William Hutchings

William Hutchings

In 1864, in the middle of the Civil War, a photographer set up his camera in front of an old man in Maine and captured something impossible:

A living eyewitness to the American Revolution — staring straight into the lens of the future.

His name was William Hutchings.

He was born in 1764 in a log cabin on the coast of what is now Maine — long before the United States even existed as a country. His childhood was brutal. The family scraped by on the edge of survival. Some days, while digging clams along the shore, young William would grow so weak from hunger that the world would tilt sideways and he’d have to sit down in the sand.

Then the British came.

They seized the nearby town of Castine during the Revolutionary War. William’s family became refugees. At just fifteen years old — a boy who had never traveled more than twenty miles from home — he picked up a musket and enlisted with the Massachusetts coast defense forces.

His only real taste of combat came during the disastrous Penobscot Expedition. The Americans were routed. William was captured. By every reasonable measure, that should have been the end of his story.

But the British officers looked at the thin, frightened boy standing before them and made an unexpected decision. They let him go.

William walked home.

The war ended. The fragile new nation slowly took shape. He married a woman named Mercy, built a farm overlooking Penobscot Bay, and raised a large family. He watched sailing ships give way to steamboats. Steamboats to railroads. And when the telegraph arrived, the whole continent could suddenly speak to itself.

And William just kept living.

He outlived every signer of the Declaration of Independence. He outlived the presidents who had grown up hearing stories of the Revolution as recent news. By the 1860s, his own grandsons were carrying muskets — not against the British, but against each other in a Civil War that split the country he had helped create.

Yet still, William Hutchings lived.

In 1864, when he was 100 years old, a minister from Connecticut named Elias Hillard arrived at his door carrying a camera. The old man sat quietly while the photographer set up his equipment. He looked into the lens with calm, steady eyes — the same eyes that had once stared down British soldiers on the Maine shoreline.

That photograph still exists.

A man born before the Revolution, before the Constitution, before the United States itself, captured forever in black and white — looking directly into a technology that would carry his image across centuries.

William Hutchings died two years later in 1866, at the age of 101. He was buried on the same farm where, as a hungry boy, he once dug clams just to survive.

We talk about history like it belongs to distant, mythical figures. But somewhere in an archive there is a real photograph. A real face. A man who stood on the deck of history and refused to leave it.

For one quiet moment in 1864, the American Revolution looked straight into the camera of the future — and didn’t blink.

Erin Brockovich

Erin Brockovich

In 1993, a file clerk with no college degree, no law training, and three kids to feed was handed a real estate file.

Inside were medical records.

That made no sense.

Her name was Erin Brockovich, and at that point, life had already hit her hard. Married young. Divorced twice before 30. Working retail jobs, waitressing, anything that kept food on the table.

By 1991, she was filing paperwork at a small California law firm, answering phones and barely covering rent.

Then came the file from a tiny desert town called Hinkley.

She kept reading. Then pulled more files. Same town. Different families. Cancer. Tumors. Miscarriages. Far too many for a place that small.

Something was wrong in Hinkley.

Everybody seemed sick.

Erin started calling residents. Every conversation sounded the same. Someone had cancer. Someone had died young. Someone couldn’t have children.

Then she found letters from Pacific Gas and Electric.

PG&E mentioned chromium in the water—chromium 3, they claimed. Harmless. Completely safe.

But Erin got suspicious.

She went to the library and taught herself everything she could about chromium. There were two forms. Chromium 3 was harmless.

Chromium 6 caused cancer.

That discovery changed everything.

Digging through PG&E’s internal records, she uncovered memos between engineers. They knew it was chromium 6 all along. They had known since 1965, while telling the town there was nothing to fear.

For years, PG&E used chromium 6 in cooling towers, dumping contaminated wastewater into open ponds with nothing protecting the groundwater beneath. Hundreds of millions of gallons seeped into the water Hinkley families drank every day.

Engineers raised alarms.

Management buried them.

And for decades, people kept drinking poisoned water without knowing why they were getting sick.

Erin drove to Hinkley herself, knocking door to door. A woman with breast cancer at 30. A man with a brain tumor at 40. Couples shattered by repeated miscarriages. Children suffering constant nosebleeds.

She asked every family one question: do you want to sue?

More than 600 said yes.

PG&E responded with powerful attorneys and endless excuses, blaming smoking, diet, anything except their own deception.

Then, on July 2, 1996, the company settled.

$333 million. The largest direct-action lawsuit settlement in American history at the time.

A single mother with no law degree had uncovered a forty-year cover-up hiding inside an ordinary file.

Erin Brockovich proved that sometimes the most dangerous thing in the world is an ordinary person who refuses to stop asking questions.

Harry Markopolos

Harry Markopolos
(Tom: Yet another exmaple of how if something is too good to be true it probably is and if you trust the system to look after your interests, you are almost certain to be let down.)

A Boston financial analyst walked into the SEC with ironclad mathematical proof that Bernie Madoff was running the biggest Ponzi scheme in history. He did it five separate times over nine years. They ignored him every single time.

His name was Harry Markopolos.

In 1999, his boss at a small investment firm asked him to analyze Bernie Madoff’s fund. Madoff was a Wall Street legend — former NASDAQ chairman, smooth, connected, and delivering impossibly steady returns no matter what the market did. Up 10-12% every year like clockwork. Harry looked at the numbers for four hours and knew something was deeply wrong.

The returns were mathematically impossible. They looked like a perfect 45-degree line on a graph — something that only exists in textbooks, not real markets. Either Madoff was front-running trades illegally or it was a massive Ponzi scheme. There was no third option.

Harry showed his boss. They brought in colleagues. Everyone agreed: this was fraud. So in May 2000, Harry did what any responsible person would do. He walked into the SEC’s Boston office with an eight-page report full of clear math and told them exactly where to look.

They did nothing.

He submitted again in October 2001. More detail. More proof. Ignored.

In 2005 he sent his strongest report yet — twenty-one pages titled “The World’s Largest Hedge Fund is a Fraud.” Seventeen red flags. Two possible explanations. Both felonies. This time he sent it to SEC headquarters in Washington.

The SEC sent a couple of junior staffers to talk to Madoff. Madoff charmed them. Case closed.

Harry submitted again in 2007. Still ignored.

By 2008 he had delivered five detailed warnings over nine years. He was scared the whole time. He believed Madoff had ties to organized crime. He varied his route to work. He slept with a gun next to his bed.

Then the financial crisis hit. Investors started asking for their money back. Madoff had no real investments — just new money paying off old investors. The whole thing collapsed. On December 10, 2008, Madoff finally confessed to his sons. They called the FBI the next morning.

The SEC didn’t catch Bernie Madoff. His own family did.

The damage was staggering. $65 billion gone. Thousands of victims wiped out — retirees, charities, Holocaust survivors like Elie Wiesel who lost everything. At least two people connected to the fraud died by suicide.

In February 2009, Harry testified before Congress. He laid out exactly how the SEC had failed for nearly a decade. The agency later investigated itself and admitted they had received credible warnings as far back as 1992 but never acted.

If they had listened to Harry’s first report in 2000, Madoff might have been stopped at around $7 billion. By the time his sons turned him in, it was $65 billion.

Five reports. Nine years. Fifty-eight extra billion dollars stolen because regulators couldn’t be bothered to check the math.

Bernie Madoff died in prison in 2021. The SEC officials who ignored Harry Markopolos five times kept their jobs and pensions.

Some of the biggest disasters in history aren’t caused by evil geniuses. They’re caused by people who see the warning signs and simply choose not to look.

Legal Government Floods

Legal Government Floods

p>While the country was watching the Farrer byelection over the weekend, Premier Minns and Water Minister Rose Jackson quietly pushed the Water Management Amendment (Easements for Inundation) Bill 2026 through the Legislative Council on 7 May, with no stakeholder consultation, no warning to the farmers it will hit, and no compensation written into the law for the damage it will cause.

What this Bill does, in plain English, is give Water NSW the power to flood private farms whenever it wants, without ever having to ask the owner for permission. The person who owns the land now has less control over their own property than a bureaucrat sitting in an office in Sydney. That is the end of private property in rural Australia.

If a Premier decided he could flood your suburban house any time he liked and never have to ask permission or pay you a cent for the damage, every street in this country would be in revolt. That is exactly what this Government is doing to us in the bush, and they are doing it while the cameras are pointed somewhere else.

We don’t live in Russia or China, we live in Australia, where governments are meant to act decently and fairly, and where private property is meant to mean something. If Labor gets away with taking control of our farms, no one’s home is safe.

The Post-Spike Blind Spot

Why Long COVID, vaccine injury, and nattokinase deserve a more honest conversation

Covid Jab Spike

A meaningful share of what is currently labeled “Long COVID” may be better understood as a post-spike syndrome — one that can follow infection, vaccination, or both. The evidence is no longer thin enough to ignore, and the intervention with the strongest mechanistic fit happens to be a fermented soybean enzyme that no one can patent.

https://open.substack.com/pub/sayerji/p/the-post-spike-blind-spot

This is a great article, well worth reading, and a vindication and validation of my efforts to help the harmed with my solutions:

https://www.healthelicious.com.au/NutriBlast-Anti-Spike.html

https://www.healthelicious.com.au/NutriBlast_DNA_Heart_Mitochondria.html

Quote of the Day

“You cannot be a good mountaineer, however great your ability, unless you are cheerful and have the spirit of comradeship. Friends are as important as achievement. …teamwork is the one key to success and that selfishness only makes a man small. No man, on a mountain or elsewhere, gets more out of anything than he puts into it. Be great, make others great.” — Tenzing Norgay Sherpa, Tiger of the Snows.

J. R. R. Tolkien – Lord Of The Rings

J. R. R. Tolkien - Lord Of The Rings

Oxford University, early 1930s. Professor J.R.R. Tolkien sat at his desk with a stack of student examination papers that needed grading.

One student had left a page completely blank.

Tolkien stared at that empty page. Then, instead of writing a grade, he wrote something else:

“In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.”

He had no idea what a hobbit was. He’d never heard the word before. It simply appeared in his mind, fully formed, demanding to be written.

The sentence wouldn’t leave him alone.

What kind of hole? What sort of creature was a hobbit? Why did it live underground?

Tolkien was a philologist—a scholar of languages and words. His brain didn’t work like most people’s. When he encountered a word, even one he’d invented, he needed to know its etymology, its grammar, its place in linguistic history.

So he started building backward.

If hobbits existed, they needed a language. If they had a language, it needed rules, structure, historical development. If they lived in holes, those holes needed architecture. If they had architecture, they had culture. If they had culture, they had history.

The hole became a comfortable home called Bag End, built into a hillside in a place called the Shire. The hobbit became Bilbo Baggins. The adventure became The Hobbit, published in 1937.

It was an immediate success. Children loved it. Adults loved it. The publisher wanted more.

“Write us a sequel,” they said.

Tolkien agreed. He thought it would take a year, maybe two.

It took seventeen.

The Lord of the Rings wasn’t written in some isolated writer’s retreat. Tolkien had a full-time job teaching at Oxford. He had a wife and four children. He had lectures to prepare, academic papers to write, departmental meetings to attend.

He wrote in the margins of his life.

Early mornings before breakfast. Late nights after the children were asleep. Weekends when the grading was finally done. He wrote by hand, in ink, because typewriters felt wrong for Middle-earth. He wrote multiple drafts of every chapter because he couldn’t move forward until every sentence was exact.

And he didn’t just write the story. He built the world underneath it.

He drew maps—detailed, to-scale maps—because he needed to know the precise distance from the Shire to Mordor before he could calculate how many days the journey would take. He created timelines that synchronized across multiple storylines happening simultaneously in different locations. He tracked the phases of the moon. He made sure the weather patterns matched the geography.

He invented languages—complete with grammar rules, verb conjugations, phonetic shifts across fictional centuries. Elvish wasn’t a few random phrases; it was a functioning linguistic system with dialects.

He wrote family trees going back thousands of years for characters who appeared in one chapter.

This wasn’t creativity run wild. This was a philologist treating his fictional world with the same rigour he applied to Old English manuscripts.

His friends thought he was insane. C.S. Lewis, who loved the story, begged him to just finish it already. But Tolkien couldn’t. Every time he thought he was done, he’d realize the Second Age of Middle-earth’s history didn’t align properly with events in the Third Age, or that the route the Fellowship took through Moria didn’t match the map, or that the sunset times were wrong for that latitude.

So he’d revise. Again.

The manuscript was finally completed in 1949—twelve years after he’d started.

Then came the next battle: publication.

Post-war paper shortages made printing expensive. Publishers were nervous about a 1,200-page fantasy novel from an Oxford professor. Tolkien wanted all three volumes released together as one work. The publisher insisted on splitting it into three books released separately.

They compromised. Three volumes, released within one year: The Fellowship of the Ring in July 1954, The Two Towers in November 1954, The Return of the King in October 1955.

Initial reviews were mixed. Some critics dismissed it as juvenile escapism. Edmund Wilson, one of America’s most respected literary critics, called it “balderdash.”

Readers disagreed.

The Lord of the Rings sold steadily, then explosively. By the 1960s, it had become a cultural phenomenon on college campuses. By the 1970s, it had created the modern fantasy genre. By the 2000s, it had become a film trilogy that won 17 Academy Awards.

To date, it has sold over 150 million copies and been translated into dozens of languages.

Every fantasy quest written after 1954—every invented world, every dark lord, every fellowship of unlikely heroes—exists because Tolkien spent seventeen years obsessing over a sentence he wrote on a blank exam paper.

Think about that. One moment of distraction. One mysterious sentence with no plan behind it. And the discipline—the almost pathological discipline—to follow that sentence wherever it led, no matter how long it took.

Tolkien didn’t write The Lord of the Rings quickly and hope readers would forgive the inconsistencies. He wrote it slowly, meticulously, with obsessive attention to detail that most people thought was excessive.

But that’s exactly why it worked.

Middle-earth feels real because Tolkien built it the way our world was built—with geography that makes sense, languages that evolved naturally, history that has consequences, cultures that developed from logical origins.

Readers feel the weight of that reality even if they never consciously notice it. They sense they’re visiting a place that existed before the story began and will continue after it ends.

That’s the power of caring about things no one told you to care about.

The maps no one asked for. The languages no one would notice. The timelines no reader would check. Tolkien did all of it anyway because he couldn’t do it any other way.

When asked about his obsessive world-building, Tolkien said: “I wisely started with a map and made the story fit.”

He meant it literally. The map came first. The story had to earn its place in the geography.

Most writers would call that insane. Tolkien called it necessary.

And he was right.

Because seventy years later, people still argue about whether Balrogs have wings, still debate the exact route through Moria, still learn to write in Elvish script, still make pilgrimages to New Zealand to stand where the films were shot.

The world feels that real.

All of it—the entire modern fantasy genre, the films, the games, the endless inspired works—began with seven words written on a page that should have been graded instead.

“In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.”

Seventeen years of obsessive work later, the world found out what that meant.

And it’s still finding out.

The Real Truth About Health Panel

The Real Truth About Health Panel

The Real Truth About Health Panel

Three leading voices in health and science sat down together, and the conversation is one every parent needs to hear.

Jeffrey Smith joins Dr. Stephanie Seneff, one of the world’s leading researchers on glyphosate and neurological health, and Dr. Michelle Perro, integrative pediatrician and author of Making Our Children Well, for a panel discussion that pulls back the curtain on what is actually happening in our food system right now. This is the kind of conversation that rarely makes it to mainstream media.

They cover the toxins showing up in school lunches. The quiet deregulation of gene editing technologies that are reshaping crops without safety testing or labeling. The biotech lobbying that keeps these practices in place. And most importantly — what parents can do about it.

This is not a conversation about distant policy debates. Whether you’re a parent, educator, or simply someone who cares about what goes into our food supply, this panel is well worth your time. It is about what children are eating today, and what that means for their health tomorrow.

Click to view the video: https://rumble.com/v75c6pe-biotech-deception-deregulation-and-school-lunch-risks.html

Aldi Manufactured Meat

Aldi Manufactured Meat

We interrupt our regular programming to bring you a very important message. READ FOOD LABELS CAREFULLY! Your long-term health depends on it!

A friend posted: A friend bought this from Aldi in Melbourne. Read labels closely. Apparently pretty much all Aldi packaged meat is this now. (Not their butcher type stuff as much.)