1. Policing in the UK. This is a MUCH better than average video explaining how narratives are set in motion with state apparatchiks all ready with the role they play. Really worth seeing as opposed to the usual rage bait or colour commentary we are used to from the counter-revolutionary side.
2. Doublethink is a process of indoctrination in which subjects are expected to simultaneously accept two conflicting beliefs as truth, often at odds with their own memory or sense of reality.[1] Doublethink is related to, but differs from, hypocrisy.
Doublethink was a term created by Orwell in his book, 1984 to explain dialectical reasoning. We first truly saw it in force during Covid where contradictory events and rules made everything absurd, and yet people bought it. Wearing masks walking into a restaurant but not at the table, etc. etc. ad nauseam.
And then there is this:
Homeless defy Nova Scotia woods ban without fines
Due to severe wildfire risk, Nova Scotia is evacuating homeless residents from forested areas, though dozens are refusing to leave.
Sixty-three individuals from wooded encampments have moved to shelters or non-wooded sites, but 137 people remain in “high-risk” wooded areas, according to the Department of Opportunities and Social Development.
Nova Scotia hasn’t yet fined homeless individuals sheltering in forests, though a dozen fines have been issued to those with home addresses. Among those fined is Jeff Evely, a military veteran who intentionally incurred the fine to challenge the order in court.
Doublethink in action:
3. How did that old Dan Rather (I think it was) catch phrase go? “That’s not News, but that too is reality”
4. One of the narrative attacks being launched on Canadians to create the panopticon that will be the state soon, is that of not owning animal companions, or pets. So far it’s limited to being anti dog it seems.
There is an expression I see floating around Twitter now and again: “You can’t hate CBC enough”.
We can add this to the long list of mass line narrative attacks against th Canadian people and assaults on reality itself. This time a layered attack on reality because the Global Warming thing is itself a narrative attack and a few people owning dogs cannot possibly contribute to an event that isn’t happening, and even if it was, the percentage of effect on global temperature by the existence of dogs is not measurable if indeed there was something to measure.
CBC is deracinating Canada, its people, its culture, the people’s rights and customs as quickly as it can. Attempts to end ownership of dogs works curiously well with Islamic prohibition on dogs as well by coincidence.
5. Another excellent reason to be the 51st state:
One of the two main reasons to post this is because it also helps cement the staggering degree to which Canadian media shapes reality and forms it, with little to no connection to informing Canadians. Scratch that, in fact Canadian media DISINFORMS Canadians. Disinformation is the deliberate act of spreading untruths for the purpose of damaging a target. And clearly that is what Canadian media does on multiple fronts at once till most people cannot figure out what is real, or finds themselves in tiny bubbles of people who happen to have landed in the same exact bubble as they did after parsing each and every narrative attack to see what side they landed on.
11 YR OLD SHOOTS ILLEGALS thanks FOX NEWS for reporting it.
BUTTE , MONTANA
Shotgun preteen vs. Illegal alien Home Invaders…Two illegal aliens, Ralphel Resindez, 23, and Enrico Garza, 26, probably believed they would easily overpower home-alone 11-year-old Patricia Harrington after her father had left their two-story home. It seems the two crooks never learned two things: they were in Montana and Patricia had been a clay-shooting champion since she was nine. Patricia was in her upstairs room when the two men broke through the front door of the house. She quickly ran to her father’s room and grabbed his 12-gauge Mossberg 500 shotgun. Resindez was the first to get up to the second floor only to be the first to catch a near point blank blast of buckshot from the 11-year-old’s knee-crouch aim. He suffered fatal wounds to his abdomen and genitals. When Garza ran to the foot of the stairs, he took a blast to the left shoulder and staggered out into the …street where he bled to death before medical help could arrive. It was found out later that Resindez was armed with a stolen 45-caliber handgun he took from another home invasion robbery. That victim, 50-year-old David 0’Burien, was not so lucky. He died from stab wounds to the chest. Ever wonder why good stuff never makes NBC, CBS, PBS, MSNBC, CNN, or ABC news……..? An 11 year old girl, properly trained, defended her home, and herself……against two murderous, illegal immigrants…….and she wins. She is still alive. Now THAT is Gun Control!Thought for the day…. Calling an illegal alien an ‘undocumented immigrant’ is like calling a drug dealer an ‘unlicensed pharmacist.’I like this kind of e-mail! American citizens defending themselves and their homes.
5. For anyone who doesn’t understand that Canada is communist, or at least a nascent communist state, please contrast the story in item 4 with this one from Canada. A home owner was charged with assault and assault with a weapon for defending himself from a home invader who was a serial criminal.
I’m not sure if Ezra doesn’t get that this is part and parcel of the total negation of the concept of private property, or if Ezra things he can move that effort backwards. I hope that’s it, and I hope he is successful. Stephen Harper actually DID pass a law that allows defence of property from thieves. The story was a merchant from India or Pakistan was having his food stall robbed every day. One day he threw a hot pepper spice at the thief causing him some distress. The police arrested him and Harper personally intervened and passed a law making this a lawful act. (This is all from memory, I stand to be corrected unless it was memory holed) So we shall see how this goes.
Thank you all for checking out this site.
Richard Feynman on trees and Carbon Dioxide
Here’s a clear biography of Richard Feynman (1918–1988), one of the most celebrated physicists of the 20th century: (Grok confirms this is Feynman from a BBC documentary on the famous physicist)
Early Life
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Born: May 11, 1918, in Queens, New York City.
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Feynman grew up in a secular Jewish family. His father, Melville Feynman, was a uniform sales manager who encouraged Richard’s curiosity about science. His mother, Lucille, had a strong sense of humor that influenced his lively personality.
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As a child, he showed exceptional ability in mathematics and tinkering—building radios and even a home burglar alarm system.
Education
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Undergraduate: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he studied physics and excelled in problem-solving.
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Graduate: Princeton University, earning his Ph.D. in 1942 under John Archibald Wheeler. His doctoral thesis introduced concepts that became essential in quantum electrodynamics (QED).
World War II
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Feynman joined the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, working on theoretical problems for the atomic bomb. He became known for his problem-solving brilliance and playful, irreverent personality—even cracking safes that stored classified documents.
Academic Career
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After the war, he taught briefly at Cornell University, then moved to the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), where he spent most of his career.
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His greatest scientific achievements were in quantum electrodynamics (QED)—a framework that reconciled quantum mechanics with special relativity.
Nobel Prize & Scientific Contributions
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Nobel Prize in Physics (1965): Awarded jointly to Richard Feynman, Julian Schwinger, and Shinichiro Tomonaga for their independent formulations of QED.
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Feynman Diagrams: He invented this visual shorthand for complex particle interactions, revolutionizing theoretical physics and making abstract quantum processes intuitive.
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Contributions also include:
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Superfluidity of liquid helium.
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Parton model in particle physics (precursor to quark theory).
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Advances in quantum computing concepts and nanotechnology.
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Personality & Teaching
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Feynman was famous not only as a scientist but as a charismatic teacher and popularizer of physics. His lectures at Caltech were turned into the famous Feynman Lectures on Physics, still widely used.
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He had a flair for storytelling, humor, and unconventional hobbies: playing bongos, sketching, lock-picking, and learning languages.
Challenger Disaster
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In 1986, Feynman served on the Rogers Commission investigating the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. He memorably demonstrated the O-ring failure by dipping rubber in a glass of ice water on live TV, showing how cold compromised the shuttle’s seals.
Books & Legacy
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Feynman’s autobiographical books (Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman! and What Do You Care What Other People Think?) became bestsellers, showcasing his wit and love of adventure.
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He is remembered as one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century, as well as a unique personality who combined genius with playfulness.
Death
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Richard Feynman died on February 15, 1988, in Los Angeles, from cancer. His last words reportedly were:
“I’d hate to die twice. It’s so boring.”
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Eeyore
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