A Letter From George

Dear Tom,

We sent them ten simple questions.

Ten clear, values-based questions on life, family, freedom, and truth.

And what did Tasmania’s political class do?

They ran for cover.

The Labor Party, the Liberal Party, the Greens, the Nationals, and the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers Party did not respond to our questionnaire.

Not one had the basic decency to be transparent with the public.

This isn’t just silence. It’s cowardice.

They don’t want to be accountable to you.

They don’t want to be pinned down on abortion, gender ideology in schools, parental rights, religious freedom, or the right of faith-based schools to employ staff who actually believe in their mission.

And sadly, this refusal to engage tells you everything you need to know.

Let’s be blunt: Labor and the Liberals have both abandoned our values.

Labor, under Dean Winter, has already pledged to maintain taxpayer-funded access to late-term abortion, with no conscience safeguards. They plan to criminalise prayer and counselling that doesn’t affirm gender ideology and sexuality, through a sweeping “conversion therapy” ban.

They are committed to defending Tasmania’s radical Anti-Discrimination Act, which already erodes religious liberty and offers no protection to faith-based schools trying to uphold their values. And let’s not forget, every single Labor MP voted in favour of Tasmania’s euthanasia legislation in 2021, helping to make it one of the most extreme assisted suicide laws in the country.

Labor is proudly flying the flag of the hard Left, and they’re coming for your conscience.

And the Liberals? They helped them do it.

Premier Jeremy Rockliff’s Liberals have vowed to reintroduce their own conversion-practices ban, one that opens the door to criminalising parents, priests, and counsellors who simply dare to disagree. They have refused to commit to any protections for life, parental rights, or freedom of speech.

They’ve said nothing about safeguarding the most basic freedoms for families and people of faith in this campaign. And yes, seven Liberal MPs, including then-Premier Peter Gutwein and now-Premier Jeremy Rockliff, voted in favour of the euthanasia bill in 2021. The party refused to take a stand, and that enabled the bill to pass.

Rockliff calls himself a moderate, but in reality, he’s just tagging along with the same activist agenda.

The minor parties showed us nothing better.

We expect the Greens to be against our values. The Nationals, and the Shooters, Fishers and Farmers are supposed to be conservative, but when given the opportunity to prove it, they went completely silent.

Not a word. Not a reply. Not a single answer.

They want your vote without earning your trust.

Only one independent candidate, John Macgowan in Clark, had the courage to engage with the issues, answering thoughtfully and in full. Mr Macgowan answered “Yes” to nine of our ten questions, and, while staking a personal pro-life position, he did not support rolling back abortion laws, stating he would only consider doing so if there were clear public support.

This election has revealed a brutal truth: the political establishment in Tasmania is either hostile or indifferent to your values.

They’re afraid to answer your questions because they don’t represent you.

They don’t believe in your freedom.
They don’t believe in your family.
They don’t believe in your faith.

So now, it’s up to us to make that truth known. Loudly. Publicly. Unapologetically.

Let’s show these politicians that ignoring the silent majority comes at a cost.

For life, family, and freedom,

George Christensen and the team at CitizenGO

Japan’s Shocking mRNA Vaccine Revelations: 21 Million Vaccination Records Expose Alarming Death Trends

Japan’s Shocking mRNA Vaccine Revelations: 21 Million Vaccination Records Expose Alarming Death Trends

Peak in deaths occurs 3 to 4 months after vaccination

f you thought the mRNA vaccine saga couldn’t get any wilder, Japan just dropped a bombshell that’s shaking the narrative to its core. A group of 350 Japanese volunteers, led by the United Citizens for Stopping mRNA Vaccines, has unleashed a staggering 21 million vaccination records—yes, you read that right—obtained through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. This isn’t some small-fry dataset; it’s a colossal trove of vaccination dates, lot numbers, and, most chillingly, deaths. And what it reveals? Well, let’s just say it’s not the “safe and effective” mantra we’ve been spoon-fed.

By analyzing the 21 million records, Prof Murakami of Tokyo Science University uncovered a disturbing peak in deaths 90–120 days after mRNA vaccination, with higher doses showing earlier death peaks. That’s right—folks who got more jabs died sooner, suggesting a cumulative toxicity that builds with each shot.

Murakami estimates that 600,000 to 610,000 Japanese may have died post-vaccination, a figure that aligns eerily with Japan’s excess death statistics. But here’s the kicker—why haven’t these deaths been plastered across headlines? Prof Murakami suggested that they’re happening three to four months later, slipping under the radar of official reports because doctors do not see them as cause of deaths if they are not within a few days after vaccination. The government’s not connecting the dots, folks, and it’s no surprise why. These delayed deaths don’t fit the narrative of “safe and effective.” Instead, they point to a silent crisis that’s been swept under the rug.

The good news is this: while Big Pharma pushes forward with its next pet project—the self-replicating mRNA vaccine (aka replicon vaccine)—the Japanese public isn’t buying it. Out of 4.2 million doses rolled out last October, only 10,000 were administered. That’s a measly 0.24% uptake rate. Let that sink in. The people of Japan, armed with growing skepticism and fueled by groups like the United Citizens, have rejected this experimental jab en masse. And they’re not just sitting quietly—over 100,000 signatures were submitted to Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, demanding a halt to mRNA vaccinations.

Why the resistance? The replicon vaccine, hyped as a “next-gen” solution, is already raising alarms. According to the press conference, the pharmaceutical company behind it (Meiji Seika Pharma) has admitted to higher rates of adverse effects and deaths compared to the original Pfizer and Moderna jabs. If the first round of mRNA shots was bad, this self-replicating version sounds like a sci-fi horror show. No wonder Japan’s saying, “Thanks, but no thanks.”

This isn’t just Japan’s battle—it’s a global wake-up call. The United Citizens group, with 70,000 supporters and 3,000 volunteers, is pushing for international collaboration to stop mRNA vaccines, including a planned influenza shot set for fall 2025.

The group’s database, though currently Japanese-only, is being prepped for English translation, and they’re inviting researchers worldwide to dive in.

But it’s not all smooth sailing. The group’s facing heat—legal heat. Meiji Seika Pharma has slapped a lawsuit on Congressman Kazuhiro Haraguchi and others for speaking out against the replicon vaccine. Haraguchi himself claims he developed lymphoma post-vaccination, with spike proteins found in his lymph cells. Coincidence? You tell me.

This 21-million-record bombshell isn’t just numbers on a spreadsheet—it’s lives, families, and a healthcare system that’s failed to ask the hard questions. The peak in deaths at 90–120 days, the staggering estimate of 600,000+ deaths, and the public’s rejection of the replicon jab scream one thing: people are waking up. Japan’s data, painstakingly gathered by volunteers, is a clarion call to rethink the mRNA experiment before more lives are lost.

Want to dig deeper? The database is online. Contact the United Citizens for Stopping mRNA Vaccines to join the fight. This isn’t over, folks. Share this, spread the word, and let’s keep pushing for the truth.

Because if we don’t, who will?

Signing off for now
A17

Finish reading: https://open.substack.com/pub/pharmafiles/p/japans-shocking-mrna-vaccine-revelations

Bladeless Wind Turbines

Bladeless Wind Turbines

France built a wind turbine with no blades — and no moving parts
On a windswept plateau in Normandy, engineers have unveiled one of the most elegant energy systems ever made — a wind turbine without blades. No spinning arms. No gears. No noise. Just a slender tower that quietly vibrates in the breeze — and turns those movements into clean, usable electricity.
The system is called a vortex wind generator, and it works on a principle most people have never heard of: vortex shedding. When wind flows past a vertical cylinder, it creates alternating zones of low pressure on either side, causing the structure to gently sway. That oscillation is then harvested using piezoelectric materials and magnetic induction, converting it directly into power.
Because it has no moving parts in contact — no blades, bearings, or gearboxes — this generator needs almost zero maintenance. It doesn’t grind. It doesn’t spin. It doesn’t kill birds or disturb neighbors. From a few feet away, it looks more like a minimalist art sculpture than a power system — and that’s exactly the point.
Each unit generates around 100 watts — not much on its own, but ideal for rooftops, rural sheds, off-grid homes, and places where traditional turbines can’t fit. When deployed in clusters, these silent columns form low-profile microgrids, capable of powering lights, small appliances, or emergency systems even in cloudy regions where solar doesn’t work well.
Perhaps the most revolutionary aspect is how durable and modular the system is. Without high-speed rotation or lubrication needs, the unit’s failure rate is incredibly low. It’s light, easy to transport, and requires no heavy concrete base. A farmer could install a dozen of these by hand. A refugee camp could deploy power in hours instead of months.
With France rolling out pilot projects across the countryside, this design could soon be powering homes, farms, and shelters with nothing but vibration and wind. In a world that needs quiet, modular, and ultra-low-maintenance power, the vortex turbine might be the sleekest solution yet.

Thank A Teacher

Teacher And Student

“Today, a 7-year-old told me I was useless.”
That’s how my last day as a public school teacher began.
No smirk. No attitude. Just a plain, indifferent voice—like he was commenting on the weather.
“You don’t know how to do TikTok. My mom says old people like you should retire.”
I smiled. I’ve learned not to take it personally.
But still… I felt something crack a little deeper inside.
My name is Mrs. Carter.
I’ve been teaching first grade in a small town outside Columbus, Ohio, for 36 years.
Today, I packed up my classroom for the last time.
When I started in the late ‘80s, teaching felt like a calling. A sacred bond.
We were trusted. Even admired.
We weren’t paid much, but there was respect—and that made up for a lot.
Parents brought brownies on conference nights.
Kids drew me birthday cards with misspelled words and crooked hearts.
And when little ones finally read their first sentence out loud?
There was a kind of joy no paycheck could ever match.
But something’s changed.
Slowly. Quietly. Year by year.
Until one day, I looked around my classroom and didn’t recognize the job anymore.
It’s not just the iPads and smartboards—though they’ve taken over, too.
It’s the exhaustion.
The disrespect.
The loneliness.
I used to spend evenings cutting out paper apples for bulletin boards.
Now I spend them documenting every incident on a student behavior app, just in case a parent threatens to sue.
I’ve been screamed at in front of my class.
Not by students—by parents.
One told me, “You clearly don’t know how to handle children. I watched a video of you on my son’s phone.”
He was filming me while I tried to calm another child having a meltdown.
No one asked how I was doing.
No one cared that I was holding it together with gum, caffeine, and sheer will.
Kids are different now, too.
And it’s not their fault.
They’re growing up in a world that’s too fast, too loud, too disconnected.
They come to school sleep-deprived, overstimulated, addicted to screens.
Some are angry. Some are scared.
Some don’t know how to hold a pencil, how to wait their turn, or how to say “please.”
And we’re expected to fix it all.
In 6 hours. With no aides. With 28 students. And a budget that wouldn’t buy snacks for a birthday party.
I remember when my classroom was a little haven.
We had a reading nook with bean bags.
We sang songs every morning.
We learned to be kind before we learned to multiply.
Now?
Now, I’m told to focus on “learning targets,” “data points,” and “measurable outcomes.”
My value is based on how well a 6-year-old fills in bubbles on a test in March.
I once had a principal pull me aside and say, “You’re too warm and fuzzy. This district wants results.”
As if human connection was a liability.
I kept going, though.
Because there were always moments. Small, sacred ones.
A child who whispered, “You’re like my grandma. I wish I could live with you.”
Another who left a note on my desk: “I feel safe here.”
Or the quiet boy who finally looked me in the eye and said, “I read it all by myself.”
I held onto those moments like life rafts.
Because they reminded me I was still doing something that mattered—even when the world insisted I wasn’t.
But this past year broke something in me.
Violence increased.
One child threw a chair across the room. Another threatened to “bring something from home” after being told to sit down.
My classroom phone became a hotline for behavior crises.
The guidance counselor quit in October. The substitute list was empty by November.
The burnout was so thick you could feel it in the air—like a fog of quiet despair.
And me?
I started to feel invisible. Replaceable.
Like an outdated tool in a digital world that no longer sees the need for human touch.
So today, I packed up my classroom.
I peeled faded art projects off the wall—some going back decades.
I found a box of thank-you cards from a class in 1995.
One said, “Thank you for loving me even when I was bad.”
I cried when I read that.
Because back then, being a teacher meant something.
Now, it feels like a job you’re supposed to apologize for.
There was no party. No speech.
Just a firm handshake from the new principal, who called me “Ma’am” and looked at his phone halfway through our goodbye.
I left behind my sticker box. My rocking chair. My patience.
But I took the memory of every child who ever looked at me with wonder, trust, or relief.
That’s mine. They can’t take that away.
I don’t know what’s next.
Maybe I’ll volunteer at the library. Maybe I’ll learn to bake bread from scratch.
Maybe I’ll just sit on my back porch, sipping tea, remembering a world that used to feel softer.
Because I miss it.
I miss a time when teachers were seen as partners, not punching bags.
When parents and schools worked together.
When education meant growth, not just grades.
If you’ve ever been a teacher, you know.
We didn’t do it for the summers off.
We did it for the kid who finally learned to tie his shoe.
For the one who smiled after weeks of silence.
For the ones who needed us in ways no test could measure.
We did it for love. For hope. For belief in something better.
So if you see a teacher—past or present—thank them.
Not with a mug or an apple.
With your voice. Your eyes. Your respect.
Because in a world that moves too fast, they stayed.
In a system that crumbled, they stood.
And in a society that forgot them, they remembered every child.
Let the teachers of the past know they’re not forgotten.
Let the teachers of today know they’re not alone.

The Origin Of Chips

The Origin Of Chips

When a wealthy diner insulted his cooking, chef George Crum reportedly retaliated with a razor, salt, and a potato—accidentally creating one of America’s favorite snacks.

This all happened around 1853 AD at Moon’s Lake House in Saratoga Springs, New York, where George Crum, born George Speck, worked as a chef.

The story often told is that a customer sent his French-fried potatoes back, complaining they were too thick and not salty enough.

In response, Crum is said to have sliced the potatoes paper-thin, fried them to a crisp, and deliberately oversalted them.
To his surprise, the disgruntled customer loved them, and “Saratoga Chips” were born.

However, there’s more to this tale than just a chef’s pique. Some accounts, including her own obituary, credit Crum’s sister, Kate Speck Wicks, with the invention.

Interestingly, George Crum never publicly disputed his sister’s claim during his lifetime, adding another layer to the chip’s origin.

The popular “spite” narrative, while dramatic, lacks strong contemporary documentation from the 1850s. Even the identity of the picky customer, often rumored to be Cornelius Vanderbilt, isn’t confirmed by primary sources.

Regardless of the exact catalyst, George Crum did go on to open his own successful restaurant, Crum’s House, prominently featuring these new crispy chips.

Whether born of a chef’s quick thinking, a sister’s accidental discovery, or a bit of both, the potato chip undeniably changed snacking forever.

Jet Fuel From Seawater

Jet Fuel From Seawater

A Norwegian startup is making jet fuel from captured CO₂ and ocean water — and planes are already flying on it.
On a remote airfield in Norway’s Lofoten Islands, planes are flying on something truly unheard of: synthetic jet fuel made from nothing but carbon dioxide, seawater, and renewable electricity. This climate-neutral fuel, called e-kerosene, is chemically identical to fossil jet fuel — but created from thin air and ocean mist.
The process begins by capturing CO₂ from the atmosphere using direct air capture towers powered by wind turbines. At the same time, desalinated seawater is split using electrolysis to generate hydrogen. Through Fischer-Tropsch synthesis, the CO₂ and hydrogen are converted into hydrocarbons — forming liquid jet fuel with zero net emissions.
The system, developed by a Norwegian startup called CarbonWings, operates entirely off-grid, using only local renewable energy. Unlike biofuels, it doesn’t rely on crops or land — and unlike hydrogen planes, it doesn’t require new aircraft designs. This is plug-and-play aviation, reimagined for a decarbonized world.
Test flights have already begun with commercial aircraft running a 50% blend of the fuel — and performance metrics are nearly identical to fossil-based aviation fuel. Emissions are down by over 80%, and the fuel has passed all ICAO safety standards.
Scaling up is the next challenge. The company plans to deploy coastal micro-refineries near major airports by 2027, turning stranded wind and sea access into clean jet fuel hubs. With support from the Norwegian government and EU carbon credits, full production is expected to begin within three years.
If this works, long-haul flights may no longer be climate villains — but part of the solution. And all thanks to CO₂, water, and wind.

Accomplishment vs Regret

I was thinking of how to best communicate the benefits of investing time in preserving your health rather than just doing what most people do.

In financial advisory worlds (one of my backgrounds) the power of compound interest, applied to even a small sum over decades, is well recognised as a huge lever to building wealth.

Yet most people do not maintain a consistent investment strategy as part of the management of their personal finances. So much so that the Australian government, on predicting an inability to pay pensions to support an aging population, chose to mandate compulsory superannuation contributions.

Part of this failure to predict future consequences comes from the constant dragging of attention to present time spending by people and organisations wanting to sell you their products/services.

Reports suggest the average Australian is exposed to a conservative 4,000 ads a day with some proposing it’s closer to 10,000. (https://www.mi-3.com.au/06-03-2023/bombarded-4000-ads-every-day-distraction-economy-what-key-attention-hint-its-not-making)

So one of the things you can do to improve your prediction and planning is to plan a specific time-out period at the beginning of each day to plan your day and another at the end of the day to review the day’s activities and start to plan the next day’s activities.

But I digress. Back to you and how to maintain your health.

Instead of focusing on the negatives, regarding exercise as a chore or eating healthy as a restriction on eating food that tastes good, why not maintain focus on the positives – thinking of eating healthy and exercise in terms of an investment in your ability to continue to enjoy life as you age, rather than suffering in your declining years?

Now criminals have in common at least three characteristics of which I am aware.

Low self-esteem
Inability to create
Inability to predict consequences

The low self-esteem results in a criminal being willing to contemplate and do actions a person with high self-esteem would not contemplate let alone undertake.

The inability to create results in a criminal having to steal from those who can create.

The inability to predict consequences results in a criminal not predicting they will be caught and incarcerated for their crimes.

Looking over what is euphemistically described as our current civilization, I see a lot of people not accurately predicting the consequences of their actions and suffering from that.

One of the projects I often give a person in their teens or twenties is to survey their parents, aunts and uncles and list their health issues. Figuring they have similar genetics and probably very similar diets.

Then ask the relative to share what changes they would make to prevent those health issues from developing if they had their time over again.

Now, their thoughts may not yield the entire picture so feel free to do some research to confirm/clarify/expand the measures you could take to set yourself up for a long and healthy life.

Then make a list of those changes. You could arrange them in ease of implementation or order of relative benefit.

Once you have done that, look over your list and decide what the first change will be that you will implement into your regime to prevent future health problems.

It could the the easiest change to implement or the one you think will make the biggest difference. But it should be one you can commit to implementing.

Once you have successfully incorporated that improvement into your regime, simply rinse and repeat. Pick the next one and implement it. Again, it could be the easiest or the most beneficial.

Continue doing this until you work your way through the list.

There is another way to determine what you need to do to improve your health and longevity. And get a much larger list of things you can change, add or drop to your regime. Pick up a copy of How To Live The Healthiest Life: https://howtolivethehealthiestlife.com/

Cancer Blood Test

Cancer Blood Test

France Launches World’s First Blood Test That Detects 18 Early-Stage Cancers with 93% Accuracy
In a major leap for cancer diagnostics, scientists in France have developed the first blood test capable of detecting 18 different types of cancer — all in their early stages — from a single tube of blood.
The test, called OncoSeek-FR, was developed by researchers at Institut Curie and biotech firm BioMimetix. It analyzes a signature pattern of tumor-derived extracellular vesicles — microscopic particles shed by cancer cells into the bloodstream long before symptoms appear. These vesicles carry molecular fingerprints unique to different cancers, including RNA fragments, surface proteins, and lipid markers.
What sets this breakthrough apart is its machine learning–driven spectral detection platform. Instead of targeting individual mutations, the AI identifies subtle shifts in bio-patterns across thousands of vesicle features. This allows it to distinguish between cancers such as pancreatic, ovarian, lung, breast, and brain — all in Stage I — with remarkable precision.
In a clinical trial of over 11,000 participants, the test achieved 93% sensitivity for early-stage cancers, with a false-positive rate of just 0.7%. It outperformed all current multi-cancer screening tools, including methylation-based tests and protein assays.
The test takes under 20 minutes and requires no imaging or biopsies. France is already planning nationwide rollout in 2026, focusing on high-risk populations and regions with low access to advanced screening. Global partnerships are also in development to make this tool available in developing countries.
This could become the world’s first scalable, universal cancer screening test — one that catches deadly diseases before they become incurable.

Montgomery Reef

Montgomery Reef

Imagine witnessing an entire reef rise from the ocean, as if the sea itself is draining away to reveal a hidden world beneath the waves.Montgomery Reef, off the coast of Western Australia, is a natural marvel spanning approximately 400 square kilometers. During low tide, it undergoes a breathtaking transformation—water recedes dramatically, leaving the reef towering above the surface like a lost city emerging from the deep. Cascading waterfalls spill from its edges, creating a mesmerizing scene that looks almost otherworldly. The tidal drop, ranging between 4 to 10 meters, exposes an intricate network of lagoons and sand channels, drawing an abundance of wildlife. Sea turtles glide through the shallows, blacktip reef sharks prowl for prey, and seabirds swoop in to feast on the newly exposed marine buffet. Located within the pristine Camden Sound Marine Park, Montgomery Reef is not just a geological wonder but a vital ecological hotspot, offering an unforgettable glimpse into nature’s raw power and beauty.

From National Geographic