Saturday, March 8, 2025

Fukushima Radiation killing the Gray whales and Great White Sharks off California?

 Kevin D Blanch w/ the details

 This season, 40 gray whale deaths have been recorded, primarily among young and adult specimens. Jorge Urbán, head of the Marine Mammal Research Program at UABCS, noted that while this number is within the expected range, it is unusual that the deceased whales are not calves.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jul/24/fukushima-fish-with-180-times-legal-limit-of-radioactive-cesium-fuels-water-release-fears 

 A total of 44 fish with cesium levels above 100 becquerels per kg have been found in the Fukushima plant port between May 2022 and May 2023, Tepco confirmed, with 90% of those caught in or near the inner breakwater. Other specimens identified as having particularly high radioactivity were an eel with 1,700 becquerels per kg, caught in June 2022, and rock trout, with 1,200 becquerels in April 2023.

Cesium, iodine and tritium in NW Pacific waters – a comparison of the Fukushima impact with global fallout  

 Due to a suitable residence time in the ocean, Fukushima-derived radionuclides will provide useful tracers for isotope oceanography studies on the transport of water masses during the next decades in the NW Pacific Ocean.

 https://www.surfer.com/news/dead-great-white-sharks-washing-up-us-canada-beaches

 https://gringogazette.com/2025/03/07/starved-gray-whale-discovered-stranded-on-playa-antares-in-the-east-cape/

 

 

He heard "I've never forgotten these Two Notes - like a choir" - as he left his body during an NDE (the OM of Light)

In the car.... Surrounded by Darkness.... the light gets closer and closer - at a point it seemed like I was looking down...almost like a point of awareness...I got as close as I could without going inside [the light]...

it started to be accompanied by Music - it was these two notes. I've never forgotten these two notes...It was these two notes and it was like a choir. One note was higher than the other. It just sounded like 50 people singing the same note....I heard the music and it seemed like I was going into the light and then I opened my eyes in the hospital...

 

 

Friday, March 7, 2025

Is being Evil just a "diminished capacity" psychopathy to be let off the hook of justice?

 177. Dr. John C. Brady II: A Breakdown of Psychopathy and Criminal Responsibility

Very fascinating talk by Dr. John C. Brady II. 

If someone thinks they're "above the law" does that mean they're in an "altered state of consciousness" that forgoes "legal responsibility" due to psychopathy or insanity? Doesn't make sense to me.

Isolation - alienated - this does not justify the crimes under the amnesty of psychopathy.

Left-brain dominance IS the true "altered state of consciousness" that becomes psychopathy as "civilization." 

Ageism fueled Covid conspiracies: 23-fold increase risk of death from COVID for 65 yrs & older (80% to 90% of Covid deaths)

 Obviously when people use "one finger" microwave "smart phone" rage algorithms then it is inevitable to be brainwashed on the interwebs. But throw in the "ageism" factor whereby targeting the elderly for an earlier death has become a multi-billion business - then COVID suddenly is a "myth" with the elderly simply succumbing to normal diseases. This of course is the opposite of the truth - a total lie that is easy to maintain since the elderly don't dominate the interwebs.

Adults over 65 years of age represent 80% of hospitalizations and have a 23-fold greater risk of death than those under 65.
Why does COVID-19 disproportionately affect older people? 

Comorbidities such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity increase the chances of fatal disease, but they alone do not explain why age is an independent risk factor.

 the virus spreads to the back of the nasal passages, where it binds to and enters via the dimerized angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) [] on the surface of airway epithelial cells []. From there, it spreads to the mucous membranes of the throat and bronchial tubes, eventually entering the lungs

 GINGER BLOCKS THE ACE2 receptor - that's why it's such an effective natural anti-viral.

 Figure 1

 Even if viral loads decline in the patient, a type of cytokine release syndrome can rapidly develop, characterized by disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), causing liver damage, renal dysfunction, cardiovascular inflammation, coagulopathy and death [, ]. There are very few studies that definitely connect the known mechanisms of aging to the pathogenesis of viruses. In this perspective, we offer potential mechanistic explanations as to why COVID-19 advances in some people and not others, and especially in older patients, including differences in the immune system, glycation, the epigenome, inflammasome activity, and biological age.

 81% of COVID deaths were the elderly in 2020

Older adults made up 90% of US COVID deaths in 2023 

 We report sometimes surprising findings on population fatality rates (“PFR”), the ratio of COVID to non-COVID deaths, reported as a percentage, which we call the “Covid Mortality Percentage,” and mean life expectancy loss (“LEL”).

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9351604/ 

 Although COVID-19 mortality was much higher for the elderly, the COVID Mortality Percentage [The ratio of COVID to non-COVID deaths] over the full pandemic period was only modestly higher for the elderly, at 13.2%, than for non-elderly adults aged 25–64, at 11.1%. Indeed, in 2021, this ratio was lower for the elderly than for the middle-aged, reflecting higher elderly vaccination rates.

 So this is a very fascinating result - since older people die at a much higher rate overall then even though 80% to 90% of COVID deaths were the elderly, their death rate overall in relation to death from other factors was about the same as the general population of non-elderly.

By year-end 2021, about 825,000 Americans had died of COVID-19.1 Of these, 615,000 (75%) were elderly (persons aged 65+).  The number of deaths attributed to COVID-19 during 2020 and 2021 trailed only those due to cancer and heart disease

  FIGURE 5:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

40% of global car market is already electric vehicles & EVs are growing fast in market share (mainly from China)

 China sold 40% of global car sales and most of them are EVs

 

DOGE=IBM Nazi Database to hunt down dissenters

 Jonathan Kamens, who led cybersecurity for VA.gov, joins the show to break down his experience of being fired by DOGE and just how dangerous it is for Musk and his minions to have access to Americans’ data.

“I think both Elon Musk and Donald Trump are pretty vindictive, vengeful people, and I think that they will use the data to go after people who they consider their enemies,” Kamens warns.

He adds, “I will point out that every authoritarian regime in the world has a secret police source, of some form or another, whose job is to collect data about private citizens and build dossiers about them and to build a culture of fear in which people tattletail on their neighbors and their co-workers. I think that’s the trajectory we’re on. I think we should expect that to happen.”

 The Chilling Reason Why Elon Musk Wants Your Data: Former Federal Worker Fired by DOGE Speaks Out

 Meanwhile cartel criminals have taken control of south America already

Drones are not routine weapons and transportation tools in South America - by the criminal cartels.

 

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Did the Piri Reis map of 1513 really refer to Antarctica? (hint, no)

 The Piri Reis Map of 1513 by Gregory C. McIntosh

As will be discussed below, the Southern Continent on the Piri Reis map is often supposed to be a depiction of prehistoric Antarctica. Inscriptions 9 and 10, located on the supposed “Antarctica,” give details, such as the land being hot, in ruins, with large serpents, and sighted by the Portuguese, which defi- nitely do not apply to Antarctica and should cause anyone to question whether it is, indeed, Antarctica that is depicted.....
Mallery’s statements of a supposed resemblance of the coastline of the Southern Continent on the Piri Reis map to that of Antarctica beneath its ice were used by Pauwels and Bergier to argue that beings from other worlds made maps, including maps of the Antarctic coastline before it became covered in ice thousands of years ago.*? Likewise, in 1960 Donald Keyhoe restated Mal- lery’s claims to say that the Piri Reis map contains a copy of a map made thousands of years ago by aliens in a spacecraft, that Columbus had a copy of this map on his first voyage, and that this map showed the coasts of Yuca- tan, Guatemala, South America to the Straits of Magellan, and a large part of Antarctica. Mallery’s amazing theory led Charles H. Hapgood to further study the Piri Reis map and other medieval and Renaissance maps.** He agrees with Mal- lery that the only possible explanation for the apparent resemblance of the Southern Continent on the Piri Reis map to the coastline of Antarctica is that it was the product of a worldwide prehistoric civilization. In Hapgood’s book, Maps of the Ancient Sea-Kings, all of the bays, promontories, rivers, and other coastal features of the Piri Reis map are identified with actual localities, al- though Hapgood must postulate certain distortions by the original mapmakers in order to make his identifications fit. His book had a wide influence on popu- lar writers to be discussed below.** Shortly afterwards, Erich von Daniken, using material from Pauwels and Bergier, also claimed that the Piri Reis map of 1513 depicted Antarctica without ice and, therefore, incorporated a map made by aliens from other planets who traveled to Earth in prehistoric times.........
John G. Weihaupt, a geology professor (as Hapgood was), independently arrived at conclusions similar to Hapgood’s regarding the apparent correspon- dences of the delineation of Terra Australis on Renaissance maps and the actual outline of Antarctica.’ As with most researchers, however, who have presumed that the presence of a Southern Continent on a Renaissance map is a depiction of Antarctica, he seems unfamiliar with the history of the development of the The Southern Continent t+ 61 geographical theory of Terra Australis from the ancient Greeks, through the Middle Ages, to Renaissance cartography.” Not all writers who have examined the relationship of Terra Australis on the Piri Reis map to the outline of Antarctica have uncritically accepted the theo- ries of Mallery, Hapgood, Pauwels, Bergier, and von Daniken. Some, such as Clifford Wilson, Daniel Cohen, Ronald Story, William H. Stiebing Jr., and David Woodward, have attempted to present more balanced views and repre- sent that the kinds of depictions shown on the Piri Reis map are not unusual for its time and can be explained without hypothesizing about vanished civili- zations and ancient astronauts.» David C. Jolly made perhaps the most succinct critique of the Mallery—Hap- good—von Daniken theory regarding the Piri Reis map and the broader claim that Renaissance maps showing a Southern Continent, such as the Fine map of 1531, are depicting Antarctica, particularly as the theory was stated by Hapgood and Weihaupt.** Anyone who is interested in a clear-headed review of the con- troversy regarding the supposed connection between Renaissance maps and preclassical mapping techniques should read Jolly’s article. For instance, Jolly examined Hapgood’s comparison of the depiction of the Aegean Sea on the Ibn Ben Zara map of 1487 with a modern map.*> The 1487 map showed many more islands in the Aegean Sea than the modern map, and Hapgood concluded that the source map for the Aegean Sea depiction resulted from a survey made when the sea level was lower, presumably tens of thou- sands of years ago. Subsequent review has shown, however, that the modern map used by Hapgood merely happened to omit many of the smaller islands and if he had compared the 1487 map with a more complete and accurate modern map he might not have so quickly jumped to his erroneous conclu- sion. Jolly remarked that the only mystery was how Hapgood happened to obtain such a bad modern map to use for his comparison test.°* One frequently encounters sloppy scholarship like this in Hapgood’s book. Phyllis Young Forsyth, in Atlantis: The Making of Myth, examines the claim that the alleged shoreline of an ice-free Antarctica on the Piri Reis map sup- ports the assertion that Atlantis was located at the South Pole in a more tem- perate time in the past. She astutely points out that “a sixteenth-century map vaguely outlining the shores of Antarctica proves nothing at all about Atlantis” and that “the entire accuracy of the map leaves much to be desired.” *” It is well to keep these words in mind when examining the more imaginative claims regarding the Piri Reis map.

 ................

 One of the difficulties of the Mallery-Hapgood—von Daniken theory that

the depiction of Terra Australis, or the Southern Continent, on the Piri Reis 
map is a depiction of Antarctica before it was covered in ice is that their sug- 
gested solution—that maps of Antarctica were made thousands of years ago 
by a lost civilization or by alien astronauts—is an even bigger mystery than 
the mystery it attempts to answer. The principle of parsimony precludes the 
creation of entities beyond necessity. None of these theories suggest how pre- 
classical or prehistoric maps were supposed to have survived for so long. If 
they were copied and recopied, how is it that errors apparently did not occur, 
as so often happens with the copying of manuscripts and other maps. The 
museums and libraries of the world abound with manuscripts of books and 
maps copied from others over the centuries, and we can identify and trace the 
sequence of many errors. One would expect a large number of errors to oc- 
cur ifa map of the coastline of prehistoric Antarctica were copied many times 
over thousands of years. If prehistoric and highly accurate maps had survived, 
whether in original form or in copies, until the thirteenth century and later, 
as Hapgood asserted, then one would expect to see the influence of these ac- 
curate maps upon other maps made before the thirteenth century. But we 
look in vain. All of the features of portolan charts and Renaissance maps that 
Hapgood attributes to prehistoric maps are completely absent from all prior 
mapmaking. 

Perhaps the supposed resemblance of this coastline on the Piri Reis map to 
that of Antarctica should be questioned. Figure 14 shows the coastline of the 
Southern Continent on the Piri Reis map superimposed over that section of 
the coastline of Antarctica believed by Mallery, Hapgood, and von Daniken to 
be depicted. The Piri Reis coastline has been redrawn to the same polar projec- 
tion as that of Antarctica, and the tropic of Capricorn has been used to prop- 
erly locate the coastline, although it must be admitted that this relies on some 
guesswork and interpretation because the Piri Reis map, being a portolan-style 
map without longitude or latitude, is not drawn to the mathematics of celestial 
coordinates, as modern maps are. 
The researches by Mallery and Hapgood into the Piri Reis map included other maps, primarily portolan charts. This examination of old maps has sub- sequently been carried on by other researchers.” This is particularly true of sixteenth-century maps that depicted Terra Australis, such as the South Polar projection map by Oronce Fine. In fig. 14 is also shown the South Polar projec- tion of the map of Fine of 1531, claimed by Hapgood and others to record an The Southern Continent + 63 actual mapping survey of Antarctica. In order to show that the outline of the Terra Australis on the Fine map “matched” the outline of the real continent of Antarctica, Hapgood had to rotate the Fine depiction 20° in longitude, drasti- cally alter its scale (Fine’s Terra Australis is nine times larger than Antarctica!), change the position of the South Pole by 1,000 miles, and omit the 900-mile- long Antarctic (or Palmer) Peninsula.® This is reminiscent of the historian who “proved” that Columbus was really Cleopatra; all he had to do was change Columbus’s name, nationality, gender, era, etc. As can easily be seen, the coast- lines from the Piri Reis map, the Fine map, and a modern map are only super- ficially similar, and they fall short of proving or even strongly suggesting that the Piri Reis map and the Fine map depict the actual outline of Antarctica. When one actually examines the map evidence presented by Mallery, Hap- good, and von Daniken, one can see that there is no basis for the excessively exuberant conclusions and assertions they made.

"I saw Blue Light everywhere" - Brahmananda David Nowe, student of Muktananda: The Sound of your own Self

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBYkAnGKJz4

Fascinating!!

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COxX_KPAy74

Better sound quality on that one. 

"There were no forms, just the infinite light of blue consciousness"

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Fascinating Money, Lies, God interview on Gaslight Nation

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VFVgoGl8X0

  Katherine Stewart, author of the new book Money, Lies, and God,

Middle Pleistocene Archaic Humans were Dark-Skinned: An African and European comparison from 400,000 years ago

 

 pdf is open access thru link

 

 Why are European "cave men" always shown to have light, "white" skin?


 It is hypothesized that these cave men developed light colored skin due to lack of sun light in the forest. But this ignores that while Neanderthals evolved in Europe they actually had non-white skin:

For example, in 2012 Caio Cerqueira and coworkers presented a survey of the genotypes of more than a hundred genetic polymorphisms thought to be associated with pigmentation of hair, skin, and eyes in the known Neandertal and Denisovan genomes. ...They found that the known Neandertal genomes had very few SNP alleles associated with light pigmentation in today's people. They suggested that Neandertals had been dark-skinned, brown or red-haired, and brown eyed.Apr 2, 2023

 https://johnhawks.net/weblog/what-color-were-neandertals/

Archaic Homo species, including the expressive morphological variability of the specimens included under the umbrella-term “Homo heidelbergensis” from Africa, Asia, and Europe. Our results support that cannot be accommodated in one same species. Additionally, we contribute to the disputable discussion about the origin of H. sapiens, adding support to an African origin for our species.

 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2950236524000033

  there is a certain proximity between neandertals and modern humans with either European and African H. heidelbergensis;

This is especially true for the Asian fossils (Lee and Hudock, 2021). Position number 4 (Roksandic et al., 2022) suggests a new taxon, Homo bodoensis, for the African and Middle Eastern Middle Pleistocene fossils. According to this proposal, Homo bodoensis would be the ancestor of Homo sapiens, most probably in Africa. In this case, the European forms should be reassigned to Homo neanderthalensis, and considered as early Neanderthals, while the Asian Middle Pleistocene fossils, particularly from China, likely represent a different lineage altogether.
Our results support position 4, namely, that H. heildelbergensis is not a valid taxonomic unit,

 ....

 Therefore, we support that Middle Pleistocene fossils from Africa and Asia should be considered as different species, Homo bodoensis and Homo daliensis, respectively. The latter suggestion is inspired by the recent proposition of Ji et al. (2021), although not based on exactly the same hipodigm as ours. The European Chibanian fossils should be kept as H. heidelbergensis, taking into account the precedence of the original proposition of Schoetensack (1908).
.............

Our results show a strong superposition of the H. sapiens individuals regardless of their geographic origin. African, Asian, and European modern humans occupy one single well-defined area in the morphospace. This pattern is in complete accordance with a common origin for living people, indicating a shared bauplan for modern humans from all around the world. In the case of a multiregional origin, it would be expected to observe a distribution of the H. sapiens specimens separated in accord with their geographic region (like the Chibanian hominins discussed above), which does not occur.
Since the earliest representatives of our species appear in Africa around 230 ka (Vidal et al., 2022), the most parsimonious hypothesis is that the emergence of H. sapiens did occur in that continent.

 ..............

departing from Homo erectus, three lineages of Chibanian hominins differentiated in Africa, Europe, and Asia: Homo bodesiensis, Homo heidelbergensis, and Homo daliensis, respectively. Although different species, these three taxa exhibited some common marked traits: large and robust skulls, flattened forehead, medium to large cranial capacity ( ± 1.200 cm3), and an accentuated supra-orbital torus. The face varied from flat to moderately expanded forward.
Homo bodesiensis gave rise to modern humans in Africa, while Homo heidelbergensis gave rise to neandertals in Europe. The transition from bodesiensis to sapiens occurred around 300 ka, while the transition from heidelbergensis to neandertals occurred around 450 ka. Homo daliensis seems to have been a coup-de-sac, despite the strong opposition of the Chinese paleoanthropological community to this idea. The first representatives of our species can be found in Africa around 230 ka, while the first representatives of neandertals can be found in Europe, between approximately 200 and 160 ka.

 ......................

 As soon as our species appeared in Africa, they started migrating out of that region, having reached the Middle East around 180 ka, and Europe at least around 200 ka, where they eventually replaced neandertals. Homo sapiens reached East Asia around 120 ka, and much probably replaced archaic humans (Homo daliensis; Homo longi) still existing in the region. During their expansion out of Africa, modern humans exchanged genes with several archaic humans still present in Europe and Asia, and possibly even in Africa. These genetic interbreeding was, however, not sufficient to change the cranial morphological pattern characterized by a short and globular neurocranium, a cranial capacity of approximately 1.350 cm3, a flat face, a distinguished chin, and a small dentition.