to form a homogeneous political current? What proportion of nationals? As far as the Russian renegades are concerned, the answer is known: alongside the Bolsheviks there were enormous numbers, an unforgivable number. But for the Jewish renegades, what was, by the enrolment and by the energy deployed, their share in the establishment of Bolshevik power?

Another question concerns the attitude of the nation towards its own renegades. However, the latter was contrasted, ranging from abomination to admiration, from mistrust to adherence. It has manifested itself in the very reactions of the popular masses, whether Russian, Jewish, or Lithuanian, in life itself much more than in the briefings of historians.

And finally: can nations deny their renegades? Is there any sense in this denial? Should a nation remember or not remember them? Can it forget the monster they have begotten? To this question the answer is no doubt: it is necessary to remember. Every people must remember its own renegades, remember them as their own—to that, there is no escape.

And then, deep down, is there an example of renegade more striking than Lenin himself? However, Lenin was Russian, there is no point in denying it. Yes, he loathed, he detested everything that had to do with ancient Russia, all Russian history and a fortiori Orthodoxy. From Russian literature he had retained only Chernyshevsky and Saltykov‐Shchedrin; Turgenev, with his liberal spirit, amused him, and Tolstoy the accuser, too. He never showed the least feeling of affection for anything, not even for the river, the Volga, on whose banks his childhood took place (and did he not instigate a lawsuit against his peasants for damage to his lands?). Moreover: it was he who pitilessly delivered the whole region to the appalling famine of 1921. Yes, all this is true. But it was we, the Russians, who created the climate in which Lenin grew up and filled him with hatred. It is in us that the Orthodox faith has lost its vigour, this faith in which he could have grown instead of declaring it a merciless war. How can one not see in him a renegade? And yet, he is Russian, and we Russians, we answer for him. His ethnic origins are sometimes invoked. Lenin was a mestizo issued from different races: his paternal grandfather, Nikolai Vasilyevich, was of Kalmyk and Chuvash blood, his grandmother, Anna Aleksievna Smirnova, was a Kalmyk, his other grandfather, Israel (Alexander of his name of baptism) Davidovitch Blank, was a Jew, his other grandmother, Anna Iohannovna (Ivanovna) Groschopf, was the daughter of a German and a Swede, Anna Beata Estedt. But that does not change the case. For nothing of this makes it possible to exclude him from the Russian people: we must recognise in him a Russian phenomenon on the one hand, for all the ethnic groups which gave him birth have been implicated in the history of the Russian Empire, and, on the other hand, a Russian phenomenon, the fruit of the country we have built, we Russians, and its social climate—even if he appears to us, because of his spirit always indifferent to Russia, or even completely anti‐Russian, as a phenomenon completely foreign to us. We cannot, in spite of everything, disown him.

What about the Jewish renegades? As we have seen, during the year 1917, there was no particular attraction for the Bolsheviks that manifested among the Jews. But their activism has played its part in the revolutionary upheavals. At the last Congress of the Russian Social‐Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) (London, 1907), which was, it is true, common with the Mensheviks, of 302‒305 delegates, 160 were Jews, more than half—it was promising. Then, after the April 1917 Conference, just after the announcement of the explosive April Theses of Lenin, among the nine members of the new Central Committee were G. Zinoviev, L. Kamenev, Ia. Sverdlov. At the VIth summer Congress of the RKP (b) (the Russian Communist Party of the Bolsheviks, the new name of the RSDLP), eleven members were elected to the Central Committee, including Zinoviev, Sverdlov, Trotsky, Uritsky.[1781] Then, at the “historic meeting” in Karpovka Street, in the apartment of Himmer and Flaksermann, on 10 October 1917, when the decision to launch the Bolshevik coup was taken, among the twelve participants were Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev, Sverdlov, Uritsky, Sokolnikov. It was there that was elected the first “Politburo” which was to have such a brilliant future, and among its seven members, always the same: Trotsky, Zinoviev, Kamenev, Sokolnikov. Which is already a lot. D. S. Pasmanik clearly states: “There is no doubt that the Jewish renegades outnumbered the normal percentage…; they occupied too great a place among the Bolshevik commissioners.”

Of course, all this was happening in the governing spheres of Bolshevism and in no way foreshadowed a mass movement of Jews. Moreover, the Jewish members of the Politburo did not act as a constituted group. Thus Kamenev and Zinoviev were against a hasty coup. The only master of the work, the genius of October’s coup de force, was in fact Trotsky: he did not exaggerate his role in his Lessons of October. This cowardly Lenin, who, he, had been hiding out, made no substantial contribution to the putsch.

Basically, because of his internationalism and following his dispute with the Bund in 1903, Lenin adhered to the opinion that there was not and never would be such a thing as a “Jewish nationality”; that this was a reactionary action which disunited the revolutionary forces. (In agreement with him, Stalin held the Jews for a “paper nation”, and considered their assimilation inevitable.) Lenin therefore saw anti‐Semitism as a manœuvre of capitalism, an easy weapon in the hands of counter‐revolution, something that was not natural. He understood very well, however, what mobilising force the Jewish question represented in the ideological struggle in general. And to exploit, for the good of the revolution, the feeling of bitterness particularly prevalent among the Jews, Lenin was always ready to do so."

In chapter 14, he wrote this:

"The closer it got to to October coup and the more apparent the Bolshevik threat, the wider this realization spread among Jews, leading them to oppose Bolshevism. It was taking root even among socialist parties and during the October coup many Jewish socialists were actively against it. Yet they were debilitated by their socialist views and their opposition was limited by negotiations and newspaper articles – until the Bolsheviks shut down those newspapers.

It is necessary to state explicitly that the October coup was not carried by Jews (though it was under the general command of Trotsky and with energetic actions of young Grigory Chudnovsky during the arrest of Provisional Government and the massacre of the defenders of the Winter Palace). Broadly speaking, the common rebuke, that the 170-million-people could not be pushed into Bolshevism by a small Jewish minority, is justified. Indeed, we had ourselves sealed our fate in 1917, through our foolishness from February to October-December.

The October coup proved a devastating lot for Russia. Yet the state of affairs even before it promised little good to the people. We had already lost responsible statesmanship and the events of 1917 had proved it in excess. The best Russia could expect was an inept, feeble, and disorderly pseudo-democracy, unable to rely on enough citizens with developed legal consciousness and economic independence.

After October fights in Moscow, representatives of the Bund and Poale-Zion had taken part in the peace negotiations – not in alliance with the Junkers or the Bolsheviks — but as a third independent party. There were many Jews among Junkers of the Engineers School who defended the Winter Palace on October 25: in the memoirs of Sinegub, a palace defender, Jewish names appear regularly; I personally knew one such engineer from my prison experience. And during the Odessa City Duma elections the Jewish block had opposed the Bolsheviks and won, though only marginally."

The book is very thorough and nuanced, neither downplaying nor exaggerating the role of Jews in the Bolshevik Revolution. Solzhenitsyn carefully addressed every aspect and angle.

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Rocketeer 13 points ago +13 / -0

Former supermodel Ana Lucia Alves is now a whistleblower (or at least claims to be one) who has talked about handlers, human trafficking, etc, in fashion and showbusiness. According to her, the "price" that certain people pay to get superstardom differs. In some cases, it's of a sexual nature (she claims that Heidi Klum and Naomi Campbell are likely high-class madams for the Elite who pimp out the models working for them - a deal that she herself was offered but turned down). In other cases, the "price" is spreading propaganda (such as in Leonardo DiCaprio's case). She said that some mega-talented people like Gary Oldman don't have to make such deals at all to become superstars because they are so talented that showbusiness can't get along without them and leaves them alone. She claims to have met DiCaprio, and said that he seems like a nice person but is essentially living in a gilded cage with handlers all around him.

Here's a video of her talking about these things:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bcZyoe6Wx4

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Rocketeer 1 point ago +1 / -0

He borrowed as much if not more from the Flash Gordon serials, John Carter books, and Kurosawa movies than from "Dune". That's how he was so successful: he borrowed a bit here and a bit there from many things rather than ripping off any one thing to an annoying degree.

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Rocketeer 4 points ago +4 / -0

They saw how adult dismissal of the prequels gave way to ironic appreciation and genuine youth appreciation

Actually, they initially banked on people's dislike of the prequels. That's why the first line in "The Force Awakens" was "This will begin to make things right." That was their wink at the audience implying "George Lucas lost his way and forgot how to make good Star Wars, but we know better than him and will do it right." Only after there was massive backlash over "The Last Jedi" and "Solo" flopped did they start leaning heavily into prequel nostalgia.

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Rocketeer 3 points ago +3 / -0

Of course, they avoid this scenario so that no discovery will be allowed.

What? Is that even legal?

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Rocketeer 1 point ago +1 / -0

Apparently, there are laxer laws on the subject in Georgia that made it legal to do the interviews (although she may have crossed the line with some of the things that she revealed).

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Rocketeer 2 points ago +2 / -0

The link in the title is to an archived version of an MSNBC op-ed expressing concern that Emily Kohrs' loose lips might sink the Trump indictment ship.

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Rocketeer 2 points ago +2 / -0

So he repeated the same M.O. multiple times, with the same consequences?

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Rocketeer 5 points ago +5 / -0

He was very frustrated with how KFC was run after he sold it. A former employee told a story about how the bosses told them to humor Col. Sanders and let him act as if he still owned the place, and he would occasionally come in, grab a piece of chicken and take a bite out of it, and start yelling at everyone and waving his cane around.

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Rocketeer 3 points ago +3 / -0

Here's a link to the full paper, which is the product of a collaboration between Stanford Internet Observatory, OpenAI, and Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology:

https://arxiv.org/pdf/2301.04246.pdf

It suggests government and corporate actions to prevent the unfettered use of AI technology (allegedly to prevent "disinformation").

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