Let’s try to get ready for developments in a year that could be pivotal in history since, say, WW2. These may not be groundbreaking items, per se, but the sorts of things that cause us to look back and say, Oh, yeah.
Let’s start with some good news, courtesy of Robert Malone:
I believe this is a sign that people are catching on to the Covid Hoax. Yes, a fair amount of this could be accounted for by people saying, hey, Covid isn’t that bad, at least not in my demographic. Nevertheless, word about the connection of increased sudden deaths and other effects from the injections is filtering out to the general population. This will result in a a public more eager for information and open to dissenting views regarding the “safety and effectiveness” of these experimental medications. The hunger for information and accountability will increase—that’s my prediction. Yes, people are dumb and easily fooled, but they are catching on—to the Covid Hoax, to election hoaxes, to many of the elaborate hoaxes foisted on us for years:
They did it for money. That’s right. If it makes them sound like whores, well … And don’t forget where the Big Money to finance the global agenda is coming from—not from narrowly focused single issue groups. It’s coming from people with far reaching interests:
George Soros has an enormous, dangerous reach in the American media
Yes, it’s fair to say that much of the MSM figures are bitches for Soros, and he is working to expand that reach of his.
MRC asserts that Soros can “mold public opinion on practically every continent” because of his donations and contributions, money that he claims advances his “open society agenda,” an agenda that is radical Marxist Socialist. Open Society advocates for abortion, Marxist economics, defunding the police, lax law enforcement, open borders, aggressive (even violent) environmentalism, and LGBT activism.
In some ways he sounds almost like a libertarian. Coincidence? Sorry, not a believer—read some history.
Remember just a week or so ago I was saying that Russia’s peace terms haven’t changed from the draft treaty terms Putin presented to the collective West at the end of 2021. Basically, NATO as it existed at that time must cease to exist. What has happened since then?
That may sound bad, but it’s actually worse than that—if you’re a Neocon:
Short 🧵
So Putin and Xi had a video conference.Apparently it was all very cozy.
Against all the naïve predictions of the dopes who believed Russia/China could never be more than a strained marriage of convenience, there appears to be A LOT of romance in the relationship.
Sure, it may not last long, compared to some marriages.
But I predict it lasts at least a decade, and probably much more.
The US State Department is not pleased. It has issued “warnings” to the two lovers."Beijing claims to be neutral, but its behavior clearly shows that it continues to invest in close ties with Russia," a State Department spokesman said.
They then commanded China to cease further military support for Russia, and to stop defying US sanctions edicts.
Oh, my!Of course, here in the 21st century, any relationship would not be “modern” were it not at least a triangle.
That’s where the Persians come in.
They have also been commanded to cease further military support for Russia, and to stop defying US sanctions edicts.
Oh, my!**The Imperial Masters in Washington and London have achieved the heretofore unthinkable geopolitical folly of joining the three key Eurasian poles of power in a strong military / economic alliance, all with an explicit aim of destroying American hegemony.**
And so they will.
And there’s more, of course: Think: Saudi Arabia, Turkey, India, etc. A reminder:
The pending removal of the Turks, presumably in exchange for certain Russian –backed guarantees on security and tighter administration of the Kurdish population in northeast Syria, leaves only the Americans as illegitimate occupiers of Syrian soil today.
The American operations in their country were recently denounced by Damascus for their plundering the oil wells and harm done to the entire economy of southeastern Syria. Meanwhile, for the Turks, sensitivity to the Kurdish population in Syria is a significant contributing factor to their prickly relations with NATO generally. Ankara never accepted American sponsorship of the Syrian Kurds as a tool to be used against Damascus.
In the past few days there have been missile strikes against American forces in Syria from unidentified sources. In light of the new agreements between Turkey, Syria and Russia, we may assume that the military pressure on the Americans to evacuate will only increase in the weeks and months to come.
So, following Zelensky’s joke negotiation demands, Russia reminded the collective West that the terms for peace haven’t changed:
Russia issues list of demands it says must be met to lower tensions in Europe {flashback to 17 December 2021}
The Guardian ^ | 17 December 2021 | Andrew RothRussia has put forward a highly contentious list of security guarantees it says it wants the west to agree to in order to lower tensions in Europe and defuse the crisis over Ukraine, including many elements that have already been ruled out.
...The demands, spelled out by Moscow in full for the first time, were handed over to the US this week. They include a demand that Nato remove any troops or weapons deployed to countries that entered the alliance after 1997, which would include much of eastern Europe, including Poland, the former Soviet countries of Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, and the Balkan countries.
Russia has also demanded that Nato rule out further expansion, including the accession of Ukraine into the alliance, and that it does not hold drills without previous agreement from Russia in Ukraine, eastern Europe, in Caucasus countries such as Georgia or in Central Asia.
Now, as for the expanding missile strikes by Russia—expanding beyond the electrical grid to things like critical military infrastructure—I relocated what I read about Ukraine’s air defenses. A lot of people think of this aspect of the war in terms of places like Iraq or Syria, but neither of those countries had the support of allies like the US. People of that sort ask, Why hasn’t Russia taken out Ukraine’s air defense totally, by now. You may have seen, as I have, numerous maps tracking the flight paths of NATO radar planes, which are constantly patrolling the periphery of Ukraine, but staying out of Ukrainian airspace and, thus, immune to Russian attack. Those planes are not doing that for no particular reason, as @OrkishAmerican writes:
Ukrainian air defenses survive largely because of US/Nato assets that Russian can not attack. As a result, Ukrainian Air Defenses can stay off line, until instructed to turn on by command from US assets.
Ukrainian Air Defenses deploy large quantity of electronic decoys that create large quantity of fake targets, while at the same time real systems operate in ambush mode. They keep off and only occasionally turned on to hunt, or when instructed to do so from US assets.
This is why Iranian drones had been so effective. They are not visible to US assets, but also can not be ignored by Ukrainian Air Defenses. Ukrainian Air Defenses have to defend against them, and that gives Russian opportunity to target and destroy them.
More ducks being put in a row.
Will Schryver also makes a point that people who fail to understand that America is a global empire just don’t get—a point that globalists are eager to trade on to gaslight conservatives:
Will Schryver @imetatronink Oct 22, 2019
One thing most Americans fail to appreciate is that the rest of the world has a perfectly legitimate interest in US elections. The political dynamics of Washington affect the entire globe; the influence of the empire's domestic and foreign policies touches everyone on the planet.
Will Schryver @imetatronink Aug 6, 2019
One of the profound things I've come to see in this age of global communication is how American empire and culture influences everything everywhere. As such, people in other lands have a legitimate (and often greater) interest in what goes on in the US than Americans themselves.
And to close on a completely unrelated—whoops! It’s all related:
Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò (QTE) Dec 18, 2022
1. The events that led to the resignation of Benedict XVI still need to be clarified, but one of the members of the deep church, the deceased Cardinal Danneels admitted that he was a part of the so-called Saint Gallen Mafia, which essentially worked to bring about the “springtime of the Church” which John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s chief of staff, wrote about in his emails published by Wikileaks.
Thus there is a group of conspirators who have worked and still work in the heart of the Church for the interests of the elite. Most of them are identifiable, but the most dangerous are those who do not expose themselves, those whom the newspaper never mentions. They will not hesitate to force Bergoglio to resign also, just like Ratzinger, if he does not obey their orders.
They would like to transform the Vatican into a retirement home for popes emeriti, demolishing the papacy and securing power: exactly the same as what happens in the deep state, where, as I have already said, Biden is the equivalent of Bergoglio.
I think the tide may be "turning" depending on where you live, or personal circumstances.
I found out this week that the kidney disease I have lived with for 35 years has progressed to the point I need transplant.
Just got word from the transplant team - operating out of one of the top hospitals in the midwest, and is world class...that to be considered I have to have all 3 mRNA covid shots from either Pfizer or Moderna.
We were shocked by this, but even more so that the letter sent to us said "The MO/KS Departments of Health show NO vaccinations."
So, the Government IS tracking, and IS sharing personal health data without ANY consent when it comes to Covid.
I have no doubt we'll find another route, but wow...it appears we are well down the path to social credit scoring.
<<It’s all related>>
Ain't it just! Another stellar post and many thanks for all of them Mark, a Happy New Year to you and yours, and to the many erudite and savvy commenters here.