Sveriges mest pro-kapitalistiska nätpublikation får en påminnelse om hur en fri arbetsmarknad fungerar. Där arbetsgivaren äge rätt att leda också fördela arbetet!
Arbetssökande får nobben om de nämner SD
The blog to end all blogs. Reviews and comments about all and everything. This blog is NOT affiliated with YouTube, Wikipedia, Microsoft Bing, Gemini, ChatGPT or any commercial vendor! Links don´t imply endorsement. Many posts and comments are ironic. The blogger is not responsible for comments made by others. The languages used are English and Swedish. Content warning: Essentially everything.
Sveriges mest pro-kapitalistiska nätpublikation får en påminnelse om hur en fri arbetsmarknad fungerar. Där arbetsgivaren äge rätt att leda också fördela arbetet!
Arbetssökande får nobben om de nämner SD
| Credit: Bernard Dupont |
Eftersom ni undrar är jag för republik. Talmannen kan gott vara "statsöverhuvud". All offentlig makt utgår ju som bekant från folket. Eller hur?
Tror bestämt att svenska språket just fick två nya ord. Eller nyord. Just det: kvittningskupp och kvittningskris.
Observera förresten att de två SD-vildarna röstade för övergångsreglerna. Vilket betyder att deras SD-ortodoxa nyparti är en ren bluff, LOL. Så nu vet vi det. Och sakfrågan är förstås redan bortglömd. Dags att debattera Robyns nya album igen, kanske...?
Valkampanjen har visst tjyvstartat, lagom till Valborg.
SD-avhopparna försökte stoppa skärpta krav för medborgarskap
Here´s an idea. Maybe the problems and struggles facing the people known by the Woke acronym MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+ will be taken more seriously if Canadian Woke bureucrats stop using that eminently mockable acronym, repeating it almost as a mantra or incantation.
And maybe, just maybe people will listen more if you don´t claim that said people are the victims of a "genocide", which they clearly aren´t. No genocides are taking place in Canada as we speak.
But of course the Woke won´t listen, since the incantation is the point of the exercise. I mean, otherwise they would actually have to *do* something about the MMIWG2SLGBTQQIA+ situation...
A propos a previous blog post...
In 100 years, most people will be West Africans freezing half to death in Europe, barely braving heat waves in the Middle East, or drowning in huge floods in North America. Or fighting Kazakhs and Pakistanis somewhere in Asia. Africa will have become uninhabitable by that time.
Prove me wrong.
The "nationalist" right won´t be able to stop immigration, just as the globo-liberals and the Greens won´t be able to stop climate change. In fact, none of them will even try. Not really. And none of them will be able to stop the demographic crisis, although they probably *will* try.
Prove me wrong.
| Credit: Frank Vassen |
The midterm elections probably won´t be pretty, let´s put it that way...
Voting Rights Act Supreme Court victory gets GOP giddy over saving midterms
How likely is it that the United States political/military/intelligence establishment would declassify knowledge about literal space aliens visiting Earth if it would make the entire country "come unglued"? Not very likely, obviously.
Unless it´s a conspiracy. An excuse to declare a state of emergency, perhaps?
But if *that´s* the purpose, they don´t need real info on actual aliens. They can just make some crazy shit up. And I don´t think *that* particular lie would serve them, since it probably *would* drive many people completely bonkers. Blaming everything on an Iranian drone mothership might be a better strategy by far!
So no, I´m not optimistic about disclosure. And yes, I know that Trump recently reiterated that it would happen. But then, he also said the Strait of Hormuz is open. So there´s that.
So what is Aaron Abke doing these days? I remember when he promoted ACIM and Law of One. Today, he is more into "Essene Christianity", which seems to be a modernized version of ancient Jewish Christianity. In this long video, Abke and two associates discuss their main doctrines, which they half-jokingly dub "heresies".
One central idea is that Jesus was an Essene, and that the Essenes were vegetarians. Jesus preached salvation through the Golden Rule (which included no killing or eating of animals) and didn´t see himself as ontologically "God". The Christology seems to be adoptionist. Jesus´ blood brother James was his true successor, not Peter and absolutely not Paul, whose message of atonement through the salvific death of Christ was a gross distortion of the original Jesus Way. Paul got his "gospel" from highly dubious visions and "revelations", not from Jesus or his true disciples.
The true Christians were the Ebionites, the Nazarenes and other Jewish Christian sects, which were persecuted by the emergent Catholic Church. Abke and his friends reference the "Hebrew Gospel of Matthew" and the Pseudo-Clementines, while arguing that the Bible contains numerous errors. Interestingly, they also try to argue their case in a scholarly way by referencing James Tabor (who actually appeared on Abke´s pod cast). Here and there, some *truly* heretical ideas shine through, such as a belief in reincarnation, a strong skepticism towards the Old Testament, and Law of One terminology.
One thing that struck me when watching this video is that the "Jesus Way" - despite its seemingly "liberal" theology - is actually harder in some ways than mainstream Christianity (or Churchianity). For instance, the idea that salvation comes strictly through works, that the Ten Commandments must be followed rigorously, and that vegetarianism is an absolutely central rule. The fact that Jesus and the Christians were persecuted is strongly emphasized, the persecution being the work of both the Romans, the Jewish elite, and (later) the Catholic Church (which persecuted the Jewish Christians). In many ways, the Jesus Way comes across as a rigorist sect. Their alternative to "Pauline" Christianity seems...extreme. Not sure if I would like to join!
That being said, the video is nevertheless interesting in many ways. Perhaps recommended.
- Well, I´m not quite dead yet, dudes, you tell that Nietzsche house philosopher of yours (fun house)!
I linked to this once before (in 2022), but here we go again. Is the reason why Christianity is receding that the Christian god might actually be...dead?
The death of God: A speculation
I could swear this was a Taoist criticizing Christianity, but a quick glance at this man´s YouTube channel indicates that he is really a Christian. If so, he is eminently objective here. I mean, he almost made me convert to The Way!
Three interesting videos on Chinese folk religion and its complex interaction with Buddhism and Taoism (here spelled Daoism).
The closest thing to a high god in Han folk religion, the Jade Emperor, has been appropriated by both Buddhists and Taoists. In Taoism, the Jade Emperor occupies the second rung in the celestial hierarchy, below the three Taoist high gods. In Buddhism, he is identified with Indra, the king of the devas, who is said to be a Buddhist. Perhaps in retaliation, some Jade Emperor-ists (to coin a phrase) argue that their heavenly sovereign is actually a buddha and the teacher of all bodhisattvas! Indeed, he seems to have out-Buddha´d the Buddha himself...
The second video is about Mazu, supposedly a real person (a shamaness from southern China) who became deified after her death. Today, the character of Mazu is used in PRC influence operations directed against Taiwan (where the goddess is very popular)!
The third video is about the ghost festival with the "hell money"...
I admit that Chinese popular religion isn´t really my cup of green tea, but here you go.
Vilka låtar / sånger är *egentligen* mest populära? Det verkar vara...vaggvisor! Åtminstone i Sverige där duon "Humlan Djojj" dominerar stort. Åååkej...
A disturbing but serious video about David Wilcock´s suicide. I actually watched his last pod cast (it´s still up on YouTube). I never heard about diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) until now, but it´s apparently a potentially lethal condition caused by a lack of insulin in the body. Wilcock described most of the symptoms exactly in his podcast and even said that a doctor would probably diagnose him with diabetes. He left out one salient symptom, however...
DKA can trigger psychosis.
Which seems to have happened the next day, when Wilcock called the police, said he had diabetes (!) and strongly implies that he would shoot himself. Which he subsequently did, in front of the police sent out to investigate the situation. It seems that DKA can develop very fast and become life-threatening within 24 hours. Which may explain why Wilcock could still make a podcast on the evening of April 19 and then kill himself around lunch time on April 20.
While the diagnosis DKA is (of course) speculation at this point, it certainly does fit the format. Since Wilcock was a conspiracy theorist, UFO believer and New Age prophet, his untimely death started a seemingly never-ending avalanche of speculations about foul play. Was he abducted by MIBs, killed by the Cabal, or placed in witness protection? His fans just can´t accept that his death was a very human tragedy, rather than some kind of QAnon-type martyrdom related to the Passion of Donald Trump (et cetera).
Maybe that´s the real tragedy.
Is this "the sly man"? Or maybe not, since "Nathan" just admitted that his former business (selling magical crystals for a profit) was a scam. What if some of "Nathan´s" customers sue him?
Just as I suspected, this guy is a wanna-be "cult" leader. Or "club" leader, to use his own terminology. The most charitable interpretation is that he´s into some modernized version of Advaita Vedanta or Zen. A less charitable interpretation? Think OTO, Franklin Jones, or even Gurdjieff. What is the "power" he constantly talks about? Kundalini, maybe...?
Not recommended.
LOL. Nice try, dude. What are the chances that this guy isn´t a wanne-be cult leader? At *no point* during his presentation, does he say that he´s an atheist, agnostic or skeptic. Instead, he promises to give us "power" and a "free" one-hour video. Why would the "free" part be important? Because he takes 100 dollars / hour for private consultations.
Haven´t seen his one-hour video (yet), but I will be extremely surprised if this isn´t just another "spiritual" group operating under an "anti-spiritual" moniker. To stand out from the general New Age crowd, obviously.
| - Oh no, that crazy blogger is LARP-ing as a Hindu-Buddhist again! |
Everyone complains about ChatGPT going haywire, telling people they are the Son of God and similar stuff, but "my" ChatGPT never did that. Either the free version has very good safety protocols, or most people deliberately prompt the system in a loony direction. Sure wonder which one is the most likely option?
Here is the LLM telling me that I *didn´t* have a supernatural vision, et cetera.
Does a very short glimps during a "meditation" of an ocean with large but unthreatening waves mean something?
Short answer: it can mean something—but not necessarily something specific or “objective.” The quality of the experience matters more than the image itself.
Let’s unpack it carefully.
Across many contemplative traditions, an image like this tends to reflect:
The important detail you gave is:
“large but unthreatening”
That’s quite specific. It usually points to:
In other words:
activity is present, but it’s not experienced as a problem
Very short “glimpses” like this often happen when:
So instead of a stable state, you get:
This is quite common.
It reflects a moment where:
That’s actually a meaningful shift.
The psyche sometimes uses symbolic imagery to express:
“Things are moving strongly—but you’re not overwhelmed”
That can indicate:
Some traditions would say:
And the non-threatening quality suggests:
But this should not be over-interpreted from a single glimpse.
It does NOT automatically mean:
It’s easy to inflate these things—better not to.
Instead of “what does it mean?”, a better question is:
What was the feeling tone of the experience?
From what you said:
That’s the key takeaway.
The best approach is very simple:
But also:
Just note:
“Ah—there can be movement without disturbance.”
Interestingly, this kind of image aligns more with:
But again—this is a light observation, not a conclusion.
The experience likely reflects:
a brief moment where strong inner movement was perceived without being threatening
That’s a healthy and useful shift, even if small.
No need to turn it into something bigger—just let it quietly inform your practice.
If you want, I can help you distinguish between:
They can feel similar but are quite different in practice.
| - Hello, dear Sir, some esoterick knowledge maybe? |
So I looked at the (bizarre) reactions to David Wilcock´s death from the New Age-channeling community. I won´t link, but here is a description of one particular YouTube video chosen at random. OK, maybe not entirely at random, but you get my point...
A lady who claims to be a channeler sits in apparent lotus position on the floor. She speech sounds unnatural and forced. And that´s the *real* her, not the spirit communication. She laughs constantly, despite commenting a tragic suicide. She is frequently off topic: "I actually grew up in the same small town as Charlie Kirk". And despite claiming to know who David Wilcock is, she constantly calls him "David Wilcox". And no, I didn´t misunderstand the grammar. Maybe the spirits in the netherworld can´t tell the difference between a personal name and its possessive form...
Then, the channeling session starts. The lady uses rods to speak to the spirits?! Yes, really. When the rod in her right hand points to the (her) right, that´s a "yes". And when the rod in her left hand points to (her) left, that´s a "no". The lady is a bit overeager, and sometimes knows beforehand when the "right" rod will indicate a "yes", indeed sometimes even if it doesn´t point to the right but kind of hovers in the center. Strictly speaking, however, the rods always point in different directions! Curiously, she puts the rods aside on a regular basis. Part of the trickery or self-delusion? I´ve seen better dowsers than this...
Of course, the information given is pointless and doesn´t even come from David Wilcox, sorry, Wilcock but from some guardian spirit overseeing the transition blah-blah.
OK, enough of this Tuesday aggression, needed to focus my Martian-martial energies on something!
The following is speculation. I don´t know why David Wilcock killed himself, but I suspect he wasn´t psychotic. The suicide seems pre-planned. Why else would he call the police and then wait until he was in full view of several police officers, shooting himself only then? He wanted witnesses. That way, there would be no doubt that he actually committed suicide. But why did he constantly repeat at the end of his life that suicide was a bad thing? Perhaps because he didn´t want his *followers* to kill themselves.
The following, by contrast, is not speculation. Wilcock was a conspiracy theorist. So were his fans. Inevitably, conspiracy theories about his death started to circulate even before the identity of the deceased had been officially confirmed by the Coroner´s Office. Also, Wilcock was a channel/channeller. Also inevitably, other mediums now claim to receive channelled messages from *him*. Or rather his immortal soul.
I don´t think this is a very good look for this particular spiritual community, to be honest.
Only half of this video is available for free, but I think it´s obvious where Sheridan is going with this...
Donald Trump claims that the would-be assassin in DC has written an anti-Christian manifesto and hates Christians. Maybe. However, the suspected shooter also referred to Trump as "the Anti-Christ" on the social media platform Bluesky.
Hmmm...
Pretty obvious what´s going on here, if you ask me.
An old hippie from Australia talks about his 54 years "off the grid" in Auroville in India, the intentional community founded by Aurobindo´s spiritual collaborator The Mother.
A potpourri of YouTube videos about various different topics: mushrooms control the weather, Chinese "green technology" is fake, virtual particles are real, et cetera. Enjoy!
Oh, just shut the *fuck* up. This guy claims to be Jesus (or something to that effect) but curses more than Martin Luther. OK, maybe not, but brother Martin aint The Christ, dude. "Star Soul Man" is more in Maya than the most die hard materialists, who are at least studying things which are objectively real. This man lives in a fantasy world of his own making. And he aint got no soul in his blood stream either.
"The goddess will not ask you for your passport. If you are present, she will find you".
A Spanish woman recently went viral when she was "possessed by Kali" at a traditional Hindu festival in southern India. The content-creator has a supranaturalist (or supranaturalist-sounding) explanation for the incident.
It struck me that Hindu temples - and many other religious buildings - might be built in such a way that alternate states of consciousness may be triggered naturally. Which of course doesn´t disprove that they may also be "spiritual".
Of course, a more prosaic explanation is that the Spanish woman wanted to "go native". I mean, she was wearing a red sari, had adopted a part-Indian name, and was interested in Hindu spirituality. A skeptical British reporter getting possessed by Ma Kali might have been more interesting...
Bala surrounded by parakeets and hypocoliuses. Which is supposedly the plural of hypocolius. The strangest bird-name in the English language? If you know, you know...
A footnote of sorts to the previous blog post on David Wilcock. So who was Neil Keenan, then?
Is there a conspiracy theorist named Neil Keenan who tried to sue an alleged international banking cartel?
Yes, Neil Keenan is a central figure in one of the most sprawling and elaborate conspiracy theories in the world of "alternative finance" and exopolitics.
In November 2011, Keenan filed a legal complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (Case No. 11-cv-8500), claiming that a staggering $1 trillion (and later trillions more) in financial instruments had been stolen from him and a group known as the "Dragon Family."
Keenan’s story reads like a high-stakes thriller involving ancient Asian wealth and modern banking corruption:
The Bonds: He claimed he was entrusted by the "Dragon Family" (an alleged ancient, wealthy group in Asia) with Federal Reserve bonds and other financial instruments worth billions.
The Theft: He alleged these were stolen/seized in 2009 at the Italian-Swiss border (the "Chiasso incident") by individuals linked to the Office of International Treasury Control (OITC) and the World Economic Forum.
The Cartel: Keenan sued a massive list of entities including the United Nations, the World Economic Forum, the Italian government, and various international banks, claiming they were part of a "banking cartel" or "cabal" using these stolen assets to fund a secret global government.
Keenan's narrative is a direct ancestor to the "Alliance" theories we discussed earlier:
He often spoke of Global Collateral Accounts—vast reserves of gold and wealth supposedly hidden in bunkers across Southeast Asia (particularly Indonesia).
He claimed he was working to "free" these accounts to provide humanity with free energy, debt jubilees, and new technologies, all while being protected by a secret "Alliance" of military and spiritual leaders.
Like many of these conspiracy-related legal challenges, the court case did not result in a trial or a payout:
The original lawsuit was voluntarily dismissed by Keenan in 2012, reportedly so he could refile it with "stronger evidence" and more defendants.
It never successfully moved forward in a traditional court of law, but in the world of online discourse, it became a foundational myth. For his followers, the dismissal wasn't a failure, but proof of how "deep" the conspiracy went.
American Discourse News (further called ADN) is a conspiracist YouTube channel. This video is about David Wilcock, the recently deceased New Age-UFO-conspiracist personality. ADN clearly wants to believe in Wilcock´s conspiracy theories about everything from banking cabals to UFOs. The content-creator questions whether the man´s death was really a suicide (as stated by the Boulder County police) and wonders aloud if he may still be alive.
However...
Inadvertently, the presentation rather reveals that Wilcock´s conspiracy claims were...pretty damn wild. Wilcock backed a lawsuit by a certain Neil Keenan, a conspiracy theorist who tried to sue the Cabal supposedly running the world...in a New York district court! ADN suspects that Keenan´s lawsuit was an elaborate hoax. Later, Wilcock and his friend Corey Goode (a UFO-alien contactee/abductee) worked for the alternative media outlet Gaia. However, Wilcock later resigned from the outlet, claiming that Gaia´s managers were "Luciferians" involved in paedophilia, cannibalism and human sacrifice! Gaia sued him (presumably for libel) and the court case dragged on for years.
Small wonder Wilcock had financial difficulties. He had also invested money in a company based in Niagara Falls which claims to develop new propulsion systems (UFO-related?). The company hasn´t reported any progress in decades. ADN implies that it may be another hoax.
Stranger still is the relation between Wilcock and Goode. Officially, they had a fall out after both had left Gaia. Wilcock even posted a video blaming Goode for his difficulties. However, there are indications that the rift was an elaborate ruse to trick Gaia, and that both men were actually still on good terms. Indeed, Goode was probably the first person to publicly comment on Wilcock´s suicide on YouTube. In that video, he describes himself as a long-time friend of Wilcock.
I get the impression that David Wilcock was a victim of his own conspiracist delusions, constantly staking his credibility (and his personal finances) on extremely far out claims. Judging by his last YouTube video, Wilcock believed in a QAnon-type scenario according to which Donald Trump works for the Alliance, presumably some kind of benign Space Brothers. Wilcock must have experienced a lot of cognitive dissonance when Trump attacked Iran, posted the Jesus/Anti-Christ meme on Truth Social, and so on.
The whole case is tragic. And since the man was a conspiracy theorist, inevitably there are now conspiracy theories about his death. This is probably not the last time we hear about David Wilcock...
Some interesting points in this one...
xxxx
Burchett recalled a discussion he had with a Navy admiral who told him about an aircraft they saw on sonar that was “almost as big as a football field” and “traveling over 200 miles an hour” underwater.
“We don’t have anything of that capability or that size,” Burchett said.
According to Burchett, one of the most outspoken legislators on the subject:
I’ve seen pictures and video of things that defy any reason that we have, and everybody says, ‘Well, it’s our stuff, it’s the Russians, it’s the Chinese.’ If it’s the Chinese, ma’am, they would own us. If it was the Russians, they wouldn’t be bogged down in Ukraine.
If it was ours, we would never risk our military fighting men and women in half-a-billion-dollar aircraft out with these things that they’re spotting. These things can hover for hours on end, then they can just shoot straight up, they can do angles.
In another appearence on Pierce Morgan Uncensored, the Tennessee congressman also cited the underwater craft report and said servicemen who report such things are often “pulled off the line and will get a psych evaluation.”
He also criticized a lack of transparency by the federal government, predicting material could very well still be kept secret despite President Trump’s release order.
“I feel like this is something that’s being held back for whatever reason,” Burchett told Morgan. “I have no faith in our federal government will release any of this stuff.”
xxxx
Link here:
Is Bala Tripura Sundari "based" or what? Ahem, this wasn´t what I intended when I gave Gemini the relevant prompts, but there you go...
Btw, aren´t her attributes those of Lalita Tripura Sundari?
I don´t usually link to police reports or true crime stories, but since I mentioned the death of David Wilcock and the conspiracy theories on YouTube about the same, here is the official Boulder County police timeline, plus a statement from Wilcock´s family.