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quietobserver 3 points ago +3 / -0

I agree, especially as a majority of people leave home to just move into apartments that have neighbors so close everyone involved has to worry about walking too loudly... And now working online makes moving for a job less necessary...

But I do think there's an issue with the majority of homes not being built to be multi-generational. I live in a smaller house on the family homestead. But almost no one I know would fit in their parent's homes at all, and only a couple would fit there with the privacy needed for a married couple.

The culture shift will be quite slow as we have to fight both social norms and having to make adjustments to current and future buildings.

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quietobserver 9 points ago +9 / -0

"Covid" the psyop was and is very real and more dangerous than the viruses that flew around and freaked everyone out. I'm so sorry it caught hold of your sibling, but they were far from being the only good person who was able to be manipulated. And some might say even being around a high jab environment might be dangerous due to that much shedding.

I don't know the protocol, but I have heard fasting can do wonders to help your body pay attention to what it can remove. I know that's a hard thing to pile on, but I've seen enough evidence that I myself would do it.

That said, once you find and choose a protocol... Maybe see if there's a suggested maintenance version for you and other family members... I've known many families where it seems all the siblings get cancer as if something happened to them as kids or was inherited. Perhaps it was the jab, or maybe the jab might have only hastened something there was an existing tendency for...

Best wishes and God bless you and your family 🙏

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quietobserver 11 points ago +11 / -0

It's always been happening. Forcing chaos and sin to light is required to spark change. I agree it's very uncomfortable though.

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quietobserver 5 points ago +5 / -0

In NC we've been noticing land and housing prices soar even in comparison to the already generally extreme market the whole US is dealing with... Wild to hear them drop land like that, surely it isn't willingly...

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quietobserver 6 points ago +6 / -0

I agree. The general population isn't ready for this at all.

I think gun safety should be a required class in schools and practical self-defense should be required in high school (and include whatever education is needed to carry in their state). And riflery should be a sport made available to as many schools as possible, maybe by encouraging it with funding.

(But also, people should be allowed to not carry because of personal freedom, we just need to make it wildly more convenient so more people actually do it.)

1
quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

The nervous system is a very real "body part" that can have issues completely unrelated to "mental stuff". And mental stuff is important too, but a person can certainly have either or both.

I hope your situation improves <3

*Also, I recommend researching Vagus Nerve massage and Vagus Nerve block. *

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quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

I'm sorry to hear you struggle with this sort of thing too :/

Many tests and years of fussing with doctors off and on. Ended up at the Cleveland Clinic after 15 years of going in circles many times with other doctors. I can answer specific questions in private DMs if you are curious, but I don't want to be too specific publically :)

I'm now on Corlanor to be a "rev limiter" for my heart rate. And that's made it so I can get out of bed and get around the house some. Not magic, but a wild improvement. I hope my plans to increase blood volume will result in getting off this stuff by this time next year, even if I'm never "normal" again.

Best wishes <3

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quietobserver 14 points ago +14 / -0

I have this crap, can't imagine dealing with having caused it myself like that.

We suspect my case is a jab injury from the 90s childhood shots, or maybe caused by my grandfather and great-grandfather working in the military where they could have been exposed to some nasty chemicals and such...

Doctors didn't listen at all about the symptoms for over 15 years, but now they whip out the covid jab and everyone with POTS symptoms now gets testing and treatment within a few months as if the industry hasn't spent the last 15+ years pretending this set of symptoms isn't possible and gaslighting me for noticing my world ended.

I hated the medical system long before recent historic events.

1
quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

There used to be people who were in the middle. The globalists/extremists all were screeching harpies that made politics unignorable. If they didn't harass Trump and Trump voters so much, there really wouldn't be so many people forced to form opinions they usually sidestep pondering.

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quietobserver 2 points ago +2 / -0

He's been pretty vocal about the abuse as a child, being told about a fellow child actor being made into red shoes, and pizzagate... Quieted down suddenly though.

1
quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

So, does anyone have any guesses what this day will be called in history? Perhaps even a new independence day?

4
quietobserver 4 points ago +4 / -0

There's a video going around, Black Americans reacting to Oliver Anthony - Rich Men North Of Richmond.

We're more united than it seems, and most of those who do not agree really just struggle to see past this eminence multigenerational psyop.

1
quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

Frankly people like being told things to do that alleviates anxiety about survival that are VERY easy to do. They wouldn't go jogging every day if CNN said that was the way to prevent spreading covid. They get to have all the pride a professional weight lifter via the means of slapping on some fabric.

They're the same ones who will join MLMs over and over (at the bottom tiers of course) but never start an actual business. They buy fruit shape candy or those "veggie straws" and feel like it was a better choice despite being the same as the products beside them. I don't understand why they are like this, but they are like this with many things other than the masks.

Also, I've seen people say they just liked masks because of feeling less exposed. I've even seen people online outright say they liked it because they felt ugly and loved not feeling compared to everyone.

1
quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

He's proving it's mostly a trash bot platform. I don't know if he's a "good" guy or anything, but when he changed the name to X it seems pretty clear he showed up to screw over what Twitter was before.

1
quietobserver 1 point ago +1 / -0

He use to openly talk about being worried about childhood vaccines being dangerous. So we know the dude knows better than what he preaches these days...

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quietobserver 5 points ago +5 / -0

When Q said the truth would put everyone in the hospital... I wonder if they meant riots and not illness.

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quietobserver 2 points ago +2 / -0

Switched On School House was suitable for us growing up. (Warning, old versions of the software require flash to run and therefore do not work on most current PCs). All of us completed grades several years ahead of time. Abeka was considered a good option too... Frankly, these curriculums have so much content it borders on busywork, so don't be afraid to spend more time on problem areas and less where you don't need to. These didn't cover issues like politics and personal finance as well I wish they did though. Learning how to read research papers was also important, but I don't recall how I picked that up.

Make sure to incorporate writing projects you assign on your own. Writing skills are one of the main issues I've seen homeschoolers have. I think a lot of parents shy away from writing assignments because they have to grade those with their own judgment and not an answer key (if that's an issue, that's a good example of when to bother with a tutor). Make sure to handle writing in MLA format, but also make them practice writing both professional and personal letters, emails, reports, comments, texts, instructions, planning, outlines for videos, etc.

Mid-high school, my brother who got a bachelor's switched from the typical home school education to looking at the college classes his degree will require and getting the books for those core classes. And studied those, and took as many CLEP tests as he could. Even a tutor for this would likely be a monetary win because of the savings in college.

Don't be afraid to embrace the fact homeschooling allows learning to come from living. Consider making it clear being productive means getting extra freedom. I spent tons of time using photoshop to make things back when you had to buy magazines for tutorials still. And 12-year-old me knew that I better keep plugging away at my projects or I'd get handed extra math sheets instead. My math still got done, but the busy work wasn't needed as long as I was doing mentally engaging activities in its place. And that led to me finding my future career which was a VERY important part of my life.

On a side note, I have a specific video game I recommend for education's sake. Portal, by Valve. I found that it asked preteen me to do puzzle-solving which made me learn to THINK. It probably wouldn't have had as big of an impact if I was older, but I do feel like learning to "think with portals" jumped me ahead of my peers. Not ideal for small kids though, bad guy robot is a bad guy. Although it's an overall good story to go with the puzzles.

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quietobserver 4 points ago +4 / -0

He's been trying to tell people for years. It really proves how much people refuse to realize what's happening unless it becomes THEIR problem :(

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quietobserver 5 points ago +5 / -0

I have health issues, they suck. I wonder if they are caused by the "90s kid vax variety box"...

But man, doctors never gave a fuck about the types of life-ruining hindering symptoms I dealt with until "long covid" started being thrown around. Now all suddenly everyone's health problems they insisted were TOTALLY impossible or "in your head" are definitely from this "long covid" thing.

These people are stupid. They just repeat whatever they are told to and don't think critically or look at what's right in front of them.

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quietobserver 2 points ago +2 / -0

Your post comes off as though you're trying to sound edgy while having not bothered to read the content of what you are replying to.

I was referring to the usefulness of the structure of religion for the low IQ in an objective way, notice I didn't mention a specific type of religion "being the answer". It's simply a fact some people are too dumb to conceptualize empathy or form functional moral structures, and lacking those structures leads low-IQ people to be easily manipulated into awful belief systems and easily caught up in "current thing" insanity because of their lack of innate moral compass.

"that's ritual and not the way...." Ritual is objectively the best many low IQ can manage, and implying otherwise simply is simply not accepting the situation. The ritual doesn't have to be religious, but the charity systems built into many various religions are also objectively useful for those who are not too bright to be able to lean on for structure.

I did mention God, but suggesting humans have the baseline value of being human no matter their intelligence is certainly a viewpoint many non-religious people hold as well.

But yeah, maybe actually read someone's post if you are going to suggest they change their major worldviews. Or don't just get triggered at the mention of God.

4
quietobserver 4 points ago +4 / -0

"It really feels like the population is dumbed way down."

As much as I want to say "yeah totally people are getting dumber", I can't just agree and leave it at that. Even though that's certainly is how it **feels **things are from my point of view.

There have always been dumb people, but they are God's children, and being a little dim in and of itself doesn't make them inherently difficult people. But it does leave them vulnerable to pitfalls most of us here are able to see clear as day. And the cultural denial of religion leaves those without the mental power to form their own educated opinions of ethics without an ethical framework to cling to. And without strong cultural norms, of course, the "do whatever you want" mentality is going to spread.

I seriously think we're seeing more of a situation where the mentally ill, the lower IQ, and those exposed to street drugs are easy for organizations/media to manipulate. And oh how the speed of manipulation is faster than ever before.

People who have been actively manipulated to bring out the worst versions of themselves, and then those people have the biggest soap box (the internet) in history available with idiot-proof simple UIs that weren't even available in this convenient of a form10 years ago.

And many of them probably could be talked out of their incorrect understanding of the world, but it's a pretty big ask to get someone to stop everything that are doing and flip their understanding of good and evil....especially if they have already made tragic irreversible choices based on the fake version of the world they have been fed. Q said if everyone was just given the truth, hospitals would be overflowing, and I think he meant we would have many people suddenly be ready to "self-delete" in the face of understanding what evils they had been tools to.

And this doesn't even remotely bring up the ramifications of the various traumatic events that make people crappier versions of themselves. 9/11, terrorism, false flags, the economic problems, the food system being abused and tainted (and not even at requiring proper labeling), chemicals, cancer spiking (it has stolen many in my family), etc... People start breaking when they are stepped on too hard. The people who can stomach looking at this forum (moreso for the active researchers who bring us information) are the people with the mental fortitude to "run into a burning building".

So.... Yes, people generally feel frustratingly stupid to deal with.

But we must be careful to remember while some people happen to be dumb, they are far better neighbors than those who are willfully ignorant.

2
quietobserver 2 points ago +2 / -0

From my 20 years of being disappointed in doctors started out when I was a child...

I would try seeking a "functional medicine" doctor for getting access to a doctor who is more interested in looking for a root cause. Insurance probably won't be interested in helping pay for it, which with what we all know here is practically a green flag.

As for bullying. Remember two things, one is that there are conservatives in the system and they are stuck having to play chameleon and playing the game and then dropping hints in private is necessary and sometimes draws them out, and they are hyper-competent when I have found them. Two, I've found it worthwhile to mention at the nurse intake stage that "falling through the cracks of the medical system has been traumatic and you need to take things at the pace you/your family can handle". This is a very disarming way to let them know you have no tolerance for bullying, it seems either to be "speaking their language" or perhaps has legal significance on a medical record. ---- As for medical records themselves, watch them like a hawk for accuracy. They can get super off track and be hard to change if not noticed near the time of writing.

Other than that... I suggest you research a few things. A good functional medicine doctor would be informed on these topics, but these are areas of research I found doctors (even when it's their own field of expertise) particularly lacking that I know can impact development/neurological condition...

Look hard into allergies/sensitivities/hormone disruption. Contamination is a serious problem, and children now are growing up in an environment full of weird things that didn't exist very long ago. Your child might have a sensitivity to something that they frequently come into contact with, and anything that causes inflammation or hormonal disruption may be hard on a person's neurological health. And sadly many things even well-informed people think are safe have hidden "gotchas".--- For this, I'd suggest researching inflammation/histamine/mast cell issues. Also, look into vegetable oils and endocrine disruptors.

On a different note, check if their blood pressure is high enough when standing/doing things. I had doctors ignore my signs of low BP as a small child. As it got worse, my brain just wasn't getting enough blood flow to work properly a lot of the time... I imagine this could certainly lead to speech delays. For this try researching POTS/dysautonomia...... This is also worth looking into because the issue is often able to be treated. And very commonly not diagnosed for 10-15 years after the first symptoms are seen.

-- Lastly, if your child is otherwise healthy and happy. Try not to feel or let others make you feel like you must constantly push for action. Long-term stress is damaging to the health of everyone in a family and it's okay to take breaks and revisit things to see if there's new research or clues every year or two.

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