SIFT TOP 5 MOST POPULAR BLOG POSTS THIS MONTH - Scroll down to see the latest posts
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If the LA fires are real why are almost all the photos fake? Essentially it's the perfect example of a psyop catering for every possi...
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A lot of people avoid Facebook because it sucks, but I must admit I find it pretty entertaining sometimes. I used to post using up to fiv...
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In my post ILLUMINATING MUSIC all those music videos were chosen because I liked them, and only came to realise later that they were...
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A new year is always a good time for making changes and I decided to start over again for 2025 with an all new Blogger blog using a sligh...
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Transitioning from normie to conspiracy theorist When asked what started me off down the conspiracy rabbit hole I struggle to know where t...
Tuesday, 16 July 2024
Fluoride has been implicated in all of these diseases
CAPTAIN CHUMP GOES NEXT LEVEL
This was a really crap psyop. As usual everything that is being shown to us is part of the illusion, but at least back in the days of 911 these psyops were relatively well done - to this day researchers can't agree on whether there were zero or two planes on 911!
(I still go with two planes flown by remote control and three controlled demolitions using explosives, with no terrorists and no energy weapons, but I lost interest in 911 in 2006 after five years of talking about it)
But the trump "shooting" was not well done and whatever really happened there would have been no real bullets fired, so all the discussion is really just a distraction - it is one of the predicted fake events, and like bird flu we knew it was going to happen in some form before the US selection on Nov 5 (note that date) - they couldn't be more obvious with stuff
Has Trump now taken things right off the scale?
But the memes are hilarious and the tatts are spectacular...
The scary part is that there are people who actually believe this circus show is real...
Now just in case anyone thinks that I'm pro Biden because I keep mocking Trump:
Monday, 15 July 2024
Another Study Designed To Find No Effect
Australian study of fluoridation neurotoxicity: Streetlight Effect Fallacy
Researchers looked in the wrong place. Couldn’t find IQ loss that other studies found.
Insensitive And Unreliable Measures Of Neurotoxicity
A just-published Australian study claims to have found no link between fluoridation and harm to children’s developing brains but didn’t use any IQ tests [Do 2022]. Instead, it used parent questionnaires of child behaviors which have been found to be relatively insensitive to detecting harm from fluoride and other neurotoxic chemicals.
The study’s lead author, dentist Dr. Loc Do of Queensland University, Australia, used two parent questionnaires to see if he could detect the same neurotoxic effects in Australian children that numerous other studies have found in Canada, Mexico, China, and elsewhere. But those studies all used standard IQ-type tests. Do’s study instead used a Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), which is not a measure of intelligence or cognitive ability but is “a 25-item brief behavioral screening tool that measures children’s behaviors, emotions, and relationships.” For example, it asks parents whether their child can be described as “Kind”, “Lies”, “Bullied”, “Shares”, “Unhappy”, “Helps”, “Clingy”, and other items having little relationship to IQ [Ribeiro Santiago 2021].
Other Weaknesses: Ecological, Didn’t Account For All Fluoride Sources, Inadequate Control Of Confounders
Do’s study summary for his grant claimed his study would provide “high quality evidence” on fluoridation and intellectual development. However, it has additional important shortcomings compared to recent studies that found adverse neurotoxic effects. Do’s study, instead of using an individual-level measure of fluoride exposure, used a group-level measure (also called an ecological measure), and only tried to account for fluoride from fluoridated water, rather than all sources. This is an important weakness compared to the best studies, which either used the biomarker of urine fluoride concentration which reflects fluoride exposure from all sources, or used combined estimates of fluoride intake from drinking water and tea [Goodman 2022, Cantoral 2021, Farmus 2021, Wang 2021, Yu 2021, Zhao 2021, Till 2020, Wang 2019, Green 2019, Riddell 2019, Bashash 2018, Bashash 2017, Valdez-Jimenez 2017]. Tea has been found to be the second largest source of fluoride exposure after fluoridated water, even in a country with much lower tea consumption than Australia [Helte 2021]. The inability to account for all sources of fluoride exposure in the Do study likely further reduced the study’s ability to detect an effect of fluoride.
Another weakness of the Do study is its lack of control for potentially important confounders, which other recent studies did control for, including: lead, mercury, arsenic, PFOA, parent IQ, HOME score, gestational age, birth weight, parity, marriage status, smoking, alcohol use of mother, and Body Mass Index (BMI).
Cites Food & Pharma Industry Front-Group’s Bogus Review
More evidence of the author’s bias is found in the Do paper introduction that cites a very biased German review that concludes fluoride has no association with neurotoxicity [Guth 2020]. This is a favorite review of fluoridation defenders. But the authors of that review are closely associated with a front-group for food and pharmaceutical interests that has a history of claiming chemical food additives, genetically modified foods, and even endocrine disrupting chemicals are no problem [USRightToKnow 2022, CorporateEuropeObservatory 2012, TestBioTech 2012]. We’ll have more on those authors and their links with industry in a future bulletin.
Do’s Advocacy For Fluoridation Reveals Bias
Finally, the choice to publish Do’s paper in the fluoridation-friendly Journal of Dental Research (JDR) instead of a journal specializing in neurotoxicity or environmental health, is further evidence the Do study is biased to avoid finding an adverse effect that might threaten fluoridation. JDR is sponsored by the International Association for Dental Research (IADR), which has had a long-standing official position supporting fluoridation and claiming it is “safe and effective”. In fact, the latest update of the IADR Position Statement on fluoridation was written by Dr. Do and has outdated and misleading information about adverse effects [IADR 2021].
The Streetlight Effect Fallacy may explain how this Australian study failed to find harm to the brain from fluoridation, but another proverb summarizes what appears to be the attitude of the researchers, and of all fluoridation defenders who are trying to deny the strong scientific evidence that fluoride harms brains: See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil… about fluoridation.
Other Weaknesses: Ecological, Didn’t Account For All Fluoride Sources, Inadequate Control Of Confounders
Do’s study summary for his grant claimed his study would provide “high quality evidence” on fluoridation and intellectual development. However, it has additional important shortcomings compared to recent studies that found adverse neurotoxic effects. Do’s study, instead of using an individual-level measure of fluoride exposure, used a group-level measure (also called an ecological measure), and only tried to account for fluoride from fluoridated water, rather than all sources. This is an important weakness compared to the best studies, which either used the biomarker of urine fluoride concentration which reflects fluoride exposure from all sources, or used combined estimates of fluoride intake from drinking water and tea [Goodman 2022, Cantoral 2021, Farmus 2021, Wang 2021, Yu 2021, Zhao 2021, Till 2020, Wang 2019, Green 2019, Riddell 2019, Bashash 2018, Bashash 2017, Valdez-Jimenez 2017]. Tea has been found to be the second largest source of fluoride exposure after fluoridated water, even in a country with much lower tea consumption than Australia [Helte 2021]. The inability to account for all sources of fluoride exposure in the Do study likely further reduced the study’s ability to detect an effect of fluoride.
Another weakness of the Do study is its lack of control for potentially important confounders, which other recent studies did control for, including: lead, mercury, arsenic, PFOA, parent IQ, HOME score, gestational age, birth weight, parity, marriage status, smoking, alcohol use of mother, and Body Mass Index (BMI).
Cites Food & Pharma Industry Front-Group’s Bogus Review
More evidence of the author’s bias is found in the Do paper introduction that cites a very biased German review that concludes fluoride has no association with neurotoxicity [Guth 2020]. This is a favorite review of fluoridation defenders. But the authors of that review are closely associated with a front-group for food and pharmaceutical interests that has a history of claiming chemical food additives, genetically modified foods, and even endocrine disrupting chemicals are no problem [USRightToKnow 2022, CorporateEuropeObservatory 2012, TestBioTech 2012]. We’ll have more on those authors and their links with industry in a future bulletin.
Do’s Advocacy For Fluoridation Reveals Bias
Finally, the choice to publish Do’s paper in the fluoridation-friendly Journal of Dental Research (JDR) instead of a journal specializing in neurotoxicity or environmental health, is further evidence the Do study is biased to avoid finding an adverse effect that might threaten fluoridation. JDR is sponsored by the International Association for Dental Research (IADR), which has had a long-standing official position supporting fluoridation and claiming it is “safe and effective”. In fact, the latest update of the IADR Position Statement on fluoridation was written by Dr. Do and has outdated and misleading information about adverse effects [IADR 2021].
The Streetlight Effect Fallacy may explain how this Australian study failed to find harm to the brain from fluoridation, but another proverb summarizes what appears to be the attitude of the researchers, and of all fluoridation defenders who are trying to deny the strong scientific evidence that fluoride harms brains: See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil… about fluoridation.
This TOOL is NZ prime minister
Sunday, 14 July 2024
Saturday, 13 July 2024
MT GOX TO PAY BACK THE MISSING BITCOIN
What nature of scam is this? The official story is that Mt. Gox was a bitcoin exchange based in Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan, that was launched in 2010.
It claimed that hundreds of thousands of bitcoin—back then worth around $400 million, now worth $45 billion had been stolen in an elaborate heist. It had practically no remaining funds with which to process withdrawals.
Moving on 10 years and the story is that the Mt. Gox estate is now sitting on 200,000 bitcoin that has been recovered from a “forgotten” wallet, previously assumed by the exchange to be empty, but that had not been drained by the hackers.
Like most official stories, it's unlikely that any of this is true, so I won't even get into any of that side of things. What is interesting is the effect that this upcoming mass dumping of Bitcoin is having on the market right now in July 2024.
Not surprisingly the entire crypto market has had a big drop. I have long suspected that crypto markets are being constantly manipulated up and down by big investors like Blackrock with the goal of enabling them to buy low and sell high.
Or, given that they know in advance when each rise or fall will be, they don't even need to do that, because they can profit on the drops as well. As they are manipulating all the rises and falls, they always know what is coming.
This entire story sounds to me about as legitimate as the moon landing, or 911, or covid. But it makes no difference, the crypto markets are getting spanked right now.
Friday, 12 July 2024
Fluoride is absorbed through the skin
Fluoride is also absorbed through the skin so unless you have full household filtration you are absorbing it every time you shower...
Remembering Ian Curtis
Yesterday I posted a link to a Joy Division playing their song "Transmission" on a friends Facebook timeline - I described it as "The tightest performance of all time"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6dBt3mJtgJc
It even looks like something classic, beyond its time or place of origin even as it was a clear product of both -- one of Peter Saville's earliest and best designs, a transcription of a signal showing a star going nova, on a black embossed sleeve. If that were all Unknown Pleasures was, it wouldn't be discussed so much, but the ten songs inside, quite simply, are stone-cold landmarks, the whole album a monument to passion, energy, and cathartic despair.
The quantum leap from the earliest thrashy singles to Unknown Pleasures can be heard through every note, with Martin Hannett's deservedly famous production -- emphasizing space in the most revelatory way since the dawn of dub -- as much a hallmark as the music itself. Songs fade in behind furtive noises of motion and activity, glass breaks with the force and clarity of doom, and minimal keyboard lines add to an air of looming disaster -- something, somehow, seems to wait or lurk beyond the edge of hearing.
But even though this is Hannett's album as much as anyone's, the songs and performances are the true key. Bernard Sumner redefined heavy metal sludge as chilling feedback fear and explosive energy, Peter Hook's instantly recognizable bass work was at once warm and forbidding, and Stephen Morris' drumming smacked through the speakers above all else. Ian Curtis synthesizes and purifies every last impulse, his voice shot through with the desire first and foremost to connect, only connect -- as "Candidate" plaintively states, "I tried to get to you/You treat me like this."
Pick any song: the nervous death dance of "She's Lost Control"; the harrowing call for release "New Dawn Fades," all four members in perfect sync; the romance in hell of "Shadowplay"; "Insight" and its nervous drive toward some sort of apocalypse. All visceral, all emotional, all theatrical, all perfect -- one of the best albums ever.
Thursday, 11 July 2024
Fluoride Stupidity & Population Control
Sodium fluoride, a hazardous-waste by-product from the manufacture of aluminum, is a common ingredient in rat and cockroach poisons, anesthetics, hypnotics, psychiatric drugs, and military nerve gas. It’s historically been quite expensive to properly dispose of, until some aluminum industries with an overabundance of the stuff sold the public on the insane but highly profitable idea of selling it at a 20,000% markup, injecting it into our water supplies, and then forcing the public to DRINK it.
Independent scientific evidence repeatedly showing up over the past 50 years reveals that fluoride shortens our life span, promotes cancer and various mental disturbances, accelerates osteoporosis and broken hips in old folks, and makes us stupid, docile, and subservient.
There are reports of aluminum in the brain being a causative factor in Alzheimer’s Disease, and evidence points towards fluoride’s strong affinity for aluminum and also its ability to “trick” the blood-brain barrier by looking like the hydrogen ion, and thus allowing chemical access to brain tissue.
Wednesday, 10 July 2024
Winning the Fluoride Fight
The council is mocking us
AN IMPORTANT QUESTION
Question
for today - Would you wear these sunglasses if they could guarantee to
make you 0.000000001% more aerodynamic in the Tour de France, or would
you be fearful that they may cause people to laugh uncontrollably and
call you a numpty?