Sunday, April 26, 2026

Current mood(?)

 


 

Tjolahoppsan

 

Credit: Andy Reago, Chrissy McClarren

 

Credit: Aftonbladet

Och vem fan tvingar dig? 

Trump can´t meme (part 666)

 


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. 

Ignorance is bliss

 

Credit: desertnaturalist

Apparently, they tried to shoot Donald Trump again. I admit I had no idea...until a few minutes ago.

Ignorance is bliss.  

Off the grid

 


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 little bit of everything

 










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!

Star soul man

 



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.

Spanish woman possessed by Kali

 


"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... 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Hypocoliuses

 


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... 

Dragon Family

 


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."

1. The Core Narrative

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.

2. Connection to "The Alliance"

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.

3. The Outcome of the Lawsuit

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.