Click here to support the Daily Grail for as little as $US1 per month on Patreon

News Briefs 18-04-2011

Resistance is NOT futile.

Thanks to @grailseeker, GrahamHancock.com, and Greg.

Quote of the Day:

Letter to the Ruling Class

You control our world. You’ve poisoned the air we breathe, contaminated the water we drink, and copyrighted the food we eat. We fight in your wars, die for your causes, and sacrifice our freedoms to protect you. You’ve liquidated our savings, destroyed our middle class, and used our tax dollars to bailout your unending greed. We are slaves to your corporations, zombies to your airwaves, servants to your decadence. You’ve stolen our elections, assassinated our leaders, and abolished our basic rights as human beings. You own our property, shipped away our jobs, and shredded our unions. You’ve profited off of disaster, destabilized our currencies, and raised our cost of living. You’ve monopolized our freedom, stripped away our education, and have almost extinguished our flame. We are hit… we are bleeding… but we ain’t got time to bleed. We will bring the giants to their knees and you will witness our revolution!

Sincerely,

The Serfs.

Attributed to Jesse Ventura.

  1. Ventura
    Jesse Ventura was a guest on the Paracast last week. You can download the show here.

    Personally I was very pleased with his position re. the problems at the Mexican border and the current war on drugs. He says he’s going to apply for the Mexican citizenship, so I’m hereby welcoming my future paisano 😉

  2. The failure is as conceptual as the person conceiving it
    Obama and the Failure of Capitalist Democracy?

    Once again, we wade into the muddy end of the pond and use one person and one concept to judge hundreds of years and people.

    Systems of government are based on concept that are then reflected by their practitioners. That a man failed does not mean that all men failed or that the whole system failed. But it does come in handy for those with a political ax to grind.

    By dulling one, you may conceptually sharpen the other.

    Regardless of the system… be it pure capitalism or socialism or anything outside or in between, it all balances on the human condition.

    Failure is our middle name. Greed is our call to fame. This stuff crosses all boundaries and corrupts even the most well-intentioned effort.

    So, yes. Maybe Obama has failed but… that does not mean that all capitalism has failed or that all democracy has failed.

    The simplistic notion being forwarded here is pretty obviously politically driven.

    1. failure
      [quote]
      Failure is our middle name.
      [/quote]
      Indeed it is. We (human societies) are very good at repeating our mistakes.

      And for those who say that capitalist democracy has failed, my challenge is: as opposed to what system? Mercantile tyrrany? Socialist anarchy?

      Every other system has failed worse.

      Of course it depends on what you call failure or success. If your objective is to enforce equality of the masses at a dirt poor level, many system employing ignorant absolute rulers work pretty well.

    2. the system
      I don’t think the video posits that, in general, Obama has failed, capitalism has failed, or that democracy has failed.

      What it points out is that our two-party system has been utterly co-opted by corporate interests, and as a result, neither party serves the interests of the public or the interests of the nation.

      Glenn Greenwald recently said the same thing – more succinctly.

  3. seeds of salvation……….
    this whole global warming slash climate change crap is starting to get a little boring.

    We face starvation? really….if the earth warmed another 2 degrees, we would have an abundence of food…if Co2 increased to 450ppm, plant growth would increase by 42%.

    I really can’t find any logic in this global warming argument!

    92% of green house gas is water vapour, temp increases, cloud cover increases to but more rain will fall on more areas. Longer growing seasons, shorter winters and plenty of fresh water for all.

    Sounds like a win win situation to me. I hate the cold anyway!

  4. dancing hysteria…
    the rye grass theory is correct. This is also attributed to the witch burnings.

    Forensic scientists did a lot of work on this many years back. They found the same rye grass problem in new england. The times all match up well for different weird happenings through out history.

  5. But it is hard to imagine how
    But it is hard to imagine how utterly stressful life was in the middle ages for the average commoner. I was discussing this with a medieval scholar once who said we have no idea what a hell hole life was in most instances. In every quarter of life there was appalling filth, disease, and discomfort.

    1. also hard to imagine is…
      ..how humans survived it all.
      large citidels were filthy, obviously, but country living would have been pleasant. The romans had clean cities with plumbing and a means to rid it of waste.
      London would have been barbaric compared to Rome which makes me wonder why they never used the technology passed onto them by the Romans.
      The population maintained an increase reguardless of the disease and squaller which makes me wonder how bad was it really.

      1. clean cities
        Well, “clean” is a relative term.

        Rome and some other big cities did have some plumbing, but no filtration of any kind. So human waste didn’t travel very far in the plumbing. Animal waste didn’t enter the plumbing in the first place. There was plenty of infectious disease in the relatively clean Roman cities.

  6. Beethoven – Music Kills Cancer Cells
    The first thought that immediately comes to mind is resonance. This sounds similar to Royal Raymond Rife’s experiments allegedly killing cancer through resonance. The cancer cells, or in Rife’s belief, the germs/viruses causing the cancer would resonate harmonically until being destroyed, and the cancers would simply die and disappear…

    Perhaps it is the resonance in the music affecting the cancer cells in the lab petri dishes due to the repetitive harmonics of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony – as the author wrote in the Portuguese version of the article (used Google Translate)
    “It may be that the effect has not been the whole work, but specifically of a rhythm, a tone or intensity…When you can identify what killed the cells, the next step will be to build a particular sound sequence for the treatment of tumors.”

    Sounds promising…

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Mobile menu - fractal