Did Smokey The Bear Brainwash You To Accept Agenda 21?

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Recently, we stumbled across some old commercials for Smokey the Bear – the iconic Forest Fire Council ads produced by our own government via the National Ad Council.

On top of warning that “Only You! Can Prevent Forest Fires,” (complete with a giant, shovel-wielding bear) many of these PSAs carried a dark and ominous tone – even scathing of humanity and their footprint on the earth.

And all that before Al Gore and the climate crusaders started blaming us all for AGW…

SmokyTheBearBut why did Smokey take this tone with his young viewers, otherwise tuned into Saturday morning cartoons and mindless TV shows?

Could it be that the real agenda behind preventing forest fires is conditioning future generations to accept blame for damaging the earth and allowing trustees to takeover land – starting with the national parks and, of course, U.N. World Heritage Sites?

After all, the Ad Council was created by powerful businessmen in a public–private partnership with the government during World War II.

As others have argued, the United Nations and international involvement in preserving important sites – arranged via the 1972 World Heritage Treaty – amounts to a loss of sovereignty, and the ownership of America’s most treasured landmarks and parks rest, ultimately, not with The People. Meanwhile, the 1972 United Nations Earth Summit set the tone for what has now been two generations of global environmental control rationales. Continue reading

It’s Time For New Rules!

“Once expanded by new awareness, the human mind cannot revert back to its previous state of ignorance – this is what the great awakening is all about.” – Chautauqua

MerkabaGridPatternIt was just last week that I found myself heading to the town of Santa Rosa, Ca. with my business partner and his wife; on a  mission of running a couple errands then having dinner out.  Our final stop before dinner was at a neighborhood green cross dispensary.  It’s just after dusk, and the sky hasn’t yet gone full dark.  As we neared the building our attention was drawn by an unusual mechanical sound originating from behind, and above  us. We turned as one to look, and sure enough hovering just above the street was a police drone.  Watching US!

It was one of those quad-copter designs and as we watched it I could tell whoever was flying it was no rookie pilot.  Maintaining a perfect hover 70 feet from the dispensary in near darkness gave all of us a weird Orwellian kind of feeling.  We continued on about  our business, relegating the sighting to the subconscious mind for a while.

After dinner, my business partner went to fetch the car as I entertained his wife with my stellar wit in front of the parking structure.  We were standing about a quarter block from a main intersection…and we heard the drone again.  This time it was flying slowly directly above the north-south city street, as if it was following a specific car.  Some 30 seconds later a police cruiser rolled calmly down the same street, following the drone, evidently with the pilot inside.

When we first saw the drone I had the thought of grabbing my phone and taping the encounter, since it was my first; but then my brain served up a slide show of recent stories where doing so hasn’t ended well for free speech.  Suddenly my mind is telling me things like the lighting sucks, and filming the drone might expose my friends to harm, at the hands of those sworn to protect and serve.  So I chose not to film the drone, but the process of reaching that decision gnawed at my subconscious like hungry grizzly bear. Continue reading

Revolution In Human Consciousness

“In these years ahead it will be to our benefit if we try to develop a consciousness that is both open to spiritual impulses whilst simultaneously aware and attentive to the needs of our communities and cultures.” K L Dennis

Consciousness_BlackHoleRecent decades have seen a great rise in ecological awareness and the perspective of living systems. Many of us are now relating on a personal and conscious level to the interconnectedness and interaction between humans, nature, and environment. However, this new paradigm of thought should not be restricted only to a material level of connectivity but also needs to embrace the nonmaterial levels of the human psyche and consciousness.

The world of the inner self is increasingly opening up and being explored through transpersonal sciences, self-realization, and individual self-actualization. Through our various cultures we are developing the language, the skills, and the perceptions to sense and articulate our personal, revelatory experiences. The once shamanic realm of extra-sensory contact is becoming more normalized as we deal with a physical reality more accustomed to shifting perceptual paradigms. For example, our new scientific discoveries are explaining and validating nonlocal realities of connection and energetic entanglement. We are now learning that extended fields of conscious information and communication exist between individuals and groups as a medium of coherence that may further entangle humanity into a collective ‘grand family’. Continue reading

One Reason Sickcare Is So Expensive: Needless Scans/Tests

“Add easy profits from needless tests to defensive medicine and no cost controls or real competition, and we have the perfect formula for waste, fraud, profiteering, bad medicine and dysfunctional, unaffordable healthcare.” – C H Smith

CharlesHughSmithWhy is sickcare (a.k.a. “healthcare”) absurdly unaffordable in America? There are many structural reasons which I have covered in depth for years, but one that most of us can relate to from personal experience is needless, hyper-costly scans and tests.

Even those of us who have never had a CT or MRI scan (and I hope I never will) know the drill from friends and family: practically every injury is now scanned by one device or another at enormous expense–not for treatment, as M.D. Ishabaka explains, but as defensive medicine to ward off future lawsuits or in response to patient demands.

Ishabaka (M.D.) walks us through the maze of CT and MRI by using his own injuries and treatments as examples of how our system has become unaffordable and ineffective.

“When I first got into the hospital as a medical student in 1977, MRI scanners did not exist, and the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal had the first CT scanner in Canada. A scan took an hour, and the images were blurry as heck, compared to modern scanners which take a few minutes and produce crystal clear images – but it was MAGNIFICENT. All of a sudden, we could see brain problems that could only be seen by operating, or doing a cerebral angiogram – a good but somewhat dangerous test (up to 3% of patients who have one suffer a stroke caused by the test).

When used appropriately, CT scans save lots of money and lives. One example is head trauma. Most people who are knocked out just have a concussion, but a few have bleeding either around or inside the brain that will kill or permanently disable them unless they are operated on ASAP.

In the old days, just when I was starting practice, most hospitals did not have a CT scanner. People who had been seriously knocked out were ALL admitted to the hospital for “neurological observation” – a nurse would check on them every hour to see how alert they were.

Continue reading