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- Sep 21, 2020
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Pierre Sabak, does a fabulous historical and linguistic job-- unwinding the serpent imagery found, for example, in Fauci's coat of arms.
Martin Geddis wrote:
This soft disclosure, according to @JWW427 (see above), was well in play when I was a little addicted kiddo in the 1960s, watching Star Trek. For example, after we learned of our voluntary enslavement in the first episode, The Cage and (expanded and revised as) The Menagerie (1966) and of the problems of infiltration (for example) The Enemy Within (1966), our all-American hero, Captain James T. Kirk (aye... all the key dudes, save Spock, were Scottish-- or seafaring Hebrews/Phoenicians) battles, Mano-o-Mano, Gorn in an episode called "The Arena" (1967):
Scary stuff. But, the clever humanoid defeats the terrible reptile in the end. At which point Athena/Apollo (called Metron in the show) appears, congratulates Kirk (Church) on his victory and his humanity (for Kirk doesn't kill the monster when he could).
Q tells us to enjoy the show-- soft disclosure porn. Although I haven't owned a TV in my entire adult life, I can't keep my eyes off it. Fauci is, literally, another Gorn.
Martin Geddis wrote:
Once full disclosure happens, the Western public’s trust in their governing institutions will be severely shaken. Q is preparing a small slice of the population to share the load of restoring faith in the rule of law in a post-media age. As the American Declaration of Independence asserts, when there is such an iniquitous state of affairs, “it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government."
This soft disclosure, according to @JWW427 (see above), was well in play when I was a little addicted kiddo in the 1960s, watching Star Trek. For example, after we learned of our voluntary enslavement in the first episode, The Cage and (expanded and revised as) The Menagerie (1966) and of the problems of infiltration (for example) The Enemy Within (1966), our all-American hero, Captain James T. Kirk (aye... all the key dudes, save Spock, were Scottish-- or seafaring Hebrews/Phoenicians) battles, Mano-o-Mano, Gorn in an episode called "The Arena" (1967):
Scary stuff. But, the clever humanoid defeats the terrible reptile in the end. At which point Athena/Apollo (called Metron in the show) appears, congratulates Kirk (Church) on his victory and his humanity (for Kirk doesn't kill the monster when he could).
Q tells us to enjoy the show-- soft disclosure porn. Although I haven't owned a TV in my entire adult life, I can't keep my eyes off it. Fauci is, literally, another Gorn.
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