
Why are media dialling back on the Covid hysteria? Is it because the “pandemic” is really over? Or is it an important part of the gaslighting process?
https://off-guardian.org/2022/01/10/what-they-really-mean-by-living-with-covid/

Tom's Blog on Life and Livingness

Why are media dialling back on the Covid hysteria? Is it because the “pandemic” is really over? Or is it an important part of the gaslighting process?
https://off-guardian.org/2022/01/10/what-they-really-mean-by-living-with-covid/

(Tom: Words fail me when the people we entrust with our health are so bloody minded as to refuse to administer life saving treatments and lie to preserve the narrative. It is beyond comprehension that those who swear to do no harm would let a person die before they would give him what would save his life.)
Sun Ng, a retired contractor from Hong Kong, traveled to Illinois to celebrate his only granddaughter’s first birthday. He got covid and was near death in a Chicago-area hospital. All other options were exhausted, but the hospital refused to give Mr. Ng a generic, FDA-approved drug with an extraordinary safety record that a doctor believed could safe his life.
Finally, a judge asked the right question about ivermectin.
“What’s the downside?”
Put another way: If a man is dying of covid in an ICU and all else has been tried, why not order a hospital to give a safe, last-ditch drug?
Edward Hospital, located near Chicago, offered three arguments as to why Sun Ng, seventy-one, should not be given ivermectin:
On each argument, DuPage County Circuit Court Judge Paul Fullerton firmly disagreed.
“I can’t think of a more extraordinary situation than when we are talking about a man’s life,” he said in a November 5 decision that is a model of rational decision-making in an irrational era.
“I am not forcing this hospital to do anything other than to step aside,” he continued in a Zoom hearing. “I am just asking—or not asking—I am ordering through the Court’s power to allow Dr. Bain to have the emergency privileges and administer this medicine.”
The hospital ultimately stepped aside. Dr. Alan Bain, an internist, administered a five-day course of 24 milligrams of ivermectin, from November 8 through November 12.
https://rescue.substack.com/p/a-judge-stands-up-to-a-hospital-step

Cheapest therapy available. Incredibly effective at extroverting your attention, lifting your spirits and calming a troubled soul. I cannot recommend it highly enough. Even if you are only mildly down, go for a walk and look at things one after another until you feel better.


(Tom: I cannot imagine more appropriate story to help us develop the right mindset to guide us to personal and collective victory over the forces that would suppress us at this time.)
The Stockdale Paradox is a concept, along with its component concept Confront the Brutal Facts, developed in the book Good to Great. Productive change begins when you confront the brutal facts. Every good-to-great company embraced what we came to call the “Stockdale Paradox”: you must maintain unwavering faith that you can and will prevail in the end, regardless of the difficulties, and at the same time, have the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.
Excerpts from Good to Great
Every good-to-great company faced significant adversity along the way to greatness, of one sort or another. … In every case, the management team responded with a powerful psychological duality. On the one hand, they stoically accepted the brutal facts of reality. On the other hand, they maintained an unwavering faith in the endgame, and a commitment to prevail as a great company despite the brutal facts. We came to call this duality the Stockdale Paradox.
The name refers to Admiral Jim Stockdale, who was the highest-ranking United States military officer in the “Hanoi Hilton” prisoner-of-war camp during the height of the Vietnam War. Tortured over twenty times during his eight-year imprisonment from 1965 to 1973, Stockdale lived out the war without any prisoner’s rights, no set release date, and no certainty as to whether he would even survive to see his family again. …
You can understand, then, my anticipation at the prospect of spending part of an afternoon with Stockdale. One of my students had written his paper on Stockdale, who happened to be a senior research fellow studying the Stoic philosophers at the Hoover Institution right across the street from my office, and Stockdale invited the two of us for lunch. In preparation, I read In Love and War, the book Stockdale and his wife had written in alternating chapters, chronicling their experiences during those eight years.
As I moved through the book, I found myself getting depressed. It just seemed so bleak—the uncertainty of his fate, the brutality of his captors, and so forth. And then, it dawned on me: “Here I am sitting in my warm and comfortable office, looking out over the beautiful Stanford campus on a beautiful Saturday afternoon. I’m getting depressed reading this, and I know the end of the story! I know that he gets out, reunites with his family, becomes a national hero, and gets to spend the later years of his life studying philosophy on this same beautiful campus. If it feels depressing for me, how on earth did he deal with it when he was actually there and did not know the end of the story?”
“I never lost faith in the end of the story,” he said, when I asked him. “I never doubted not only that I would get out, but also that I would prevail in the end and turn the experience into the defining event of my life, which, in retrospect, I would not trade.”
I didn’t say anything for many minutes, and we continued the slow walk toward the faculty club, Stockdale limping and arc-swinging his stiff leg that had never fully recovered from repeated torture. Finally, after about a hundred meters of silence, I asked, “Who didn’t make it out?”
“Oh, that’s easy,” he said. “The optimists.”
“The optimists? I don’t understand,” I said, now completely confused, given what he’d said a hundred meters earlier.
“The optimists. Oh, they were the ones who said, ‘We’re going to be out by Christmas.’ And Christmas would come, and Christmas would go. Then they’d say, ‘We’re going to be out by Easter.’ And Easter would come, and Easter would go. And then Thanksgiving, and then it would be Christmas again. And they died of a broken heart.”
Another long pause, and more walking. Then he turned to me and said, “This is a very important lesson. You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end—which you can never afford to lose—with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be.”
To this day, I carry a mental image of Stockdale admonishing the optimists: “We’re not getting out by Christmas; deal with it!”
https://www.jimcollins.com/concepts/Stockdale-Concept.html

What I find of particular interest is the much vilified as dangerous Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine sit way below the “safe and effective” polio, hepatitis and tetanus vaccines. Sort of confirms that the health “authorities” and talking heads are promoting an agenda that has little to nothing to do with the science, doesn’t it?


When I review a movie, I look for repetitive content in the movie itself (and the repetitive content shared between all screen productions) because the human subconscious is designed to track and count repetitive content….and then force you to act it out. In this way, the movies lead and program the behavior of the public. The people who rule us have a saying, “what’s on the screen in the morning will be on the street by the evening.” The video at this added link proves this conclusively.
https://bit.ly/33nC3gP
Whatever repetitive images appear on your screen, you’re going to literally act them out, outside your conscious awareness. The movie and TV screens are behavior programming tools. They’re not there to entertain you. They’re there to entrain you.
Movies and TV shows are about NOTHING other than modifying your behavior through repetitive content exposure to the subconscious mind pathway. The reason the subconscious assesses repetitive content and acts it out in this way is believed to be a survival adaptation, regarding mimicking the majority, in order to find increased safety in the bigger herd.
First thing to note…..I couldn’t get through more than 1 hour of this near 3 hour mind control buffet. The first repetitive image to appear in this movie is the most repetitive image in all screen media and that is a coffee mug. A coffee mug (with tea in it mind you) starts the movie. There’s no shortage of coffee machines, coffee cups and coffee imagery littered throughout the movie…..and in all movies. It doesn’t matter what movie you pick. The people who program your behavior don’t care what movie you pick either. All the movies have the same patterns and themes in each one. Starbuck’s coffee cups are everywhere in “Don’t Look Up”, a cabal company owned in part by Bill Gates. And Gates doesn’t need the money from you buying Starbucks coffee, he needs you caffeinated because caffeine changes brain function in a way that benefits him and his group directly. The way mind control works, if you see repetitive images of any object, you’ll embrace and engage with that object. They want you drinking coffee for very specific reasons. Click this link to explore why they want you drinking coffee or ingesting caffeine. https://bit.ly/3IdoDmt A society of coffee drinkers will have very particular brainwave patterns, which makes them easier to rule, lie to and manipulate.
The second most common theme in this film and most others (over the past 50 years) is anti male programming, white males in particular. There’s a tsunami of scenes in this movie that flood the audience’s subconscious minds with image after image of weak males, fearful males, strong women making fun of weak males and strong women dominating weak males. Mind control isn’t complex. This constant exposure to weak male role modelling forces the human subconscious of men to act out that weakness and it also forces women to hate their men, hate all men or at least hate some men…..especially if they’re white. Here’s another good video demonstration of screen images changing a human’s behavior in a predictable way…click here. https://bit.ly/3I5MWTa
Inversion programming is the name of the game in the first 50 minutes of this movie. Mission accomplished. Not sure what happens in the last 2 hours but this film is so thick with mind control cues, brainwashing and behavior modification techniques that it was hard to write them all down. Again INVERSION of the natural order was front and center, as the primary mind control mission. Rude and soulless women in power, surrounded by weak men who act hysterical and feminized at the slightest inclination of danger or stress. Every country needs a Minister of Psychology to break down the tsunami of mind control media trash fire releases rocketing out of Hollywood….which all intend on undermining the very foundations of Western civilization. Our social engineers program us through their screen productions, to act, think and talk in ways that guarantee we destroy our own society. This is Jason Christoff for The Illuminati Movie Review.

