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Sometimes I think it would be pretty cool to be an influencer, with thousands of followers hanging on my every word. Not achieving this ...
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Every once in a while I find myself falling into the convoluted parallel universe known as Substack. I think Substack is a horrible platfo...
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"Asian AI dude" is the most prolific AI content generator in Youtube history, and "he" is doing Iran as well as silver...
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Guns N' Roses are looking a bit tragic these days, but t ickets to their Auckland concert are now available until sold out. (WTF?) ...
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New Zealand is a Kleptocracy, meaning "rule by thieves," a form of government where political leaders (kleptocrats) systematicall...
Tuesday, 4 February 2025
Monday, 3 February 2025
A TRIBUTE TO DAVID DEES
Normies just can’t cope with him at all. Here is one review of his art:
“David Dees believes in all the conspiracies. No, seriously. All of them. His cartoons have featured every possible conspiracy theory, and in every possible combination. You want a picture of Obama wearing a crown of thorns and smiling weirdly as he emerges from an egg labeled “Fascist World Government” perched atop a pile of gold coins, while a herd of sheep in the background hold up signs reading “O Baaa Ma!”?
Sunday, 2 February 2025
Saturday, 1 February 2025
WHY BLOG?
WHAT AM I AIMING TO ACHIEVE BY POSTING STUFF ON THE INTERNET?
We all tend to think we understand what is going on, and all the people who are levels behind ourselves in this multi level learning game are retarded. Which they are. But each time we move up a level, our old self was also retarded, compared with our present self. And hopefully that process will keep on repeating.

The past four years have been a real eye opener for me, as they have for many people. It's been one of my hobbies to post things online for over 25 years, as first started out in 1998. It was even once possible to earn some income from blogging, but if you want to post content that is not deep state approved propaganda, it's far harder now than it ever was in the past.
Over the past five years the annual hits on my old WordPress blog dropped from 4 million to only 40k - a 99% drop!

#1 TO MAKE MONEY
The blockchain platforms I used to earn some income from, have completely turned to shit, with key insider accounts controlling the payouts on the few platforms that remain. And it's safe to say if you were calling out the covidhoax and the death jabs back in 2020, you are not on the insiders reward list. In fact I'm still black listed on several platforms, including Hive where everything I post is automatically down voted.
From 2016 to 2021 I actually did make money online, some from posting, but mostly from buying and selling blockchain tokens. But those are both dead ends now, so it's safe to say I'm not doing it to earn money anymore. In fact I've lost business, and made enemies by being fairly outspoken online, particularly over the past five years. And posting stuff always takes time. Financially I would probably be better off to just shut my face and act like a normie.

#2 TO CHANGE THE WORLD
The next major reason was to "change the world". Despite being a cynical conspiracy theorist, I did set out with the hope that by posting content it would be possible to "wake up the sheeple". But this multi layered psyop we are all part of is a real mind fuck. If the sheeple haven't woken up by now, my little blog posts are not likely to change much.
My best advice at this point, is if you want to move up a level, start by going to the website of Miles Mathis and read his essays. Yes, there are hundreds of them - read at least a dozen. By that point you will be well past most people online. But that is very unlikely to be the final stage of your knowledge - it never is!
As I kept reading, and thinking about all the new information I was learning, it dawned on me that there is no way one person could do all that research and write all those essays. So "Miles Mathis" would need to be an entire team. And then it all gets very suspect. As it always does.
Yes, Miles Mathis is a shill. But reading his essays is still a great intro into seeing how they are deceiving us. They are hand feeding us a bunch of truth mixed in with all the lies.

What comes next
I don't know. The world will continue to
change with or without any input from me. So changing the world might be
an exciting idea in theory, but in practice I'm sort of beginning to
understand why all those zen guru teachers say you can only change
yourself.
#3 TO MAKE NOTES FOR MYSELF
Yes, this is probably the only one that really stacks up. The best way to get my head around something is to present it to others. And I prefer to do that in the form of a blog post. The combination of condensing ideas down to simple and easy to understand lines of text, combined with images, forces me to make my thoughts clearer. If that helps anyone else, that is a bonus. So that is the main reason I'm still posting stuff, and most definitely the reason for this post.

#4 TO HAVE FUN
Along with #3 just having fun strikes me as a really good thing to do online, and I am aiming to do this too, alongside making some good notes. If I can manage to do both that would be great. But it probably requires totally letting go of any ambitions to achieve #1 or #2. I'm still gradually letting go of all that outdated get rich and change the world crap!
Friday, 31 January 2025
EAT ZE BUGS
A Swedish company called Tebrito had a plan to produce meal-worms for insect proteins to put in human food like granola and protein bars. They got $4.2 million in investments to push this toxic "food".
Another
Swedish company called Mycorena also went bankrupt in 2024. They got
$27.8 million in investments to produce 3D printed fake meat made out of
mycelium.
It is clear that even in liberal Sweden, people do not want to eat fake food.
Go woke, go broke.
Thursday, 30 January 2025
GRAND MASTERS OF DECEPTION
In an attempt to explain the many levels of "conspiracy" research I often used to use the analogy of multiplayer online games - there are lots of levels, which ever one you get to there are more above it, and if you do ever get to the top one, another one will rapidly be created above it.
But then I had the thought, online games games have only been around for about 25 years, while "conspiracies" go back hundreds of years. And that is when I started thinking about chess.
It is said a chess grand master can anticipate all the possible moves up to seven levels ahead. Whoever is pulling the strings globally would need to be able to do that as well.
It wasn't a major jump to start wondering who all the chess grand masters actually are. And sure enough, no surprises here!
Beersheba in Israel is the city with the most chess grand masters per capita in the world
Bobby
Fischer, the highest rated player in history when he became world
champion in 1972, is believed to have had two Jewish parents, although
Fischer himself was "antisemitic" and strongly denied having a Jewish
identity.
Many others would also try to hide the fact so the actual numbers would be higher, but this is the official list of "Outstanding Jewish Chess Players" on Jewish owned Wikipedia:
Outstanding Jewish Chess Players
- Aaron (Albert) Alexandre (c. 1765–1850), German-born French-English[11]
- Simon Alapin (1856–1923), Lithuanian[12][13]
- Lev Alburt (born 1945), Russian/American[14]
- Izaak Appel (1905–1941), Polish, killed by the Nazis
- Lev Aronin (1920–1982), Russian/Soviet[14]
- Levon Aronian (born 1982), Armenian grandmaster, World Cup champion twice[15]
- Arnold Aurbach (c. 1888–1952), Polish-born French[citation needed]
- Yuri Averbakh (1922–2022), Russian[16]
- Mary Weiser Bain (1904–1972), born in Hungary (now sub-Carpathian Ukraine), immigrated to the United States as a teenager, first American woman to represent the U.S. in an organized chess competition, won the U.S. Women's Chess Championship in 1951, awarded the Woman International Master title in 1952
- Anjelina Belakovskaia (born 1969), Ukrainian-born US woman grandmaster[citation needed]
- Alexander Beliavsky (born 1953), Ukrainian-born Soviet/Slovenian grandmaster[14]
- Joel Benjamin (born 1964), American grandmaster
- Ossip Bernstein (1882–1962), Ukrainian-born French grandmaster[12]
- Arthur Bisguier (1929–2017), US grandmaster[17]
- Abram Blass (1896–1971), Polish
- Isaac Boleslavsky (1919–1977), Ukrainian-born Soviet grandmaster[18]
- Mikhail Botvinnik (1911–1995), Russian/Soviet grandmaster and 6th undisputed world champion[17]
- Gyula Breyer (1893–1921), Hungarian, pioneer of the hypermodern school, important chess theorist, blindfold simultaneous record holder
- David Bronstein (1924–2006), Ukrainian-born Soviet grandmaster,[12]
- Oscar Chajes (1873–1928), Ukrainian/Polish/Austrian-born US[19]
- Vitaly Chekhover (1908–1965), Russian[citation needed]
- Isabelle Choko (1928–2023), Polish-French concentration camp survivor[20]
- Erich Cohn (1884–1918), German[21]
- Wilhelm Cohn (1859–1913), German[22]
- Moshe Czerniak (1910–1984), Polish-born Israeli[23]
- Arnold Denker (1914–2005), US grandmaster[24]
- Arthur Dunkelblum (1906–1979), Polish-born Belgian[25]
- Mark Dvoretsky (1947–2016), noted Russian trainer and international master[26]
- Roman Dzindzichashvili (born 1944), Georgian-born Israeli American grandmaster[citation needed]
- Vereslav Eingorn (born 1956), Ukrainian grandmaster
- Berthold Englisch (1851–1897), Austrian[27]
- Larry Evans (1932–2010), US grandmaster[17]
- RafaÅ‚ Feinmesser (1895–?), Polish, killed in Warsaw during Holocaust
- Reuben Fine (1914–1993), US grandmaster[28]
- Bobby Fischer (1943–2008), US grandmaster and 11th undisputed world champion[17]
- Alexander Flamberg (1880–1926), Polish[29]
- Salo Flohr (1908–1983), Ukrainian-born Czech and Soviet grandmaster[30]
- Henryk Friedman (1903–1942), Polish, killed by the Nazis
- Paulino Frydman (1905–1982), Polish-born Argentine[12]
- Boris Gelfand (born 1968), Belarusian-born Israeli grandmaster, World Cup champion[14]
- Efim Geller (1925–1998), Ukrainian-born Soviet grandmaster[17]
- Harry Golombek (1911–1995), English[17]
- Eduard Gufeld (1936–2002), Ukrainian grandmaster[31]
- Boris Gulko (born 1947), German-born Russian US grandmaster[32]
- Isidor Gunsberg (1854–1930), Hungarian-born English[17]
- Ilya Gurevich (born 1972), Russian-born US grandmaster and junior World champion[33]
- Mikhail Gurevich (born 1959), Ukrainian-born Russian Turkish grandmaster[14]
- Dmitry Gurevich Born in 1956, Russian/American grandmaster
- Lev Gutman (born 1945), Latvian-born Israeli German grandmaster[34]
- Daniel Harrwitz (1821–1884), Prussian/Polish/German-born English French[35]
- Israel Horowitz (1907–1973), US[17]
- Bernhard Horwitz (1807–1885), German-born English[17]
- Dawid Janowski (1868–1927), Belarusian/Polish-born French grandmaster[30]
- Max Judd (1851–1906), US[17]
- Gregory Kaidanov (born 1959), Ukrainian-born Russian US grandmaster[36]
- Julio Kaplan (born 1950), Argentine-born Puerto Rican US grandmaster and World junior champion[12]
- Mona May Karff (1908–1998), Moldovan-born US woman master[17]
- Isaac Kashdan (1905–1985), US grandmaster[12]
- Garry Kasparov (born 1963), Russian grandmaster, former 13th undisputed world champion
- Alexander Khalifman (born 1966), Russian grandmaster and World champion[37]
- StanisÅ‚aw Kohn (1895–1940), Polish, killed by the Nazis
- Ignatz von Kolisch (1837–1889), Hungarian/Slovakian-born Austrian grandmaster[17]
- George Koltanowski (1903–2000), Belgian-born US grandmaster[17]
- Viktor Korchnoi (1931–2016), Russian-born grandmaster
- Yair Kraidman (born 1932), Israeli grandmaster[38]
- Leon Kremer (1901–1941), Polish
- Abraham Kupchik (1892–1970), Belarusian/Polish-born US[17]
- Alla Kushnir (1941–2013), Russian Israeli woman grandmaster[17]
- Salo Landau (1903–1944), Polish-born Dutch, killed by the Nazis[39]
- Berthold Lasker (1860–1928), Prussian/German/Polish-born master, elder brother of Emanuel Lasker
- Edward Lasker (1885–1981), Polish/German-born US[40]
- Emanuel Lasker (1868–1941), Prussian/German/Polish-born US grandmaster and 2nd undisputed world champion[17]
- Anatoly Lein (1931–2018), Russian/Soviet/American grandmaster[14]
- Konstantin Lerner (1950–2011), Ukrainian/Israeli grandmaster
- Grigory Levenfish (1889–1961), Polish/Russian-born grandmaster[41]
- Irina Levitina (born 1954), Russian-born US woman grandmaster[17]
- Vladimir Liberzon (1937–1996), Russian-born Israeli grandmaster[42]
- Andor Lilienthal (1911–2010), Russian-born Hungarian/Soviet grandmaster[43]
- Samuel Lipschütz (1863–1905), Austria-Hungary/American[14]
- Johann Löwenthal (1810–1876), Hungarian-born US English[17]
- Moishe Lowtzky (1881–1940), Ukrainian-born Polish, killed by Nazis[citation needed]
- Gyula Makovetz (1860–1903), Hungarian[citation needed]
- Jonathan Mestel (born 1957), English grandmaster and World U-16 champion[citation needed]
- Houshang Mashian (born 1938), Iranian-Israeli chess master
- Jacques Mieses (1865–1954), German-born English grandmaster[17]
- Miguel Najdorf (1910–1997), Polish-born Polish/Argentine grandmaster[17]
- Daniel Naroditsky (born 1995), American grandmaster and chess streamer[44]
- Ian Nepomniachtchi (born 1990), Russian grandmaster[43]
- Aron Nimzowitsch (1886–1935), Latvian-born Danish[30]
- IsaÃas Pleci (1907–1979), Argentine[45]
- Judit Polgár (born 1976), Hungarian grandmaster[17]
- Susan Polgár (born 1969), Hungarian-born US grandmaster and World champion[46]
- Zsófia Polgár (born 1974), Hungarian-born Israeli international master[17]
- Lev Polugaevsky (1934–1995), Belarusian/Soviet grandmaster[47]
- Dawid Przepiórka (1880–1940), Polish, killed by Nazis[12]
- Lev Psakhis (born 1958), Russian/Soviet/Israeli grandmaster[14]
- Abram Rabinovich (1878–1943), Lithuanian/Russian[14]
- Ilya Rabinovich (1891–1942), Russian[14]
- Teimour Radjabov (born 1987), Azerbaijani grandmaster[14]
- Nukhim Rashkovsky (1946–2023), Russian grandmaster[14]
- Éloi Relange (born 1976), French grandmaster[14]
- Samuel Reshevsky (1911–1992), Polish-born US grandmaster[48]
- Richard Réti (1889–1929), Slovakian/Hungarian-born Czech[30]
- Maxim Rodshtein (born 1989), Israeli U-16 World champion[49]
- Kenneth Rogoff (born 1953), US grandmaster[citation needed]
- Samuel Rosenthal (1837–1902), Polish-born French[22]
- Eduardas Rozentalis (born 1963), Lithuanian grandmaster[14]
- Levy Rozman (born 1995), American chess master
- Akiba Rubinstein (1880–1961), Polish grandmaster[48]
- Gersz Salwe (1862–1920), Polish grandmaster[12]
- Jennifer Shahade (born 1980), American chess player, poker player, commentator and writer[50]
- Leonid Shamkovich (1923–2005), Soviet/Israeli/Canadian/American grandmaster
- Yury Shulman (born 1975), Belarusian/Soviet/American grandmaster
- Gennady Sosonko (born 1943), Russian-born Dutch grandmaster[51]
- Jon Speelman (born 1956), English grandmaster[12]
- Rudolf Spielmann (1883–1942), Austrian-born Swedish[30]
- Leonid Stein (1934–1973), Ukrainian-born Russian grandmaster[52]
- Endre Steiner (1901–1944), Hungarian[citation needed], killed by the Nazis
- Herman Steiner (1905–1955), Slovakian/Hungarian-born US[53]
- Lajos Steiner (1903–1975), Romanian/Hungarian-born Australian[54]
- Wilhelm Steinitz (1836–1900), Czech-born Austrian and US grandmaster and 1st undisputed world champion[12]
- Mark Stolberg (1922–1942), Russian
- Emil Sutovsky (born 1977), Israeli grandmaster[55]
- Peter Svidler (born 1976), Russian grandmaster, World Cup champion[14]
- László Szabó (1917–1998), Hungarian grandmaster[56]
- Mark Taimanov (1926–2016), Soviet/Russian grandmaster[57]
- Mikhail Tal (1936–1992), Soviet/Latvian grandmaster and 8th undisputed world champion[12]
- Siegbert Tarrasch (1862–1934), Polish/German grandmaster and Senior World champion[58]
- Savielly Tartakower (1887–1956), Russian-born Austrian/Polish/French grandmaster[48]
- Anna Ushenina (born 1985), Ukraine-born Women's World Champion[59]
- Anatoly Vaisser (born 1949), Kazakh-born Soviet/French grandmaster[14]
- Joshua Waitzkin (born 1976), American Junior Champion and martial arts champion
- Max Weiss (1857–1927), Slovakian/Hungarian-born Austrian[17]
- Simon Winawer (1838–1919), Polish[17]
- Leonid Yudasin (born 1959), Russian-born Israeli grandmaster[60]
- Tatiana Zatulovskaya (1935–2017), Azerbaijani-born Russian Israeli woman grandmaster[12]
- Johannes Zukertort (1842–1888), Polish-born German English[17]







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